Petitioner, who is confined in the State Prison at San Quentin, seek's his release on the ground that he has completed his term of lawful imprisonment. While the record does not sustain his position in that regard, nevertheless it does appear appropriate that the Adult Authority should reconsider the propriety of his continued confinement in the light of subsequent events as will hereinafter be delineated.
Following two trials in 1932—one in July and the other a month later—petitioner was convicted on seven counts, divisible three on the first trial and four on the second. The indictment in each ease charged two prior convictions of felonies—forgery and grand theft—and these were admitted. By its judgments, the court ordered that the sentences on the seven offenses—consisting of alleged acts of kidnapping, rape, and violations of section 288a of the Penal Code as separately stated—run consecutively. At the time of the alleged commission of these seven offenses, petitioner was on probation on account of the two prior felony convictions and he had never served a penitentiary term on those charges. Such probation was thereupon revoked, and judgment was pronounced with the sentence to run concurrently with the sentences upon the other seven offenses. Petitioner started his term of imprisonment on September 15, 1932. On October 18, 1935, the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles fixed the length of time of petitioner’s imprisonment at 35 years, apparently computed on the formula basis of five years for each of the seven enumerated offenses to run consecutively, and five years on the prior felony conviction to run concurrently. On April 4, 1944, petitioner’s total sentence was refixed by the board at 30 years, and with the available credit allowances, this term has been reduced to 19 years and three months, permitting petitioner’s release in 1951 unless further action is taken by the Adult Authority, successor to the aforesaid board. (Pen. Code, § 3000; as amended by Stats., 3d Ex.Sess. 1944, ch. 2, § 40.)
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Meanwhile petitioner had encountered considerable delay in prosecuting his respective appeal proceedings, and he applied to this court for a determination of his rights in seeking a review of the judgments of conviction entered against him in the two 1932 trials. As the circumstances were so outlined, this court by decision of August 14, 1945, in
In re Byrnes,
Petitioner challenges the legality of his continued imprisonment under the above circumstances. He contends that he has served the sentences fixed on the judgments of conviction as affirmed on appeal in the first action—computing the length of time to be five years on each of the three counts, or an aggregate of 15 years, with the period of commitment beginning on September 15, 1932, and completed, on the basis of alleged good-time credit allowances, as of March 15, 1942— and that he is now entitled to his release because no other judgments stand against him following the reversal ordered on the appeal on the four counts comprising the second action and his subsequent acquittal on the retrial of those charges. In support of his position, petitioner refers to these statements made in the opinions rendered with regard to his appeal proceedings: (1)
In re Byrnes, supra,
In opposing petitioner’s claim to release, respondent maintains that petitioner is serving one continuous sentence as a total period of confinement fixed by the prison authorities rather than a series of separate, consecutive servitudes imposed upon him in pursuance of the original judgments of conviction—five years on each of seven counts. Respondent also notes that the “cumulative sentence,” originally fixed by the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles at 35 years, was reduced thereafter to 30 years; that in so refixing the length of time of petitioner’s imprisonment, the board treated it as a “single term of confinement” and without reference to the specific counts evidenced by the seven commitments, all of which then stood unimpeaehed against petitioner; that the judgments on the three offenses that were affirmed in the first action
(People
v.
Byrnes, supra,
Respondent’s position accords with the recent decision of this court in
In re Cowen,
While in the Cowen case the precise issue was the power of the Adult Authority to revoke credits theretofore earned by a prisoner confined under consecutive sentences and refix his total term of imprisonment after the first of such sentences had expired by reason of such credits, such right of reconsideration and redetermination was” deemed to exist under our penal statutes not only in furtherance of the effective operation of the credit system but likewise for the successful administration of the whole theory of the law relating to consecutive sentences as premised on the concept of “a single,
*848
continuous term of confinement rather than a series of distinct, independent terms” (p. 643)—as appears from the above quoted language. It therefore becomes immaterial here that petitioner had completed, according to the formula followed by the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles, the “full terms of imprisonment imposed under the [three] judgments of conviction [affirmed on appeal] in the first action”
(People
v.
Byrnes, supra,
Petitioner’s position is not strengthened by his reliance on the case of
In re Shull,
Thus it appears in the Shull case that the voiding of the “additional term” entitled the petitioner to his immediate release from custody because he had then already served the maximum term, as reduced by credits, for the offense for which punishment had been validly imposed, and the “Board of Prison Directors,” by a subsequent declaration of the forfeiture of such credits, could not breathe life into a
total
term of imprisonment which had come to an end. So the distinction is made in
In re Cowen, supra,
The writ is discharged and the petitioner remanded.
Gibson, G. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Schauer, J., concurred.
