43 A.2d 748 | Conn. | 1945
The plaintiff in this habeas corpus proceeding seeks release from the state prison on the ground that two sentences he had received ran concurrently and that both the periods of imprisonment fixed in them have expired. The trial court rendered *302 judgment in his favor and the defendant, warden of the prison, has appealed.
On September 21, 1939, the plaintiff was convicted of the crime of burglary and sentenced to the prison for a term of not less than two nor more than five years. On May 23, 1941, he was released on parole. On December 23, 1941, he committed another burglary and was arrested. While he was being held in jail awaiting trial for this offense, the board of parole at the prison revoked his parole and lodged with the jail authorities a warrant for his return to the prison. On January 6, 1942, he pleaded guilty to the information charging the second offense. The trial court was informed that he had not completely served his prior sentence and that his parole had been revoked. It imposed a sentence of not less than one nor more than three years, without specifying whether this sentence should run concurrently or consecutively with the unserved portion of the earlier sentence. On January 8, 1942, the defendant received the plaintiff into his custody under a mittimus based on the judgment of guilty of the second offense. Thereafter, the board of parole voted that the plaintiff should serve the unexpired portion of the first sentence after the expiration of that imposed for the second offense. If the second sentence ran concurrently with the unexpired portion of the first, the defendant has fully served both and is entitled to his discharge. If, however, he is required by law to serve the unexpired portion of the first sentence after the completion of imprisonment under the second, in accordance with the vote of the board, he is still rightfully held in prison.
Under our indeterminate sentence law, where two or more sentences to state prison are imposed at the same time, ordinarily a maximum and a minimum period are set for the first offense and only a maximum for *303
the others; General Statutes, 6507; and, if the sentences are to run concurrently, not only should a direction to that effect be given in the judgment but a maximum and a minimum should be fixed for each offense. Abt v. Walker,
The case of Hunley v. Hollowell, supra, followed an earlier decision of the Iowa court, Kirkpatrick v. Hallowell,
Unless the vote of the board of parole in this case, that the plaintiff should serve the unexpired portion of the first sentence after the expiration of the second sentence, was effective, the two sentences ran concurrently. The statutes give the board no power to determine in that way the time when a convict returned for breach of parole shall begin to serve the balance of his sentence. It is true that the board is authorized to establish "such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary, upon which such convict may go up on parole, and to enforce such rules and regulations and to revoke and reimprison any convict upon parole, for any reason that shall seem sufficient to said board." General Statutes, 6510. We are not, however, concerned with the scope of the power so given, because the vote of the board in this case was not under any rule or regulation it had established. In the absence of statute, the determination whether two sentences to the same penal institution shall run concurrently or consecutively is an incident to the judicial function of imposing sentences upon a convict and is a matter for the determination of the court. With the performance of that function, the board of parole, as an administrative body, has, in the absence of statutory authority, no right to interfere. Application of McDonald, supra; Wright v. Youell, supra, 927; In re Prout,
The defendant seeks, it is true, a finding that the trial court, in imposing the second sentence, took into account the fact that the plaintiff would have to serve additional time for the violation of his parole, and, in support of such a finding, it refers to a colloquy between court and counsel at the time the second sentence was imposed. Even if the fact was as claimed by the defendant, it could not change the legal effect of the sentence imposed. The terms and incidents of that sentence must be found in the judgment rendered, read in the light of the applicable statutory provisions. Alcorn v. Fellows,
In Glazier v. Reed,
If we apply like reasoning to the situation before us, we reach this result: Where a convict has broken his parole from the state prison and has been returned to it under a subsequent sentence, it would be a meaningless gesture for the board of parole, on revoking his parole, to order his return, and the time when such a vote becomes effective would be the equivalent of such an order. No doubt the board may determine the time when it will revoke a parole for its breach, and it may vote that a parole be revoked but, if the convict is outside the walls of the prison, direct that no warrant be issued for his return until some future day, or, if he is already in custody in the prison, direct that the revocation be effective only as of such a day. See Miller v. Hiatt,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.