Jeffrey Wayne Yeatman v. State of Mississippi ( 2014 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2013-CP-00457-SCT
    JEFFREY WAYNE YEATMAN a/k/a JEFFREY
    YEATMAN a/k/a JEFF W. YEATMAN
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                        02/15/2013
    TRIAL JUDGE:                             HON. JAMES T. KITCHENS, JR.
    TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:                   JEFFREY WAYNE YEATMAN (PRO SE)
    RHONDA HAYES-ELLIS
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:               OKTIBBEHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                  JEFFREY WAYNE YEATMAN (PRO SE)
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                   OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: BARBARA BYRD
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                      CIVIL - OTHER
    DISPOSITION:                             AFFIRMED - 07/24/2014
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., KITCHENS AND CHANDLER, JJ.
    CHANDLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   On October 31, 2006, Jeffrey Wayne Yeatman pleaded guilty to one count of simple
    assault on a law-enforcement officer and two counts of third-offense driving under the
    influence. Each of the three counts had a separate cause number. The Circuit Court of
    Oktibbeha County accepted Yeatman’s guilty pleas and sentenced him as follows: for simple
    assault on a law-enforcement officer in cause number 2006-0161-CR, five years
    imprisonment and a fine of $5,000 as a habitual offender; for third-offense DUI in cause
    number 2006-0327-CR, five years imprisonment and a fine of $5,000 as a habitual offender;
    and for third-offense DUI in cause number 2006-0328-CR, one year imprisonment, four
    years of post-release supervision, and a fine of $100. All sentences were to run
    consecutively.
    ¶2.    Yeatman filed motions for post-conviction relief from his convictions for simple
    assault on a law-enforcement officer and third-offense DUI in cause number 2006-0327-CR.
    The trial court denied post-conviction relief, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. This Court
    granted Yeatman’s petition for a writ of certiorari. Yeatman v. State, 
    90 So. 3d 1239
    , 1243
    (Miss. 2012). Because, by statute, the fine for simple assault on a law-enforcement officer
    is a maximum of $1,000, the Court vacated the $5,000 fine imposed on Yeatman for that
    crime. 
    Id. at 1244-45
    . We also remanded the case to the trial court for a determination of
    whether the criminal information in cause number 2006-0327-CR charged Yeatman as a
    habitual offender. 
    Id. at 1244
    . We directed the trial court to vacate the habitual-offender
    portion of Yeatman’s sentence in that cause if it found that Yeatman had not been charged
    as a habitual offender in cause number 2006-0327-CR. 
    Id.
     This appeal concerns the trial
    court’s decision on remand.
    ¶3.    On remand, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing at which Yeatman argued that,
    because his criminal information in cause number 2006-0327-CR did not charge him as a
    habitual offender, his habitual-offender sentence should be vacated. The trial court reviewed
    the transcript of the plea hearing, the criminal informations in causes number 2006-0327-CR
    and 2006-0328-CR, and Yeatman’s guilty-plea petitions in those cause numbers. The State
    explained that the criminal information for cause number 2006-0328-CR had the habitual-
    2
    offender language, but the criminal information for cause number 2006-0327-CR did not.
    Yeatman’s guilty-plea petitions showed that he had agreed that the State would recommend
    habitual-offender sentencing in cause number 2006-0328-CR and would recommend a
    sentence of one year and four years’ post-release supervision in cause number 2006-0327-
    CR.
    ¶4.    The trial court recognized that, in exchange for Yeatman’s guilty pleas to simple
    assault on a law-enforcement officer and two charges of third-offense DUI, the State had
    agreed not seek a life sentence for the assault charge under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-
    83. See Yeatman, 90 So. 3d at 1242. The trial court found that, during the sentencing hearing,
    the cause numbers for the DUI charges inadvertently had been transposed, causing Yeatman
    to receive a habitual-offender sentence in cause number 2006-0327-CR rather than cause
    number 2006-0328-CR. The trial court found that, in cause number 2006-0328-CR, Yeatman
    received the sentence he had bargained for in 2006-0327-CR, and in cause number 2006-
    0327-CR, he received the sentence he had bargained for in 2006-0328-CR. The trial court
    concluded that Yeatman had received the benefit of his plea bargain and declined to vacate
    the habitual-offender portion of Yeatman’s sentence. Instead, the trial court held that “[t]he
    sentence originally placed in Oktibbeha Criminal Cause Number 2006-0327-CRK is to be
    instead placed in Oktibbeha Criminal Cause Number 2006-0328-CRK and the sentence
    placed in Oktibbeha Criminal Cause Number 2006-0328-CRK is to be instead placed in
    Oktibbeha Criminal Cause Number 2006-0327-CRK, as the cause numbers were
    inadvertently switched during the guilty plea process.” The trial court also removed the fine
    given for simple assault on a law-enforcement officer. The trial court directed the district
    3
    attorney to prepare nunc pro tunc sentencing orders in the three causes, reflecting the
    corrections.
    ¶5.    Yeatman appeals, arguing that, on remand, the trial court exceeded this Court’s
    mandate directing the court to vacate the habitual-offender portion of his sentence if the
    criminal information in cause number 2006-0327-CR did not charge him as a habitual
    offender. He argues that, because he did not file a motion for post-conviction relief (PCR)
    attacking cause number 2006-0328-CR, the trial court lacked authority to alter the sentence
    in that case. He further argues that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter nunc pro tunc
    sentencing orders after the term of court had expired.
    ¶6.    The State argues that the trial court acted within its inherent authority to correct what
    amounted to a clerical error in the sentencing orders. We agree. Yeatman received the benefit
    of his plea bargain, because, although the cause numbers were transposed, he received the
    exact sentences he expected to receive based on the plea petitions. As Yeatman expected, the
    State did not pursue an amendment to the indictment under Section 99-19-83 for simple
    assault on a law-enforcement officer, and on the DUI charges, he received five years as a
    habitual offender on one charge, and one year and four years’ post-release supervision on the
    other charge. Although the criminal information in cause number 2006-0327-CR did not
    charge Yeatman as a habitual offender, he was charged as a habitual offender in cause
    number 2006-0328-CR. Yeatman’s guilty-plea petition in cause number 2006-0328-CR
    states that the State would recommend a mandatory five-year habitual-offender sentence.
    Yeatman’s guilty plea petition in cause number 2006-0327-CR states that the State would
    recommend a sentence of one year to serve and four years on post-release supervision. The
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    record supports the trial court’s finding that Yeatman received the benefit of his plea bargain,
    although the cause numbers inadvertently were transposed on the sentencing orders.
    ¶7.     The Court of Appeals addressed a similar situation in Fields v. State, 
    840 So. 2d 796
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2003). As in this case, in Fields, the defendant’s two case numbers were
    switched during the sentencing hearing; the defendant’s sale-of-marijuana sentence of
    twenty-five years was what he should have received for sale of cocaine, and his sale-of-
    cocaine sentence of five years was what he should have received for sale of marijuana. 
    Id. at 800
    . Three years later, the trial court corrected the mistake in amended judgments that
    reflected the correct cause numbers and correct sentences. 
    Id.
     The Court of Appeals held that
    the only reasonable inference to be drawn from the facts was that the trial court originally
    had intended to sentence Fields to twenty-five years for sale of cocaine and five years for sale
    of marijuana. 
    Id.
     The Court of Appeals held that the trial court’s entry of amended sentencing
    orders was within its inherent authority “to correct clerical errors . . . and to make the
    judgment entry correspond with the judgment rendered.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Kitchens v. State, 
    253 Miss. 734
    , 
    179 So. 2d 13
    , 14 (1965)). The Court of Appeals rejected the defendant’s
    argument that the trial court had lacked authority to correct the sentencing orders three years
    later, stating:
    As a general rule, “jurisdiction once acquired is not defeated by subsequent
    events, even though they are of such a character as would have prevented
    jurisdiction from attaching in the first instance.” B.G. Bynum v. State, 
    222 Miss. 632
    , 
    76 So. 2d 821
    , 821 (Miss.1955). In addition, “every court of record
    has inherent power not derived from statute to correct its own judgment
    rendered at a former term but a reviewing court is without power to substitute
    a wholly different judgment for that from which an appeal is prosecuted.” 
    Id.
    In the case of Brown v. Sutton, 
    158 Miss. 78
    , 
    121 So. 835
    , 837 (1929), the
    court said: “Every court of record has general authority over its own records.
    5
    The power of such a court to correct its records so as to make them speak the
    truth is inherent. The records of a court can be corrected or altered only by the
    court itself; and another court has no authority to make such corrections, even
    though it has appellate jurisdiction over the court whose records are sought to
    be corrected.” “Where it clearly appears that the judgment as entered is not the
    sentence which the law ought to have pronounced upon the facts as established
    by the record, the court acts upon the presumption that the error is a clerical
    misprision rather than a judicial blunder and sets the judgment entry right by
    an amendment nunc pro tunc.” Morrison & Whitlock v. Stewart, 
    21 Ill. App. 113
     (1886). The circuit court had not lost jurisdiction over this case. In
    addition to the ability to correct clerical errors, this correction may be done at
    any time, as well after as during the term. Balch v. Shaw, 
    61 Mass. 282
     (Mass.
    1851).
    Fields, 
    840 So. 2d at 800-01
    .
    ¶8.       Under the above authority, the trial court was within its inherent power to direct the
    entry of nunc pro tunc sentencing orders to correct what plainly was a clerical error by the
    court. The trial court retains the inherent authority to correct errors of a purely clerical nature
    at any time, even outside the term of court. Fields, 
    840 So. 2d at 801
    . Thus, the trial court
    had jurisdiction to enter a corrected sentencing order nunc pro tunc in cause number 2006-
    0328-CR, although Yeatman did not file a motion for PCR from that conviction. Further, no
    double-jeopardy concerns arose, because Yeatman was not resentenced to a greater term than
    he originally received. See Harvey v. State, 
    919 So. 2d 282
    , 285 (Miss. Ct. App. 2005) (the
    correction of a sentencing order to conform to the proceedings did not raise double-jeopardy
    concerns). The only reasonable inference to be drawn from the facts is that Yeatman received
    the sentences he bargained for and that the cause numbers inadvertently were transposed on
    the sentencing orders. We find that the trial court’s direction of the entry of nunc pro tunc
    sentencing orders was within its inherent authority to correct clerical errors. Therefore, we
    affirm.
    6
    ¶9.   AFFIRMED.
    WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., LAMAR, KITCHENS,
    PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-CP-00457-SCT

Judges: Dickinson, Kitchens, Chandler, Waller, Randolph, Lamar, Pierce, King, Coleman

Filed Date: 7/24/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024