delivered the, opinion of the Court *
December 10, 1930, in the federal district court for the southern district of New York, petitioner was'convicted on his plea of guilty of the crime of stealing from the United States mails. By order of the court, sentence was suspended and he was discharged from the custody of the marshal.
At a Subsequent term of court, on June 17, 1931, petitioner was sentenced by another judge to four yfears imprisonment. A motion to vacate the sentence was denied; and. a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed in the federal district court for the northern district of Georgia, praying the discharge of petitioner on the ground that the court imposing the sentence wás without jurisdiction to do so. After a hearing the writ was dis-. missed and petitioner remanded to custody. The circuit court of appeals affirmed the judgment. 56 F. (2d) 152.
Petitioner seeks a reversal here on the ground that the order of December 10 constitutes a permanent suspension of sentence, void tinder the decision of this court in Ex parte United States, 242 U. S. 27; and that with the expiration of the term the trial court 'was without, power to sentence petitioner. The Solicitor General vigorously opposes the contention that the effect of the order was *210 to suspend sentence permanently; but, without' determining that question, we are of opinion that if such was . the. effect, nevertheless,, the court was not deprived of power to impose sentence at a subsequent term.
.The decisions on the point are in conflict. The greater number support the view of petitioner; but we are of opinion that the weight of reason is the other way. Several of the cases holding with petitioner are set forth in
Mintie
v.
Biddle,
15 F. (2d) 931. While these cases and others are emphatically to the effect that a permanent suspension of sentence is void, and that the court thereby, with the passing of the term, loses jurisdiction, we find no convincing reason in any of them for the latter conclusion. The decision in the
Mintie
case rests primarily upon. considerations affecting the accused. Support for its conclusion is found by .the court in the supposition that during the suspension the accused can “ make no plans, enter into no contracts, engage in no permanent occupation, and bind himself to no obligations, or create any pérmanent ties, business or domestic.” .But it is hard to see the relevancy of'these difficulties to the question of jurisdiction. They equally would be present if sentence were definitely postponed from term to term; and power to that extent is not doubted. Moreover, since the suspension order is void, the accused is not bound to rest under the supposed hardship. He may at any time put an end to it by requesting the court to pronounce judgment, which the court no doubt would do unless good 'cause to the contrary were made to appear. In the ab-' sence of such request he must be held to have consented to the indefinite delay and cannot complain.
Hoggett
v.
State,
101. Miss. 269, 271;
In a criminal casé final judgment means sentence; and a void order purporting permanently to suspend'sentence
*211
is neither a final nor a valid judgment.
United States
v.
Lecato, supra,
at p. 695;
State
v.
Bongiorno,
96 N. J. L. 318;
' The order here under review being ineffectual to confer immunity from punishment; the conclusion that such immunity existed must rest upon the bare fact that, without any saving provision, the term at which the accused was convicted but not sentenced had passed. But that foundation for the conclusion at once vanishes in the face of therule that where judgment has not been pronounced upon a verdict during the term at which it was rendered, the cause continue? on the docket and necessarily passes over to a succeeding term for final judgment or other appropriate action.
Walker
v.
Moser,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The opinion was announced .by • the Chief Justice, Mr. Justice Sutherland being absent from the Bench.
