after making the foregoing statement,. delivered the opinion of the court.
An act providing for an indeterminate sentence was first passed in Michigan on July 1, 1889, No. 228, p. 337, and was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of that State.
People
v.
Cummings,
88 Michigan, 249. A constitutional amendment was subsequently adopted (1901), which authorized the legislature to provide for an indeterminate sentence law, as punishment for crime,, on conviction thereof. Art. 4, § 47, constitution of Michigan, as amended. See Laws of 1903, p. 452. Under the authority of this amendment the legislature, in 1903, passed act No. 136 of'the public acts of that year. This act was held to be valid.
In re Campbell,
138 Michigan, 597;
In re Duff,
141 Michigan, 623. An act of a character very similar has been held to violate no provision of the Federal Constitution.
Dreyer
v.
Illinois,
In this case, where the maximum term for burglary is fixed by the statute at, five years, the sentence fixing that term at two years was simply void, and the maximum term of imprisonment fixed by the statute takes the place of the maximum term *486 fixed in the sentence. In re Campbell; In re Duff, supra. Under this construction the term of imprisonment of the plaintiff in error has not yet expired.
He cannot, however, avail himself of the provisions of the statute in relation to applying for and obtaining- his discharge on parole,-after the expiration of the minimum term of the sentence, because he has been convicted of two previous felonies. ,
Ón June 7, 1905, Public acts of Michigan, No.. 184, p. 268, the, legislature passed another act'on the same subject and repealed the act of 1903. .The plaintiff in error contends' that the provisions of the act of 1905 are more unfavorable to him than those of the act of 1903, and that it is invalid as to him because it is an ex post facto law, and, -as the act of 1903 has been repealed, there is no act in force by .which he can be further imprisoned.
Without stopping to inquire whether the act of 1905 would be in his case an ex post facto law, it may be stated that the Supreme Court of Michigan has held that the act of 1903 is not repealed as to those who; were sentenced under it, and that as to them it is in full force, and-the statute, of 1905 has no application. In re Manaca, 146 Michigan, 697. In such a case as this we follow that construction of the constitution and laws of. the State which has been given thém by the highest court "thereof. There is, therefore, no force in the contention made on the part of the plaintiff in error that the act of 1905 applies in his case and is ex post facto.
• It is also urged that the result of the holding of the state court is that plaintiff in error is imprisoned under the indeterminate sentence act of 1903 for the maximum period (five-years) provided by the general statute for the crime of which he has been convicted, without any discretion oh the part of the court as to the term of his sentence, while he is also refused the right to apply under the act for a discharge upon his parole after the expiration of the minimuin term of the. sentence, because, it is alleged, that as to him. there can be no *487 minimum sentence, as he has been twice before convicted of a felony, although he has had no opportunity of being heard as to that allegation. He now urges that he is imprisoned in violation of the Sixth and Eighth and the Fourteenth Amendments of the' Federal Constitution.
The claim rests upon an entire misapprehension of the rights of the plaintiff .in error under these Amendments. The- Sixth and Eighth Amendments do not liinit the powers of the States, as has many times been decided.
Spies
v.
Illinois,
We find nothing in the record which shows any violation of the Federal Constitution, and the judgment ofthe Supreme Court of Michigan must, therefore, be .
Affirmed.
