Pеtitioner, an inmate of San Quentin Prison, applied for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the Adult Authority improрerly refused him credit on his prison term for time spent in jail. The allegations of his petition and the Summary of Sentence Data prepared by the Department of Corrections showed that contrary to
In re Patton,
We issued an order to show cause. Respondent warden filed his return showing that petitionеr has now been credited with the disputed periods of jail time. Although the issuance of our order to show cause hаs resulted in this petitioner’s receiving the relief he applied for, we deem it appropriate in our supеrvision of the administration of criminal justice to decide the questions he presented. Petitions for habeas cоrpus filed by other prisoners indicate that sentences are still being computed contrary to the holdings of
Patton
and
Aguilera,
and the question expressly undecided by
Aguilera
is a recurring problem important to other prisoners and the Adult Authority. (See
D. I. Chadboume, Inc.
v.
Superior Court,
Petitioner is serving a prison sentence for sеcond degree burglary (maximum term 15 years; Pen. Code, § 461) that began September 5, 1958. In 1961 the Adult Authority released him on parolе. On April 12, 1962, it cancelled his parole and ordered his return to prison. For seven days, until *602 his return to prison on April 19, he was hеld in jail as a parole violator ordered returned to prison.
In 1963 petitioner was again paroled. On Seрtember 3, 1965, the Adult Authority suspended his parole and ordered his return to prison. He was at large for four days after the making of the order of September 3. From September 7, 1965, until March 10, 1966, he was in jail as a parole violator. Also during this time, under the name Howard Emerson Ellwood, he was tried for and convicted of possessing narcotics, granted probаtion, and from December 1, 1965, to March 1, 1966, was held in jail as a condition of probation as well as under the order of the Adult Authority. On March 10 he was removed from jail to state prison.
In May 1966 petitioner was again paroled. In Octobеr 1966, under the name Howard Emerson Ellwood, he was convicted of attempted burglary and sentenced to one yеar in the county jail. On December 28, 1966, while he was serving this jail sentence, the Adult Authority cancelled his parole and оrdered his return to prison. On March 16, 1967, he was returned to prison.
At the time petitioner applied for habeas corpus the Adult Authority had computed all the time he spent in jail as “at large” time not credited on his 1958 sentence. Penal Code section 3064 provides that ‘ ‘ From and after the suspension or revocation of the parole of any prisoner and until his return to custody he shall be deemed an escape and fugitive from justice and no part of the time during which he is an escape and fugitive from justice shall be part of his term. ’ ’ Although section 3064 refers to a prisoner’s return to custody, not his return to state prison, we recently stated in summary of the substance of the statute that “the time bеtween a valid order of suspension and his actual return to state prison is not credited to his term.”
(In re Hall,
*603
For the reasons stated in
Aguilera, supra,
The reasoning of Aguilera applies equally to time spent in jail under an Adult Authority order while that body is determining whether a prisoner should be reinstated on parole and to time spent in jail under such an order after the Adult Authority has decided to return him to state prison and is arranging to transport him there.
We further hold in accord with
In re Patton, supra,
Since the Adult Authority’s records will disclose whether prisoners were in fact at large or whether they were in actual custody outside a prison pursuant to orders suspending or cancelling рarole, questions of credit for time in jail like those raised here can be settled by the Adult Authority without requiring prisoners tо resort to the courts to obtain correction of the computations of their sentences. (Cf.
In re Portwood,
The order to show cause is discharged and the petition for habeas corpus is dismissed.
McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
