The defendant in this case, as well as defendants in six other cases, was charged in the Ninth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Rapides with the offense of false or illegal registration, etc., denounced by LSA-R.S. 18:222, In each of these cases immediately after the verdict and the imposition of sentence the defendants applied for, and were granted, writs by this court solely for the purpose of reviewing the legality of the sentences actually imposed. The defendant in the instant case was given the following sentence: “I sentence you, Jesse Johnson, to serve six months in Parish Jail, subject to work, and suspend all of same except three months thereof, upon good behavior.”
Article 536 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, LSA-R'.S. 15:536, provides insofar as pertinent: “Whenever any person has been found guilty of a misdemeanor in any court, the judge may sentence the defendant but suspend such sentence and release the offender during his good behavior; provided further, that the judge may suspend the sentence in the manner set forth in this article although the prisoner has been incarcerated and actually begun to serve the sentence imposed. * * * ”
Under the provisions of this article, after a defendant has been adjudged guilty the judge may do two things: (1) He may sentence the defendant- to serve a time in prison and suspend the sentence thus imposed during good behavior, or (2) after the prisoner has been incarcerated under the sentence imposed and actually begun to serve the sentence the judge may -suspend the balance of the sentence not served during good behavior. The statute does not permit or authorize the judge at the time the sentence is actually imposed to impose a sentence for a fixed term and at the same time suspend a portion thereof. As pointed out by this court in Cox v. Brown,
In any criminal case it is the mandatory duty of the district judge upon conviction of a defendant to impose a sentence authorized or directed by law, and, if he does not impose a sentence authorized or directed by law, the sentence is illegal, and
Relator contends in brief that “A sentence which has been imposed and suspended with an order of limitation of such suspension is a legal sentence, and that portion of the order attempting to limit the suspension is null and void and treated as if it had not been contained in the order of sentence.” In other words, relator contends that we should simply strike out that portion of the sentence that makes it illegal, thus making the sentence a legal one, and he would therefore be entitled to a suspension of the entire sentence. As authority he relies on the case of Cox v. Brown, supra. We cannot agree with relator’s contention that this court should delete a portion of the sentence to make the sentence imposed a legal one, and, further, we do not think that the case relied upon is authority for the proposition advanced. In the Cox case the sentence imposed was a legal one, and in this court we had for review only a subsequent order, issued after the prisoner had actually begun serving the sentence,' which suspended a portion of the sentence remaining to be served.
Our review of the jurisprudence shows that it has been the custom and practice of this court in cases in which it has been found that an illegal sentence has been imposed to remand the case to the district court for the imposing of a legal sentence. See State v. Nicholson,
For the reasons assigned, the sentence imposed upon relator is annulled and set aside, and the case is remanded to the district court in order that the relator may be sentenced according to law.
