Clyde R. Gullatt, a San Quentin inmate, filed the instant habeas corpus petition, contending, among other things, that he was improperly denied credit on his California terms for the time he served in federal prison.
On February 21, 1957, Gullatt began serving concurrent California prison sentences for possession of marijuana (maximum term 10 years; former § 11712 of Health & Saf. Code, as amended Stats. 1953, ch. 1770, p. 3526, §6), possession of marijuana with a prior conviction of that offense (maximum term 20 years; former § 11712 of Health & Saf. Code, as amended Stats. 1953, ch. 1770, p. 3526, § 6), and two counts of sale of marijuana (maximum term life; former § 11713 of Health & Saf. Code, as amended Stats. 1st Ex. Sess. 1954, ch. 12, p. 259, §1). In 1960 the Adult Authority fixed.his term on each count at 10 years and released him on parole.
On February 3, 1961, the Adult Authority suspended his parole, refixed his terms at the maximum, and ordered his return to prison. The month before he had pleaded guilty in a federal court to armed bank robbery (perpetrated while on parole), and thereafter, on February 15, 1961, the federal court committed him £o the <3U§tpdy of the A,fáorney General. *397 The judgment contains no recommendation or direction concerning the sentence running consecutively or concurrently with the prior state sentences. Gullatt was in a county jail in California from February 3, until February 21, 1961, and on the latter date was received at the federal prison at McNeil Island, Washington, under the federal sentence. In August 1961 his California parole was cancelled, and a state detainer was lodged with the federal prison.
On September 2, 1966, the federal authorities returned him to the California authorities, and he was held in county jails in this state from September 2 until his return to state prison on September 26, 1966. During this period, the federal court, on the basis of a petition which reflected a technical error in sentencing, vacated his guilty plea and set aside the sentence; he again pleaded guilty and the federal court, as a result of his good record at McNeil Island, granted him probation. In November 1966 he pleaded guilty to state parole violation charges and his parole was revoked.
With respect to the period from his parole suspension on February 3, 1961, until his return to state prison on September 26, 1966, the Department of Corrections gave him credit on his California terms for the 42 days he was in county jails (i.e., 18 days from his parole suspension until his transfer to McNeil Island and 24 days following his return to jail from McNeil Island and before his transfer to prison). He was not given credit on his California terms for the 5 years, 6 months and 11 days he spent in federal prison.
The Department of Corrections acted properly in not giving him credit for that time. The fact that a federal judgment does not specify that the sentence is to run consecutively with a prior state sentence does not raise a presumption that the federal sentence is to run concurrently with the state sentence.
(Larios
v.
Madigan,
Gullatt next asserts that the Adult Authority’s utilization of the bank robbery as a ground for revoking, his parole and refixing his terms subjected him to double jeopardy and multiple punishment in that he had previously been placed in jeopardy for the crime in the federal court and punished therefor by incarceration in federal prison. The. return shows that Gullatt pleaded guilty to charges that he violated his parole by committing the bank robbery and associating with a named parolee before and during the commission of the robbery. 1
The Adult Authority action was administrative in character and did not place Gullatt in jeopardy within the meaning of our state jeopardy rule. (Cf.
People
v.
Eggleston,
There is no merit to Gullatt’s remaining contention that the Adult Authority, once having fixed his terms had no power to refix them. (Pen. Code, § 3020.)
The order to show cause is discharged and the habeas corpus petition is denied.
*399 Traynor, G. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a rehearing was denied November 13,1968.
Notes
According to Adult Authority reports, Gullatt also admitted participating in a robbery at a transit office several days after the bank robbery, ’ and investigation revealed he was a member of “the notorious Shot-Gun Bandit Gang. ’ ’ It is unclear and immaterial whether these matters were', included among the charges to which he pleaded guilty and which resulted - in the revocation of his parole.
