State v. Lebeau ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA19-872
    Filed: 21 April 2020
    Avery County, No. 17 CRS 50725-26
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JUANITA NICOLE LEBEAU, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 15 April 2019 by Judge Marvin
    Pope in Avery County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1 April 2020.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Asher P.
    Spiller, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Emily
    Holmes Davis, for the Defendant.
    BROOK, Judge.
    Juanita Nicole Lebeau (“Defendant”) appeals from judgment entered upon jury
    verdicts on 10 April 2019 and amended 15 April 2019 for trafficking in methadone.
    We hold that the trial court retained jurisdiction to amend its judgment. We further
    hold that the 15 April 2019 amendment to the judgment did not violate Defendant’s
    right to be present at sentencing. Accordingly, we find no error.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant was arrested on 6 October 2017 and indicted 20 August 2018 on
    charges related to drug offenses that took place in April and May of 2017. On 10 April
    2019, an Avery County jury found her guilty of one count of trafficking between four
    and fourteen grams of methadone and two counts of selling methadone, a Schedule II
    narcotic.   For sentencing purposes, the two counts of selling methadone were
    consolidated under the one count of trafficking. The sentence announced in open
    court on April 10 was “a mandatory 70 months” of active imprisonment. The written
    judgment reflected both a minimum and a maximum sentence of 70 months’ active
    time.
    The next day, the Avery County Clerk of Court sent Judge Pope an email
    asking two questions: First, whether he ought to indicate a maximum term for
    Defendant’s sentence; and second, how to resolve a handful of inconsistencies among
    the verdict sheet, the indictment, the court calendar, and the written judgment. In
    some places, the primary charge was listed as “PWISD Sch. II,” i.e., trafficking. In
    others, it was listed as “Sale of Sch. II CS.” Judge Pope replied the same afternoon
    clarifying that he had consolidated the two counts of selling methadone under the
    trafficking count, a Class F felony “for which [Defendant] received 70 to 93 months.”
    On 15 April 2019, Judge Pope entered an amended judgment sentencing
    Defendant to a minimum of 70 and a maximum of 93 months of confinement,
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    reflecting the sentence prescribed for her trafficking offense by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-
    95(h)(4).
    Defendant timely noticed appeal.
    II. Analysis
    On appeal, Defendant argues that the amended judgment must be vacated and
    the case remanded for resentencing.        Specifically, she argues her sentence was
    amended after the trial court had been divested of jurisdiction over her case. In the
    alternative, she argues that even if the trial court had jurisdiction on 15 April 2019
    when it amended her sentence, it did so in her absence and thus denied her the right
    to be present to hear her sentence.
    We address these arguments in turn.
    A. Jurisdiction
    Defendant contends the trial court lost jurisdiction over her case when she
    entered notice of appeal, and that the amendment corrected an error in judicial
    reasoning and thus depended on the trial court’s continuing jurisdiction for its
    validity. The State argues that the trial court had jurisdiction when it amended
    Defendant’s sentence. It contends a trial court is only divested of jurisdiction when
    both (1) a notice of appeal has been given and (2) the period for taking appeals has
    elapsed.
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    As explained below, we agree with the State that the trial court retained
    jurisdiction.
    1. Standard of Review
    Whether the trial court had jurisdiction is a question of law that we review de
    novo. State v. Herman, 
    221 N.C. App. 204
    , 209, 
    726 S.E.2d 863
    , 866 (2012).
    2. Merits
    “The jurisdiction of the trial court with regard to the case is divested . . . when
    notice of appeal has been given and the period described in (1) and (2) has expired.”
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1448(a)(3) (2019) (emphasis added). Subsection (1) refers to
    “the period provided in the rules of appellate procedure for giving notice of appeal.”
    Id. § 15A-1448(a)(1).1
    The North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure allow a
    written notice of appeal in a criminal case to be filed 14 days after the entry of a
    judgment. N.C. R. App. P. 4(a)(2) (2019). Therefore, under the plain language of
    § 15A-1448(a)(3), the trial court has jurisdiction until notice of appeal has been given
    and 14 days have passed.
    Defendant cites State v. Davis, 
    123 N.C. App. 240
    , 
    427 S.E.2d 392
    (1996), for
    the proposition that a notice of appeal alone terminates a trial court’s jurisdiction. In
    that case, we stated that “[t]he general rule is that the jurisdiction of the trial court
    is divested when notice of appeal is given[.]” State v. Davis, 
    123 N.C. App. 240
    , 242,
    1  Subsection (2) involves instances when a motion for appropriate relief has been made and,
    as such, is inapplicable here. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1448(a)(2) (2019).
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    
    427 S.E.2d 392
    , 393 (1996). But we do not read Davis’s description of a “general rule”
    to nullify in toto one of the statute’s conjunctive requirements for the divestment of
    jurisdiction. A “general rule” by its terms does not preclude the operation of more
    specific statutory provisions, as the plain text of § 15A-1448(a)(3) requires. “Where
    the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, there is no room for judicial
    construction and the courts must construe the statute using its plain meaning.” State
    v. Wagoner, 
    199 N.C. App. 321
    , 324, 
    683 S.E.2d 391
    , 395 (2009). Moreover, Davis
    concerned a sentence amended months after it was first entered, well after the
    expiration of the 14-day window for filing a notice of appeal, and is therefore
    
    distinguishable. 123 N.C. App. at 241
    , 427 S.E.2d at 393 (holding trial court was
    without jurisdiction to amend the defendant’s sentence when it did so in the course
    of amending the record on appeal).
    Only five days passed between the entry of the original judgment in this case
    and its subsequent amendment. The trial court thus retained jurisdiction over the
    matter.
    B. The Right to be Present
    Defendant next argues that because the amended April 15 judgment was
    entered in her absence, she was deprived of her right to be present to hear her
    sentence. Defendant contends this right is violated when “the written judgment
    contains any substantive change from the sentence pronounced in defendant’s
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    presence.”   The State argues that because the sentence imposed is statutorily
    required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-95(h)(4) for the offense under which Defendant’s
    guilty verdicts were consolidated, the sentence inhered in the verdict and thus was
    not actually changed by the entry of the amended judgment.          The judgment’s
    amendment, in other words, was the “non-discretionary byproduct” of the verdict,
    notwithstanding the trial court’s failure to properly record the upper end of that
    mandatory sentence. State v. Arrington, 
    215 N.C. App. 161
    , 167, 
    714 S.E.2d 777
    , 782
    (2011). We agree with the State and conclude that the amended judgment did not
    effect a substantive change to Defendant’s sentence.
    1. Standard of Review
    We review the propriety of an amended judgment entered outside the
    defendant’s presence de novo.
    Id. at 166,
    714 S.E.2d at 781.
    2. Merits
    Criminal defendants have a right to be present to hear the entry of their
    sentences. State v. Mims, 
    180 N.C. App. 403
    , 413, 
    637 S.E.2d 244
    , 250 (2006).
    Defendant was present to hear her sentence as it was imposed and announced on 10
    April 2019. The question is whether the April 15 amended judgment “represent[ed]
    a substantive change from the sentence pronounced by the trial court[.]”
    Id. We have
    found a change to be substantive where a trial court has materially
    altered the length or the terms of a defendant’s sentence in the defendant’s absence.
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    See, e.g., State v. Hanner, 
    188 N.C. App. 137
    , 141, 
    654 S.E.2d 820
    , 823 (2008) (finding
    a substantive change where multiple sentences were amended to run consecutively
    rather than concurrently); 
    Mims, 180 N.C. App. at 414
    , 637 S.E.2d at 250-51
    (vacating nine months’ intensive probation imposed in written judgment but not
    orally in open court); State v. Crumbley, 
    135 N.C. App. 59
    , 66, 
    519 S.E.2d 94
    , 99 (1999)
    (vacating amendment to defendant’s sentences causing them to run consecutively
    rather than concurrently).    In each of these cases, the trial court modified the
    defendant’s sentence as an otherwise permissible exercise of judicial discretion. See,
    e.g., State v. Harris, 
    111 N.C. App. 58
    , 71, 
    431 S.E.2d 792
    , 800 (1993) (“The sentencing
    judge [] retains the discretion to impose multiple sentences to run consecutively or
    concurrently.”).
    On the other hand, changes that merely correct clerical errors are not
    substantive.   A clerical error is one that results “from a minor mistake or
    inadvertence, esp[ecially] in writing or copying something on the record, and not from
    judicial reasoning or determination.” State v. Jarman, 
    140 N.C. App. 198
    , 202, 
    535 S.E.2d 875
    , 878 (2000) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary, 7th ed. 1999). Similarly, our
    Court in Arrington concluded that an amendment to include statutorily required fines
    accompanying the punishment imposed was not a substantive change but a
    statutorily “necessary byproduct” of the sentence. 
    Arrington, 215 N.C. App. at 168
    ,
    714 S.E.2d at 782. A change is therefore not substantive when it corrects a clerical
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    error or clarifies that a sentence will comport with applicable statutory limits on the
    trial court’s sentencing discretion.
    North Carolina law requires that the sentence imposed for Defendant’s
    conviction be a minimum of 70 months and a maximum of 93 months. N.C. Gen Stat.
    § 90-95(h)(4)(a) (2019). It also requires that “[t]he maximum term shall be specified
    in the judgment of the court.” N.C. Gen Stat. § 15A-1340.13(c) (2019). The judge is
    to enter the sentence required by the conviction, and subsequent discretion to adjust
    the time served within that mandatory range is left to state correctional officers.
    Id. § 15A-1340.13(d).
    Here, the trial court’s discretion was bound in both procedural and substantive
    terms such that the amended sentence did not represent a novel exercise of judicial
    discretion in Defendant’s absence, as it did in Crumbley, Mims, and Hanner. Rather,
    the amendment reflects the only sentence the court could legally impose given the
    verdict rendered—“a non-discretionary byproduct of the sentence that was imposed
    in open court.” 
    Arrington, 215 N.C. App. at 167
    , 714 S.E.2d at 782.
    Further, “a court of record has the inherent power and duty to make its records
    speak the truth.” State v. Cannon, 
    244 N.C. 399
    , 403, 
    94 S.E.2d 339
    , 342 (1956). The
    trial court is entitled to a presumption of regularity; that is, the presumption that
    “public officials [] discharge their duties in good faith and exercise their powers in
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    accord with the spirit and purpose of the law.” State v. Ferrer, 
    170 N.C. App. 131
    ,
    136, 
    611 S.E.2d 881
    , 884 (2005) (internal marks and citations omitted).
    It is presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary,
    that acts of a public officer within the sphere of his official
    duties, and purporting to be exercised in an official capacity
    and by public authority, are within the scope of his
    authority and in compliance with controlling statutory
    provisions.
    Civil Service Bd. of City of Charlotte v. Page, 
    2 N.C. App. 34
    , 40, 
    162 S.E.2d 644
    , 647
    (1968) (emphasis added).
    Although on its face the initial April 10 judgment purported to sentence
    Defendant to a minimum and maximum term of 70 months, that sentence would
    violate state law by both failing to impose the correct sentence pursuant to § 90-
    95(h)(4) and by failing to specify the maximum term—not just any maximum term—
    required by § 15A-1340.13(c).      Adhering to the presumption of regularity, we
    presume—absent any evidence to the contrary—that Judge Pope meant on both April
    10 and April 15 to assign Defendant the sentence made mandatory by the “controlling
    statutory provisions.”
    Id. This presumption
    is supported by Judge Pope’s response to the Clerk of Court’s
    April 11 email inquiry, in which he explained that he had “consolidated everything
    into Count I . . . for which [Defendant] received”—in the past tense—“70 to 93
    months.” (Emphasis added.) During the 10 April 2019 sentencing hearing, Judge
    -9-
    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    Pope also announced “[t]he defendant is sentenced to a mandatory 70 months,”
    (emphasis added), suggesting he understood his discretion was bound by statute.
    Unlike Mims, where remanding for resentencing was required in part because
    “the transcript [was] void of any reference to [the revised] sentence[,]” the transcript
    in this case made reference to the “mandatory” nature of the sentence prescribed by
    statute. 
    Mims, 180 N.C. App. at 413
    , 637 S.E.2d at 250.
    We therefore conclude that the amended judgment does not reflect a
    substantive change to Defendant’s sentence such that Defendant had a right to be
    present for the rendering of the amended judgment because the trial court retained
    “the inherent power and duty to make its records speak the truth[,]” 
    Cannon, 244 N.C. at 403
    , 94 S.E.2d at 342, and thus the amended judgment comports both with
    the sentence announced and with the statutorily required sentence.
    III. Conclusion
    We conclude that the trial court retained jurisdiction over Defendant’s case
    because only five days elapsed between the entry of the first judgment and the entry
    of the amended judgment. Further, because the substance of Defendant’s sentence
    was wholly preordained by statute, and because we presume that the trial court
    intended to follow the law, we conclude that the April 15 amendment reflects a
    clerical clarification rather than a substantive change. We therefore hold the trial
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    STATE V. LEBEAU
    Opinion of the Court
    court did not err in amending the judgment to reflect the mandatory sentence
    required by statute.
    NO ERROR.
    Judges TYSON and ZACHARY concur.
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