173 Mass. 550 | Mass. | 1899
The petitioner was found guilty of manslaughter, and on July 12,1894, was duly sentenced to the state prison for four years. Shortly before his term would have expired he
We think that the plain implication of the statute is, that if a convict, who has been adjudged insane and has been removed from the state prison or the reformatory prison to the State asylum for insane criminals, recovers before the term of his sentence expires, he is to be returned to the prison from which he was removed in order that he may serve out the remainder of his sentence; but if he does not recover before his sentence expires, or if in the judgment of the superintendent and trustees of the asylum he should not be returned, he is to remain in confinement in the asylum as an insane person, subject to be discharged at any time, as in the case of other lunatics, when it appears that he is not insane, or is not dangerous to himself or to others, and ought not longer to be confined. Ample provision is made for the discharge of such persons, (Pub. Sts. c. 87, §§ 42-44, and St. 1898, c. 433, § 13,) and the Legislature, having provided for the removal of the convict to an insane asylum if he was found on examination to be insane, well may have been content to leave the matter of his discharge, if he was still insane at the expiration of his sentence, to be governed by the laws applicable to the discharge of other lunatics. The provision for his return to prison, “ there to remain pursuant to the original sentence computing the time of his detention or confinement in the hospital [asylum] as a part of the time of his imprisonment,” plainly implies that he is not to be returned unless a portion of his term of imprisonment remains unexpired. His continued confinement after the expiration of his sentence in an asylum for insane criminals would be in accordance with the policy established by the State, that the criminal insane or persons who have been vicious in their lives should be confined in an institution especially devoted to their care. St. 1894, c. 251. St. 1895, c. 390.
We discover nothing unconstitutional in the statute under which the petitioner was removed to the asylum and is detained
The ruling of the court that the petitioner was not entitled to a discharge and denying the writ was correct and should be affirmed. So ordered.