288 P. 1109 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
THE COURT.
The petition of F.V. Daniels for the issuance of a writ ofhabeas corpus by this court sets forth the following:
That on the twenty-fourth day of June, 1925, the petitioner was sentenced by the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles, to the state prison, for the crime of receiving stolen goods; that on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1925, the petitioner was received at the state prison at San Quentin; that on the eighth day of January, 1926, the petitioner's sentence was fixed at five years; that the credits which the petitioner earned upon said five-year sentence amounted to one year and five months; that the petitioner's term, therefore, would expire in three years and seven months, to wit, on January 28, 1929. The petitioner further sets forth that on the thirty-first day of January, 1928, petitioner was admitted to parole; that on the twenty-third day of October, 1928, petitioner was arrested in the county of Los Angeles, state of California, and sentenced to the county jail in the county of Los Angeles; that this sentence expired on the thirteenth day of May, 1929; that on the seventh day of November, 1928, the petitioner's parole was suspended; that on the fourteenth day of May, 1929, petitioner was returned to the state prison at Folsom, and is confined therein; that on the eighteenth day of May, 1929, the board of state prison directors attempted to forfeit all credits earned by the said petitioner, and that before said date, namely, on the twenty-eighth day of January, 1929, the petitioner's term had expired. Wherefore, the petitioner asks that a writ may be issued herein, a hearing had, and the petitioner restored to his liberty. *45 [1] The petitioner's application herein is based upon and proceeds upon the theory that the credits which may be allowed on a prisoner's term for good behavior, attach, are operative and limit the term of imprisonment theretofore imposed upon a prisoner, irrespective of any action of the board of prison directors in allowing such credits. No allegation is contained in the petition before us setting forth that any action has ever been taken by the board of prison directors relative to the allowance of credits, and, therefore, we cannot assume that any such action has ever been taken. As we read the decisions, the Indeterminate Sentence Law and the act of the legislature relative to credits, such credits are not now operative unless some affirmative action has been taken by the board of prison directors. It is, in our opinion, insufficient to allege simply that credits have been earned.
[2] Beginning with the case of In re Lee,
[3] Section
In the case of In re Thompson,
[4] The fact that the petitioner was outside the walls of the state prison on parole has no bearing whatever upon the power of the board of prison directors to act in his case. Even though outside the prison walls, in contemplation of law the petitioner was still under the direction and jurisdiction of the board of prison directors and, constructively, a prisoner of the state.
This court, in the case of Ex parte Heckman,
In Pareses v. California State Board of Prison Directors etal., reported
Under the authorities cited, it is evident that the petition under consideration does not contain facts sufficient to warrant the issuance of a writ.
The petition is denied. *47