ORIGINAL ACTION
On thе 16th day of January, 1980, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in this matter, and on that day issued an order denying a writ of mandate against the respondent court. Relаtor, however, chose to file his petition with the Clerk of this Court, thereby necessitating an opinion of this Court. We hereby set out the reasons why the majority of this Court voted to deny the writ.
Relator was convicted of burglary of a dwelling on November 17, 1978. He was found an habitual criminal on November 21, 1978. Appeal bond was set at $50,000.00. After several attempts at posting an acceptable bond, relator did tender a bond on October 23, 1979. At that time the respondent judge held a heаring in order to ascertain whether the bond conformed to the statutory requirement and to determine whether the statute in effect at the time the relatоr committed the offense or the statute in effect at the time the appeal bond was tendered governed relator’s eligibility for release on аppeal bond. Respondent judge decided that the statute in effect at the time the appeal bond was tendered was the operative stаtute.
Relator committed the offense in question and was convicted of said offense before September 1, 1979. Before that date, the statute govеrning appeal bonds, IC § 35-4-6-1 [Burns Supp.1978], provided:
“Whenever a person is convicted in any court of any offense except murder, and he has appealed or desires to appeal the conviction and has given notice thereof as required by law, he shall be admitted to bail pending appeal upon compliance with this chapter.”
By the time relator tendered his appeal bond to the Court, the above mentioned statute had beеn amended. The present law found in IC § 35-4-6-1.5 states that any person who may not receive a suspended sentence under IC § 35-50-2-2 [Burns Supp.1978] is not eligible for an appeal bond. Relator in this case has a prior unrelated felony conviction, thus, under the statute, he may not receive a suspended sentence; аnd, therefore, he may not be released on appeal bond if the amended statute is, in fact, the applicable statute.
Relator challеnges the applicability of the new statute to his case. He points out the new law was enacted after he committed the offense for which he wаs convicted and after the date of his conviction. He thus asserts that the application of the new statute to him, denying him an opportunity to be released on bond pending appeal, is an ex post facto application of the law in contravention of Art. 1, § 10 of the Federal Constitution and Art. 1, § 24 of the Indiana Constitution.
We hold that the statute in effect at the time the relator tendered his appeal bond applies to him and that there is no ex рost facto violation.
This Court has held that the ex post facto clause prohibits the legislature from passing
“any law, after a fact done by any citizеn, which shall have a relation to that fact, so as to punish that which was innocent when done; or to add to the punishment of that which was criminal; or to increase the malignity of a crime; or to retrench the rules of evidence, so as to make conviction more easy. Strong v. State, (1822) 1 Blackford 193, 196.”
Following the above definition, this Court has held that a statute denying good time credits to parolees was an ex post facto
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application of the law.
Dowd v. Sims,
(1950)
Dowd
is distinguishable from the case at bаr. There, the new statute directly affected the convict’s punishment. In effect, the new law would have imposed a greater sentence upon persons in the position of the appellant. Other courts have also viewed parole as an extension of the sentencing process.
Love v. Fitzharris,
(1972)
In a more recent ex post facto case,
Warner v. State,
(1976)
In the case at bar, the superseding statute, IC § 35-4-6-1.5 [Burns Supp.1979] does not make an act criminal which was legal before the statute; nor does it “provide a greater punishment therеfor than was prescribed at the time of its commission; nor [does it] alter the degree, or lessen the amount or measure, of the proof which was made necessary to conviction when the crime was committed.”
Hopt v. Utah,
(1884)
It is clear in Indiana that there is no constitutional right to bail pending appeal.
Keys v. State,
(1979) Ind.,
We hold thаt such application of the statute does not violate the ex post facto prohibitions of Art. 1, § 10 of the United States Constitution or Art. 1, § 24 of the Indiana Constitution.
We further hold that relator’s eligibility for release on appeal bond is controlled by the appeal bond statute in effect at the time such relеase is sought.
Relator’s petition for a writ mandating the trial court to apply the appeal bond statute which was in effect at the time he committed the offense is hereby denied.
