64 N.E.2d 857 | Ill. | 1946
June 15, 1927, the defendant, Fred Wooten, together with nine other persons, was indicted in the circuit court *543 of Williamson county on three separate charges. In case No. 2132, he was charged with the murder of Ethel Price; in No. 2134, with conspiracy to murder Ethel Price, and in No. 2135, with conspiracy to murder Lory L. Price. He pleaded guilty to the charges contained in the three indictments and, on January 7, 1929, was sentenced to the penitentiary in Nos. 2134 and 2135 to terms of imprisonment for fifty-seven years each and, on January 8, 1929, in No. 2132, for life. In No. 2135, the sentence was adjudged to commence upon the expiration, "however it may occur" of the sentence and imprisonment in No. 2134. Similarly, the sentence for murder, in No. 2132, was ordered to begin at the expirations of the sentences and imprisonments, "however the expirations of said sentences and imprisonments may occur, heretofore entered against him in Case No. 2134 and Case No. 2135." Defendant, incarcerated in the penitentiary since 1929, prosecutes this writ of error pro se, seeking a reversal of the three judgments.
No bill of exceptions having been filed, the only errors cognizable are those arising upon the common-law records. The People admit and confess that the judgments and definite sentences of fifty-seven years each for the conspiracies charged in Nos. 2134 and 2135 are erroneous, and that the respective sentences for each of the conspiracy charges could not exceed five years for each offense. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1927, chap. 38, par. 139.) Ordinarily, upon confession of error involving merely the correctness of a sentence, the procedure is to remand the cause for entry of a proper sentence (People v. Montana,
Apart from the fact that defendant has long since served more than the maximum term which could legally have been imposed on the two charges of conspiracy to murder, the sentence for murder in No. 2132 does not admit of a construction permitting it to be served consecutively with the sentences in Nos. 2134 and 2135. Defendant's contention is well taken that the complete judgment order fails to specify any definite time when the sentences shall lawfully become effective, rendering a determination either of the beginning or ending of the respective sentences impossible. Two or more sentences of a defendant to the same place of confinement run concurrently, in the absence of specific provisions to the contrary appearing in the judgment order.(People ex rel. Clancy v. Graydon,
Our conclusion renders unnecessary a determination of defendant's contention that his conviction of conspiracy to murder Ethel Price was merged in the conviction of murder. *546
The remaining contention requiring consideration is the complaint with respect to a statement of the trial judge and the State's Attorney tending to show that defendant was guilty of criminal offenses for which he had never been indicted, tried or convicted. Although this statement is not properly a part of the common-law record, (People v. Lantz,
The judgment in No. 2132 is affirmed, and the judgments in Nos. 2134 and 2135 are each reversed.
Circuit court No. 2132 — Judgment affirmed. Circuit court Nos. 2134 and 2135 — Judgments reversed. *547