227 A.D. 464 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1929
Relator petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. His writ was dismissed, and he appeals. The appeal is heard on the original papers. His petition states that in May, 1927, he was sentenced by the Court of General Sessions of the County of New York to imprisonment under a determinate sentence of two years and six months, and that such term of imprisonment “ less compensation for good behavior and work ” expired on February 8, 1929, and that he has been “ unlawfully held since that date; ” that in November, 1919, he was sentenced, as a second offender, by the Court of General Sessions to imprisonment for five years, and that he served three years and four months under that sentence, “ having earned one year and eight months compensation for good behavior and faithful work; ” that “ instead of being discharged, as stipulated by law,” he was “ conditionally released on parole; ” and “after making four monthly reports I consulted an attorney who advised me regarding the law, and discontinued reports.” He further alleges that it is for the period for which he was conditionally released on parole under the earlier imprisonment that he is now being held in Sing Sing Prison, “ although my maximum sentence had expired prior to the commission of the last offense.” The respondent warden, in his return to the writ, shows that relator, after being under sentence commencing December 11, 1919, for the term of five years for felony, was released under parole pursuant to the Governor’s commutation on March 16, 1923, he then having one year, seven months and twenty-five days to serve; that the relator’s criminal record showed a previous conviction for felony; that the Governor’s commutation placed him under the
The same view appears to have been held in People ex rel. Schlecter v. Jennings (130 Misc. 748; affd., 223 App. Div. 814).
There remains the question whether the parole violation authorized the retention of the. relator although the period of his first sentence had fully expired. It is to be pointed out at this time that there is no dispute of the relator’s delinquency in the violation of his parole. He himself asserts it in his petition for the writ. He has filed no traverse to the warden’s return. In People ex rel. Atkins v. Jennings (248 N. Y. 46, 53) it is pointed out that one who escapes while on parole may not claim, after recapture, that the period fixed for his term of imprisonment had fully expired at the time of his recapture. In this case there is no dispute that the relator’s delinquency was willful. Whether the crime for which he was sent to the New York Penitentiary was committed during the period covered by the first sentence, does not clearly appear. At any rate, that is not material excepting in so far as it bears upon his leading the kind of life imposed by-the Governor’s conditions. The Atkins Case (supra) justifies the exaction of a service by the relator of the balance of his original term for which he had been granted commutation from the time that his delinquency was declared and as to which, as stated, he offers no dispute. The conditions imposed by the Governor required the relator to keep the Parole Board, through the Superintendent of State Prisons, advised as to his employment, his associations, his earnings, his surroundings, his recreations, his successes and his failures. During the entire period of his parole he was to subject himself to the superintendence and authority of the Board of Parole. If the relator is correct he could secrete himself while his commutation was running, consort with evil persons and five a flagrant and improper life, and there could be no expiation to the State for its act of grace in commuting if he were not recaptured until after the time fixed for the expiration of his original sentence.
I think the order dismissing the writ should be affirmed, and so advise.
Lazansky, P. J., Rich, Young and Caeswell, JJ., concur.
Order dismissing writ of habeas corpus affirmed.
Now Correction Law, § 243, as amd. by Laws of 1929, chap. 243.— [Rep.