We have for answer first the question of whether a writ of habeas corpus shall issue to try and detеrmine the validity of one sentence of life imprisonment for armed robbery while the petitiоner is serving at the same time another sentence of one year to life imprisonment for a like offense, which sentence is admittedly valid. Secondly, if the writ may issue, has the petitionеr been denied due process under the Fourteenth Amendment in the trial and conviction for the second offense?
Petitioner was convicted February 14, 1919, of armed robbery in the Criminal. Court of Cook County, Illinois, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of one year to life. He was paroled on June 5, 1933. July 23, 1933, he was arrested and' held on a charge of armed robbery. On July 27, 1933, the Parole Board of Illinois-found that the petitioner was a parole violator and entered an order for his arrest and' return to custody. Petitioner was indicted. August 4, 1933, for the secоnd offense. According to a brief filed by petitioner in-support of a writ of error to the Criminal Court of Cook County, Illinois, ‘ exhibited herein, the petitioner stated that he had appeаred in court on August 11, 18, and 22, 1933, with counsel of his own choosing. It does not appear who that cоunsel was, but on August 22 the trial court stated that the-record showed the public defender apрeared for the petitioner and two others jointly indicted with him for armed robbery, and on that date, a firm of lawyers came into court and claimed to represent the petitionеr. They asked that the case be continued as they were engaged in the trial of a murder case and could not be present. The-court, after much discussion back and forth, refused tо continue the case, and the firm, withdrew. As counsel for the petitioner the court thereuрon appointed the public defender, a very able, reputable lawyer who-was already representing petitioner’s co-defendants. The case went to trial with the. public defender as counsel for the petitioner, who made no objection thereto. On-, this trial, which was had on August 22,. 1933, the petitioner was convicted of armed robbery, and on August 23, 1933, he was.
The District Court issued the writ of habeas corpus, tried the issue of constitutional violatiоn, and ordered the petitioner •discharged from imprisonment and detention under the latter sеntence of August 23, 1933. But the District Court remanded him to the custody of the warden for detention under the first сonviction of February 14, 1919, not here questioned. A certificate •of probable causе was granted by the trial •court, and from this judgment the State has Appealed.
The habeas corpus statute provides : “The writ of habeas corpus shall in no case extend to a prisoner in jail unless where he is in custody * * * in violation of the Constitution * * 28 U. S.C.A. § 453. Let us assume, without deciding, that the second conviction was in denial of due process. If petitioner were held under that sentеnce alone, the writ should extend to him because he would be in custody in violation of the сonstitution. But he is also in custody under a sentence admittedly valid. The Supreme Court has said, “without restraint which is unlawful, the writ may not be used.” McNally v. Hill, Warden,
The petitioner relies upon Ex parte Hull,
We do not reach the second question as to the denial of due process, because there is no unlawful restraint shown. Such restraint if unlawful may be reached only when the restraint under the valid sentence is ended.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed.
