64 N.E.2d 872 | Ill. | 1946
At the preceding September term of court we granted William F. Krell leave to file a petition for writ of habeas corpus. He is confined in the Illinois State Penitentiary at Joliet and the warden of that prison is respondent.
The facts set forth in the answer of the warden and Krell's reply thereto show the following: Krell was indicted in November, 1920, in the criminal court of Cook county for the crime of robbery while armed with a gun. On a trial by jury he was found guilty and on January 15, 1921, was committed to the State penitentiary for a term of years not to exceed the maximum fixed by statute. The statutory penalty for the crime charged at that time was not less than ten years or for life. (Hurd's Ill. Rev. Stat. 1921, chap. 38, par. 246.) Krell entered the penitentiary *425
and commenced service of said sentence immediately after his commitment and was detained there until January 23, 1922, when he was released under the circumstances hereinafter shown. A writ of error was sued out of this court to review the record of his conviction. The cause was submitted on the common-law record and on December 22, 1921, the judgment was affirmed. (People v.Krell,
It appears by the answer of the warden that Krell failed to file a proper transcript of record in the Supreme Court of the United States and on January 24, 1923, that court entered an order dismissing the cause. On May 2, following, a mandate was filed in this court and on May 7, the clerk of this court issued the further mandate to the criminal court of Cook county. Krell did not thereafter surrender to the warden nor was default entered on his bail bond. No action appears to have been taken to return Krell to the penitentiary until February 20, 1939. On the latter date, the clerk of the criminal court issued a certified copy of the original mittimus and within a few days he was returned to prison where he has since been detained serving the sentence imposed by the judgment of January 15, 1921.
It is contended that the long lapse of time — approximately twelve years and one month — between Krell's release from prison and his reincarceration has rendered his further detention in prison unlawful. To negative any claim that Krell was a fugitive from justice during such period, which it was evidently thought would place his case in a different category, he sets forth facts in his reply showing that of the twelve years and one month he was out of the Illinois prison he was in Cook county on two different periods, the first from January 2, 1925, to May 1, 1927, twenty days of which he was in the custody of the police officers, and the second from November, 1929, to September 2, 1932, during which he served a term of one year in the Cook county jail and one year in the house of correction. It appears from the answer of the respondent that the greater part of the remainder of the twelve *427 years and one month during which he was out of the Illinois prison, he was confined in the State prisons of Kentucky, Nebraska and Michigan, serving sentences of varying lengths. Under the facts, this cause will be considered on the basis that Krell was within the State's jurisdiction a part of the time that he was out of the Illinois prison and that it was sufficient to have enabled the officers charged with the duty of returning him to prison to have caused his reincarceration if they had exercised reasonable diligence.
The order of January 23, 1922, entered by a justice of this court, caused the warden of the penitentiary to release Krell from prison but it did not change the judgment or release him from serving the remainder of the penalty imposed. It had the effect of staying the operation of the mandate and temporarily suspending the mittimus, (People ex rel. Finn v. David,
The contention that the failure of the officers of the law to return Krell to prison excuses him from serving the remainder of the term overlooks the fact that Krell initiated the move which produced his release from prison and that after the cause had been determined in the United States Supreme Court he acquiesced in further delay of his return by not surrendering to the warden. Under such circumstances he is in no position to say that service of the sentence is at an end, for to do so would be to permit him *428
to be released from completing the sentence by reason of his own wrongful act. Volker v. McDonald,
There is a class of cases upon which Krell relies which holds that after a defendant has been found guilty or pleaded guilty to a criminal offense, the court loses jurisdiction unless judgment is pronounced and penalty imposed within a reasonable time after conviction. What is a reasonable time is dependent upon matters that are pending before the court and is limited to such period as may be necessary for the court to dispose of motions for a new trial, in arrest of judgment, or for other good cause. (People exrel. Powers v. Shattuck,
It is ordered that the writ be quashed, and that the prisoner be remanded to the custody of the warden.
Prisoner remanded. *429