200 P. 51 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1921
To the writer, as a justice of this court, the petitioner, who is confined in the state prison at Represa, state of California, under a sentence of five years for burglary of the second degree, addresses this petition, claiming that his restraint by the warden of said prison is unlawful for the reason that the state board of prison directors, in fixing his punishment under the indeterminate sentence law, exceeded its jurisdiction for reasons to be hereinafter stated.
The petitioner presents this application in propria persona or without being represented by an attorney, and, as I find, upon examination of the same, that it is plainly my duty to deny the application, it is believed to be only just to him that the reason for so doing should be briefly stated.
Section
I first observe that, in the absence of a better showing than is here made of the nature of the sentence pronounced by the court against the petitioner, I will not assume or believe that any such sentence was pronounced, as it would involve a palpable absurdity, assuming that the fixing of a minimum and a maximum or any penalty in the judgment of sentence by the court is necessary under the law or that it adds any legal force to the judgment of sentence.
But I do not think that the specification of any penalty is required to be made in a judgment of sentence. [1] Under the indeterminate sentence law [Stats. 1917, p. 665] the court, in a felony case, where a conviction has been had, can do no more, in the matter of passing sentence, than to pronounce judgment of sentence, which merely involves an adjudication, by implication from the verdict of conviction, of the prisoner's guilt and his punishment by confinement in one of the prisons of the state, designated in the judgment. In the case of People
v. Lee,
As to the nature of the order of the prison board determining the term during which the prisoner shall serve, the statute itself seems to be very clear. It provides that said board shall, after the expiration of the minimum term of imprisonment of any prisoner, determine what length of time such prisoner shall be confined. This means, of course, that the board shall determine only what the maximum penalty the prisoner is to suffer shall be. Obviously, neither the board nor the prisoner is concerned with the minimum penalty when the time at which the board may determine what the maximum penalty shall be has been reached.
The petitioner misapprehends the purport of the decision inEx parte Heath, supra. There the petitioner had been convicted of the crime of robbery, together with a prior conviction *228 of burglary. In such a case the punishment provided is imprisonment in the state prison for the term of the prisoner's natural life. (Secs. 213 and 667, Pen. Code.) In other words, there is in such a case, under the law, no minimum penalty either expressly provided for or implied from the language fixing the penalty. Neither the court nor the prison board is, in such case, vested with any discretion in the matter of determining what length of time the prisoner shall serve. The law itself has determined and fixed that time and fixed it at straight life imprisonment. What, with obvious propriety, is held in the Heath case and intended by this court to be held therein is that where, as in that case, the law provides a straight, definite term during which the prisoner shall serve in prison and so leaves in the court or prison board no power or discretion to fix any other or different penalty, then, there being no minimum penalty which can be fixed, the indeterminate sentence law does not and cannot apply.
[2] In the case of second degree burglary, as is also true as to some other crimes which could be named, while there is no minimum penalty specifically prescribed by the statute, there is, nevertheless, an implied minimum penalty. As seen, the punishment for daylight burglary, as fixed by the statute, is any term not exceeding five years, which manifestly constitutes the maximum penalty. The minimum may be for one day or for one hour or even less, as the prison board may determine, and thus, as stated, there is a minimum penalty for the offense, even though, so far as the statute itself is concerned, it is indefinite or not specifically fixed. In such case the prison board is vested with a discretion in the matter of determining "what length of time" the prisoner shall be confined in prison, whether the limit of the maximum term prescribed or anything less to the smallest fraction of time, and, within the fair and reasonable import of the statute, may, in such a case, at any time after the prisoner has been committed to the custody of the prison and the authorities thereof, determine what shall be the length of the prisoner's term up to the maximum time for which he can be punished.
[3] But, it may be added, if the prison board was in such a case without authority to fix the length of time during which the prisoner shall suffer imprisonment, the power *229
to do so still remains in the superior court, and, since the judgment of sentence would, for failure to fix the time therein, amount only to an irregularity, or, in other words, not render the judgment absolutely void, the court would have the right to correct its judgment in that particular (In reSilva,
The application for the writ herein prayed for is denied.