In re JOSEPH HARINCAR, on Habeas Corpus
Crim. No. 4606
In Bank
Dec. 10, 1946
403
The judgment is reversed and as defendants have prevailed on both appeals, they are entitled to their costs on said apрeals. (Rules on Appeal, Rule 26 (a), 22 Cal.2d 1, 18.)
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Carter, J., and Schauer, J., concurred.
Traynor, J., did not participate herein.
[Crim. No. 4606. In Bank. Dec. 10, 1946.]
In re JOSEPH HARINCAR, on Habeas Corpus.
Robert W. Kenny, Attorney General, and David K. Lener, Deputy Attorney General, for Respondent.
SCHAUER, J.--By application for writ of habeas corpus petitioner attacks an adjudication that he is an habitual criminal. He contends that the trial court erroneously found that he had suffered three prior convictions of felony in other states, whereas two of the convictions were of offenses which, if committed in California, wоuld be only misdemeanors. Under the authority of In re McVickers, ante, p. 264 [176 P.2d 40], and In re Seeley, ante, p. 294 [176 P.2d 24], if this contention can be upheld by reference to the judicially noticed law of the states in which the priors were suffered, or to authenticated copies of the informations and judgments of prior convictions, petitioner can secure relief in this proceeding. However, as hereinafter pointed out, it appears that petitioner is an habitual criminal with two prior convictions of felony, serving a life sentence, that he has been releаsed on parole and, therefore, that he is entitled to no relief except a formal adjudication of his status.
Petitioner was accused by information of the crime of forgery committed in Los Angeles on July 16, 1936. The information alleged that he had beеn three times previously convicted of felonies in other states and had served a term of imprisonment in a state prison for each conviction. Petitioner pleaded guilty to the charge of forgery and admitted the prior convictions as allеged. Counsel for petitioner stated to the trial court that the crimes of which petitioner had been previously convicted “were nothing but petty larcenies under our laws.” As to one of the priors this statement is correct. The judgment of the trial court, еntered on October 1, 1936, recited the three asserted prior convictions and adjudged that petitioner was an habitual criminal and that he should be imprisoned in the state prison at Folsom for the term of his natural life.
The three prior convictions alleged, admitted as charged, and recited in the judgment are of “Larceny, a felony,” in Iowa on March 10, 1920; of “Receiving Stolen Property, a
After the time for appeal had expired petitioner moved the trial court to vacate the judgment of conviction. He apparently did not distinguish between the formal judgment of conviction and the ancillary determination (affecting not guilt but only length of imprisonment and eligibility to parole) of habitual criminal status. In pressing the motion to vacate the judgment of conviction, however, he contended, as he does in this proceeding (and as he had at the trial), that the two convictions of crimes denominated “Larceny” adjudicated only that he had committed acts which, if committed in this state, would be petty theft. His motion was denied, he appealed, and the order denying the motion was affirmed on the authоrity of People v. Lumbley (1937), 8 Cal.2d 752, 760 [68 P.2d 354], and People v. Moore (1935), 9 Cal.App.2d 251, 255 [49 P.2d 615]. (People v. Harincar (1942), 49 Cal.App.2d 594 [121 P.2d 751].) The attack in the proceeding now before us is not upon the judgment of conviction but is directly and exclusively levelled at the subsidiary determination of habitual criminal status.
Petitioner concedes that the second alleged prior conviction
The first alleged prior conviction, as stated above, was of “Larceny, a felony,” in Iowa in 1920. The applicable Iowa statute (Iowa Code, 1897, § 4831) provided that “If any person steal, take and carry away of the property of another any money, goods . . . [etc.], he is guilty of larceny“; larceny of property of value more than $20 was a felony punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary; larceny of property of value less than $20 was a misdemeanor punishable by fine and imprisonment in the county jail. From the record before us (including copies of the Iowa indictment and judgment) it appеars that petitioner was specifically charged with and convicted of larceny of certain described goods of the alleged and admitted value of $81. At the time petitioner committed and
The problem, therefore, is substantially the same as if petitioner were contending that a conviction of grand larceny of $81 in California in 1920 is not, since the 1923 amendment of
It therefore appears that petitioner at the time he was convicted of the primary crime of forgery was an habitual criminal who had been twice, not three times, previously convicted of felonies enumerated in
As petitioner appears to have been accorded every right to which he has shown himself entitled, the writ is discharged and he is remanded to the custody of the Adult Authority, subject to his status on parole.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., and Carter, J., concurred.
SPENCE, J.--I concur in the judgment rеmanding petitioner “to the custody of the Adult Authority, subject to his status on parole.” I further agree with the conclusions that “Petitioner, serving a life sentence, is not entitled to be released from the restraint of parole,” and that he has “been accоrded every right to which he has shown himself entitled.”
When petitioner commenced this proceeding on habeas corpus, he was not on parole but was serving a life sentence in the state prison as an habitual criminal. Since the commencement of this proceeding, he has been released on parole under the authority of
Petitioner, however, originally sought, and still seeks by this proceeding on habeas corpus, to nullify the portion of the judgment adjudicating his status as an habitual criminal. As it does not affirmatively appear from the face of the record in the criminal proceeding in which the habitual criminal adjudication was made that the trial court was without jurisdiction to make such adjudication, I believe petitioner should be denied such relief for the reasons stated in my dissenting opinions in In re McVickers, ante, p. 264 [176 P.2d 40], and In re Seeley, ante, p. 294 [176 P.2d 24]. While the majority opinion denies such relief, I believe that the majority opinion should have confined the inquiry to the face of the record in the criminal proceeding in arriving at the conclusion that petitioner was not entitled thereto.
Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
