107 Kan. 167 | Kan. | 1920
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus.
The petitioner was prosecuted in the court of Topeka for a public offense. He pleaded guilty, and on January 9, 1920, he was sentenced to the county jail for ninety days. At the same time he applied to the judge of the court of Topeka for a parole. A parole was granted. Within a few days the attorney-general notified the judge of the court of Topeka— a court of limited jurisdiction — that he had no judicial power to grant paroles, and so the petitioner was again taken into custody on January 17,1920. Thereupon the petitioner applied to the district judge of Shawnee county (first division) for a parole. This was heard in part and continued for further evidence, but a stay of proceedings was granted; and on January 20, the petitioner appealed to the district court from the judgment pronounced against him by the 'court of Topeka on
The gist of the petitioner’s claim of right to release on habeas corpus is because the commitment was void:
“That it was not issued until a long- time after said judgment had fully expired; and that said Justice of the Peace had no right or authority to issue said commitment or warrant at the time; in that, it has long since expired and is void on its face and is without any authority, in that said respondent has no legal authority therein for confining your petitioner in the county jail of Shawnee county.”
While the above chronicle shows the divers and sundry maneuvers made by this petitioner to avoid the judgment and consequences of his crime, it plainly shows that he has not yet served the adjudged term of ninety days in jail. Petitioner invokes the old rule that one who has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment is entitled to his discharge at the time when that term would have ended if he had been promptly incarcerated when sentenced. That rule, although a debatable one and one given more significance in olden times than now, covers cases of official neglect and indifference, irregularities for which the defendant has been in no way responsible, where the delay in incarcerating the defendant has been unreasonable; and where judgment has been pronounced upon an arrangement that the sentence of imprisonment was only a formality and that it would probably not. be executed at all. In such a case, if the defendant is permitted to go at large until long afterwards, habeas corpus may be invoked. (In re Krig, 105 Kan. 695, 185 Pac. 1044.) But here there was no considerable delay; the postponement of the petitioner’s imprisonment was caused by the abortive parole, the abortive appeal, the stay of proceedings, and the application to the district judge for a parole. For all of these
The court is of opinion that the petitioner’s case comes within the general principle laid down in The State, ex rel., v. Piper, 103 Kan. 794, 176 Pac. 626, in which it was held that where a delay in executing a sentence of imprisonment, although unusual, was not unreasonable under the circumstances, the judgment of imprisonment was not satisfied until it had been fully executed, and that the essential portion of the sentence in a criminal case is the punishment, including the kind of punishment and the amount thereof, and that the “expiration of time without imprisonment is in no sense an execution of the sentence.”
(See, also, Ex Parte Eldridge, 3 Okla. Crim. Rep. 499, 106 Pac. 980, 27 L. R. A., n. s., 625; 16 C. J. 1335, 1336.)
The petitioner’s discharge is denied, and he is remanded to the custody of the sheriff to serve the unexecuted portion of the ninety days’ term of imprisonment which was imposed on him by the court of Topeka.