Jamie Demon Jacobs v. State of Arkansas , 2023 Ark. App. 21 ( 2023 )


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  •                                   Cite as 
    2023 Ark. App. 21
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CR-22-175
    Opinion Delivered January   25, 2023
    JAMIE DEMON JACOBS
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE COLUMBIA
    V.                                              COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. 14CR-19-241]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    APPELLEE
    HONORABLE DAVID W. TALLEY, JR.,
    JUDGE
    REMANDED TO SETTLE AND
    SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD
    CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge
    Jamie Demon Jacobs appeals the Columbia County Circuit Court’s order revoking
    his suspended imposition of sentence (SIS) and sentencing him to a combined total of twenty
    years in the Arkansas Department of Correction (ADC). As his sole argument on appeal, he
    claims he was improperly sentenced upon revocation. Because the record before us does not
    contain the information necessary for us to sufficiently review and decide this issue, we must
    remand the matter to the circuit court to settle the record.
    In 2019, Jacobs was charged as a habitual offender with seven counts of aggravated
    assault and eight counts of first-degree terroristic threatening. He subsequently pled guilty to
    two of the terroristic-threatening counts listed as counts fourteen and fifteen of the
    information.1 In exchange for his guilty plea on these charges, the other thirteen charges
    were nolle prossed.
    The sentencing order was filed on March 20, 2020. As to count fourteen, the court
    imposed a sentence of twelve months in the ADC followed by ten years’ SIS. As to that
    count, the court placed a checkmark in the box indicating that Jacobs was being sentenced
    as a habitual offender pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-4-501(a) (Supp. 2021)
    and identified his habitual-offender status as an aggravating reason for a departure from the
    presumptive sentencing range.
    As to count fifteen, however, the sentencing order imposed only a ten-year SIS. It did
    not reflect any additional term of incarceration. And while the box indicating that Jacobs
    was being sentenced as a habitual offender pursuant to section 5-4-501(a) had been checked,
    the order indicated that the sentence imposed was not a departure from the presumptive
    sentence.
    On November 1, 2021, the State filed a petition to revoke Jacobs’s suspended
    sentence,2 alleging that he had violated the conditions of his suspended sentence by
    1
    On that same day, Jacobs pled guilty as a habitual offender to one count of possession
    of a controlled substance (methamphetamine or cocaine) in case No. 14CR-19-186 and was
    sentenced to twelve months in the ADC with 120 months’ SIS. The sentencing order clearly
    specified that he was being sentenced as a habitual offender and that his sentence was to run
    concurrently with the underlying sentence in the instant case and the sentence imposed in
    case No. 14CR-13-56C.
    2
    The State alleged in the petition to revoke that Jacobs had been sentenced to one
    year in the ADC and ten years’ SIS in case No. 14CR-19-241 on two counts of terroristic
    threatening.
    2
    committing a criminal offense punishable by imprisonment, by possessing and using
    controlled substances, and by failing to pay costs in his underlying cases. 3
    A revocation hearing was held on December 16, 2021, at which time Jacobs, Magnolia
    Police Sergeant Liz Colvin, and Community Corrections Officer Thomas Fenske testified
    regarding the allegations contained in the petition. After considering the evidence presented,
    the circuit court revoked Jacobs’s suspended sentence, finding that he had violated the terms
    and conditions of his SIS.4
    However, before the court could impose the sentence on revocation, the following
    colloquy occurred between the court and defense counsel:
    COUNSEL: Secondhand, as The Court makes its decision as to sentencing, I’d like to
    draw The Court’s attention to 19-241, in which he was sentenced to one
    year A.D.C, ten years suspended on two counts of Terroristic
    Threatening. I just want to ensure that The Court is aware; It appears
    based on the Sentencing Order, that it’s labeled as offense number fifteen.
    He was sentenced to a hundred and twenty months or ten years suspended
    as a habitual offender and I think the intent was for him to serve one year
    3
    The charged offenses were felony fleeing in a vehicle, running a stop sign, driving
    with a suspended driver’s license, possession of drug paraphernalia, and possession of
    methamphetamine and marijuana. As for the possession/use allegation, Jacobs was found in
    possession of methamphetamine and marijuana on or about October 5, 2021, and he tested
    positive for amphetamine, methamphetamine, and marijuana on October 6, 2021. Finally,
    at the time of the filing of the petition, he owed $575 in case Nos. 14CR-19-186 and 14CR-
    19-241.
    4
    The court found that he had violated the terms and conditions of his sentence by
    testing positive for amphetamine, methamphetamine, and marijuana and by committing the
    felony offenses of fleeing in a vehicle, driving with no driver’s license, possession of drug
    paraphernalia, and possession of methamphetamine and marijuana. The court did not make
    a finding with regard to the delinquency in payment of his fines and fees because he had not
    had an opportunity to make any payments given the short period of time between his release
    and his subsequent arrest on new charges.
    3
    A.D.C. on each count. It appears that he was not sentenced to one, that
    one year in A.D.C. was not imposed on one of those counts, so we’d just
    ask the Court to make a note of that upon making a decision.
    COURT:      I think that he was sentenced to one year on each count to run
    concurrently and then ten years S.I.S. on –
    COUNSEL: That’s correct, Your Honor.
    COURT:      -- each of the others and as an habitual offender.
    COUNSEL: That’s correct.
    COURT:      Okay.
    COUNSEL: I just was making sure, because in one of the counts it does not show that
    an A.D.C. sentence was imposed on that particular count.
    The State then made its sentencing recommendation after which the court orally imposed a
    ten-year sentence on each count to run consecutively to each other. 5
    Defense counsel then asked for clarification as to the length of sentence available for
    imposition on count fifteen. More specifically, she asserted that because no term of
    imprisonment had been imposed on count fifteen in the original sentencing order, Jacobs
    could not be sentenced on revocation as a habitual offender and that only six years was
    available on that count. The circuit court indicated that on the basis of its notes, Jacobs had
    been sentenced as a habitual offender on all counts; that for a Class D felony the term for a
    habitual offender was zero to twelve years; and because one year was imposed on each count,
    5
    The court also ordered that these sentences were to run consecutively to the ten-year
    sentence in case No. 14CR-19-186 for an effective sentence of thirty years. The court also
    waived the previous imposition of court costs.
    4
    Jacobs could be sentenced up to eleven years on revocation. Defense counsel agreed that the
    court had intended to sentence Jacobs to one year on each count but asserted once again
    that Jacobs had not actually been sentenced as a habitual offender because no time had been
    imposed on count fifteen. The State, agreeing that the original sentencing order had failed
    to impose any term of incarceration on count fifteen, stated that any discrepancy could be
    cured if the docket sheet reflected a different sentence had been imposed. The State also
    noted that the habitual-offender designation on the sentencing order as to count fifteen had
    been marked, to which the court responded, “Well, that’s at least both my recollection and
    the docket sheet, but I guess it does create a potential issue, but I will leave that for somebody
    else to sort out.” The court then signed a sentencing order imposing consecutive ten-year
    sentences on both counts without amending the original sentencing order. Jacobs has timely
    appealed.
    The issue we are presented with on appeal is whether the ten-year sentence imposed
    by the circuit court on Jacobs’s Class D felony terroristic-threatening conviction exceeded
    the maximum sentence allowed by law. If a court revokes a defendant’s suspension of
    sentence or probation, the court may enter a judgment of conviction and may impose any
    sentence on the defendant that might have been imposed originally for the offense of which
    he or she was found guilty. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-308
     (Supp. 2021). In Arkansas, the
    maximum sentence allowed for a Class D felony is six years. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-401
    (a)(5)
    (Repl. 2013). However, if the defendant is found to be a habitual offender with more than
    one but fewer than four felonies, Arkansas law provides for an extended term of
    5
    imprisonment of not more than twelve years for a Class D felony. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4
    -
    501(a)(1) & (a)(2)(E). Thus, the ten-year sentence imposed by the court upon revocation is
    valid only if Jacobs was originally sentenced as a habitual offender.
    On appeal, Jacobs asserts that he was not sentenced as a habitual offender in the
    original sentencing order; thus, the maximum sentence he could receive would be six years.
    In support of his argument, he cites Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-4-501, claiming it
    requires that habitual offenders be sentenced to a period of incarceration in the ADC.
    Because he was not ordered to serve any time in the ADC and only received a suspended
    sentence, he claims he was not sentenced as a habitual offender. As to the fact that the
    habitual-offender-designation box had been marked, Jacobs contends this was an inadvertent
    clerical error.
    The State, on the other hand, argues that Jacobs was sentenced as a habitual offender
    in the original sentencing order and that no period of incarceration is required for Jacobs to
    be classified as a habitual offender because the minimum statutory sentence for Class D
    felonies, standard or habitual, is zero. In the alternative, the State argues that the court
    intended to impose a one-year sentence in the ADC and that its failure to do so was a clerical
    error.
    Here, both parties have alleged that certain provisions of the original sentencing order
    that are essential to our review of the issue on appeal contain clerical errors. The circuit court
    was notified of the conflicting provisions, acknowledged that the original order did not
    accurately reflect the court’s intended sentence, yet declined to enter a corrected order. But
    6
    when the court announced its sentence on revocation, it seemingly relied on the intended,
    rather than the actual, sentence in determining Jacobs’s status as a habitual offender and in
    imposing the ten-year sentence on revocation. As a result, this court is left with unresolved
    questions regarding the factual basis for the court’s imposition of an extended term of
    imprisonment.
    Because the proper disposition of the issues on appeal in this case requires findings
    of fact that must be made in the circuit court, we remand the matter to the circuit court with
    specific instructions to settle the question as to what, if any, clerical errors exist as to the
    original sentencing order; to correct the original sentencing order nunc pro tunc if any
    clerical errors are found to exist; and to supplement the record with a transcript of the
    original sentencing hearing, the court’s docket sheets from the original guilty-plea hearing,
    and any other evidence in the record to support the court’s findings regarding the clerical-
    error issue. The supplemental record is to be returned within thirty days of this order.
    Remanded to settle and supplement the record.
    HARRISON, C.J., and VIRDEN, J., agree.
    Erin W. Lewis, for appellant.
    Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Walker K. Hawkins, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    7
    

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 2023 Ark. App. 21

Filed Date: 1/25/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/25/2023