42 N.Y.S. 251 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
In May, 1885, the relator was convicted in the United States District Court for the northern district of Hew York, of the offense of
In this manner the term of imprisonment for which the relator was sentenced was reduced about fifteen months. Within that time, and in December, 1889, he was convicted in the Court of Sessions of Kings county of the offense of burglary in the third degree and grand larceny in the first degree, and sentenced to imprisonment in the State prison at Sing Sing for the term of ten years. It is assumed that the relator is entitled to the action of the commutation board in his case, unless he may be required to serve the residue of the temí for which he was sentenced by the United States District Court, and unless that fact is a reason for its denial. His counsel insists that no legal reason exists for his detention for such purpose, and further that the defendants can take no notice of the sentence imposed by the United States court, in the performance of their duty as a commutation board in behalf of the relator, as provided by Laws of 1886 (Chap. 21, § 7). He would be right in the first part of his insistence if the commutation allowed to him upon his imprisonment in the Erie County Penitentiary had been dependent upon a Federal statute solely and without reference to the statute of this State. The only statute of the United States to which our attention is called, designating any definite deduction from the term for which a person convicted of crime is sentenced, provides that all persons convicted of an offense against the United States and confined in any State penitentiary, “ who so conduct themselves that no charge for misconduct is sustained against them, shall have a deduc
Thus far, the grant of commutation provided for is entirely distinct from the law of the State. But by the next section it is provided that: “ The preceding section, however, shall apply to such prisoners only as are confined in jails or penitentiaries where no credits for good behavior are allowed ; but, in other cases, all prisoners now or hereafter confined in the jails or penitentiaries of any State, for offenses against the United States, shall be entitled to the same rule of credits for good behavior applicable to other prisoners in the same jail or penitentiary.” (Id. § 5544.)
And it is also provided that, while confined in the jail or penitentiary of any State, such criminal shall, in all respects, be subject to the same discipline and treatment as convicts sentenced in the courts of the State in which said jail or penitentiary is situated, and shall exclusively be under the control of the officers having charge of the same under the laws of the State. (Id. § 5539.)
It is true that the Federal statute does not, in express terms, provide that the prisoner discharged upon such commutation should, in the event before mentioned, be required to serve out the residue of the term for which he had been sentenced. Butu the provision of the United States Be vised Statutes, that he shall be entitled to the same rule of credits for good behavior applicable to other prisoners in the same prison, would seem to have the-effect to make the rule prescribed in such cases by the statute of the State applicable to those confined in the prisons of the State upon conviction of offenses against the United States. This is by force of the Federal statute, the purpose of which evidently was that there should be no distinction in the application of the rule of commutation as between those convicted in the United States and State courts, and confined in the prisons of a State in which a rule of commutation existed. Such, therefore, must be deemed to have been the intent and effect of the provisions before mentioned of the Federal statute. And it follows that the conditions within the rule, and part of it, are necessarily applicable alike to both classes of convicts -in the prisons of the State, and that the discharge of the relator by the Governor from the Erie County Penitentiary was subject to such conditions.
The fact that the provisions before referred to, of the United
The order should be reversed and the application of the relator be so far granted as to direct that a mandamus issue to the defendants, constituting the commutation board, commanding them to take action as such, and determine the amount of commutation, if any, they recommend to be allowed to the relator.
Hatch, J., concurred.
I am not prepared to say that I disagree with Mr. Justice Bradley in his construction of the Federal statute, but I am of opinion
The order appealed from should be reversed and application granted to extent of directing the respondents to act on the case of the relator.
Brown, P. J., and Bartlett, J., concurred.
Order reversed and application granted, so far as to direct that a mandamus issue to the defendants constituting the commutation board to take action and determine the amount of commutation, if any, to be allowed to the relator.