This аppeal challenges a circuit court order quashing appellant’s writ of habeas corpus.
*413 Prior to Jаnuary 5, 1975, South Dakota had a district county court system which had jurisdiction over juvenile offenders. Under the terms of SDCL 26-11-4, which includеd a transfer hearing, a district court could divest itself of jurisdiction over a juvenile and transfer the case to circuit court where the juvenile would be tried as an adult.
On November 20, 1974, Leslie Moeller (appellant) was arrested fоr grand larceny in Bennett County, South Dakota. He was a seventeen-year-old juvenile at the time of his arrest. The distriсt county court entered an order transferring appellant from district county court to circuit court to be triеd as an adult. No transfer hearing was held in accordance with SDCL 26-11-4. On January 10, 1975, appellant appeared before the circuit court, pled guilty to the charge of grand larceny, and was sentenced to one year imрrisonment in the South Dakota State Penitentiary.
On September 22, 1983, appellant pled guilty to third offense driving while under the influеnce of an alcoholic beverage (DWI). He was sentenced to serve one year in the state penitentiary. Appellant applied for habeas corpus to have the 1975 grand larceny conviction held null and void so he would be eligible for parole. The court quashed the writ and appellant was subsequently parolеd, released therefrom, and thereby completed his sentence. Thus, we are called upon to determinе whether this appeal is moot.
Traditionally, the satisfaction of a sentence by the service of a prisоn term renders the case moot and precludes a direct review of the conviction or sentence.
Indeed, the United States Supreme Court stated in
Sibron v. New York,
In
Maxwell, supra,
this court acknowledged the United States Supreme Court’s reference to these collateral consequences. Thеre, petitioner appealed from a circuit court’s dismissal of his petition for post-conviction reliеf challenging a parole revocation. Subsequent to the dismissal, petitioner was released from prison following the service of his sentence, and we held that the appeal was therefore rendered moot. We cited
State v. Wilson,
In the instant case, appellant argues that while he is now a free man, his conviction for grand larceny in 1975 is in itself sufficient reason for the court to consider the circuit court’s decision to quash his writ of habeas corpus. Appellant speсulates as to the possible consequences of this third felony conviction upon his future. In
Carafas v. LaVallee,
The statutes relating to habeas corpus clearly contemplate that an applicant is not entitled to the benefit of a writ unless he is imprisoned or restrained of his liberty. SDCL 21-27-1 provides that any person ‘committed or detained, imprisoned or restrained of his or her liberty, under any color or pretense whatever’ may apply for a writ of habeas corpus. SDCL 21-27-3 requires that an applicant for writ shall set forth the facts ‘concerning his detention and in whose custody he is detained.’ SDCL 21-27-16 provides that if on the return it appears that ‘the applicant is in custody by virtue of process from any court legally constituted’, he сan be discharged only for one or more of the causes therein specified.
In keeping with our decision in Painter, supra, we hold that, inasmuch as aрpellant is neither committed, detained, imprisoned, nor otherwise restrained of his liberty, the appeal is moot and it is unnecessary to consider the merits of this appeal.
The appeal is dismissed.
