In a petition for a writ of error coram nobis appellant contends that a judgment of conviction and sentence were imposed upon him by the State of California without proper jurisdiction and he urges that the conviction and sentence be vacated, set aside, voided and expunged from the record. His writ was denied by the Los Angeles Superior Court and he appeals.
In 1955 appellant was arrested in California on a charge of robbery. Shortly thereafter, pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum issued by the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, he was delivered to the federal authorities for trial on federal charges involving the receiving of, and failure to register, a machine gun. In March 1955, he was convicted of these charges in the United States District Court. Judgment was pronounced imposing two five-year consecutive sentences, and he was committed to the custody of the Attorney General or his authorized representative, for imprisonment.
Appellant was then redelivered to the state authorities, and arraigned in the superior court on April 7, 1955, on eight counts of armed robbery. After he entered pleas of guilty on two counts, admitting that he was armed at the times the offenses were committed, the remaining six counts were dismissed. On May 12, 1955, appellant was sentenced on the robbery charges. Being informed of the prior federal judgment, the trial judge ordered that the sentences on the two robbery counts run consecutively and that said sentences run “concurrently with any other sentence now serving.”
Appellant was then delivered into the custody of the warden of the state prison at Folsom to serve the robbery sentences. He thereafter instituted a habeas corpus proceeding in which
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he sought transfer from the custody of the warden of the state prison to the custody of the federal authorities in order that he might serve his sentence under the federal judgment of conviction, and thereby gain the benefit of the concurrent sentence provision of the state judgment. Our Supreme Court sustained appellant’s position in the habeas corpus proceeding and ordered that appellant be delivered into the custody of the proper federal authorities for the purpose of serving his sentence under the federal judgment of conviction. The reasons for the ruling were thus summarized: “Apparently under the federal rules the computation of time on a federal sentence begins to run only from ‘the date on which [the prisoner] is received at the penitentiary, reformatory or jail for service of [the] sentence. ’
(Zerbst
v.
McPike,
As noted in that decision (at p. 77) with reference to the state judgment of conviction: ‘ ‘ The validity of the judgment, however, is conceded by petitioner and he does not seek to escape the burden thereby imposed upon him.” Appellant now contends, however, that the California judgment and sentence were improper because the state had no jurisdiction over him after his release to the federal authorities under the writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum. He argues (1) that the release under that writ was a complete relinquishment of jurisdiction; (2) that, in order for the state to reacquire jurisdiction once federal sentence was imposed, it was necessary to obtain the consent of the United States Attorney General; and (3) that such consent was never obtained.
It is doubtful whether
coram nobis
lies here
(People
v.
Conley,
The appellant’s contention is without merit. It is apparent that he has misconstrued the meaning and effect of the writ
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of habeas corpus
ad proseqtiendum.
“ [T]he writ of habeas corpus
ad prosequendum
has been utilized to bring a prisoner incarcerated under sentence by one sovereignty to trial for alleged violation of the laws of the other sovereignty. . . . A good statement of the operation and extent of the writ appears in
Lunsford
v.
Hudspeth
(10 Cir.),
The writ was honored by the state authorities as a matter of comity between the two sovereigns.
(United States
ex rel.
Moses
v.
Kipp, supra,
In
Lunsford
v.
Hudspeth
(10 Cir.),
A factually similar problem was presented to the state court in
People
v.
Knight,
In the instant case there is nothing in the record to indicate that the appellant was taken from federal custody without proper authorization from the federal authorities; and we must presume, absent a showing to the contrary, that the superior court, in imposing judgment and sentence was “acting in the lawful exercise of . . . [its] jurisdiction.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1963, subd. 16.) The Supreme Court, in appellant’s prior appeal, indicated that he was delivered to the federal authorities for trial and “. . . then redelivered to the state authorities”
(In re Stoliker, supra,
There are other and equally compelling reasons why the appellant’s contention cannot be sustained. First, it has been repeatedly held that the jurisdiction of the court in which an individual defendant was tried cannot be attacked because of the manner in which the defendant was brought before it.
(People
v.
Valenti,
Second, it has also been often held that ‘ ‘ a sovereign having the prior and exclusive jurisdiction and custody of a person for violation of its penal laws may voluntarily surrender him to the other for the purpose of trial on a criminal charge, and in such circumstances the question of jurisdiction and custody is essentially one of comity between the two sovereigns,
not a personal right of the individual.”
(Emphasis added.)
(Stamphill
v.
United States,
Affirmed.
Fox, P. J., concurred.
