Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The question on this appeal is whether a prisoner, who was convicted of murder in the year 1911 and sentenced to life imprisonment and who has served five years and has obeyed all the rules and regulations of the institution in which he is confined, is entitled to a-parole as a matter of right which he may enforce by writ of mandamus against the Board of Prison Commissioners.
The case arises in the following way: Plaintiff, Tom Neal, was indicted by the grand jury of Whitley county for the crime of murder committed in the month of June, 1911. On a trial before a jury in the month of September, 1911, the jury found him guilty and fixed his punishment at life imprisonment. In the month of October, 1911, he was sentenced and taken to the state penitentiary, where he is now confined. On October 14, 1916, and after he had served five years, he applied to the Board of Prison Commissioners for a parole, which was refused. Thereupon he brought this suit in the Franklin circuit court against Henry Hines and others, members of the Board of Prison Commissioners, to obtain a writ of mandamus requiring them to grant him a parole. In addition to the foregoing facts, .he alleged that he had obeyed all the rules and regulations of the institution in which he was confined. A demurrer was sustained to the petition and the petition dismissed.
Plaintiff appeals.
In the year 1910, the legislature enacted the Indeterminate Sentence Law. C.
At the same session the General Assembly passed an act repealing the parole act of March 21, 1900, and conferring upon the State Board of Penitentiary Commissioners the power to parole prisoners under certain conditions. C.
By an act approved March 20, 1912, the parole act of 1910 was amended, and it was provided that in all cases of felony where there was a judgment of conviction, the judge who tried the case should make a statement of all facts proven on the trial which he might deem important or necessary for the full comprehension of the case, which statement should be filed with the papers in the case and made a. part of the record and transmitted by the clerk to the Board of Prison Commissioners, together with a transcript of the record containing the indictment or information and the judgment rendered. The act further provided that upon the said record and the prisoner’s record while under confinement, the commissioners might in their discretion grant or refuse the'parole or final discharge. C.
In the year 1914, the General Assembly passed an act repealing all acts in conflict therewith and conferring upon the State Board of Penitentiary Commissioners,' with the approval of the Governor, the power, to parole and to permit to go and remain at large, outside the buildings and enclosures of the same, any person that is now confined or that hereafter may be confined in any penitentiary, reformatory, house of reform or other penal institution of the state now placed, or hereafter .placed under the management or control of said board.” C.
By an act approved March 23, 1916, the parole law was further amended so as to make eligible to a parole all prisoners who had served half their sentence with the exception of persons convicted for life or for sixteen years or longer, who were not eligible unless they had served at least eight years. This act also requires the approval of the Governor before a parole can be granted. C. 38, P. 428, Acts 1916.
In support of plaintiff’s right to a mandamus, counsel for plaintiff argues as followsPlaintiff was convicted under the Indeterminate Sentence Law of 1910. That law provided that a person sentenced to life imprisonment under its provisions shall be eligible to parole as may now or hereafter be prescribed by -law. Thereafter, and at the same session, the legislature made a life prisoner who had served five years eligible to a parole. Plaintiff’s rights were fixed by the two acts in question and, having served for five years, he is entitled to a parole as a matter of right under the rule laid down in Wilson v. Commonwealth,
It is true that in the cases of Wilson v. Commonwealth, supra, and Board of Prison Commissioners v. DeMoss,
Judgment affirmed.
