State ex rel. Davis v. Hunter

McClain, J.

After the applicant for this writ of habeas corpus had served more than nine years of his seventeen years’ sentence, and when, under the provisions- of the statute as to diminution of sentence for good conduct' (Code, -section 5Y03, which is a substantial re-enactment of-the provisions of Acts 18th General Assembly, chapter 154,'. sectioii *5701, which was in force when the applicant Was committed), he would have been entitled to his discharge on serving for a further period of sixty-three- days without any misconduct, authorizing a forfeiture of the good time which he had earned, or would be entitled to earn under the provisions of that, statute, his sentence was suspended by the Governor. The-terms of the suspension were, that it should remain in force-during the pleasure of the chief executive, and might be-revoked by said executive and the prisoner remanded for further execution of the sentence, and that the prisoner accepted the suspension with the full understanding that it might be so revoked, and that “whatever allowance and. rebate he may have heretofore earned' by reason of good conduct while incarcerated in the penitentiary will be forfeited' by operation of such revocation, and he will be thereupon-, recommitted to- serve the remaining period of his original' sentence, without any rebate or allowance for good time heretofore earned.” It was also stated in the order of suspension that the prisoner would be expected to abstain from the use-of intoxicating liquors, and from frequenting places whereintoxieánts were sold or kept for sale, and in other ways so-conduct himself as to justify the conclusion that the public-welfare would not be endangered by the continuation of the-suspension.

About two and one half years after the prisoner-had been released under this executive order, information. was received at the executive office that the person whose-sentence had thus been suspended was under arrest in Connecticut for the crime of assault, and that- he had, been conducting himself in such a manner as to justify the conclusion that the public welfare was very seriously endangered by-his being at large. Without specifying the details of the-, information as to his conduct, it is sufficient to say that-it-was to the effect that- he had been guilty of the grossest criminal misconduct, and was a disorderly, desperate, and dangerous person, and that, instead of complying Avith the specific; *571requirement not to frequent places where intoxicants were sold or kept for sale, he had been engaged in the keeping and illegal sale of intoxicating liquors, for which offense a warrant of arrest had been made out, but not served on account of his flight. The communication to the executive office in which this information was conveyed was from a prosecuting attorney in Connecticut, but, as the court below refused to allow this communication to be introduced in evidence, we need not further refer to it. It is sufficient to say that the Governor appears to have had reasonable ground on which to base his order,' issued immediately after the receipt of this communication, specifying that, for good and sufficient reasons appearing to him, the suspension of sentence was revoked; and by the order said Davis was directed to be apprehended, and returned to the warden of the penitentiary at Anamosa, to be confined in said penitentiary for the whole of his unexpired term of sentence.” In pursuance of this order, said Davis was returned to the penitentiary, and, after serving such length of time as to more than cover the sixty-three days which he would have been required to serve, had his sentence not been suspended and had he continued to pursue such a course of good conduct in the penitentiary as would have entitled him to tire benefit of the statutory provisions, he brought this, writ of habeas corpus to secure his release.

It is argued by counsel for the prisoner that the order of recommitment only authorized confinement for sixty-three days, but, construing the order of revocation in the light of the language used in the order of suspension, we think it was the plain intention of the Governor that he should be kept in confinement for the additional period of more than seven years for which he might-have been confined under the original sentence, without tíre benefit of the statutory provision as to good conduct; and therefore we have before us the question whether the Governor, in granting a suspension. of sentence to a prisoner in the penitentiary, may law*572fully impose as a condition to be accepted by him the requirement that, in the event of the revocation of the suspension by the Governor in his discretion, the prisoner may be reimprisoned, with the penalty of a forfeiture of the diminution 'of his sentence which, under the statute, he would have tenjoyed, had he not accepted the benefits of the suspension.

i. Conditional pardon: revocation. The power to grant reprieves, commutations, and par'dons conferred upon the Governor by the Constitution, article 4, section 16, includes the power to grant a conditional pardon. Arthur v. Craig, 48 Iowa, 264. And . , . , an indefinite suspension of sentence on conditions is undoubtedly, in practical effect, a conditional pardon. It was said by this court in the case just cited that “ the executive may annex to a pardon any condition, precedent or subsequent, provided it be not illegal, immoral, or impossible to be performed ”; and we have no doubt that the '■Governor may, as a condition of the- continuance of the. suspension of sentence, require the prisoner to abstain from acts which are not in themselves criminal, or from a course of conduct which would not in itself constitute a violation of law. There is some conflict among the authorities as to the method of procedure to be pursued when a prisoner who has availed himself of a conditional pardon has been guilty of a breach of the conditions imposed. It has been held by some courts that there must be a judicial determination of the facts amounting to a breach of the condition, and, construing the conditional pardon as a grant on a condition subsequent, this view is not unreasonable. See State ex rel. O’Connor v. Wolfer, 53 Minn. 135 (54 N. W. Rep. 1065, 19 L. R. A. 783, 39 Am. St. Rep. 582); People v. Moore, 62 Mich. 496 (29 N. W. Rep. 80); People v. Cummings, 88 Mich. 249 (50 N. W. Rep. 310, 14 L. R. A. 285, and note); People v. Burns, 77 Hun, 92 (28 N. Y. Supp. 300). It has been •said, however, in other cases, that the determination of the facts constituting a breach of condition need not be on in•dictment, nor on trial by jury. State v. Chancellor, 1 Strob. *573347 (47 Am. Dec. 557). And in some jurisdictions it lias been held that the authority to determine whether the conditions of the pardon have been broken may he conferred upon the Governor, who can finally determine the question of fact, and remand for further imprisonment without judicial proceedings. Kennedy's Case, 135 Mass. 48; Fuller v. State, 122 Ala. 32 (26 South. Rep. 146, 45 L. R. A. 502); State v. Smith, 1 Bailey, 283 (19 Am. Dec. 679). But the order of suspension in the case before us contained the express condition that it might be revoked at the discretion of the executive, and should remain in force only during his pleasure; and it is plain, therefore, from its very terms, that no determination of any fact was essential to the authority of the Governor to terminate the suspension and cause the prisoner to be returned to the penitentiary. It cannot be contended, therefore, that any judicial proceeding was necessary. This was expressly decided in Arthur v. Craig, supra; and, to the same effect, see Woodward v. Murdock, 124 Ind. 439 (24 N. E. Rep. 1047).

2 conditional nution of^seníence. But the Governor, in revoking the suspension, attempted to exercise a power reserved in the original order of suspension — of forfeiting the statutory deduction for good conduct which the prisoner might have availed himself of, had he not accepted the benefits of the suspension — and .the question is whether, by an arrangement between the executive, granting a conditional pardon or suspension of sentence, and the prisoner, accepting it, the statutory privilege of diminution of sentence for good conduct while in the penitentiary can be taken away. The executive may withdraw what he has granted, and he may specify the conditions on which such withdrawal shall be made, or he may make the continuance- of the privilege conditional on his own pleasure and discretion. But we find no authority in the statute nor in adjudicated cases for the exercise by the Governor, at his discretion, of the power to deprive a prisoner of his statutory diminution of *574sentence on account of good conduct while in prison. It would not be claimed that the executive could stipulate, as a consequence' of the revocation of the privilege granted and accepted, that the prisoner should serve a longer term than that for which he had been sentenced. Commonwealth v. Fowler, 4 Call, 35. True, it has been held that the executive may impose the condition, that the prisoner leave the State. Ex parte Hawkins, 61 Ark. 321 (33 S. W. Rep. 106, 30 L. R. A. 736, 54 Am. St. Rep. 209); Ex parte Marks, 64 Cal. 29 (28 Pac. Rep. 109, 49 Am. Rep. 684), or that the prisoner shall reimburse the State for the expenses of his prosecution by the payment of a specified sum annually for a certain number of years. People v. Marsh, 125 Mich. 410 (84 N. W. Rep. 472, 51 L. R. A. 461, 84 Am. St. Rep. 584). But in no case which we have been able to find has it been attempted to compel performance by the prisoner of the obligations entered into by him in accepting the benefits of the conditional pardon or suspension. If we should sustain the enforcement of the condition in the present case, we would, in effect, sustain and enforce a contract made by the prisoner, waiving his statutory diminution of sentence. No such contract is authorized by statute, nor, as we think, is any such contract capable of enforcement. Indeed, it is only in a somewhat fictitious sense that a conditional pardon is spoken of as a contract. ■ It is, as a matter of fact, simply the grant and acceptance of a privilege, with a condition attached, in accordance with which the privilege may be revoked. State v. Smith, 1 Bailey, 283; 19 Am. Dec. 679; Lee v. Murphy, 22 Gratt. 789; 12 Am. Rep. 563; Greathouse’s Case, 4 Sawy. 487; 10 Fed. Cas. 1057.

The statutory provisions as to diminution of imprisonment for good conduct do not, perhaps, confer upon the prisoner any legal right; but, at any rate, they confer a statutory privilege, of which the prisoner may avail himself. No doubt, the forfeitures provided by Code, section 5704, may be imposed by the warden without a judicial determina*575tion as to the facts constituting a violation of the rules, regulations, or laws for the government of the penitentiaries. But if no such forfeiture has been declared until the prisoner has served for such length of time that, with the diminution of sentence provided for, he is entitled-to his. discharge, he can, without question, secure his discharge in a legal proceeding. We reach, the conclusion, therefore, that the diminution of imprisonment provided for by statute is a privilege of which the prisoner can be deprived only in accordance with the provisions of the statute, and that, as no provision is made for forfeiture of this privilege on account of violation of the terms of a conditional pardon or suspension of sentence by the executive, no such forfeiture can be imposed by the executive under any condition or stipulation inserted in the conditional pardon or order for suspension of sentence. This conclusion finds some support in the reasoning adopted by the Supreme Court of Indiana in deciding the case of Woodward v. Murdock, 124 Ind. 439 (24 N. E. Rep. 1047). In that case there was, however, no express condition that on violation of the terms of his parol the prisoner should forfeit the diminution of sentence already earned by good conduct, and the court simply held that on remand after revocation of the parol the prisoner could only be required to serve such portion of his term as remained after giving him credit for such good conduct as was provided by statute. The court, however, says: The appellant (the prisoner) could not extend the time of his imprisonment by contract with the Governor, any more than he could have become a prisoner in the first instance by contract.. It is only by virtue of the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction that a citizen can be condemned to imprisonment, and, when the time expires for which the sentence runs as given in the judgment, the prisoner is entitled to his discharge.”

The judgment of the trial court was correct, and it is AEEXRMED.