Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Two young men, Jackson and Sims, were jointly indicted in the Grant circuit court for the crime of grand larceny, to which charge they pleaded guilty. A trial being had, the jury returned a verdict reading:
“We, the jury, find the defendants guilty and fix their punishment at eighteen months in the penitentiary.”
Jackson was only nineteen and Sims eighteen years oí age, and these facts having been made known to the court, the defendants were sentenced to the house of reform at Greendale, instead of the penitentiary, at Frankfort. From the orders of the circuit court we learn that this was done at the instance of the defendants and by the consent of the attorney for the Commonwealth. The defendants were carried to the reform school and there confined under its rules for ten days. In the meantime they applied to the judge of the Fayette circuit court for a writ of habeas corp%is, which was granted, and upon hearing they were discharged from the institution because of their age, and remanded to the Grant county jail. When this was done, the judge of the Grant circuit court called a special term, and the Commonwealth’s attorney gave notice to the defendants that he would on a day named, move the court to correct that part of the original judgment whereby the defendants were
Appellants contend:
(1) That the Grant circuit court lost jurisdiction of this case after it adjourned its trial term, and had no power to enter any order in the case at the special or any subsequent term.
(2) They having served time in the house of .reform under the first judgment, the trial court is barred from entering a second judgment which would operate as a second jeopardy in violation of defendants constitutional rights.
After the verdict of the .jury, the court immediately pronounced sentence upon them and they were soop thereafter carried'to the house of reform; the orders were signed and court closed in due course. Appellants insist that the court did not thereafter have jurisdiction to enter any order in the case. This is ordinarily true, but in a criminal case of this nature the rule is different. Most courts are averse to discharging criminals who have been duly convicted when the application for their release is by petition for habeas corpus, based on some error, omission or mistake in the sentence which might have been cured or corrected by appeal, and this rule is more in consonance with reason and justice than that which recognizes the right of the defendant to be discharged for some technical error committed by the trial court. This question was before this court in the case of Combs v. Commonwealth, 160 Ky. 396, and in passing upon it, we said:
The general rule as laid down by text writers and courts is much as stated in the Combs ease: “Changes in the sentence, however, which do not alter the punishment but only change the time or place of its infliction may be made at a subsequent term. 16 C. J. 1316. ’ ’ Supporting this text cases from New York, North Carolina, Wyoming and Kentucky are cited.
The mile in this jurisdiction is well stated in the Combs case above cited, and we do not incline to the rule of discharging defendants for errors made by the trial court in the sentence pronounced. The trial and verdict in this case were regular and no complaint is made of either by -appellants. Only that part of the judgment which sentenced the prisoners to the house of reform instead of to the penitentiary was erroneous, and the judgment went so far as to properly provide in case the defendants, or either of them, arrived at the age of twenty-one years before they had served the full eighteen months’ sentence imposed by the verdict, the keeper of the house of reform should deliver defendants to the state penitentiary, “there to be confined at hard labor for the balance of said eighteen months confinement imposed by the jury in said case.”
Looking to the substance rather than to form, and to the merits rather than to useless rules of procedure, this
Judgment reversed.