This appeal is from a judgment denying a writ of habeascorpus. The petition therefor shows that July 10, 1937, appellant upon conviction of a felony was sentenced to the custody of the Board of Trustees of the Indiana Reformatory for an indeterminate term of one to ten years, which, we may assume, he served. In the same court in 1942 he was convicted of another felony and, with knowledge of the prior conviction, the judge sentenced him to the Reformatory for an indeterminate term of two to five years, where he was confined until February 17, 1945, when over his protest he was transferred to the State Prison on an order made by the State Department of Public Welfare pursuant to clause (n) of § 52-1104, Burns' 1933 (Supp.), enacted in 1936. This order, he contends, was void as an unconstitutional interference by an administrative board with the sentence of the court, subjecting him, he says, to the greater stigma of confinement in the State Prison. *Page 517
The place of punishment of convicts is within the control of the legislature, designation of which it may delegate to other agencies. Mellot v. State (1942),
The sentencing of appellant in 1942 was made with the knowledge that the State Department of Public Welfare had been delegated the authority to transfer the convict from either 2-4. institution to the other "at will, when, in its discretion, it is deemed advisable for the welfare of the . . . inmate." § 52-1104, supra. This statutory authority was inherent in the sentence to the same extent as if it had been expressly stated therein. Mellot v. State, *Page 518 supra; Woodard v. Murdock (1890),
The case of People ex rel. Saia v. Martin, Warden (1943),
Judgment Affirmed.
NOTE. — Reported in