(After stating 'the foregoing facts.) An amendment of a sentence after the term of court has expired should not be allowed. It was beyond the power of the court under the facts in this case to modify, amend, or revise the sentences.
Porter
v.
Garmony,
148
Ga.
261 (
Testimony by the former judge of the city court and by the clerk of the city court as to the oral pronouncement of the judge when the sentences were imposed would not modify or change the rule that sentences cannot be amended after the expiration of the term of court at which they were imposed. Oral declarations of the judge constitute no part of the sentence until they have been put in writing and duly entered as such.
Freeman
v.
Brown,
115
Ga.
27 (
The judgment of the habeas corpus court in remanding custody to the warden in this case must stand or fall on the language employed in the original sentences. “If a defendant is found guilty of more than one offense, and the imprisonment under one sentence is to commence on the expiration of the other, the sentence must so state; else the two punishments will be executed concurrently.”
Fortson
v.
Elbert County,
117
Ga.
149 (
It appears that the plaintiff in error entered two pleas of guilty on misdemeanor charges, one for public drunkenness, and the other for assault; that the pleas were entered in the same court, on the same date, at the same time; and that the sentences were imposed by the same judge, with the notation on each sentence as above stated. It is nowhere contended, either in the' bill of exceptions or in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, that the language, “These sentences to run consecutively,” is not a part of the original sentence imposed in each instance. From the language above quoted from the sentences, can the intention of the trial judge at the time of their imposition be fairly ascertained?
In construing a sentence, the language of the sentence should be given its ordinary legal meaning and should be construed so as to give effect, if possible, to the intention of the judge who imposed it. Fredericks
v.
Snook, 8 Fed. 2d, 968. See also
The judge hearing this ease, in his judgment, stated in part as follows: “From the face of the records themselves, it seems apparent that the purpose and legal effect of the two sentences was that they should run consecutively.” The record in this court convinces us that the above conclusion of the trial judge was not unauthorized. We therefore hold’ that it was not error, for any reason assigned, to remand the prisoner to the custody of the warden.
Judgment affirmed.
