295 A.2d 569 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1972
The plaintiff in this mandamus action, ancillary to which he has filed a motion for immediate issue of a writ of mandamus, requests the court to order the defendant commissioner to credit him with 1106 days which he seeks to have deducted from the minimum sentence of four years annexed to his term of life imprisonment by the Connecticut board of pardons. If his claim is valid, he is at present eligible to appear before the board of parole for parole consideration. Succinctly stated, it is his contention that by virtue of §§
The parties filed a stipulation of facts, the cardinal ones so far as the issue herein is concerned being the following: On May 21, 1969, the plaintiff was arrested on a murder charge. From May 21, 1969, to June 23, 1971, he was confined in a community correctional center pursuant to a mittimus and denied bail; that period amounts to 763 days. On June 23, 1971, the plaintiff was sentenced to a term of life for the crime of murder — second degree. On October 4, 1971, the Connecticut board of pardons reduced the plaintiff's sentence to a minimum of four years. If the plaintiff comes within the provisions of §
It is noted that the stipulation of facts submitted to the court specifies simply that the board of pardons reduced the plaintiff's sentence to a minimum of four years. No further facts were presented to the court relative to the action of that board. No change was made with reference to the life-term aspect of the sentence which the plaintiff has been serving.
If the board of pardons had commuted the sentence from life imprisonment to expire on a date certain, the status of the plaintiff would have automatically changed, entitling him to the credits he now claims via §§
This court is concerned, therefore, with the following sections of the General Statutes: Sections
Section
Section
Section
Section
Section
Prior to 1931, the statute relative to parole of prisoners made no mention of those serving a life sentence. Rev. 1930 § 6509. In 1931, legislation was passed amending § 6509 as follows: "Any person sentenced to the State Prison, after having been in confinement under such sentence for a period not less than the minimum term, or, if sentenced for life, after having been in confinement under such sentence for a period not less than twenty-five years, may be allowed to go at large on parole . . . ." Cum. Sup. 1933, § 1185b. The statute as amended in 1935 omitted "a period" in two places. Cum. Sup. 1935, § 1730c. In 1939, the statute was further amended as follows: "Any person sentenced to the State Prison, after having been in confinement under such sentence for not less than the minimum term, or, if sentenced for life, after having been in confinement under such sentence for not less than *25
twenty-five years, less such time, not exceeding a total of five years, as may have been earned under the provisions of section 783c [now §
Sections
The legislature is presumed to have, in enacting a law, knowledge of existing relevant statutes so as to make one consistent body of law. Hartley v.Vitiello,
Again, at the 1971 session of the legislature, §
To put it briefly, the failure of the General Assembly to alter the statute (§
To allow the prisoner serving a life term credit in excess of five years of "earned" time by granting him rights accorded non-life-term prisoners would fly in the face of the oft-expressed determination of the legislature that one serving a life term must serve, absent pardons board and/or parole board action, at least twenty years — assuming he qualifies for the five-year "good time" provision — in order to obtain the automatic right to appear before the board of parole.
The court has taken judicial notice of the "Report of the Legislative Committee on Parole Eligibility" submitted to the 1971 General Assembly as provided by House Joint Resolution 282 of the 1969 Session of the General Assembly. The committee submitting the report consisted of legislators, the chairman of the board of parole, the commissioner of correction, and other penal authorities. That report emphasizes: "Connecticut is joined only by Rhode Island in requiring that 20 years must be served of any life sentences." The report makes no mention of any reduction of the twenty-year provision.2 That is to say, it makes no reference to statutes which the plaintiff claims pertain to his status and to the benefits of which he claims he is entitled. The report concludes that "no immediate action is deemed necessary, [but] it is urged that this [1971] session of the General Assembly authorize continuing study of provisions for parole eligibility." The session of the General Assembly to which this report was referred *28
is the session which reenacted §
It is readily apparent that, although having many opportunities to amend §
It is interesting to note, furthermore, that while §§
"It is a well-settled principle of construction that specific terms covering the given subject matter will prevail over general language of . . . another statute *29
which might otherwise prove controlling." Kepner
v. United States,
Furthermore, although the court was not presented with any evidence concerning the meeting of the board of pardons, we assume, without basing this decision on that assumption, that the board, in granting the plaintiff the privilege of earning the right to be considered for parole after serving four years of a life sentence, had before it the complete history of the plaintiff's presentence incarceration, including its duration.
In conclusion, it is noted that the defendant has stipulated that if §
It is adjudged that the plaintiff's request for an order in the nature of a mandamus directing the defendant commissioner of correction to credit the plaintiff with 1106 days to be applied to the plaintiff's sentence of June 23, 1971, as modified by the board of pardons on October 4, 1971, be, and it is hereby, denied.