Cannon v. State
Cannon v. State
Opinion of the Court
The appellant, Esker Cannon, Jr., pleaded guilty to the offense of criminally negligent homicide on June 11, 1992. On June 26, 1992, the trial court sentenced him to 365 days in jail and ordered him to pay a $2,000 fine, a $50 victims' compensation assessment, $2,846.90 in restitution, court costs, and attorney fees. The record indicates that at the time of sentencing the appellant was entitled to approximately nine and one-half months' credit for time served, leaving approximately two and one-half months on the 365-day sentence imposed by the trial court.
Immediately following imposition of sentence, the trial court ordered that the appellant be released on July 8, 1992, and placed on two years' supervised probation. The appellant, through counsel in open court, declined probation. Nevertheless, the trial court stated that it would impose a sentence of probation "anyway." The appellant appeals the trial court's decision and states as his sole issue the following: "May the trial court lawfully impose a sentence of probation upon a defendant who declines to accept it?"
The appellant contends that the right to refuse or accept probation in Alabama was recognized in Persall v. State,
"A probation is subject to rejection or acceptance by the convict. He has an unfettered election in that regard, and the court order is not effective or operative until it has been accepted by him. If he prefers to serve out his sentence, as originally imposed upon him, to a suspension of it by subjecting himself to the conditions nominated in the probation, he has the clear right to do so. But if he elects to accept the probation and avails himself of the liberty it confers, he must do so upon the conditions upon which alone it is granted to him. One of these conditions is that his sentence shall continue in fieri, and that the State shall have the power to execute it in full upon him should he forfeit the liberty and immunity conditionally secured to him by the order. That a convict having only a short time remaining of his sentence would make an unwise choice by accepting such probation upon onerous conditions for a breach of which he might years after be remanded to complete his sentence affords no argument against the constitutional integrity of the enactment."
The state argues that the first two sentences of the above-quoted passage do not confer upon the appellant the right that he suggests. Specifically, the state contends that "the Court in its reasoning did not utilize the statement that probation is subject to rejection or acceptance by the convict to decide the issue and therefore said portion of the opinion is dictum." We are convinced, however, that the principle espoused in the first two sentences was necessary to thePersall court's holding and survives today to vest in a convict the right to accept or reject probation. Central to the Persall
court's holding is the idea that a convict is bound to the conditions of his probation because of his acceptance of those terms in exchange for his conditional freedom. The Court of Appeals clearly recognized that it was the convict's decision to accept probation, and not the trial court's offer of probation that subjected him to the particular condition which suspended his entire sentence during the term of probation. Indeed, the court went so far as to say that, in some cases, a convict would make an "unwise choice" by accepting probation when only a short time remained on his prison term. Persall,
More recently, this court, in Markley v. State,
We note that our recognition of the convict's unfettered right to accept or reject probation does not interfere with the trial court's absolute discretion in determining whether to grant or deny a request for probation. See German v. State,
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
BOWEN, P.J., and McMILLAN, J., concur.
TAYLOR, J., dissents with opinion.
MONTIEL, J., dissents without opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
The judge has the unlimited authority to sentence to anything within the minimum and maximum. When a circuit judge sentences a convicted person to no more than the maximum and no less than the minimum we should not disturb that sentence. *Page 507
Reference
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- Esker Cannon, Jr. v. State.
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