55 N.E.2d 63 | Ill. | 1944
An indictment returned to the criminal court of Cook county in March, 1933, charged plaintiff in error with the crime of murder. When arraigned he tendered a plea of not guilty but thereafter such plea was withdrawn and a plea of guilty entered. After hearing evidence in aggravation and mitigation of the circumstances of the homicide, he was committed to the penitentiary for a term of one hundred years. He was received at the penitentiary the latter part of the year 1933 and now brings the case to this court by writ of error. The questions submitted are raised on the common-law record.
The grounds for reversal refer to the penalty imposed. Reference is made to the parts of section 1 of the Parole Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943, chap. 38, par. 801,) where it is ordered that if one convicted of murder is sentenced to the penitentiary for life, he becomes eligible to parole at the end of twenty years, while if he is sentenced for any number of years, greater than the minimum, he is not eligible until he has served one third of such term. The *13 claim is made that the application of this provision to plaintiff in error's case deprives him of the right to the equal protection of the law as guaranteed by section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the Federal constitution. In demonstrating the point, plaintiff in error argues that one convicted of murder and committed to the penitentiary for life becomes eligible to parole when he has served twenty years, while in his case, having been committed for one hundred years, he will not be eligible to parole until he has served thirty-three and one-third years of such term. If such contention was to be sustained, a sentence for a term of more than sixty years would furnish a basis for a claim of unjust discrimination.
Section 142 of division 1 of the Criminal Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943, chap. 38, par. 360,) directs that whoever may be convicted of murder shall suffer the punishment of death or imprisonment in the penitentiary for his natural life, or a term of not less than fourteen years. In People v. Hetherington,
The remaining question is as to whether the possibility that a prisoner serving a life sentence for murder may be paroled when he has served twenty years while one sentenced to serve one hundred years cannot be paroled until he has served thirty-three and one-third years, is a denial of the equal protection of the laws within the meaning of the Federal constitution. Plaintiff in error was twenty-four years of age when convicted and the sentence of one hundred years' imprisonment in the penitentiary is in effect a sentence for life. He has no right under the law to demand that he be discharged from the penitentiary during his lifetime. (People v. Connors,
That the legislature has the right under the Federal constitution to provide that certain classes of prisoners shall serve longer minimum terms before being eligible to parole than other classes is settled by Ughbanks v. Armstrong, Warden,
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the criminal court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *16