delivered the opinion of the Court.
In these two cases we are asked to decide one question: Whether a judge, upon finding the accused guilty of violating probation, may order the sentence previously suspended therefor, to be served consecutively to the sentence the accused is then serving for conviction of a crime committed while on probation.
Kevin Patrick Kaylor (Kaylor) was convicted in the Circuit Court for Cecil County on July 17, 1975 of obtaining controlled dangerous substances by use of a false name and of obtaining a prescription drug by use of a false name in violation of Maryland Code (1957, 1976 Repl. Vol.), Article 27, §§ 287 (b), and 300 (g-1) (2). He was sentenced to three years for the first offense and two years for the second offense, the sentences to run concurrently. These sentences were suspended and Kaylor was placed on probation for three years.
On August 26, 1976, the Circuit Court for Cecil County, after a hearing, revoked Kaylor’s probation because he had been convicted of malicious destruction of property and receiving stolen goods by the Circuit Court for Kent County and of receiving stolen goods by the Circuit Court for Queen Anne’s County. The three year sentence, which had been suspended, was ordered to be served consecutively to the sentences Kaylor was then serving for the subsequent offenses. On appeal, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed *68 the judgment in an unreported per curiam opinion, Kaylor v. State, No. 1125, September Term, 1977, filed May 25, 1978. On August 18, 1978, this Court granted Kaylor’s petition for a writ of certiorari.
John Butts (Butts) entered a guilty plea to assault charges in the Criminal Court of Baltimore and was sentenced to three years imprisonment on February 23,1976. This sentence was suspended and Butts was placed on probation for five years. On July 6,1977 Butts was convicted of assault with intent to murder in the Criminal Court of Baltimore and sentenced to ten (10) years imprisonment. Butts’ probation was revoked on November 3, 1977 and his original three year sentence was directed to run consecutively to the ten year sentence he was then serving. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the trial court’s disposition in Butts v. State, No. 1319, September Term, 1977, filed June 19, 1978 (unreported). This Court granted Butts’ petition for a writ of certiorari on September 7, 1978 and directed that Butts’ cause be consolidated with that of Kaylor.
Kaylor and Butts contend that the power of the courts to suspend sentences and order probation is derived solely from statutory authorization. 1 They argue that since there is no specific statutory authorization to direct that a suspended sentence be served consecutively to a sentence subsequently imposed the courts lack the authority and power to order such disposition. The result urged upon us is that when probation is revoked the suspended sentence starts to run from the date of revocation and that only concurrent sentences are proper.
The State, in reply, contends that a judge has the power to designate the time at which a sentence will commence and has the discretion to run a sentence consecutively to another sentence. The State argues that if a trial judge cannot make the earlier sentence cumulative to the subsequently imposed sentence a probationer will be able to avoid punishment for his original offense.
*69
Initially, we note that imposition of sentence in a criminal case is a matter within the discretion of the judge. The authority of the court to sentence a convicted defendant derives from the court’s power to try an accused person for a crime committed within its jurisdiction.
Rigor v. The State,
The appellants cite the opinion of this Court in
State ex rel. Sonner v. Shearin,
A court has a power to impose whatever sentence it deems fit as long as it does not offend the constitution and is within statutory limits as to maximum and minimum penalties.
Reynolds v. Warden,
This Court has long adhered to the position that consecutive sentences are a proper exercise of the trial court’s discretion.
Martin v. State, supra; Yantz v. Warden,
Jurisdiction to inflict cumulative punishment is dependent, not on the accident that the offender has been convicted twice or oftener before the same tribunal, but upon the fact that distinct violations of the law have been committed by one individual whose malefactions merit separate and, therefore, cumulative penalties. Authority to sentence at all is incident to and a consequence of the power to try an accused, and the right to try is founded on the fact that the crime was committed within the jurisdiction of the Court and upon the further fact that the prisoner after being indicted is present in person before the Court during the trial. It is not material how or by what means he was brought into Court, as will be shown later on in discussing another phase of the case. If the Court which imposed a sentence that is to begin upon the expiration of a prior punishment inflicted by some other tribunal of the same commonwealth, has jurisdiction of the offense charged and over the culprit it can unquestionably proceed to try him and upon conviction can sentence him for that violation of the law by imposing a cumulative penalty. If this were not so the subsequent offense might remain unpunished by reason of the death of material witnesses during the running of the prior sentence. [101 Md. at 470 (emphasis supplied)].
We conclude, therefore, that a judge may, in the exercise of his discretion, impose consecutive sentences for distinct violations of the law, thus preventing duly convicted offenders from escaping punishment for the commission of their criminal acts.
There is authority in the federal courts which supports this conclusion. In
United States v. Lustig,
In reinstating a sentence upon revocation of probation, the district court, to insure that the defendant is punished both for the original conviction and the subsequent offense, may in its discretion order that the sentence be served consecutive to a federal sentence for an intervening crime____Consecutive sentences are an appropriate mechanism for imposing a distinct punishment for each of two criminal acts. The district court’s imposition of the consecutive sentence in this case was not improper. [555 F. 2d at 753 ].
See United States v. Tacoma,
*73
One final contention by appellants must be disposed of.
2
Appellants refer us to two cases which they claim stand for the proposition that a judge who finds that a probationer has committed a crime while on probation has only the power to revoke that probation, and that consequently the sentence, the suspension of which is stricken on revocation of probation, must begin immediately upon revocation of probation. The first case cited by appellants,
Hite v. State,
The second case cited by appellants,
Coleman v. State,
When the sentence in a criminal case is imposed and execution of the imposed sentence is conditionally suspended, as distinguished from the suspension of the imposition of sentence, and the defendant placed on probation, and thereafter the probation is stricken out, the defendant should not be re-sentenced. His original sentence is effective with the probationary provisions stricken out. [231 Md. at 222 (emphasis supplied)].
The appellants argue that this language from
Coleman
means that the imposition of consecutive sentences upon them amounted to a “re-sentencing” which is impermissible. We cannot accept this contention. The number of years’ imprisonment which appellants would have had to serve for their original convictions, but for their being placed on probation, was not restated or changed in any way by the courts which revoked their probation. The courts which revoked appellants’ probation performed the act for the first time, of determining when the original sentences would be served. That act had not yet been performed because the execution of the appellants’ sentences had expressly been suspended. There was no duplication of actions between the original sentencing and probation revocation courts. Thus no “re-sentencing” occurred. We interpret that portion of the
Coleman
excerpt which states, “His original sentence is
effective
with the probationary provisions stricken out,” [emphasis supplied] as meaning that there is no requirement for a court revoking probation to duplicate the original sentencing court’s action by restating the sentence imposed
*75
upon the probationer. The only task remaining to the judges who revoked the appellants’ probations was to order the execution of their sentences.
Cf. Bernstein v. United States,
Lest appellants forget, we remind them that probation is a matter of grace, not entitlement, which permits a wrongdoer to keep his freedom “as long as he conducts himself in a manner consonant with established communal standards and the safety of society.”
Scott v. State,
We conclude that it was within the trial court’s discretion to decide whether the appellants’ sentences should run concurrently or consecutively. Under the circumstances of these cases there was no abuse of that discretion in requiring those sentences to be served consecutive to the sentences they were serving when probation was revoked. We affirm the decisions of the Court of Special Appeals.
Judgments of the Court of Special Appeals affirmed; costs to be paid by appellants.
Notes
. Maryland Code (1957, 1976 Repl. Vol., 1977 Supp.), Article 27, Section 641A authorizes the trial courts of Maryland to suspend a sentence and release the defendant on probation.
. Appellants had also suggested in passing that we would be invading their constitutional rights if we were to hold that a sentence the suspension of which has been stricken may be executed consecutively to a sentence being served at the time of probation revocation, in light of our past rulings that probationers were not in every instance entitled to the appointment of counsel at revocation hearings. Crenshaw v. State,
