*648 Opinion
D. J. McCarthy, Superintendent of the California Men’s Colony at San Litis Obispo appeals from an order granting Charles Denton Watson’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus seeking, pursuant to section 2900.5 of the Penal Code, 1 285 days presentence credit for jail time spent in custody in Texas, The central question which we face is whether petitioner is entitled to have such time credited upon his sentence where it was spent in jail in a foreign jurisdiction while he was resisting extradition to California for trial upon charges of which he was ultimately convicted. As will appear, we conclude that he is entitled to the credit. We affirm the order.
The facts are not in dispute. On November 30, 1969, petitioner was arrested in McKinney, Texas at the request of the Los Angeles Police Department as a part of its investigation of the Tate-LaBianca murders. The next day the department obtained a warrant for petitioner’s arrest for murder (§ 187) and sent officers to Texas to effect his return to this state. Petitioner refused to return.
On December 8, 1969, he was charged by indictment in California with seven counts of murder and one count of conspiracy to commit murder and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest. After formal demand by this state, the Governor of Texas granted extradition but petitioner resisted it, pursuing various proceedings in an effort to invalidate the Texas extradition order. All of these failed and he was returned to California on September 11, 1970.
After trial by jury, petitioner was found guilty of seven counts of murder of the first degree and one count of conspiracy to commit murder. He was eventually sentenced to life imprisonment on merged counts, counts two through eight having been consolidated into one count. While seiving this sentence at California Men’s Colony, San Luis Obispo, California, petitioner applied for presentence jail time credit pursuant to the newly enacted section 2900.5 as interpreted by this court in
In re Kapperman
(1974)
Section 2900.5, as it read at the applicable time, 2 provided that any defendant convicted of a felony who “has been in custody in any city, county, or city and county jail” shall receive “credit upon his sentence” for “all days of custody of the defendant from the date of arrest to the date on which the serving of the sentence imposed commences,” if “the custody to be credited is attributable to charges arising from the same criminal act or acts for which the defendant has been convicted.” Since petitioner had been incarcerated in a Texas county jail upon his arrest for the murder charges of which he was ultimately convicted, it would appear that under a literal application of the statute he was entitled to credit for “all days of custody ... from date of arrest to the date on which the serving of the sentence imposed commences,” namely, the 285 days spent in custody in Texas.
Appellant concedes that a literal reading of the statute would grant petitioner the credit sought, but urges that the section should not be read literally since to do so would benefit fugitives from justice—a result
*650
contrary to the public policy of this state. Such policy, according to appellant, has been established by section 3064 which provides: “From and after the suspension or revocation of the parole of any prisoner and until his return to custody he shall be deemed an escapee and fugitive from justice and no part of the time during which he is an escapee and fugitive from justice shall be part of his term.” Therefore, argues appellant, the Legislature has demonstrated that fugitives should not benefit from their flight and must have intended to extend its section 3064 treatment of fugitives to section 2900.5. Appellant offers no support for such an assertion of legislative intention other than the suggestion that it is necessary to consider the holding of
In re Pearce
(1974)
In Pearce, the defendant’s parole was suspended in California and he was thereafter apprehended and placed in jail in Alabama solely because of his suspended parole. He successfully resisted extradition to California in Alabama’s courts for 15 months after which he was returned to state prison in California. Pearce then sought credit against his term of imprisonment for the time spent in jail in Alabama while resisting extradition to this state. The court held that he was not entitled to the credit because “ ‘return to custody’ [in § 3064] beyond any doubt means return to the custody of California’s prison authorities” (id., at p. 401), that he was not in the control or custody of the California prison authorities while resisting extradition in Alabama, and that he therefore remained a fugitive from justice until he returned to California.
JLn the case at bench, appellant argues that since petitioner was a fugitive from justice during the time he spent in jail in Texas while resisting extradition to California, then similarly and consistently with the public policy set forth in section 3064 he is entitled to no credit for such time.
While petitioner having been charged with the commission of a crime within California and thereafter having been found in Texas was a fugitive from justice for purposes of extradition
(Appleyard
v.
Massachusetts (1
906)
We think it clear that section 2900.5 deals with a different type of custody than does section 3064. The latter section obviously pertains to a
convicted
and paroled prisoner who, after the suspension or revocation of his parole, is entitled to no credit for any of his escape time against the term of his.sentence until he has returned to the custody of the California prison authorities. The former section on the contrary pertains to the
pretrial
incarceration of a person charged with crime but not yet tried much less convicted, and therefore clothed with the presumption of innocence. To implement the underlying philosophy of section 2900.5, the courts have therefore given the term “custody” as used in that section a liberal interpretation.
{In re Jordan
(1975)
The crucial element of the statute is not where or under what conditions the defendant has been deprived of his liberty but rather whether the custody to which he has been subjected “is attributable to charges arising from the same criminal act or acts for which the defendant has been convicted.” (§ 2900.5, subd. (b).) In recognition of this element the courts have placed the emphasis on the
fact
of the defendant’s custody prior to the commencement of his sentence regard
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less of the particular locale, institution, facility or environment of his incarceration. Thus in
In re Jordan, supra,
It is noteworthy that in 1976 the Legislature, in apparent acceptance of the liberal rationale of the above decisions, amended section 2900.5, to broaden the term “custody” without limitation as to place of presentence custody.
4
It is also noteworthy that the Courts of Appeal have at least
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impliedly recognized that presentence custody in another jurisdiction qualifies for credit. In
Jordan,
as we have seen, the court granted credit for custody in a mental hospital in Missouri; in
In re Miller
(1974)
Additionally we observe that both New York and Michigan have interpreted their comparable statutes as allowing presentence jail time credit to defendants incarcerated in foreign jurisdictions while resisting extradition. In
People
v.
Havey
(1968)
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Finally, we apprehend no public policy in this state against those defendants charged with crime who have resisted California’s demand for their extradition. Any person arrested and held for extradition or ordered to be extradited has both a federal and state right to test the validity of the arrest and extradition. (See Indigents’
Right to Appointed Counsel in Interstate Extradition Proceedings
(1975) 28 Stan.L.Rev. 1039.) “Whenever the executive of the State, upon whom such demand has been made, by virtue of his warrant, causes the arrest for delivery of a person charged as a fugitive from the justice of another State, the prisoner is held in custody only under color of authority derived from the Constitution and laws of the United States and is entitled to invoke the judgment of the judicial tribunals whether of the State or the United States, by the writ of habeas corpus, upon the lawfulness of his arrest and imprisonment.”
(Roberts
v.
Reilly, supra,
In sum, we hold that a defendant convicted of a felony is entitled to credit pursuant to section 2900.5 against his sentence for the presentence time spent in jail in a foreign jurisdiction resisting extradition to this state on charges of which he has been ultimately convicted.
The order is affirmed.
Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Clark, J., Richardson, J., and Manuel, J., concurred.
Notes
Retired Associate Justice of the Supreme Court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
hereafter, unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Penal Code.
Section 2900.5 as added to the Penal Code in 1971 (Stats. 1971, ch. 1732, § 2, p. 3686) provided:
“(a) In all felony convictions, either by plea or by verdict, when the defendant has been in custody in any city, county, or city and county jail, all days of custody of the defendant from the date of arrest to the date on which the serving of the sentence imposed commences, including days served as a condition of probation in compliance with a court order, shall be credited upon his sentence, or credited to any fine which may be imposed, at the rate of not less than twenty dollars ($20) per day, or more, in the discretion of the court imposing the sentence. If the total number of days in custody exceeds the number of days of the sentence to be imposed, the entire sentence shall be deemed to have been served. In any case where the court has imposed both a prison sentence and a fine, any days to be credited to the defendant shall first be applied to the sentence imposed, and thereafter such remaining days, if any, shall be applied to the fine.
“(b) For the purposes of this section, credit shall be given only where the custody to be credited is attributable to charges arising from the same criminal act or acts for which the defendant has been convicted.
“(c) This section shall be applicable only to those persons who are delivered into the custody of the Director of Corrections on or after the effective date of this section.”
As originally enacted the section was applicable only to those persons delivered into the custody of the Director of Corrections on or after March 4, 1972, and would not have provided for presentence jail time credit for petitioner. However, this court in
In re Kapperman, supra,
In Young the court granted presentence jail time credit on the petitioner’s prison term, holding that since he could not afford bail due to his indigency, any denial of such credit would constitute a denial of equal protection of the laws, petitioner’s jail time amounting to an additional deprivation of liberty not imposed upon other defendants having the means to post bail and secure their liberty pending trial.
Section 2900.5 as amended in 1976 provides:
“(a) In all felony and misdemeanor convictions, either by plea or by verdict, when the defendant has been in custody, including but not limited to any time spent in a jail, camp, work furlough facility, halfway house, rehabilitation facility, hospital, prison, or similar institution, all days of custody of the defendant, including days served as a condition of probation in compliance with a court order, shall be credited upon his *653 sentence, or credited to any fine which may be imposed, at the rate of not less than thirty dollars ($30) per day, or more, in the discretion of the court-imposing the sentence. If the total number of days in custody exceeds the number of days of the sentence to be imposed, the entire sentence shall be deemed to have been served. In any case where the court has imposed both a prison or jail sentence and a fine, any days to be credited to the defendant shall first be applied to the sentence imposed, and thereafter such remaining days, if any, shall be applied to the fine.
“(b) For the purposes of this section, credit shall be given only where the custody to be credited is attributable to proceedings related to the same conduct for which the defendant has been convicted.
“(c) For the purposes of this section, ‘sentence’ includes any fine or period of imprisonment imposed as a condition of probation or otherwise ordered by a court in imposing or suspending the imposition of any sentence, and also includes any term of imprisonment, including any period of imprisonment prior to release on parole and any period of imprisonment and parole, prior to discharge, whether established or fixed by statute, by any court, or by any duly authorized administrative agency. The credits provided by this section shall not be considered in establishing or fixing any condition of probation, parole date, or term of imprisonment; but such credits shall be applied to any such condition of probation, parole date, or term of imprisonment no later than one week after it has been established or fixed.
“(d) It shall be the duty of the, court imposing the sentence to determine the total number, of days to be credited pursuant to the provisions of this section. The total number of days to be credited shall be contained in the abstract of judgment provided for in Section 1213.”
