In Re Fink
Before: Peters
[693]
PETERS, J.
On June 7, 1961, petitioner, without force or violence, escaped from the Ice Springs Conservation Camp. He was apprehended three days later. On June 30, 1961, he pleaded guilty to a charge of violating former section 4531 of the Penal Code. Before judgment and sentence, petitioner escaped from the county jail. He was thereafter apprehended and detained by federal authorities for a violation of the Dyer Act. Upon his release from the Federal Prison at Leavenworth, petitioner was delivered to the California authorities. On December 22, 1964, judgment of conviction was at last entered against him on his 1961 plea of guilty. The judgment was for violation of section 4531, and the sentence was that provided by law, the term to run concurrently with any other term petitioner had not completely served. Petitioner was never charged with the second escape. He is now serving terms pursuant to other convictions, and concedes that, whatever the decision in this case, he is not entitled to release.
At the time of the guilty plea section 4531 provided that the penalty for escape was a minimum of one year and a maximum of life. In September of 1963 the Legislature repealed section 4531 and amended section 4530, providing in subdivision (b) of section 4530 that the penalty for escape without force or violence was a minimum of six months and a maximum of five years.
Petitioner seeks the reduced penalty prescribed by section 4530, subdivision (b). He asks that the judgment which purports to incarcerate him pursuant to section 4531 be corrected, and that the Adult Authority be instructed to correct its records as they affect the fixing of his sentence and eligibility for parole. Habeas corpus is a proper remedy to secure such relief.
(In re Estrada,
63 Cal.2d 740, 750 [48 Cal.Rptr. 172, 408 P.2d 948].)
In the
Estrada
case, at page 742, it was held that when a statute mitigating punishment becomes effective after the commission of the prohibited act but before final judgment the lesser punishment provided by the new law should be imposed. This rule of law has been consistently followed.
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