13 R.I. 143 | R.I. | 1880
On May 12, 1878, the petitioner was sentenced, on complaint that he was a vagrant, to the Providence Reform School during his minority, or in the alternative to the Providence County jail for thirty days. He was afterwards permitted to go at large on probation but without being discharged. October 3, 1879, while he was so at large, he was arrested by direction of the trustees of the Reform School, and thereupon, without first being returned to the school, he was removed to the state workhouse as incorrigible, by order of the Board of State Charities and Corrections given in compliance with an application of the trustees of the Reform School under Pub. Laws R.I. cap. 603, § 11, of March 27, 1877.1 The petitioner *144 asks to be released on two grounds. The first is that the application of the trustees was unwarranted because he was not an inmate of the Reform School when it was made. We think, however, that the petitioner though not actually confined in the Reform School was yet in contemplation of law an inmate of the school and subject to its discipline, having never been discharged. The second ground is that the statute authorizing the removal is unconstitutional, because it confers judicial power on the Board of State Charities and Corrections and enables them even to alter the sentence of the court. We think this ground is also untenable. The statute was enacted before the sentence was pronounced, and the sentence must therefore be held to have been pronounced subject to its provisions. And the power given to the board is in our opinion simply disciplinary, and not in the constitutional sense of the word judicial. The petition is therefore denied.
Petition dismissed.