Sunil Kumar v. State of Arkansas ( 2024 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2024 Ark. App. 153
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION III
    No. CR-23-208
    Opinion Delivered February 28, 2024
    SUNIL KUMAR
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE MILLER
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                                         [NO. 46CR-16-379]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                           HONORABLE WREN AUTREY,
    APPELLEE JUDGE
    AFFIRMED IN PART; DISMISSED IN
    PART
    MIKE MURPHY, Judge
    A Miller County jury found appellant Sunil Kumar guilty of possession of cocaine (a
    Class B felony), possession of Xanax (a Class A misdemeanor), possession of marijuana (a
    Class A misdemeanor), and reckless driving (a Class B misdemeanor). He was sentenced to
    a total of thirty years in the Arkansas Division of Correction and given three days’ jail-time
    credit. This is a direct appeal in which Kumar appears pro se. On appeal, he argues that the
    circuit court did not correctly afford him jail-time credit and that his sentence was
    unconstitutional. Neither argument is preserved, and we affirm in part and dismiss in part.
    Only a brief procedural history is necessary. On June 25, 2018, the State and Kumar’s
    counsel announced ready for trial; twelve jurors and an alternate were selected and seated.
    After a recess in chambers, the defense advised the court that Kumar had agreed to a plea
    agreement. Defense counsel sought permission to plead Kumar the following day before a
    different judge, to allow Kumar time to raise money for fines and costs; the court granted
    counsel’s request and allowed Kumar to remain free on bond.
    Kumar did not show up the next day.
    Over defense counsel’s objection, the circuit court proceeded with the trial without
    Kumar, and the jury convicted Kumar in absentia on all charges. He was sentenced as a
    habitual offender, but Kumar had disappeared. He did not resurface again until 2021 when
    he was booked into a jail in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, on theft charges. Arkansas authorities
    were able to place a hold on him. However, before Kumar could be transferred to Arkansas,
    he had to first resolve some criminal charges in Allen County, Texas. Kumar was taken into
    custody in Arkansas on January 9, 2023, held without bond on a separate case, and formally
    sentenced in the case before us today on February 7, 2023. The sentencing order was entered
    February 17, and Kumar timely appealed.
    On appeal, Kumar argues that the court did not correctly calculate or apply jail-time
    credit due and that the length of his sentence amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.
    Kumar’s first point regarding jail-time credit is not preserved. Nothing in the record
    before us today indicates that Kumar raised a jail-time-credit objection or argument to the
    circuit court. Jail-time credit arguments are reviewable on direct appeal, but only when the
    issue was raised in the original proceeding. Weatherford v. State, 
    2019 Ark. App. 536
    , at 3,
    
    590 S.W.3d 172
    , 174. Kumar contends that because his argument concerns an illegal
    sentence, it may be challenged at any time.
    2
    A challenge to jail-time credit, however, is not a challenge to an illegal sentence but
    rather a challenge to a sentence imposed in an illegal manner. Cooley v. State, 
    322 Ark. 348
    ,
    350–51, 
    909 S.W.2d 312
    , 313 (1995). The former may be challenged any time, the latter
    must first be raised at the circuit court level. Kumar’s sentence is not illegal on its face because
    it is within the maximum prescribed by law. He is not, however, completely foreclosed from
    relief: if a request for jail-time credit was not raised in the original proceeding, then a claim
    that the sentence was imposed in an illegal manner may still be raised in a Rule 37 petition.
    Ark. R. Crim. P. 37.2(c)(ii); Cooley, supra. The appeal as it relates to the jail-time credit
    argument is dismissed.
    Kumar’s second point on appeal is that his thirty-year sentence is grossly
    disproportionate to his cocaine-possession offense in violation of the Eighth Amendment.
    Kumar did not challenge the constitutionality of his sentence below, so this point, too, is
    unpreserved. We have consistently held that we will not consider issues raised for the first
    time on appeal, even constitutional ones. See A.J.A. v. State, 
    2019 Ark. App. 464
    , 
    588 S.W.3d 92
    . Accordingly, we decline to consider the merits. Anderson v. State, 
    2024 Ark. App. 79
    . The
    appeal as it relates to the Eighth Amendment argument is affirmed.
    Affirmed in part; dismissed in part.
    HARRISON, C.J., and WOOD, J., agree.
    Sunil Kumar, pro se appellant.
    Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: Christian Harris, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    3
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 2/28/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/28/2024