ORDER DISMISSING CAUSE WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Petitioner, a state prisoner presently confined within the Missouri State Penitentiary at Jefferson City, Missouri, has filed pro se the above-styled petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging the validity of his confinement pursuant to a sentence of three years’ imprisonment for the offense of driving a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent.
*1317 The petition alleges that petitioner was convicted upon his plea of guilty to the above charge, and sentenced on October 2, 1975, to a term of three years, suspended, and placed on probation for a period of five years. Petitioner, who was represented by counsel during his arraignment and plea and his sentencing proceeding, did not appeal from his conviction and sentence.
According to petitioner, he remained on probation until October 15, 1976, at which time his probation was revoked by the sentencing judge without the provision of written reasons therefor, and petitioner was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment without credit granted for time served on probation. Petitioner contends that denial of credit for time served on probation prior to imposition of sentence deprives him of due process and equal protection of the law because he is not afforded the same rights granted to parolees. He further contends that with credit granted for time served on probation and time served in the Missouri State Penitentiary, he has fully served his sentence and is entitled to his release.
The petition states that petitioner has presented petitions for writ of habeas corpus with respect to this conviction to the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri and to the Missouri Supreme Court, and that each petition was denied. Petitioner further states that he has not presented the issues raised in this petition to the state court in the form of a motion to vacate under Missouri Supreme Court Rule 27.26.
Prom the face of the petition herein, therefore, it is clearly evident that petitioner has not exhausted his adequate and available state remedies with respect to the issues he asserts. The issue of credit for time served on probation certainly is cognizable under a 27.26 motion in the state courts,
Shepherd v. State,
The requirement that available state remedies be exhausted prior to the granting of federal habeas corpus relief is satisfied if the issues presented in a habeas corpus petition have been presented to the state courts for direct review.
Brown v. Allen,
Notwithstanding the failure of petitioner to properly exhaust his state court remedies and the dismissal which necessarily results therefrom, the Court will take this opportunity to briefly discuss petitioner’s claim on the merits, which this Court views as being frivolous and wholly without merit. Petitioner attacks the Missouri scheme for determining whether time served by a defendant on probation should be credited against his sentence. Before discussing this contention more fully, however, a brief statement of the Missouri statutory scheme relating to probation and parole is in order.
Under Missouri law, those defendants who have been placed under the jurisdiction of the Missouri Department of Corrections are subject to being granted probation or parole by the State Board of Probation and Parole. R.S.Mo. § 549.261 (1969). The courts, by statute, are rendered incapable of granting this relief to such defendants. R.S.Mo. § 549.121.2. Where parole is granted by the State Board, “[t]he period served on parole shall be deemed service of the term of imprisonment . . .” R.S.Mo. § 549.275.1 (1969). However, where probation or parole is properly granted by the court, whether credit is to be given, in whole or in part, for the time the defendant was on probation or parole is a matter committed by statute to the discretion of the court. R.S.Mo. § 549.101.1 (1969). The Missouri scheme is best capsulized in
Gordon v. State,
[I]n the case of a judicial parole (or probation) the credit against the term of imprisonment is discretionary with the court; whereas, in the case of an administrative parole the credit against the sentence is mandatory.
It should be further observed that, under Missouri law, where the court does not order such an allowance to be made at the time of revocation, it will be deemed an exercise of discretion against granting the credit. Gordon v. State, supra, at 490.
Clearly, “the statutory refusal to count time spent on parole when sentence is resumed does not violate due process.”
Firkins v. State of Colorado,
The equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not, of course, prohibit a state from treating different classes of persons in different ways.
Barbier v. Connolly,
Under Missouri law, a defendant’s sentence commences from the time he is actually received by the Department of Corrections.
Johnson v. Haynes,
It is further the opinion of this Court that, even if probationers and judicial parolees under R.S.Mo. § 549.071 (1969) are deemed similarly situated with administrative parolees under R.S.Mo. § 549.261 (1969), still, no Constitutional infirmity exists. Assuming,
ad arguendo,
that what this Court has already deemed to be two separate and distinct classes are, in fact, but one class of persons “similarly circumstanced,” the aforesaid legislative distinction in dealing with members of that “class” must be supported if there exists any rational basis for the distinction.
McGinnis v. Royster,
United States ex rel. McGill v. Schubin,
*1320 The significance of this fact is that the state can reasonably conclude that a parolee will have a sufficient amount of time remaining in his sentence to deter him from absconding or engaging in prohibited conduct during the crucial readjustment period immediately following his release from prison, but that a conditional releasee, with a much shorter portion of his sentence remaining at this time, will be substantially less deterred if he need only serve the remainder of his sentence without forfeiture of time spent on release.
The state has an interest in providing an adequate sanction in the event that conditional releasees violate the conditions of their release. We cannot say that this interest does not supply a rational basis for the distinction that New York has drawn.
While the differences between the status of a Missouri probationer and a New York conditional releasee are evident, and while the reasoning employed by the State of New York to support its scheme is not necessarily consistent with the reasoning employed to support the Missouri scheme, this in no way lessens this Court’s resolve to defer to what it has concluded to be a rational scheme, furthering a legitimate state interest, devised by the Missouri legislature. Referring to “the State’s sensitive and difficult effort to encourage for its prisoners constructive future citizenship while avoiding the danger of releasing them prematurely upon society,” the Supreme Court, in
McGinnis v. Royster, supra,
We do not wish to inhibit state experimental classifications in a practical and troublesome area, but inquire only whether the challenged distinction rationally furthers some legitimate, articulated state purpose.
As discussed above, the Missouri scheme
does
rationally further a legitimate state interest and thus survives the equal protection attack mounted against it by petitioner. A similar result on this very issue was achieved in
State v. Gideon,
Petitioner’s reliance on
Gagnon v. Searpelli,
Because petitioner has failed to exhaust available state court remedies before filing the present petition seeking federal habeas corpus relief, it is therefore
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the above-styled petition for writ of habeas corpus be, and it is hereby, denied. 1
Notes
. This Court’s gratuitous discussion pertaining to petitioner’s equal protection claim, and the citations contained in that discussion, are made in the hope that they might provide petitioner with a more complete view of the law which may be applied to his situation.
