Larry Frazier and Kenneth Schaffer appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (T. Emmet Clarie, Judge), affirming the dismissal of their consolidated petitions for writs of habeas corpus. The petitions claim that Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7a, which increases the good time credit per year for inmates sentenced on or after October 1, 1976, discriminates against prisoners sentenced prior to that date, including petitioners, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We affirm.
Frazier was originally sentenced on July 3, 1975 by the Connecticut Superior Court in Fairfield County to a term of not less than 54 nor more than 108 years, following his conviction of several criminal counts. On December 8,1976, he was resentenced to a term of not less than 30 years nor more than 60 years.
On July 3, 1973, Schaffer was sentenced to a term of 17 years to life by the Superior Court after his conviction for murder. Both appellants are currently serving their sentences and the Connecticut Commissioner of Corrections is computing good , time credit on their sentences based on the provisions of Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7 which applies to persons sentenced before October 1, 1976. 1
While appellants were serving these sentences, the Connecticut legislature enacted Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7a, 2 which applies only to prisoners sentenced on or after October 1, 1976, its effective date, and provides *33 more good time credit per year than its predecessor, § 18-7. A prisoner sentenced before October 1, 1976 who maintains a good conduct and work record receives under § 18-7 110 days of good time for each year of the first five years of a sentence and about 140 days for each subsequent year. On the other hand, a prisoner sentenced on or after October 1, 1976, with a similar conduct and work record, receives 120 days of good time for each year of the first five years of a sentence and 180 days for each subsequent year. Thus, the effect of Connecticut’s non-retroactive enlargement of good time benefits is to subject two persons convicted of the same offense and sentenced to the same maximum term to different periods of incarceration, depending on whether they were sentenced before or after October 1, 1976. Frazier and Schaffer argue that this statutory classification arbitrarily discriminates against persons sentenced before October 1, 1976, and thus violates their right to equal protection of the law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Each appellant exhausted his available state remedies by prosecuting unsuccessful appeals in the Connecticut courts. The Connecticut Supreme Court applied a “rational basis” test to the statutory classification and rejected the equal protection claim.
Frazier v. Manson,
After rejection of their equal protection claim by the Connecticut Supreme Court, Frazier and Schaffer filed their present federal petitions pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, which were consolidated and referred to Magistrate F. Owen Eagan. He recommended that they be dismissed on the ground that the nonretroactivity of § 18-7a could be rationally justified as furthering the legitimate state purpose of avoiding a legislative modification of a judicial sentence in contravention of Connecticut’s constitutional separation of powers. Judge Clarie approved the magistrate’s recommended ruling.
DISCUSSION
Legislation that does not employ suspect classifications or impinge on fundamental rights must be upheld under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment when the legislative means are rationally related to a legitimate government purpose.
Clements v. Fashing,
- U.S.-,
Appellants attempt to distinguish
McGinnis
on the ground that it dealt with good time credits relevant to computing minimum terms and parole eligibility, whereas here the good time computation affects maximum terms and discharge. However, the
McGinnis
court knew that the good time differences at issue there affected the time of release of prisoners to the community, resulting in longer incarceration for those in county jail custody without good time credits than for those in state prison.
Id.
In applying the rational basis test to determine whether the discriminatory classification under attack serves some legitimate purpose, we look first to expressions by the legislature on the subject. However, we need not necessarily stop there since “the search for the ‘actual’ or ‘primary’ purpose of a statute is likely to be elusive.”
Michael M. v. Sonoma County Superior Court,
Applying these principles here, the articulated purpose of § 18-7a, to eliminate multiple systems of computing and crediting good time that existed prior to 1976 because of different good time standards for different institutions in the state, while certainly a legitimate state purpose, does not justify the creation of a dual system for calculating good time based on date of sentence. The denial of the new good time *35 standards to pre-October 1976 prisoners is irrelevant to the legislature’s expressed purpose, which would have been achieved with equal effectiveness if the new standards had been made retroactive. Yet the legislature deliberately chose to exclude from the enlargement of good time benefits all persons sentenced prior to October 1, 1976. The enacted statute expressly states that it applies only to “person[s] sentenced to a term of imprisonment, on and after October 1, 1976.” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7a(a). Furthermore, the legislative history, though sparse, confirms the deliberateness of the nonretroaetivity provision. See, e.g., Conn.Gen. Assembly, Raised Committee Bill No. 5125, § 3 (“This act shall not apply to those persons sentenced to a term of imprisonment prior to the effective date of this act. Said persons shall continue their eligibility for such credit as was provided for prior to the effective date of this act”).
Absent any evidence that the legislature lacked a legitimate reason for the distinction or acted for an unlawful purpose, we may explore other rational justifiable bases. The state offers the justification advanced by it to the Connecticut Supreme Court and accepted by that court, i.e., that retroactivity would impose an excessive administrative burden on it. See
Stovall v. Denno,
Notwithstanding the inadequacy of the administrative convenience rationale offered by the state, the legislature’s classification may be justified by a legitimate discernible purpose which was suggested by the Connecticut Supreme Court and relied upon by the district court — the avoidance of encroachment by the legislature on the judiciary’s sentencing authority. The legislature could reasonably have relied upon the fact that in imposing sentence a judge frequently takes into account existing systems of computing good time. It could then have determined that the more liberal method of awarding good time credits under § 18-7a should not be made retroactive for the reason that if it had been in effect prior to October 1, 1976, longer sentences would have been imposed initially upon appellants and other similarly situated prisoners. We therefore conclude that it was rational for the Connecticut legislature to avoid a retroactive legislative modification of judicial sentences.
We need not decide whether the Connecticut legislature’s reluctance to intrude on judicial sentencing powers is constitutionally mandated under Connecticut’s separation of powers provision, Conn.Const. art. II, nor under art. IV, § 13, which vests the pardoning and clemency powers in the executive and not the legislature. See Comment,
Today’s Law and Yesterday’s Crime: Retroactive Application of Ameliorative Criminal Legislation,
121 U.Pa.L.Rev. 120, 145-47, 150 (1972). Nor is our decision affected by the Connecticut legislature’s grant on two occasions of other benefits to prisoners retroactively. See Conn.Gen.Stat. §§ 18-98a and 18-98b. To our knowledge, these stat
*36
utes have not been challenged as violative of Connecticut’s constitutional separation of powers. Moreover, even if the legislature might have granted some benefits retroactively it was not required to do so when it appeared to have a legitimate reason for denying them, as in this case. For the same reason we are unpersuaded by the decision of the Massachusetts legislature to confer enlarged good time benefits on prisoners sentenced prior to an act’s effective date, for time served after that date, apparently also without challenge under Massachusetts’ constitutional separation of powers provision. See
Comerford v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
We are not persuaded to deny rationality to the statute here under attack merely because the Assistant Attorney General of Connecticut has disavowed the legislative encroachment rationale for the challenged classification, apparently because he fears that such a ruling would jeopardize the legislature’s power to grant retroactive relief when appropriate. The fact that retroactivity may be permissible under other circumstances does not preclude the legislature from denying it where a rational basis exists for such action. While it is reasonable to accord some deference to the executive’s view of legislative intent in order to support a statute against constitutional challenge, we need not reject a plausible, legitimate purpose that rationally supports a statutory classification simply because, for tactical reasons, the state agent charged with enforcement of the statute disdains that purpose. We are particularly reluctant to do so when it appears that the highest court of the state impliedly subscribes to the rationale.
Frazier v. Manson, supra,
“[Tjhere is no requirement that two persons convicted of the same offense receive identical sentences.”
Williams v. Illinois, supra,
The order of the district court dismissing the writs of habeas corpus is affirmed.
Notes
. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7 provides in part:
“Any prisoner sentenced to a term of imprisonment prior to October 1, 1976, may, by good conduct and obedience to the rules of said institution, earn a commutation or diminution of his sentence, as follows: Sixty days for each year, and pro rata for a part of a year, of a sentence which is not for more than five years; and ninety days for the sixth and each subsequent year, and pro rata for a part of a year, and, in addition thereto, five days for each month as a meritorious time service award which may be granted in the discretion of the warden and the commissioner for exemplary conduct and meritorious achievement; provided any serious act of misconduct or insubordination or persistent refusal to conform to institution regulations occurring at any time during his confinement in said prison shall subject the prisoner, at the discretion of the warden and the commissioner, to the loss of all or any portion of the time earned.”
. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 18-7a provides in part:
“Good conduct credit for prisoners sentenced on and after October 1, 1976.
“(a) ... [A]ny person sentenced to a term of imprisonment, on and after October 1, 1976, and while still serving such sentence whether such sentence is for a definite, indefinite or indeterminate term, and regardless of the institution wherein the prisoner is confined may, by good conduct and obedience to the rules which have been established for the service of his sentence, earn a commutation or diminution of his sentence in the amount of ten days for each month, and pro rata for a part of a month, of a sentence which is for not more than five years, and fifteen days for each month and pro rata for a part of a month, for the sixth and each subsequent year of a sentence of more than five years.... Any act of misconduct or refusal to obey the rules which have been established for the service of his sentence shall subject the prisoner to the loss of all or any portion of such credit by the commissioner or his designee.”
. In a Memorandum of Decision, No. 238522 (April 22, 1980), the Superior Court for the District of Hartford-New Britain denied Schaffer’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, relying on
Frazier v. Commissioner of Corrections,
