MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff petitioner brings this civil rights action seeking monetary compen
On February 7, 1961, Logan was sentenced to twenty years confinement upon a conviction for first degree murder. Logan was paroled on April 15, 1969, and while out on parole he was arrested on statutory burglary and malicious wounding charges and was convicted for those two offenses in the Circuit Court for the City of Colonial Heights, Virginia, on August 5, 1971. He was sentenced to a term of three years on the statutory burglary conviction and eight years on the malicious wounding conviction, to be served consecutively. On August 14, 1973, his 1961 conviction was voided and he now seeks both compensation and sentence credit for the eight years and ten weeks served under that conviction.
Compensation for time spent confined pursuant to subsequently voided conviction is unavailable in a § 1983 action. The Eleventh Amendment bars exaction of compensation from the State. See Edelman v. Jordan,
Logan also prays that the time that he served under the void 1961 conviction be credited to the time that he is now serving on the 1971 convictions. Defendant’s motion to dismiss this “credit” claim is well taken because a prisoner has no right to have credited to a subsequent sentence time served under a prior void unrelated conviction. Miller v. Cox,
Accordingly, defendant’s motion for summary judgment shall be granted and the complaint/petition shall be dismissed.
