Com. v. Neely
Com. v. Neely
Opinion
Demetrius L. Neely was convicted, on his guilty plea, of possession of cocaine in the Circuit Court of the City of Portsmouth on December 1, 1997. The circuit court imposed a sentence of two years in prison, but suspended the entire sentence and ordered supervised probation. While on probation, Neely was arrested on unrelated federal charges and his probation officer initiated revocation proceedings. Neely pled guilty to the federal charges and was sentenced to confinement in a federal correctional institution. Thereafter, the circuit court revoked his suspended sentence and ordered his original two-year sentence to be served, to run "consecutively with all other sentences."
Almost four years later, Neely, still in federal custody, filed a motion in the circuit court seeking a modification of his two-year sentence, claiming that a detainer placed against him by the Virginia authorities interfered with his release from federal custody. The circuit court ruled that it had no jurisdiction to consider Neely's motion because of the time limitation imposed by Rule 1:1.
Neely appealed to the Court of Appeals. A divided panel, by a published opinion, held that the circuit court retained jurisdiction to entertain Neely's motion pursuant to Code § 19.2-303, reversed the order of the circuit court and remanded the case.
Neely v. Commonwealth,
Code § 19.2-303 plainly and unambiguously provides the trial judge with jurisdiction to consider Neely's motion, and it needs no interpretative construction.
We have no basis upon which to conclude that the legislature did not mean what it unambiguously wrote in Code § 19.2-303. If a defendant has not been transferred to the custody of the Department after conviction, the passage of time is not a factor that impacts upon the trial judge's jurisdiction to exercise his statutory grant of power under Code § 19.2-303.
See Robertson v. Superintendent of the Wise Corr. Unit,
Neely,
The Attorney General filed a petition for a stay and a rehearing en banc, which the Court of Appeals granted.
Neely v. Commonwealth,
The appeal presents a single question: "Did the circuit court correctly rule that it did not have jurisdiction under Virginia Code § 19.2-303 to rule on the defendant's motion to modify his sentence, even though at all relevant times the defendant was confined in the federal penal system?" We have considered this question and find no error in the
judgment of the Court of Appeals. For the reasons set forth in the majority opinion of the panel of the Court of Appeals,
Neely v. Commonwealth,
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- COMMONWEALTH of Virginia v. Demetrius L. NEELY.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published