State v. Richards, 23968 (10-8-2008)
State v. Richards, 23968 (10-8-2008)
Opinion of the Court
{¶ 3} Mr. Richards violated the terms and conditions of community control. At a hearing on March 28, 2007, the trial court told him that, if it found him guilty of a community control violation, it would sentence him to 12 months. Mr. Richards pleaded guilty to the violation, and the court again told him that he was being sentenced to "12 months." The journal entry that the court issued on April 2, 2007, however, sentenced him to three years. He did not appeal.
{¶ 4} A couple of months later, the trial court again suspended Mr. Richards' sentence, placed him into a judicial release program known as Reentry Court, and told him that he had to appear for weekly court hearings. After he failed to appear for one of the hearings, he pleaded guilty to escape. At a hearing regarding his sentence for violating judicial release, the court acknowledged that it had "made a mistake" when it resentenced him for the community control violation "and did not reimpose his three year sentence." The court sentenced Mr. Richards to one year for escape, but postponed its reimposition of his prior sentence. It directed the parties *Page 3 to file briefs and reset the hearing. Following the hearing, the State moved for Mr. Richards to be resentenced for his community control violation.
{¶ 5} At the rescheduled hearing, the court acknowledged that Mr. Richards' sentence was "a procedural mess," but stated that it was "going to do the best [it could] to unmess it." The court resentenced Mr. Richards "to the original sentence, reimposing the time, which is 3 years, which is 12 months on each count consecutive to the one count on the escape. One year on the escape charge from the reentry court."
{¶ 6} On November 9, 2007, Mr. Richards moved the trial court to correct its April 2, 2007, journal entry, alleging it was not "consistent with the sentence imposed in open court." On November 13, 2007, the trial court journalized the sentence it had ordered. The court found that Mr. Richards had violated the terms and conditions of Reentry Court and sentenced him to four years in prison. Mr. Richards has appealed "the sentence journalized on November 13, 2007," assigning three errors. On November 30, 2007, the trial court denied Mr. Richards' motion to correct.
{¶ 8} The Ohio Supreme Court has "consistently held that once an appeal is perfected, the trial court is divested of jurisdiction over matters that are inconsistent with the reviewing court's jurisdiction to reverse, modify, or affirm the judgment." State ex rel. Rock v. Sch.Employees Ret. Bd,
{¶ 9} The sentence that the trial court reduced when it granted Mr. Richards judicial release was the one it imposed on April 2, 2007. That is the same sentence that was the target of Mr. Richards' motion to correct. If the trial court had granted Mr. Richards' motion, it would have interfered with this Court's review of the trial court's decision to reimpose that sentence. This Court, therefore, concludes that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to do what Mr. Richards requested in his motion. His first assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 11} Mr. Richards' argument fails because he did not appeal the April 2, 2007, journal entry. Under the doctrine of res judicata, he is barred from challenging the sentence he received for violating community control at this time. State v. Perry,
{¶ 12} Mr. Richards' argument also fails on the merits because the trial court's pronouncement that he was "going to be sentenced to 12 months, 6 months in jail to run concurrent" was not his sentence. "A court of record speaks only through its journal and not by oral pronouncement or mere written minute or memorandum." Schenley v.Kauth,
{¶ 14} Mr. Richards' argument fails because the trial court did not grant the State's motion for resentencing. The State requested that the court "re-sentence the defendant in regard to a community control violation hearing and sentencing originally held on March 28, 2007." *Page 6 The court's November 13, 2007, journal entry only addressed Mr. Richards' sentence for violating judicial release. The journal entry stated that "the Court finds the Defendant violated the terms and conditions of the Reentry Court, and terminates him from the program." The court reimposed the three-year sentence that it had ordered following Mr. Richards' violation of community control. It also ordered that sentence to be served consecutively to the one-year sentence it imposed for escape. Accordingly, because the trial court did not grant the State's motion to resentence Mr. Richards for violating community control, his third assignment of error is overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
The Court finds that there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common Pleas, County of Summit, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App. R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run. App. R. 22(E). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the mailing in the docket, pursuant to App. R. 30. *Page 7
*Page 1Costs taxed to appellant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State of Ohio v. Michael A. Richards
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Unpublished