167 P.2d 123 | Wash. | 1946
[1, 2] It is the rule in this state that a sentence for violation of law must be definite and certain. Davis v. Catron,
"Where sentences are imposed on verdicts of guilty, or pleas of guilty, on several counts or on several indictments consolidated for trial, it is the rule that the sentences so imposed run concurrently, in the absence of specific and definite provision therein that they be made to run consecutively by specifying the order of sequence."
This quotation was set out in the opinion of the United States supreme court cited by petitioner, and is apparently the language which he contends governs his case, but the *841 supreme court of the United States, after quoting the circuit court of appeals, stated that it had erred in its decision and announced the rule to be as follows:
"Sentences in criminal cases should reveal with fair certainty the intent of the court and exclude any serious misapprehensions by those who must execute them. The elimination of every possible doubt cannot be demanded. Tested by this standard the judgment here questioned was sufficient to impose total imprisonment for fifteen years made up of three five-year terms, one under the first count, one under the second and one under the third, to be served consecutively and to follow each other in the same sequence as the counts appeared in the indictment. This is the reasonable and natural implication from the whole entry. The words, `said term of imprisonment to run consecutively and not concurrently,' are not consistent with a five-year sentence."
See cases listed in 70 A.L.R. 1511.
In Wall v. Hudspeth,
"But it is urged that the sentence being served in the state penitentiary was from fourteen to twenty-eight years, that the state of Louisiana has an indeterminate sentence law, Code Cr. Proc. La. art. 529, and that therefore the exact time such sentence would terminate was indefinite and uncertain. The sentence in question here expressly provided in clear language that it should begin at the expiration of the one then being served which plainly meant that petitioner should commence serving it immediately at the expiration of the prior sentence, whether it expired by completion of the full term or by earlier termination in any other manner. Such a provision is not objectionably uncertain and indefinite."
Accord: Collins v. United States,
In In re Sanford,
[3] There is another reason for affirming the decision of the trial court. That reason is that, where a person has been sentenced to serve consecutively two terms of imprisonment, he may not attack the second sentence before the first has been served. In In re Blystone,
[4] The record does not disclose the length of the term imposed by the board of prison terms and paroles under the first sentence imposed upon petitioner, and we cannot presume that it was less than twenty years. That being the situation, the petitioner has not as yet served the first term imposed by the court in Thurston county and cannot now complain.
Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
DRIVER, C.J., MILLARD, STEINERT, and MALLERY, JJ., concur. *843