OPINION
On June 21, 1967, at a preliminary hearing before a magistrate, relator was held for the Grand Jury on charges arising out of an incident which occurred on June 3, 1967. On July 5, 1967, at another preliminary hearing, relator was held for the Grand Jury on charges arising out of an incident which occurred on May 27, 1967. The 1967 July session of the Grand Jury presented Bills of Indictment Nos. 196-197 relating to the June 3 incident and Bills of Indictment Nos. 2719-2720 pertaining to the other incident.
After the return of the above-mentioned indictments, relator was convicted of first degree murder under Bills Nos. 516-520 (October Sessions, 1967) and sentenced thereunder to life imprisonment. This life sentence, now on appeal, which relator was serving at the time he filed his habeas corpus petition and which he is presently serving, is not attacked in this action. Rather, relator attacks solely the indictments Nos. 196-197 and 2719-2720, which he contends should be dismissed because he has been denied (1) his right to a speedy trial and (2) his right to challenge the Grand Jury array.
Under Pennsylvania law, relator can never be paroled on his life sentence. 61 Pa.S.tat.Ann. § 331.21 (1964). However, there is the possibility that relator may ultimately defeat his murder conviction, in which event Pitts and the Commonwealth would be adversaries as to the indictments here attacked. Further, even if relator fails in his attack on the murder conviction, he may at some later date be considered for commutation of sentence or executive pardon, Penna. Const., art. IV, § 9, P.S., the result of which could possibly be affected by the outstanding indictments or a conviction thereunder. Since these possibilities
We therefore proceed to consider a similar but narrower issue: whether relator is “in custody” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2241(c) (3). The relevant custody, under the statute, is that imposed by the charges under attack, i. e., the custody which is allegedly lawless. Peyton v. Rowe,
Relator, at the time he filed his habeas corpus petition, was serving only his life sentence: there has been no indication that he was being restrained at all in order to assure his appearance for trial on the indictments outstanding. Though it is true that, should relator be released on his present sentence, he might be held thereafter under the outstanding indictments, this would constitute a future restraint. See Nelson v. George,
The outstanding charges may threaten relator and thus psychologically “restrain” him.
Finally, if we consider the “totality of restraints” herein, we conclude that they are insufficient to constitute custody. To decide otherwise would in our mind involve “tenuously construing ‘custody’ virtually to read .the word out of the statute.” Allen v. United States,
Notes
. We are aware of the fact that, in other jurisdictions, the pendency of indictments may affect the conditions of the sentence the prisoner is serving. E. g., Smith v. Hooey,
. It is well settled that this court has jurisdiction, under the habeas corpus statute, to review the legality of pre-conviction detention. Baker v. Grice,
. While actual physical restraint under these indictments lies solely in the future, the threat of that restraint can have a psychological impact in the present. Thus, we have a present restraint, i. e., one which existed at the time the petition was filed and which continues unabated.
. Most cases which hold that bail constitutes custody, e. g., Marden v. Purdy,
