65 Wash. 287 | Wash. | 1911
— On September 26, 1908, the defendant, James Mallahan, then about eighteen years of age, was charged by information with the crime of attempting to commit a burglary in King county. To this information he pleaded
“The prosecuting attorney with the defendant James Mallahan and counsel came into court. The defendant was duly informed by the court of the nature of the information found against him for the crime of attempt to commit burglary committed on the 23rd day of September, 1908, of his arraignment and plea of ‘guilty of the offense charged in the information.’
“The defendant was then asked if he had any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him, to which he replied that he had none.
“And no sufficient cause being shown or appearing to the court, thereupon the court rendered its judgment: That whereas the said defendant having plead guilty in this court of the crime of attempt to commit burglary, sentence is suspended provided the defendant report once a week to officer G. S. Corbett and once a month to the court.”
Defendant was released from custody under the suspended sentence. On February 26, 1910, the defendant having been previously arrested, the following order was made and entered herein:
“Upon the showing of the prosecuting attorney that the defendant is under a suspended sentence to reformatory at Monroe, which sentence was suspended during good behavior, and the court finds that the defendant’s behavior has not been good, the defendant is ordered confined at the reformatory at Monroe, for a term of not less than five (5) years and more than seven (7) years.”
On March 4, 1910, defendant, by his. attorney, filed his written motion, based upon his affidavit thereto attached, by which he asked the trial court to vacate the judgment and sentence. This motion, supported and resisted by other affidavits, was denied. The defendant has appealed.
Appellant contends the trial judge erred in denying his motion to vacate, that his plea of guilty was not voluntary, that he was entitled to be represented by counsel, and that the trial judge erred in imposing a minimum‘ sentence of
That the court had authority to suspend the sentence and later commit the appellant is unquestionably shown by section 1, chapter 24, Laws of 1905, p. 49 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2191), in effect when the plea of guilty was entered, and section 28, chapter 249, Laws of 1909, p. 896 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2280), in force when appellant was finally committed. As to the power of the court to enforce a suspended sentence under these sections, there can be no question. If the power does not exist, the practical effect of the order of suspension was to finally discharge appellant and deprive the
“The legislature cannot authorize the courts to abdicate their own powers and duties, or to tie their own hands in such a way that, after sentence has been suspended, they cannot, when deemed proper and in the interest of justice, inflict the proper punishment in the exercise of a sound discretion. Nor can the free and untrammeled exercise of this power, or the right to pass sentence according to the discretion of the court, be made dependent upon compliance with some condition that would require the court to try a question of fact before it could render the judgment which the law prescribes. The statute must not be understood as conferring any new power. The court may suspend sentence as before, but it can do nothing to preclude itself or its successor from passing the proper sentence whenever'such a course appears to be proper.” People ex rel. Forsyth v. Court of Sessions etc., 141 N. Y. 288, 36 N. E. 386.
Appellant insists his release was in effect a final discharge as a release at common law, in' that it did not expressly comply with the statute by directing the release during his good behavior. We find no merit in this contention. The suspension was granted under the statute, although the words “good behavior” were omitted from' the order which provided that appellant should report weekly to an officer and once each month to the court. This could have been for no other purpose than to keep them advised as to his conduct whether it constituted good behavior.
Appellant further insists it is the intention of the statute that the penalty for an attempt to commit burglary shall be only one-half as great as the penalty for the crime of burglary itself, that the maximum sentence herein should not exceed seven years, and that the minimum sentence should not exceed two and one-half years. The only reasonable construction of Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 2794, 2986 and 2193, is that, in the case of an attempted burglary, the maximum term of an indeterminate sentence shall not exceed seven years, which is one-half of the maximum term fixed by § 2794
Dunbar, C. J., Ellis, Morris, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.