Where a defendant is convicted of crime, and is not sentenced during the current term, and the failure or omission to pass sentence is not at the request or consent of the defendant, but, in the absence of any order or entry, is due altogether to the inaction or oversight of the court, the court, during the succeeding term or terms, does not lose jurisdiction of the case and the person of the defendant, so that the court may not cause the defendant to appear before the court during such subsequent term and be sentenced as if sentence were being passed during the term current with the trial.
No. 13807. SEPTEMBER 9, 1941.
The Court of Appeals (in Case No. 28984) certified the following question: "Where a defendant is convicted of crime, and is not sentenced during the current term, and the failure or omission to pass sentence is not at the request or consent of the defendant, but, in the absence of any order or entry, is due altogether to the inaction or oversight of the court, does the court during the succeeding term, or terms, lose jurisdiction of the case and the person of the defendant, so that the court may not cause the defendant to appear before the court during such subsequent term and be sentenced as if sentence were being passed during the term current with the trial? In this connection see: 15 Am. Jur. 141, § 487; 24 C. J. S. 27, § 1564?"
Although the precise inquiry here involved has not heretofore been before either of our two courts of review, each has dealt with questions somewhat similar, and the conclusions reached were in harmony with the view that under the facts stated the trial court did not lose jurisdiction. SeeShort v. Dowling, 138 Ga. 834 (76 S.E. 359); Hancock v.Rogers, 140 Ga. 688 (79 S.E. 558); Scoggins v. State,24 Ga. App. 110 (100 S.E. 18); Neal v. State, 104 Ga. 509
(30 S.E. 858, 42 L.R.A. 190, 69 Am. St. R. 175), where Mr. Justice Fish, afterwards Chief Justice, examined and discussed with that clarity, strength, and thoroughness so characteristic of his judicial utterances the question of the lack of power in a judge to suspend a sentence, and the correlative right of a judge thereafter to order that the original sentence be served. On the question whether under the circumstances stated by the Court of Appeals jurisdiction to pass sentence is lost, there has been great diversity of opinion in other jurisdictions. This lack of harmony may be seen by reference to the annotations in 3 A.L.R. 999, 1003 et seq., to the cases of Smith v. State, 188 Ind. 64
(121 N.E. 829), and McLaughlin v. State, 207 Ind. 484 (192 N.E. 753, 97 A.L.R. 800, 802); and the notes in 24 C. J. S. 27, § 1564. In Miller v. Aderhold, 288 U.S. 206 (53 Sup. Ct. 325,77 L. ed. 702), the Supreme Court of the United States aligned itself with those courts that hold that jurisdiction is not lost, its ruling being that where judgment has not been pronounced upon a verdict during the term at which it was rendered, the cause continues on the docket and necessarily passes over to a succeeding term for final judgment or other appropriate action. After stating the argument on which the contrary contention rested, Mr. Justice Sutherland, in delivering the opinion of a unanimous bench, said: "We conclude, in accordance with what we regard as the better view, that in a criminal case, where verdict has been duly returned, the jurisdiction of the trial court, under circumstances such as are here disclosed, is not exhausted until sentence is pronounced either at the same or at a succeeding term." The editors of American Jurisprudence state the rule to be "well settled that if, through inadvertence or oversight on the part of the court, sentence is not pronounced during the term at which the case is tried, or if the clerk neglects to enter a sentence duly pronounced, the court may impose sentence at a subsequent term." 15 Am. Jur. § 487. No *Page 650
sound reason occurs to us why the prevailing rule should not be adopted. There are practical considerations why it should be. To apply it infringes no right of the accused. To deny it would be harmful to society. It is as much the duty of courts to guard the safety of the latter as to enforce the rights of the former. There should not be any conflict between the two; and in ruling as we do we are of the opinion that in recognizing the vitality of the maxim salus republicae suprema lex we do not impair any privilege of the citizen. The question propounded is answered in the negative.