Appellants, Willard King and Larry Lovell, were tried together upon separate informations charging them with escape. At issue is the validity of the provisions of SDC 1960 Supp. 13.1226 providing:
“Every prisoner confined in the State Penitentiary for a term of less than life, or held as a prisoner there under any means of lawful custody whether sentenced or not, who escapes or attempts to escape therefrom, is punish *516 able by imprisonment in such Penitentiary for a term not exceeding five years. If such prisoner is confined therein under sentence of imprisonment, his sentence on conviction for such escape shall commence at the expiration of the original term of his imprisonment."
The information in each action charged that defendant while confined in the State Penitentiary "for a term of years less than for life" did unlawfully and feloniously escape from the custody of the penitentiary officials. After trial defendants were found guilty and sentenced to the State Penitentiary for terms of one year commencing at the expiration of their present terms.
It is contended that the statute in question denies to defendants the equal protection of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and violates the provisions of Section 18, Article VI of the Constitution of this state declaring that no law shall grant tо any citizen privileges or immunities which upon the same terms 'shall not equally belong to all citizens. The contention is that thesе constitutional protections are denied by the statute in question because it limits the class of prisoners to those who are sentenced to terms for less than life and fixes a penalty upon them for escaping when no penalty is prоvided for prisoners sentenced for life.
Equal protection of the law requires that the rights of every person must be govеrned by the same rule of law under similar circumstances and, in the administration of criminal justice, the imposition of different punishments or different degrees of punishment upon one than is imposed upon all for like offenses is a denial of such right. Moorе v. State of Missouri,
In the case of In re Woofter,
*518 Counsel for appellant argues that there is no proper basis for the classification for the reason that a pardon or commutation may terminate the sentence оf a life termer and release him' from prison before his life ends; that if the law prescribed the imposing of a conseсutive term of imprisonment upon a life termer who escapes commencing upon the earlier ending of the life sеntence- by pardon or commutation he would become subject to the term for escape upon expirаtion of the life term by executive clemency. A pardon or commutation is a privilege and not a right and, as a prаctical matter, the fact of an escape by a life termer would be a material aspect in determining when, if еver, the prisoner would merit executive clemency. In determining the validity of a classification for legislative purpоses, it is not a question whether facts judicially known appear to favor a different classification. The court will not concern itself with the expediency of a legislative measure. We conclude that the statute under consideratiоn does not violate the equal protection provisions of the federal and state constitutions.
Judgments affirmed.
