The problem presented by this petition is controlled by our recent decisions in
In re Estrada,
On July 22, 1957, petitioner pleaded guilty to a charge of first degree robbery and was sentenced to the term prescribed by law for that offense. Thereafter he was convicted of escape from a penal institution in violation of Penal Code section 4531 and on May 9, 1963, sentenced for the term prescribed by law for that offense, such sentence to run consecutively to the prior robbery sentence. Petitioner appealed. The judgment was affirmed on March 31,1964.
At the time petitioner committed and was sentenced for the escape, section 4531 provided that ‘ ‘ Every prisoner committed to a State prison who escapes ... is punishable by imprisonment in a- State prison for a term of not less than one year. ...” The maximum was therefore life imprisonment. (Pen. Code, § 671.) The term of imprisonment must commence from the time the prisoner would otherwise have been discharged from prison. (Pen. Code, §4531.) Section 3044 of the Penal Code provided that no person convicted of an escape “may be paroled until he has served at least two calendar
The escape here involved was admittedly without force or violence. As to such escapes the 1963 amendments reduced the punishment in three respects. The term of imprisonment was reduced from a minimum of one year and a maximum of life, to a minimum of six months and a maximum of five years. The requirement that parole cannot be granted until at least two years after the escapee’s return to prison was eliminated. The requirement that the escape term run consecutively with any prior uncompleted term was also eliminated.
The
Estrada
case,
supra,
This conclusion is not affected by the fact that the Attorney General has informed us that the Adult Authority has fixed petitioner’s sentence on the robbery charge at eight years and for the escape at two years thereafter. Thus the terms were fixed to run consecutively. The petitioner was paroled early in March 1966. Obviously, the length of that parole may be affected by whether the sentences are to be concurrent or consecutive. Until that fact is determined we cannot determine
The writ is granted and the District Court of Appeal is directed to recall its remittitur in People v. Corcoran, 3 Crim. 3472, to vacate its judgment, and to reverse the judgment of the Superior Court of Tehama County for the sole purpose of permitting the trial judge to determine in his discretion whether the sentences shall be consecutive or concurrent.
