15 S.E.2d 519 | Ga. | 1941
Lead Opinion
1. Where after conviction in June, 1940, upon two misdemeanor charges, and sentences aggregating twenty-four months servitude, the convict, on December 26, 1940, was granted a pardon on condition that she would pay a fine of $200, and where, although on delivery of such pardon the grantee was released from imprisonment, she did not tender the fine until February 24, 1941, held, that the pardon was subject to payment of the fine as a condition precedent, and, having fixed no definite time for payment, contemplated payment within a reasonable time.
2. In such case, the pardon lapsed by its own terms before the fine was tendered, and afforded no basis for a writ of habeas corpus after rearrest of the grantee.
Annie L. Moore filed her application for the writ against P. H. Lawrence as superintendent and warden of the State penitentiary in Tattnall County, making the following allegations: In June, *442
1940, she was convicted of the offense of lottery on two counts, and was sentenced to twelve months servitude on each count, the sentences to run consecutively. On December 26, 1940, the Governor granted to her a conditional pardon, the condition being that she would pay a fine of $200, the pardon "to become effective only after said fine has been paid." The petitioner tendered to the proper authorities the sum of $200 in full compliance with the condition imposed, which said tender was refused. She has at all times been ready and willing to pay the said sum, and now tenders the same into court. The date of the tender did not appear from the application, but in the response it was alleged that the tender was not made until February 24, 1941, after a bench warrant had been issued for the arrest of petitioner upon the theory that the fine had not been paid within a reasonable time, and that the conditional pardon had ceased to be effective for any purpose. The bill of exceptions recites that evidence was heard, and complains that the judgment was contrary to law and "to the evidence in the case." It further recites that a certified copy of the conditional pardon was introduced; but the other evidence is not stated either literally or in substance, and does not appear in the record. The judge gave as a reason for denying the writ, and remanding the applicant to custody, that the Governor had no authority to change the punishment by imposing a fine, and therefore that the conditional pardon was a nullity.
The applicant, after conviction in June, 1940, upon two misdemeanor charges, was sentenced to twelve-months servitude under each conviction, the sentences to run consecutively. On December 26, 1940, the Governor granted to her a pardon on the condition that she would pay a fine of $200. The applicant alleged tender of the fine to the proper authority, but did not show the date of the tender. It was alleged in the response that the fine was not tendered until February 24, 1941. The bill of exceptions recites that a certified copy of the conditional pardon was introduced in evidence, and shows that still other evidence was heard; but the other evidence was not set forth and does not appear in the record. In the circumstances, it is to be presumed that the evidence sustained the respondent's allegation as to the time of such tender. Beck Gregg Hardware Co. v. Crum,
We think it is true that the Governor had authority to impose such condition. Muckle v. Clark,
In this case it appeared, as a matter of law, that the condition was not complied with in a reasonable time. The pardon had thus lapsed by its own terms before the fine was tendered. No recall by the Governor was necessary to nullify it, and the belated tender by the grantee could not revive it. CompareSimpson v. Sanders,
Even though it should be assumed that in such case the Governor would be authorized to cause release of the prisoner for some appreciable time, and that the pardon here under consideration had this legal effect, still it could not properly be taken as implying an intention to restore liberty generally before compliance with its terms. The most that could be said is that the liberty allowed meanwhile was limited to the purpose of compliance, and as thus restricted was intended to last only for such period of time as would be reasonably necessary to report to the proper officer for the purpose of paying the fine, thus meeting the condition precedent and rendering the pardon absolute. In determining what would be a reasonable time for such performance, a number of conditions might require consideration, such as distance, weather, means of conveyance, and similar matters without the grantee's control and affecting *445 ability to perform immediately. Financial ability should not be considered, where it was not mentioned as a part of the condition. Presumably the Governor did not take into consideration the applicant's financial condition. Otherwise a convict might be at large indefinitely, or might never comply with the condition necessary to make the pardon effective. The time of performance could have been expressly stated, and in that case the time fixed in the order would have controlled. Also, the case might have been different as related to time if the Governor had required the applicant to remain in custody pending performance of the condition precedent. Whether the pardon in this case did contemplate release from imprisonment before compliance with its condition, the record shows that the applicant herself treated the order as requiring such release; and in this view it should be said as a matter of law that she waited an unreasonable time, approximately two months, before offering such compliance. The pardon having ceased to be effective for any purpose before the fine was tendered, no other judgment could properly have been rendered except the one remanding the prisoner to custody.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
Addendum
It is suggested in the motion for rehearing that the decision affirming the judgment of the trial court was based upon a misunderstanding of the facts, in that this court "seemed to be under the impression that at the time the fine was tendered on February 24, 1941, this plaintiff in error had already entered upon her service in the State prison." It is then stated that as a matter of fact the plaintiff in error, the applicant in the court below, had not begun service of the sentence at the time the conditional pardon was granted on December 26, 1940, or at the time the fine was tendered on February 24, 1941, but was at liberty on bond after conviction, and tendered the fine pending a proceeding to forfeit the bond and before the date of the hearing "on said bond forfeiture." The record does show the facts as thus recited in the motion for rehearing, but it also discloses that the bond was given in connection with an application for certiorari to review the verdict and judgment of conviction in the criminal court of Fulton County, and that on December 30, 1940, just four days after the conditional pardon was granted, the applicant by her attorney appeared *446 in the superior court and dismissed her petition for certiorari. We did not overlook these facts in considering the case, but did fail by inadvertence to mention them either in the statement or in the opinion. We did not consider that the result should be changed thereby, but in the circumstances counsel were justified in inferring that our decision was based upon a misapprehension of the facts.
During the time that the applicant was at liberty on bond, she was not entirely free but was merely transferred from the custody of the law to the legal though friendly custody of her surety, whose dominion was "a continuance of the original imprisonment."Coleman v. State,
Other matters referred to in the motion are sufficiently covered by the original decision.
Rehearing denied. All the Justices concur.