Dеfendant Gregory Earl Jones was sentenced, following his plea of guilty to first-degree robbery in violation of section 711.2, The Code 1979, to a twenty-five-year pris *298 on term. The sentence was to commence at the expiration of a fifty-one-year sentence he was serving when he committed the robbery. Jones appeals, contending (1) the trial court was not required by section 901.8, The Code 1979, to impose a consecutive sentence for a crime committed while defendant was an escapee from the penitentiary, and (2) the consecutive sentencе imposed by the court was cruel and unusual punishment. We affirm.
Defendant was charged with robbery in the first degree and attempted murder in connection with a holdup and shooting by defendant of the attеndant at a gas station in Centerville on May 17,1979. At the time of the alleged crimes, defendant was an escapee from the Iowa State Penitentiary at Ft. Madison where he was serving a fifty-year sentence for second-degree murder and a consecutive one-year sentence for escape. Defendant pleaded guilty to the robbery charge in exchange for the county attorney dropping the attempted murder charge. He was sentenced on September 14 to a twenty-five-year sentence, sections 711.2,902.7, .9(1), to be served at the expiration of his existing sentences. § 901.8.
I.
Did section 901.8 require imposition of a consecutive sentence?
Defendant says that section 901.8 did not require the court to impose a consecutive sentencе on him. “A consecutive sentence is added to defendant’s present sentence, whereas a concurrent sentence is served at the same time as an existing sentence.”
State v. Smith,
Section 901.8 provides:
Consecutive sentences. If a pеrson is sentenced for two or more separate offenses, the sentencing judge may order the second or further sentence to begin at the expiration of the first or succeeding sеntence. If a' person is sentenced for escape under section 719.4 or for a crime committed while confined in a detention facility or penal institution, the sentencing judge shall ordеr the sentence to begin at the expiration of any existing sentence. If consecutive sentences are specified in the order of commitment, the several terms shall be construеd as one continuous term of imprisonment.
(emphasis added)
The record is not clear whether the court concluded it was required by the second sentence of section 901.8 to impose a consecutive sentence on defendant, see
State v. Smith, 291
N.W.2d at 26, or whether the court exercised its discretionary power under the" first sentence of section 901.8, which reflects the common law.
State v. Buck,
Defendant argues that the second sentence of section 901.8 does not apрly to his factual situation. He points to the words that require a consecutive sentence “for a crime committed while confined in a detention facility or penal institution.” (emphasis added) Becаuse he was at liberty as an escapee at the time of the robbery, defendant says he was not “confined” under the second sentence of section 901.8. He further argues that the secоnd sentence of the statute only applies to crimes against persons and property committed within the prison walls.
We hold the word “confined” in section 901.8 means “committed” and therefore the second sentence of that statute mandated that a consecutive sentence be imposed on defendant.
We base the above conclusions on several principles of statutory construction. The legislature “is presumed to know the usual meaning ascribed by the courts to language and to intend that meaning unless the context shows otherwise.”
State v. Wilson,
At the time the legislature enacted section 901.8, 1978 Session, 67th G. A., ch. 1091, § 4, this court in
State
v.
Eads,
At the time of the robbery, Jones was committed to the penitentiary and was an escapee. Under the Eads definition, since Jones was “committed” to the penitentiary at the time of the robbery, he was “confined” to the pеnitentiary for the purposes of section 901.8 when he perpetrated the robbery.
There also are several policy reasons that support our interpretation of the legislative intent on the meaning of “confined” in section 901.8. The state has an interest in preserving order and discipline within its penal institutions as well as in preventing crime both inside and outside prisons. Those interests justify the imposition of consecutive sentences for a crime committed by an inmate within the penal institution. It cannot be conducive to either prison order and discipline or the prevention of crime to provide that inmates who commit crimes while
escaped
may receive concurrent sentences while inmates who commit crimes within the institution must receive consecutive sentences.
See Loras College v. Iowa Civil Rights Commission,
We believe the construction we have given to the portion of section 901.8 in question is compatible with the meaning and consequences intended by the legislature. §§ 4.4(3), .6(1), and (5), The Code.
There is no merit to defendant’s first assignment.
II. Was the consecutive sentence cruel and unusual punishment? Defendant contends that since he was already serving sentences totaling fifty-one years, the imposition of a cоnsecutive twenty-five-year sentence for robbery constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of U.S. Const. Amends. VIII, XIV.
The state is prohibited from inflicting cruel and unusual punishment upon a criminal defendant.
See State
v.
Robbins,
The United States Supreme Court has primarily considered the issue of cruel and unusual punishment in relation to the imposition of the death pеnalty, e.
g., Godfrey v. Georgia,
In
Rummel
the Court distinguished between sentences of imprisonment alone and sentences of death, noting that “successful challenges to the proportionality of particular sentences have been exceedingly rare.” The Court said that it could objectively distinguish between death sentences and sentences of imprisonment for purposes of eighth amendment analysis because a death sentence is the irrevocable ultimate sanction!
Id.
at 270-73,
Under
Rummel,
it is ordinarily for the legislature to make the policy decision, absent an ex post facto effect on defendant as in
State v. Smith,
We hold the trial court was required to impose a consecutive sentence on defendant, and the sentence was not cruel and unusual punishment.
AFFIRMED.
