The prisoner was convicted of misdemeanor in the police court of the city and county of San Francisco, and fined five hundred dollars, “and in default of payment of said fine, to be imprisoned in the county jail of the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, at the rate of one day for each one dollar of such fine, until said fine is satisfied.”
It is conceded that the offense of which the prisoner was convicted is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or by both. (Pen. Code, sec. 19.)
In this case the court imposed the fine only, with the alternative of imprisonment, in case of default in payment of the fine, not exceeding one day for each dollar of such fine, unless the same was satisfied. Under this judgment the prisoner has been in jail six months, and it is claimed that he is now entitled to be discharged; it being insisted on his behalf that the court had no jurisdiction to impose such a fine, or make such an apportionment thereof as would extend the period of imprisonment for non-payment thereof beyond the period of six months, — the maximum term of imprisonment which the court could have imposed if it had selected that mode of punishment.
Ex parte Wadleigh, 82 Cal. 518, and Ex parte Rosenheim, 83 Cal. 388, are relied upon in support of this contention.
All that was determined in Ex parte Wadleigh was, that a prisoner is entitled to his discharge from the state prison when he has served out the term prescribed by the judgment of imprisonment, less the credits which have been allowed him under the law, and that a judgment imposing imprisonment in the state prison in default of the payment of a fine is void,—affirming in the latter regard the decision in Ex parte Arras, 78 Cal. 304. In
Again, it being conceded, and that being the express provision of the statute, that the court had jurisdiction to impose a fine of five hundred dollars, it had full power to apportion the imprisonment for non-payment at the rate of one day for each dollar of such fine, under section 1446, Penal Code, in relation to proceedings in justices’ and police courts.
In Ex parte Wadleigh, the prisoner was discharged because the legislature had not in terms authorized the imprisonment in default of payment of the fine. In this case it has, in express terms, in at least two separate sections, made such provision.
Writ discharged, and prisoner remanded.