In this habeas corpus proceeding petitioner requests us to order his unconditional release from custody on the ground that the trial courts which convicted him did not have jurisdiction over his person. Alternatively, he asserts the right to be transferred to the custody of the Stаte of Texas in order to serve his California sentences and a prior Texas sentence concurrently. We have concluded that the convictions were valid but that petitioner should be released to the appropriate Texas authorities.
In January 1962 petitioner was convicted of robbery in Huntsville, Texas, and sentenced to a term of five years. He was released on parole in February 1963, and sometime during that year he came to California, apparently in violation of the conditions of his pаrole. In November 1963 petitioner was convicted in the Los Angeles Superior Court on two counts of second degree burglary. (Pen. Code, § 459.) The judgment declared that the sentences on the two counts were to run consecutively to each other, but failed to indicate whether or not *360 they were to be consecutive in relation to any unexecuted prior sentences. In January 1964 he was convicted on two additional counts of second degree burglary in the Riverside Superior Court; the judgment provided that the sentences imposed were to be served concurrently with each other and with any uncompleted prior sentences. At the present time he is confined in the California Correctional Training Facility at Sole-dad subject to a detainer placed on him by Texas.
Petitiоner contends that the California courts did not have jurisdiction to try him because he was then under the supervision of Texas parole authorities. He urges that parole constitutes constructive custody and that no other state may obtain jurisdiction until this custody is terminatеd. At the time of both his trials in California, petitioner was present in the courtroom and was in the physical custody of California authorities. The actual presence of an individual in the courtroom is the most widely recognized basis for jurisdiction of a court. Indeed, it has bеen held that even one who is brought into a state illegally may not challenge the jurisdiction of its courts upon that ground. (See
Frisbie
v.
Collins
(1952)
It is claimed that the assumption of jurisdiction by California improperly infringed upon the powers of the State of Texas since that state had constructive custody over petitioner at the time of his California trials. A similar contention was raised in
Strand
v.
Schmittroth
(9th Cir. 1957)
Different considerations are relevant if, as in the case at hand, the offender is merely in the constructive custody of one state but is physically within a second state. In such circumstanсes, the assumption of jurisdiction by the second state does not constitute any serious infringement upon the powers of the first state. On the contrary, it is the second state which could justly claim an infringement of its sovereign powers if not permitted to arrest and try one who has committed a crime within its borders. Thus, the very principles of comity which preclude one state from requiring another to surrender physical custody of a prisoner, compel the conclusion that a state is not prevented from assuming jurisdiction over a person found within its borders by the fact that the person is in the
constructive
custody of another state or of the federal government.
(Strand
v.
Schmittroth, supra,
at pp. 598-599;
United States
ex rel.
Brewer
v.
Maroney
(3d Cir. 1963)
In the case of
In re Marzec
(1945)
Although petitioner is not entitled to his unconditional release, the parties agree that he is entitled to be transferred to a Texas penal institution in order that he may serve his California sentences concurrently with the Texas sentence previously imposed. Penal Code section 669 provides in effect that when any person has been convicted of two or more crimes, whether in the same court or different courts, the last sentence
*362
shall be served concurrently with the prior sentences unless the trial judge determines within a specified period of time that it shall run consecutively.
In re Stoliker
(1957)
The sole purpose of transferring defendant to Texas is to permit him to serve his sentences concurrently. If at the time of his release by Texas a portion of the California sentence remains to be served, he should bе returned to this state. The 1917 case of
In re Whittington,
There may be cases in which a state intends to waive further jurisdiction over a prisoner whom it transfers to another state, but it appears that these cases are in the minority. The suggestion in
Whittington
that the courts should presume jurisdiction has been waived in all cases in which an offender
*363
has been transferred is contrary to Penal Code section 1555.2, which provides that no transfer shall be deemed a waiver of jurisdiction. The rule preserves no legitimate right of the person held in custody and may deprive him of his right to a speedy trial, for the state first taking him into custody will in all probability be unwilling to transfer him temporarily for the purpose of trial in another state if this accommodation will be interpreted as a waiver of further jurisdiction over him. (See
United States
ex rel.
Moses
v.
Kipp
(7th Cir. 1956)
supra,
The Attorney General proposes that petitioner ⅛ transfer to Texas be conditioned upon his waiver in advance оf the right to demand extradition proceedings at the time of his possible return to California. The procedure for obtaining a waiver of extradition is prescribed in section 25-A of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act, which states that any person may waive extradition “by executing оr subscribing in the presence of a judge of any court of record within this state a writing which states that he consents to return to the demanding state. ...” (Italics added.) This section has been enacted in substance by both California and Texas. (Cal. Pen. Code, § 1555.1; Tex. Code Crim. Proc., art. 1008a, § 25-A.) Thus it aрpears that the waiver must be executed before a judge in the asylum state and that a waiver executed prior to petitioner’s transfer to Texas would be of no effect under the law of either state. The last sentence of the section provides thаt the procedures therein described are not to be deemed exclusive. Therefore, if some other statute provided an alternative procedure permitting an advance waiver, it would be controlling. However, we have found no other statute аpplicable to the facts of this case, 1 and thus the procedure is governed by the provisions of section 1555.1.
There may be some question whether petitioner would be
*364
classified as a fugitive from justice at the time of his return to California. However, it is unnecessary to decide this issue since the powers of extradition grаnted to the states by the federal Constitution are not exclusive. The Uniform Criminal Extradition Act properly provides for the rendition of persons whose conduct has not brought them within the provisions of article IV, section 2, of the federal Constitution.
(New York
v.
O’Neill
(1959)
Even if an advance waiver were permitted by Penal Code section 1555.1, we would still have grave doubts whether petitioner could be required to execute such a waiver in order to secure the benefits of Penal Code section 669. An administrative agency may not exact a condition for thе performance of a duty which the law makes unconditional. The wording of section 669 is unconditional; unless the trial court provides otherwise, defendant has the right to serve his sentences concurrently. Nothing in section 669 or in
In re Stoliker
(1957)
supra,
In view of our conclusion that no statute permits the conditioning of petitioner ⅛ transfer to Texas upon his prior execution of a waiver of extradition, it is unnecessary to consider his further contention that the imposition of such a condition would be unconstitutionаl.
The writ of habeas corpus is granted for the purpose of transferring petitioner to the custody of an authorized representative of the State of Texas, in order that he may serve any ineompleted sentences previously imposed by that state. It is оrdered that the Director of Corrections notify the appropriate authorities of the State of Texas that they may take custody of petitioner, and if custody is so taken, that the Director of Corrections designate a penal institution of that state as the place of confinement for the purpose of execution of the Cali *365 fornia judgments of conviction. It is further ordered that if, after notification, the authorities of the State of Texas decline to take custody of petitioner, or if they consent to credit petitioner with time served in California penal institutions in execution of his prior Texas sentence, this order he deemed to have been fully executed. In all other respects the writ is denied.
Notes
Penal Code section 11177 provides that persons released on parole may be returned to this state at any time and may be required to execute a waiver of extradition. However, petitioner is not claiming the right to be released on parole; hence this section is inapplicable to the present case.
