Jeffery Thompson v. State of Indiana
Jeffery Thompson v. State of Indiana
Opinion
Case Summary
[1] Jeffery Thompson appeals the trial court's denial of his motion to credit his sentence with 240 days that he served on pretrial home detention. The State does not oppose the motion. We conclude that the trial court erred in denying Thompson's motion and therefore reverse and remand with instructions to credit that time to Thompson's sentence.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] In April 2016, the State charged Thompson with one count of level 6 felony operating while intoxicated endangering another person and one count of level 6 felony operating while intoxicated with an alcohol concentration equivalent of .15 or more. On June 26, 2018, pursuant to a written plea agreement, Thompson agreed to plead guilty to the first charge. The State agreed to dismiss the second charge and all the charges that Thompson had pending in cause number 49G15-1512-F6-45853 and cause number 49G15-1701-F6-3764 ("Cause 3764"). In Cause 3764, Thompson had been ordered to serve pretrial home detention from January 31, 2017, through September 28, 2017, a total of 240 days. He completed the home detention with no violations. Thompson and the State agreed to a total sentence of 730 days and also agreed that the credit time earned in Cause 3764 would be applied to that sentence.
[3] The trial court accepted the plea agreement and sentenced Thompson to 730 days, with ten days executed and the rest suspended to probation. The court awarded Thompson sixty days of good time credit for his pretrial home detention in Cause 3764.
See
Discussion and Decision
[4] Thompson contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for credit for time that he served on pretrial home detention. The State does not oppose Thompson's motion. For the reasons given below, we agree with Thompson.
[5] "To say that the case law has been murky on the issue of credit time for home detainees would be an understatement."
Barker v. State
,
[6] Three years later, the court was confronted with the same issue in
Franklin v. State
,
[7] Just two years later, in
Purcell v. State
,
We recognize that this conclusion casts doubt on the continued viability of the holding in Franklin itself, to wit, that pre-trial time served on home detention does not count as credit toward a sentence subsequently imposed. Although not directly before us today, we have revisited the question and conclude that a trial court is within its discretion to deny a defendant credit toward sentence for pre-trial time served on home detention. Absent legislative direction, we believe that a defendant is only entitled to credit toward sentence for pre-trial time served in a prison, jail or other facility which imposes substantially similar restrictions upon personal liberty.
Id. at n.6.
[8] Many legislative changes have been made in the nearly two decades since Purcell . For example, the legislature has specifically defined the various types of "credit" available to imprisoned or confined persons. Enacted in 2015, Indiana Code Section 35-50-6-0.5 provides,
The following definitions apply throughout this chapter:
(1) "Accrued time" means the amount of time that a person is imprisoned or confined.
*1069 (2) "Credit time" means the sum of a person's accrued time, good time credit, and educational credit.
(3) "Educational credit" means a reduction in a person's term of imprisonment or confinement awarded for participation in an educational, vocational, rehabilitative, or other program.
(4) "Good time credit" means a reduction in a person's term of imprisonment or confinement awarded for the person's good behavior while imprisoned or confined.
[9] The legislature has also revamped the statutes governing credit time classes. Persons convicted before July 1, 2014, were assigned to one of four classes: I, II, III, or IV.
[10] In addition, the legislature has amended Section 35-38-2.6-6, which now provides,
(a) As used in this subsection, "home" means the actual living area of the temporary or permanent residence of a person.
(b) A person confined on home detention in a community corrections program receives one (1) day of accrued time for each day the person is confined on home detention, plus any earned good time credit.
(c) In addition to accrued time under subsection (b), a person who is placed in a community corrections program under this chapter is entitled to earn good time credit under IC 35-50-6-3 and IC 35-50-6-3.1. A person confined on home detention as part of a community corrections program may not earn educational credit under IC 35-50-6-3.3.
(d) A person who is placed in a community corrections program under this chapter may be deprived of earned good time credit as provided under rules adopted by the department of correction under IC 4-22-2.
Thus, the statute allows post-conviction home detainees in community corrections programs to earn both accrued time (calculated at a day for a day) and good time credit.
[11] And finally, Section 35-50-6-3.1 now provides,
(a) This section applies to a person who commits an offense after June 30, 2014.
(b) A person assigned to Class A earns one (1) day of good time credit for each day the person is imprisoned for a crime or confined awaiting trial or sentencing.
(c) A person assigned to Class B earns one (1) day of good time credit for every three (3) days the person is imprisoned for a crime or confined awaiting trial or sentencing.
(d) A person assigned to Class C earns one (1) day of good time credit for every six (6) days the person is imprisoned for a crime or confined awaiting trial or sentencing.
(e) A person assigned to Class D earns no good time credit.
(f) A person assigned to Class P earns one (1) day of good time credit for every four (4) days the person serves on pretrial home detention awaiting trial.
*1070
[12] Thompson correctly observes that, "[d]espite the statute's silence, every other credit time classification listed in [ Section 35-50-6-3.1 ] earns accrued time in addition to good time credit." Appellant's Br. at 7 (citing
Abney v. State
,
[13] Thompson further observes that he "was unable to find any situation in the Indiana Code where a defendant can earn 'good time credit' without also earning accrued time."
Id.
at 8. We were also unable to find any such situation, which leads us to conclude that the legislature could not have intended such an absurd result.
See
Study v. State
,
[14] Based on the numerous substantive legislative changes regarding credit time that have been enacted since
Purcell
, we conclude that
Purcell
is no longer good law with respect to accrued time for pretrial home detention.
See
Horn v. Hendrickson
,
[15] Reversed and remanded.
Vaidik, C.J., and Mathias, J., concur.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.