State v. Guiser ( 2019 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Guiser, 2019-Ohio-5421.]
    STATE OF OHIO                     )                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    )ss:                NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF SUMMIT                  )
    STATE OF OHIO                                         C.A. No.       29456
    Appellee
    v.                                            APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT
    ENTERED IN THE
    KRISTIE M. GUISER                                     COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
    COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO
    Appellant                                     CASE No.   CR-2014-07-2178(B)
    DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
    Dated: December 31, 2019
    HENSAL, Judge.
    {¶1}     Kristie Guiser appeals a judgment of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas
    that denied her motion for jail-time credit. For the following reasons, this Court reverses.
    I.
    {¶2}     In 2014, Ms. Guiser pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated possession of
    drugs. The trial court found her guilty of the offense and sentenced her to 30 months of
    community control, advising her that, if she violated the conditions of her community control, it
    would sentence her to one year in prison and order it to run consecutive to a sentence she had
    received in a different case.
    {¶3}     Three weeks after sentencing, Ms. Guiser violated the conditions of her
    community control. The trial court found her guilty of the violation and ordered her to serve one
    year in prison consecutive to the two-year sentence she had received in a different case. The
    2
    court credited her 145 days for time she had already served in jail and a community-based
    correctional facility (CBCF).
    {¶4}    After Ms. Guiser served more than 500 days in prison, the trial court granted her
    judicial release and placed her on two years of community control. Ms. Guiser violated the
    conditions of her community control three times. The first two times, the court continued her on
    community control. The third time the trial court sentenced her to one year in prison to be
    served consecutively to a two-year sentence it had imposed for her community control violation
    in a different case, for a total of three years imprisonment. It credited her “an aggregate total of
    67 days of jail credit * * * since the time she was released from prison on judicial release.” The
    court also wrote in its entry that “Defendant’s previously calculated jail time credit prior to the
    original imposition of sentence, along with the time served in the Ohio State Reformatory for
    Women, is not included in this calculation.”
    {¶5}    Ms. Guiser did not appeal her sentence. Instead, she filed a motion for jail-time
    credit, arguing that she had only received 67 days of credit and that the trial court should have
    included the time she spent in jail and a CBCF before her first prison stay. The trial court denied
    her motion. Ms. Guiser subsequently filed a request for a nunc pro tunc entry and a motion to
    calculate and amend her jail time and prison credit, arguing that the court’s jail time credit
    should have included all of the time she spent in jail, a CBCF, or prison before her judicial
    release. The trial court denied her motion. Ms. Guiser has appealed, assigning as error that the
    trial court failed to properly calculate and credit her prior jail and prison time.
    II.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    THE TRIAL COURT DENIED THE DEFENDANT-APPELLANT DUE
    PROCESS AND EQUAL PROTECTION UNDER THE LAW WHERE IT
    3
    FAILED TO CALCULATE AND CREDIT THE DEFENDANT’S
    CONFINEMENT (JAIL-TIME) CREDIT AND PRIOR INCARCERATION IN
    ITS SENTENCING ENTRY.
    {¶6}    Ms. Guiser argues that the trial court incorrectly concluded that she was not
    entitled to any additional jail-time credit. Revised Code Section 2929.19(B)(2)(g)1 provides that,
    at sentencing, if a court determines that a prison term is necessary or required, it shall
    include in the sentencing entry the total number of days, including the sentencing
    date but excluding conveyance time, that the offender has been confined for any
    reason arising out of the offense for which the offender is being sentenced and by
    which the department of rehabilitation and correction must reduce the definite
    prison term imposed on the offender as the offender’s stated prison term * * *.
    The court’s calculation shall not include the number of days, if any, that the
    offender served in the custody of the department of rehabilitation and correction
    arising out of any prior offense for which the prisoner was convicted and
    sentenced.
    R.C. 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i). The statute also provides that a sentencing court retains jurisdiction
    “to correct any error [in the calculation] not previously raised at sentencing[.]”              R.C.
    2929.19(B)(2)(g)(iii). “[An] offender may, at any time after sentencing, file a motion in the
    sentencing court to correct any error made in making a determination under division (B)(2)(g)(i)
    of this section, and the court may in its discretion grant or deny that motion.” 
    Id. We review
    the
    denial of a motion to correct jail-time credit for an abuse of discretion. State v. George, 9th Dist.
    Medina No. 19CA0037-M, 2019-Ohio-3823, ¶ 8. An abuse of discretion occurs when the
    court’s decision is unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore, 5 Ohio
    St.3d 217, 219 (1983).
    {¶7}    Ms. Guiser argues that the trial court’s sentencing entry did not award her all of
    the jail-time credit to which she was entitled. She contends that, in contrast to the 67 days that
    1
    Since their enactment in 2012, the location of these jail-time credit provisions has
    fluctuated between R.C. 2929.19(B)(2)(f), 2929.19(B)(2)(g), and 2929.19(B)(2)(h).
    4
    the court credited her, she has actually been in a jail or a CBCF for a total of 243 days. She also
    contends that she has been incarcerated in prison a total of 504 days, bringing her aggregate time
    served to 747 days.
    {¶8}      The State notes that the trial court was not responsible for crediting Ms. Guiser’s
    prison time.      Section 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i) specifically provides that “[t]he court’s [jail-time
    credit] calculation shall not include the number of days, if any, that the offender served in the
    custody of the department of rehabilitation and correction * * *.” Prior prison time is credited to
    a defendant by the department of rehabilitation and correction itself under Section 2967.191(A),
    which provides that the department “shall reduce the stated prison term * * * by the total number
    of days, if any, that the prisoner previously served in the custody of the department * * * arising
    out of the offense for which the prisoner was * * * sentenced.” See State v. Fisher, 10th Dist.
    Franklin No. 16AP-402, 2016-Ohio-8501, ¶ 16 (explaining that the department of rehabilitation
    and corrections’ “obligation to reduce a stated prison term by the number of days an inmate
    previously served in [its] custody is independent of the sentencing court’s duty to determine jail-
    time credit.”).
    {¶9}      Although the trial court was not required to include Ms. Guiser’s prior prison time
    in its calculation, it was required to determine “the total number of days” that Ms. Guiser has
    been confined “for any reason arising out of the offense” for which she was being sentenced.
    R.C. 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i). When the trial court sentenced Ms. Guiser after her first community
    control violation, it determined that she had served 145 days in jail or a CBCF. According to
    Ms. Guiser, she spent another 15 days in jail after sentencing until she was actually transported
    to prison. Under Section 2967.191(A), Ms. Guiser is entitled to credit for the number of days
    that she spent in “confinement while awaiting transportation to the place where [she] is to serve
    5
    [her] prison term.” Because a sentencing court does not know how many days that is going to be
    at the time of sentencing, Ohio Administrative Code 5120-2-04(C) provides that, when a sheriff
    delivers an offender to the department of rehabilitation and corrections’ reception center, the
    sheriff must present “a record of the days [the offender] was confined for the offense between the
    date of sentencing and the date committed to the reception center.” See State v. Davis, 2d Dist.
    Montgomery No. 27495, 2018-Ohio-4137, ¶ 10-14.
    {¶10} When the trial court sentenced Ms. Guiser for violating the conditions of her
    community control after her judicial release, it did not include the 145 days it originally credited
    her or the time that she spent awaiting transportation to prison following her first violation in its
    jail-time credit. Instead, it only credited her the 67 days she had spent in custody “since the time
    she was released from prison on judicial release.” It explicitly indicated that “Defendant’s
    previously calculated jail time credit * * * is not included in this calculation.”
    {¶11} The plain language of Section 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i) directs a sentencing court to
    include in its sentencing “the total number of days” that an offender has been confined “for any
    reason” arising out of the offense for which she is being sentenced. We note that, although the
    court sentenced Ms. Guiser after she committed a community control violation, the sentence it
    imposed was actually for her original conviction of aggravated possession of drugs, just as the
    sentence it imposed following her first community control violation. Upon review of the record,
    we conclude that the trial court’s jail-time credit should have included all of the time that she
    was confined in jail or a CBCF before and immediately after sentencing on her first community
    control violation as well as the time that she has spent in jail or a CBCF related to that offense
    following her judicial release.
    6
    {¶12} Upon review of the trial court’s sentencing entry, it appears that the court believed
    it did not have to include the jail-time credit it previously determined, but could simply tack on
    the additional time that Ms. Guiser was entitled because of her confinement on the latest
    community control violation.          Although that makes some practical sense, Section
    2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i) requires a court to calculate “the total number of days” that an offender was
    confined related to the underlying offense. It is also important for a court’s latest sentencing
    entry to include all of the prior time because the department of rehabilitations and correction may
    only credit jail time that has been “determined by the sentencing court under [R.C.
    2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i).”    R.C. 2967.191(A).      Furthermore, in assessing what time has been
    “determined by the sentencing court[,]” Section 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(v) provides that “[t]he
    department of rehabilitation and correction shall rely upon the latest journal entry of the court in
    determining the total days of local confinement for purposes of division (B)(2)(g)(i) to (iii) of
    this section and section 2967.191 of the Revised Code.” The department, therefore, could not
    look back to the time the trial court credited in its prior sentencing entry, but was only authorized
    to award Ms. Guiser 67 days of jail time credit.
    {¶13} Upon review of the record, we conclude that the trial court should have granted
    Ms. Guiser’s motion and awarded her the additional jail-time credit to which she is entitled.
    Without a correction of the amount of jail-time credit, Ms. Guiser will be required to serve time
    that she has already served, which is both unreasonable and unconscionable. We, therefore,
    conclude that the trial court exercised improper discretion when it denied Ms. Guiser’s motion
    under Section 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(iii). The trial court is instructed to enter a new sentencing order
    that credits Ms. Guiser for all of the time she has spent in confinement in jail or a CBCF related
    to her aggravated-possession-of-drugs offense. If the trial court concludes on remand that the
    7
    correct jail-time credit can be determined from the record, it may correct the error by issuing a
    corrected sentencing entry nunc pro tunc.        Davis, 2018-Ohio-4137, ¶ 17.       Ms. Guiser’s
    assignment of error is sustained.
    III.
    {¶14} Ms. Guiser’s assignment of error is sustained. The judgment of the Summit
    County Court of Common Pleas is reversed, and this matter is remanded for proceedings
    consistent with this decision.
    Judgment reversed,
    and cause remanded.
    There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common
    Pleas, County of Summit, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy
    of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
    Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of
    judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the
    period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(C). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is
    instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the
    mailing in the docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
    Costs taxed to Appellee.
    JENNIFER HENSAL
    FOR THE COURT
    8
    CARR, P. J.
    SCHAFER, J.
    CONCUR.
    APPEARANCES:
    KRISTIE M. GUISER, pro se, Appellant.
    SHERRI BEVAN WALSH, Prosecuting Attorney, and JACQUENETTE S. CORGAN, Assistant
    Prosecuting Attorney, for Appellee.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 29456

Judges: Hensal

Filed Date: 12/31/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/31/2019