State ex rel. Randlett v. Lynch , 2021 Ohio 221 ( 2021 )


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  • [Cite as State ex rel. Randlett v. Lynch, 
    2021-Ohio-221
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    The State ex rel. Larry A. Randlett,                        :
    Relator,                                   :
    v.                                                          :       No. 20AP-489
    Judge Julie M. Lynch,                                       :   (REGULAR CALENDAR)
    Respondent.                                :
    DECISION
    Rendered on January 28, 2021
    On brief: The Tyack Law Firm Co., L.P.A., and Jonathan T.
    Tyack, for relator. Argued: Jonathan T. Tyack.
    On brief: [G. Gary Tyack], Prosecuting Attorney, and
    Seth L. Gilbert, for respondent. Argued: Seth L. Gilbert.
    IN MANDAMUS
    NELSON, J.
    {¶ 1} Larry Randlett seeks a writ of mandamus that would order a common pleas
    court judge to withdraw her nunc pro tunc orders specifying that the duration of the period
    of postrelease control previously ordered for and that attaches to 41 of the 67 felony sex
    crimes of which he was convicted in 2003 is the five years mandated by law. Because we
    conclude that he does not in the circumstances of this case have a clear legal right to such a
    writ, we will deny his petition.
    {¶ 2} We need not belabor the nature of Mr. Randlett's crimes. Suffice it to note
    that at the March 31, 2003 sentencing, Judge McGrath neatly summarized the offenses as
    involving "five separate and distinct victims, multiple counts, multiple offenses against
    each, young teenage boys. Predatory scheme over seven years, only stopped when caught.
    Abused trust, creating great psychological harm, and it's been a life-altering experience in
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                2
    a negative way for each of the victims." Tr. at 244. The unpleasant facts are further laid out
    in State v. Randlett, 10th Dist. No. 03AP-385, 
    2003-Ohio-6934
     ("Randlett I").
    {¶ 3} On February 10, 2003, Mr. Randlett entered pleas of guilty in four cases,
    three of which are at issue here. In Franklin C.P. No. 01CR-705, he pled guilty to two third-
    degree felonies of sexual battery and six fourth-degree felonies of gross sexual imposition.
    In Franklin C.P. No. 01CR-4353, he pled guilty to seven third-degree felonies of gross sexual
    imposition, nine fourth-degree felonies of gross sexual imposition, six fourth-degree felony
    counts of corruption of a minor, and one fourth-degree and one fifth-degree felony of
    disseminating matter harmful to juveniles. In Franklin C.P. No. 02CR-1721, he pled guilty
    to nine fourth-degree felonies of corruption of a minor and (under "old law") to eight third-
    degree felonies of corruption of a minor and three fourth-degree felony counts of gross
    sexual imposition. In Franklin C.P. No. 02CR-1738, he pled guilty (under "old law") to six
    third-degree and eight fourth-degree felony counts of gross sexual imposition and to one
    third-degree count of corruption of a minor.
    {¶ 4} Mr. Randlett signed a total of three plea forms relating to the "new law"
    counts as to which postrelease control would attach. Those forms specified that as to the
    felony sex offenses (and this box was checked on each of the three forms), Mr. Randlett
    certified that: "If the Court imposes a prison term, I understand that the following period(s)
    of post-release control is/are applicable: * * * Felony Sex Offense * * * Five Years-
    Mandatory [box checked]."       Mr. Randlett further attested on the plea form that "I
    understand that a violation of post-release control" could result in certain sanctions.
    February 10, 2003 plea forms in 01CR-705, 01CR-4353, and 02CR-1721 (plea form
    regarding "new law" counts).
    {¶ 5} During the plea colloquy, and consistent with the various plea forms, the trial
    judge distinguished between "the new law and the old law." February 10, 2003 Tr. at 28.
    After discussing theoretical possibilities for community control (new law) and probation
    (old law), the Judge said:
    in the new law sections of the case, if you go to prison on these
    cases for any, for felony sex offense, once released from prison,
    you will be subject to five years mandatory supervision by the
    Adult Parole Authority of Ohio, and if you violated the law
    while under their five-year supervision, they could send you
    back to prison on the new law cases, new law counts of these
    No. 20AP-489                                                                               3
    cases for additional time in addition to what the Court had
    given you, but in any event they can't add any more time than
    one-half of whatever the total of the Court's sentence was. Do
    you understand that?
    Id. at 30. Mr. Randlett responded: "Yes, I do, Your Honor." Id.
    {¶ 6} The Judge and the parties returned to the matter of postconviction release at
    the sentencing hearing, after the court had imposed prison sentences that, as later modified
    by this court to be consistent with trial court pronouncements at the hearing, amounted to
    what we somehow later calculated as 18 years. Compare April 3, 2003 Judgment Entries
    with Randlett I at ¶ 43-45, 55; State v. Randlett, 10th Dist. No. 06AP-1073, 2007-Ohio-
    3546, ¶ 3 (Randlett I "determined that the trial court erred in imposing a greater sentence
    than that pronounced at the sentencing hearing and, accordingly, modified defendant's
    sentence to a prison term of 18 years").
    THE [SENTENCING] COURT: Let's see. All right. With
    respect to the new law F-3s and F-4s, the F-3 GSIs, the Court
    believes -- is it five-year mandatory? You can correct me if I'm
    wrong.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Five-year mandatory supervised
    release, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Right. Once released from prison after twenty
    years, you would be supervised, Mr. Randlett, for a five-year
    period, mandatory, by the Adult Parole Authority of Ohio. If
    you violated the law, you can be sent back to prison for more
    time on these cases, on these F-3 new law cases, counts, than
    the Court has given you, but in any event, no greater amount of
    extra time than one-half of the Court's sentence.
    And as to the F-4s and F-5s under the new law, I believe there
    is an optional supervision by the Adult Parole Authority. If you
    violated the law, they can send you back to prison for more time
    than the Court had given you on those counts, but in any event,
    no greater amount of extra time than one-half of the Court's
    sentence.
    March 31, 2003 Tr. at 247-48.
    {¶ 7} This erroneous mandatory/optional spoken distinction between third-degree
    felony sex offenses and lesser degree felony sex offenses for purposes of postrelease control
    (which under the law is a mandatory five years for all felony sex offenses, R.C.
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                4
    2967.28(B)(1)) was not reflected in the judgment entries filed after sentencing. The
    judgment entries for "new law" cases 01CR-705 and 01CR-4353 each recited simply:
    "After the imposition of sentence, the Court notified the Defendant, orally and
    in writing, of the applicable periods of post-release control pursuant to R.C.
    2929.19(B)(3)(c), (d) and (e)." April 3, 2003 Judgment Entries (emphasis added); see
    also Mandamus Petition at ¶ 8, 10. That same language also appeared in the judgment
    entry for 02CR-1721, which further divided the sentences there between new law and old
    law counts, noting with regard to the latter that for offenses that "occurred prior to Am.
    Sub. S. B. 2," Mr. Randlett "is not subject to post release control." April 2, 2003 Judgment
    Entry; see also Mandamus Petition at ¶ 9. Properly, and of note, no language regarding
    postrelease control appeared in the judgment entry for 02CR-1738, which related entirely
    to "old law" offenses. April 3, 2003 Judgment Entry; see also Mandamus Petition at ¶ 11.
    {¶ 8} Consistent with the judgment entries, the trial court also signed "disposition
    sheets," filed on the same April 3, 2003 date, that for the three relevant cases confirmed
    that the "Defendant [had been] notified of * * * Post Release Control in writing and orally";
    Judge McGrath took care to strike inappropriate reference to "Bad Time" notification on
    each of those forms. The record further reflects a "NOTICE (Prison Imposed)" form signed
    by Mr. Randlett and his lawyer on the day of the sentencing hearing and filed April 7, 2003
    in which the trial court notified the defendant that "felony sex offenders" are subject to a
    "mandatory 5 years" of postrelease control: that additional advisement, while not reflected
    in the body of that one-page form (where the mandatory and durational aspects of the term
    were left blank) was provided in the one-page document's only (and slightly more than one-
    line-long) footnote.
    {¶ 9} The reference in each of the three relevant sentencing entries to "the
    applicable periods of post-release control" was not appealed in 2003 or thereafter.
    Mr. Randlett did appeal from the consecutive nature and length of the sentences, from the
    trial court's determination that he was a sexual predator, and from the trial court's reliance
    on undisclosed victim impact statements. See Mandamus Petition at ¶ 12; Randlett I at
    ¶ 20. This court did modify two judgments of the trial court to reflect the precise sentence
    lengths imposed at the sentencing hearing: "With those modifications, the judgments of
    the trial court [were] affirmed as modified." Randlett I at ¶ 55.
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                 5
    {¶ 10} Nor were the judgments disturbed by Mr. Randlett's February 10, 2006
    application to reopen his appeal, see State v. Randlett, 
    110 Ohio St.3d 1443
    , 2006-Ohio-
    3862 (declining review of this court's denial), or by his August 25, 2006 motion for relief
    from judgment under Civ.R. 60(B), see State v. Randlett, 10th Dist. No. 06AP-1073, 2007-
    Ohio-3546 (affirming trial court denials of relief from judgment).
    {¶ 11} Roughly some 17 years after he was sentenced and after this court resolved
    his direct appeal, Mr. Randlett neared his release from prison. See Mandamus Petition at
    ¶ 22 (citing stated release date of November 30, 2020). Matters took a turn. In a form
    letter dated August 6, 2020 and addressed to the Franklin County Prosecutor, Ohio Parole
    Board Chief Hearing Officer Brigid Slaton referenced the three relevant case numbers and
    opined that the trial court's "entry * * * does not include sufficient notification regarding
    post-release control. In order for the [Adult Parole Authority] to assess this individual for
    post-release control, post-release control must be properly included in the sentencing
    entry. * * * * A corrected entry that imposes post-release control, and includes the
    prescribed duration in R.C. 2967.28, will enable the Parole Board to place this individual
    on post-release control." Ms. Slaton checked two boxes on the form: "1) As the sentencing
    entry for this case omits post-release control, corrective action must be taken to ensure that
    the individual can be placed under post-release control supervision," and "2) As the
    sentencing entry for this case omits the duration of the post-release control period,
    corrective action must be taken to ensure that the individual can be placed under post-
    release control supervision."
    {¶ 12} The    prosecuting    attorney    disagreed   with    the   parole   authority's
    understanding of the state of the law, and advised the trial court that "the * * * notice
    requiring [sic] corrective action is in error." August 21, 2020 Motion for Nunc Pro Tunc
    Entry at 2. Nonetheless, in what he called "an abundance of caution – and to ensure that
    Randlett is subject to the mandatory supervision upon his release," the prosecutor
    requested that the trial court "file nunc pro tunc entries in these cases stating that Randlett
    is subject to a mandatory five-year term of PRC." Id. at 3. Mr. Randlett opposed the
    motion, and, "so that there [would be] no misunderstanding on the part of the Ohio
    Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, * * * request[ed] a ruling by the Court
    declaring that Postrelease Control is not a part of Defendant's sentence in these cases."
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                  6
    September 17, 2020 Memorandum Contra and Cross-Motion at 1 (in trial court docket of
    which this court takes judicial notice); see id. at 3-4 ("The language in the Sentencing
    Entries does not impose postrelease control, and as such, postrelease control is not a part
    of Defendant's sentence. * * * * Because the State did not appeal these 'voidable' Sentencing
    Entries, the Court's judgment in these cases is final.").
    {¶ 13} The trial court found "good cause" for the state's motion and in each of the
    three cases issued a nunc pro tunc order "to reflect that the Defendant is subject to a
    mandatory five-year term of Post Release Control." October 6, 2020 Nunc Pro Tunc Order.
    For each case, that alteration took the form of adding the phrase "is Five (5) years
    mandatory" at the end of the April 3, 2003 sentencing entry's statement that "[a]fter the
    imposition of sentence, the Court notified the Defendant, orally and in writing, of the
    applicable periods of post-release control pursuant to R.C. 2929.19(B)(3)(c), (d), and (e)."
    (We see no dispute that as to cases 01CR-705 and 01CR-4353, the nunc pro tunc change
    accurately described what actually was said at the sentencing hearing; further, the state
    acknowledges that the trial court at the sentencing hearing never correctly advised
    Mr. Randlett of the mandatory applicable five-year period of postrelease control in 02CR-
    1721, in that the trial court mistakenly thought that such period did not apply to fourth- or
    fifth-degree felony sex offenses. And because they purport to reach back to the March 31,
    2003 sentencing hearing, the nunc pro tunc orders naturally do not purport to incorporate
    this court's Randlett I sentence modifications: neither those clarifications nor
    Mr. Randlett's prison release date is at issue here.)
    {¶ 14} Mr. Randlett did not appeal the nunc pro tunc orders, but responded with his
    petition seeking mandamus. The gist of his argument is that the "original [three] April 3,
    2003 sentencing entries * * * failed to properly impose[] PRC because they did not provide
    the statutorily compliant notification regarding postrelease control," Mandamus Petition
    at ¶ 42; that "[i]f the entries contain a legal error favoring a defendant, then the State
    should have appealed the error * * * * and is therefore barred by res judicata from now
    claiming, more than seventeen (17) years later, that the trial court failed to properly impose
    PRC in the sentencing entries," id. at ¶ 32, 31 (emphasis in original); and that the trial court
    in any event lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the three cases in which it issued nunc
    pro tunc entries because Mr. Randlett already had served his sentence in those three cases
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                   7
    and was imprisoned only on 02CR-1738, for which postrelease control does not obtain, id.
    at ¶ 33-38, 46-48.
    {¶ 15} The state moved to dismiss Mr. Randlett's petition, and after review we
    consolidated those arguments with further filing and argument on the merits, which we
    considered at an oral hearing conducted on January 6, 2021. Both parties have made good
    presentations, but we do not accept Mr. Randlett's predicate that postrelease control would
    be unenforceable under the 2003 sentencing entries as originally issued. Our reading of
    the law is that the nunc pro tunc orders altered neither the fact nor the duration of the
    postrelease control imposed by the original entries. Mr. Randlett is correct that those
    original entries are res judicata, but that means not that by law he is out from under
    postrelease control obligations, but rather that he was to be subject to a mandatory five-
    year period of postrelease control upon his release from prison. Because the nunc pro tunc
    additions have no legal effect on the fact and duration of the postrelease control ordered,
    we do not find that Mr. Randlett has established a clear legal right to the writ he seeks.
    Therefore, we do not reach a conclusion as to the state's further argument that a writ would
    be improper because Mr. Randlett had an adequate remedy at law, through appeal, for any
    claims.
    {¶ 16} "To be entitled to a writ of mandamus, a relator must establish, by clear and
    convincing evidence, (1) a clear legal right to the requested relief, (2) a clear legal duty on
    the part of the respondent to provide it, and (3) the lack of an adequate remedy in the
    ordinary course of the law." State ex rel. Olmstead v. Forsthoefel, __Ohio St.3d __, 2020-
    Ohio-4951, ¶ 7, citing State ex rel. Love v. O'Donnell, 
    150 Ohio St.3d 378
    , 
    2017-Ohio-5659
    ,
    ¶ 3.
    {¶ 17} The premise of Mr. Randlett's writ request is that "To 'Adequately
    Impose' PRC, Corrective Action Was Necessary," November 18, 2020
    Memorandum Contra Respondent's Motion to Dismiss, [Etc.] at 17 (emphasis in original),
    and that because of res judicata and also what he argues was the expiration of his relevant
    sentences, the trial court lacked authority to order such corrective action, see, e.g., id. at 22
    ("Res Judicata Applies") (emphasis in original), 34 ("A trial court lacks jurisdiction to
    impose PRC upon an offender when the sentence for the entire case has been already
    served").
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                 8
    {¶ 18} To bear out the first part of his argument, Mr. Randlett leans on State v.
    Grimes, 
    151 Ohio St.3d 19
    , 
    2017-Ohio-2927
    , and argues that it has retroactive effect to mean
    that because the April 3, 2003 sentencing entries omitted reference to the consequences of
    violating postrelease control and because the entries "do not indicate the length of Relator's
    term of post-release control and whether said term is mandatory or not," postrelease
    control could not be effectuated absent corrective action by the court. November 18, 2020
    Memorandum at 17-20, 21 (also arguing at 21-22 that "the 2003 Sentencing Entries * * *
    were clearly not sufficient to comply with pre-Grimes post-release control notification
    requirements").
    {¶ 19} But Grimes and its progeny, as Mr. Randlett recognizes, have in some
    significant part been overtaken by even more recent Supreme Court rulings. Here, we paint
    with a bit of a broad brush simply to sketch the background landscape.
    {¶ 20} In the years immediately following Mr. Randlett's sentence, the Supreme
    Court made clear that " 'unless a trial court includes postrelease control in its sentence, the
    Adult Parole Authority is without authority to impose it.' " Hernandez v. Kelly, 
    108 Ohio St.3d 395
    , 
    2006-Ohio-126
    , ¶ 20, quoting State v. Jordan, 
    104 Ohio St.3d 21
    , 2004-Ohio-
    6085, ¶ 19 (overruled in part by State v. Harper, 
    160 Ohio St.3d 480
    , 
    2020-Ohio-2913
    ).
    But that postrelease control sentencing language did not need to be perfect, or even entirely
    correct, in order to withstand collateral attack. See, e.g., Watkins v. Collins, 
    111 Ohio St.3d 425
    , 
    2006-Ohio-5082
    , ¶ 53 (the "sentencing entries, although they mistakenly included
    wording that suggested that imposition of postrelease control was discretionary, contained
    sufficient language to authorize the Adult Parole Authority to exercise postrelease control
    over the petitioners. Consequently, * * * habeas corpus is not available to contest any error
    in the sentencing entries, and petitioners have or had an adequate remedy by way of appeal
    to challenge the imposition of postrelease control").
    {¶ 21} Consistent with that guidance, this court regularly upheld against collateral
    attack the effectiveness of sentencing entry language advising prison and parole authorities
    that the court had imposed postrelease control requirements for the "applicable periods."
    For example, in State v. Holloman, 10th Dist. No. 11AP-454, 
    2011-Ohio-6138
    , ¶ 10, we
    addressed a formulation identical to the 2003 sentencing entries relevant here: "the trial
    court's judgment entry imposing appellant's sentence stated that 'the Court notified the
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                   9
    Defendant, orally and in writing, of the applicable periods of post-release control pursuant
    to R.C. 2929.19(B)(3)(c), (d) and (e).' "       We said:     "In similar post-release control
    notification cases, this court has concluded that post-release control may be properly
    imposed when the 'applicable periods' language in the trial court's sentencing entry, such
    as in the present case, is combined with other written or oral notification of the imposition
    of post-release control." Id. at ¶ 11 (citations omitted). The entry notification was proper
    and effective. Id. at ¶ 13. See also, e.g., State v. King, 10th Dist. No. 15AP-930, 2016-Ohio-
    1247, ¶ 16 ("applicable periods" entry language upheld against collateral attack: "This court
    has previously held that 'post-release control may be properly imposed when the
    "applicable periods" language in a trial court's sentencing entry "is combined with other
    written or oral notification of the imposition of post-release control" ' ") (citations omitted).
    {¶ 22} It is fair to say that the landscape changed with Grimes. That 2017 decision
    involved a challenge to sanctions for violation of postrelease control terms that the offender
    argued had not been validly imposed in the first instance. In the process of upholding the
    sanctions, the Supreme Court majority held that "to validly impose postrelease control
    when the court orally provides all the required advisements * * *, the sentencing entry must
    contain the following information: (1) whether postrelease control is discretionary or
    mandatory, (2) the duration of the postrelease-control period, and (3) a statement to the
    effect that the Adult Parole Authority will administer the postrelease control pursuant to
    R.C. 2967.28 and that any violation by the offender of the conditions of postrelease control
    will subject the offender to the consequences set forth in that statute." 
    2017-Ohio-2927
    , at
    ¶ 1. Grimes further said that it is "the trial judge's responsibility to impose postrelease
    control, including the responsibility to interpret the law to determine in each case whether
    postrelease control is mandatory or discretionary and to determine the term of supervision
    as well as to advise the offender of those determinations * * *. It is the responsibility of the
    APA to carry out the sentence after the court imposes it, not to interpret the law and facts
    and impose its own sentence based on information in the sentencing entry." Id. at ¶ 21.
    {¶ 23} But Grimes was not the end of the saga, as the parties here recognize. State
    v. Harper, 
    160 Ohio St.3d 480
    , 
    2020-Ohio-2913
    , "realign[ed]" Ohio precedent and
    established that "[w]hen a case is within a court's subject-matter jurisdiction and the
    accused is properly before the court [as Mr. Randlett unquestionably was in 2003], any
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                    10
    error in the exercise of that jurisdiction in imposing postrelease control renders the court's
    judgment voidable, permitting the sentence to be set aside if the error has been successfully
    challenged on direct appeal." Id. at ¶ 4 (emphasis added). In such circumstances, that is,
    "any error * * * in failing to properly impose postrelease control rendered the judgment of
    conviction voidable, not void, and it is not subject to collateral attack." Id. at ¶ 5 (adding:
    "Therefore, to the extent any prior case conflicts with our holding today, it is overruled").
    {¶ 24} Although the sentencing court in Harper had failed to "include the
    consequences of a violation of postrelease control in the sentencing entry itself"—thus
    violating one of the three Grimes requirements for the "valid[]" imposition of postrelease
    control, 
    2017-Ohio-2927
    , at ¶ 1—defendant Harper had not appealed that error. 2020-
    Ohio-2913, at ¶ 8. The Supreme Court found it "time * * * to reevaluate the basic premise
    of our void-sentence jurisprudence and the remedy for the failure to properly impose
    postrelease control." Id. at ¶ 34. The court observed that "[i]f the entry were merely
    voidable, res judicata would apply," id. at ¶ 18, and it noted the virtues of finality and judicial
    economy that come with a definitive end to litigation, id. at ¶ 37. Then the court held: "we
    overrule our precedent to the extent that it holds that the failure to properly imp0ose
    postrelease control in the sentence renders that portion of a defendant's sentence void." Id.
    at ¶ 40. Significantly for the purposes of the matter before us, we note that the Supreme
    Court continued: "Any error in imposing the postrelease-control sanction in [Harper's]
    sentence * * * could have been objected to at trial and that may have been reversible error
    on direct appeal. However, such an error [that is, 'any' error in imposing postrelease
    control] did not render any part of Harper's sentence void." Id. at ¶ 41 (emphasis added);
    see also id. at ¶ 43 (Court cautions "prosecuting attorneys, defense counsel, and pro se
    defendants throughout this state that they are now on notice that any claim that the trial
    court has failed to properly impose postrelease control in the sentence must be brought on
    appeal from the judgment of conviction or the sentence will be subject to res judicata").
    {¶ 25} We understand Harper to mean that the three entries in Mr. Randlett's cases
    signaling the imposition of postrelease control are controlled by res judicata regardless of
    any Grimes-type error that might have been but that was not raised on direct appeal. That
    teaching has the effect of revalidating, where the issue was not taken up on direct appeal,
    the result of this district's substantial jurisprudence giving effect against collateral attacks
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                11
    to the "appropriate periods" sentencing entry language that the Randlett sentencing entries
    contained.
    {¶ 26} State v. Hudson, __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2020-Ohio-3849
    , buttresses our reading
    of Harper. "Relying on Grimes," the offender there argued that he could not be subject to
    postrelease control because the sentencing entry did not include notice of the consequences
    of postrelease control violation; it was too late to correct the entry, he urged, because he
    had served the prison term to which postrelease control attached. Id. at ¶ 1. The Supreme
    Court said again that the sentencing entry's "failure [to include consequence language] does
    not render any part of the sentence void." Id. at ¶ 3 (emphasis added). We take that to
    mean that the failure did not invalidate the entry's imposition of postrelease control, which
    was res judicata. See also id. at ¶ 16 (any error in properly imposing postrelease control
    "did not render any part of [the] sentence void") (emphasis added); ¶ 17 (when sentencing
    court has jurisdiction, "sentencing errors in imposing postrelease control render the
    sentence voidable, not void, and the doctrine of res judicata will apply to collateral attacks
    on it"). Thus, the Supreme Court said that it did not need to decide whether Hudson had
    fully served the sentence to which postrelease control attached, "because * * * this collateral
    attack on his sentence is barred by res judicata." Id. at ¶ 10.
    {¶ 27} The Supreme Court "therefore" reversed a remand that this court had
    ordered requiring the trial court to correct its postrelease control entry. Id. at ¶ 19. Harper
    had done the same thing. 
    2020-Ohio-2913
    , at ¶ 44. Informed by Harper and Hudson, we
    agree with what we take to be Mr. Randlett's assumption that "absent a timely appeal, res
    judicata generally allows only the correction of a void sanction." State v. Holdcraft, 
    137 Ohio St.3d 526
    , 
    2013-Ohio-5014
    , ¶ 9, citing State v. Fischer, 
    128 Ohio St.3d 92
    , 2010-Ohio-
    6238, ¶ 40. Postconviction release sentences that at one point may have been voidable, but
    that were not voided and are not void, cannot appropriately be revised, nor can postrelease
    control be added to res judicata sentences that did not mention postrelease control in the
    first place. But here, the more salient point—and the place where we part company with
    Mr. Randlett's analysis—is that because the imperfect imposition of postrelease control in
    his cases was never voided, that part of his sentences remained in full force.
    {¶ 28} The legal effect of the challenged nunc pro tunc entries was redundant: the
    imposition of postrelease control for "appropriate periods" in this case already had the
    No. 20AP-489                                                                                 12
    effect of imposing a five-year mandatory period of PRC in each of the three cases. (That is
    true, we conclude, even with regard to case number 02CR-1721, where the entry—n0w res
    judicata—contained the "appropriate periods" language despite seeming incongruity with
    certain remarks at the sentencing hearing.)
    {¶ 29} State v. Bell, 
    160 Ohio St.3d 216
    , 
    2020-Ohio-3104
    , puts an even finer point
    on the analysis. This court had affirmed a trial court judgment denying a motion to vacate
    postrelease control as not in compliance with Grimes, but remanded the matter for the trial
    court to issue a nunc pro tunc entry correcting the sentencing entry. See State v. Bell, 10th
    Dist. No. 17AP-645, 
    2018-Ohio-3576
    , ¶ 13. The Supreme Court reversed the remand, while
    leaving the affirmance in place. 
    2020-Ohio-3104
    , at ¶ 1. Bell again confirms that res
    judicata entries that imposed postrelease control in a way violative of Grimes stand,
    unaltered (and unchangeable).
    {¶ 30} Mr. Randlett cites to State v. Payne, 10th Dist. No. 19AP-248, 2020-Ohio-
    1009, for the proposition that "the trial court's judgment entries [there, and by extension
    here] were contrary to law because, under Grimes, they did not properly impose post-
    release control"; therefore, he urges, the " 'applicable periods' language [employed only for
    the 'possibility' of use in the original entries in Payne, id. at ¶ 35]" does not "mean ' " 'the
    statute controls.' " ' " December 30, 2020 Relator's Reply at 4, citing Payne at ¶ 33-39 as
    in contrast with the state's briefing. But the single-judge lead opinion in Payne issued
    before Harper and Hunter realigned Ohio precedent and made clear that Grimes-type
    errors in imposing postrelease control do not make the postrelease control part of a
    sentence void. See, e.g., Harper at ¶ 5 ("any error * * * in failing to properly impose
    postrelease control rendered the judgment of conviction voidable, not void, and it is not
    subject to collateral attack"; previous decisions in conflict with that holding             are
    "overruled"). The view of the lead opinion in Payne that "[w]hen post-release control is not
    appropriately imposed [under Grimes analysis] in a trial court's judgment entry, the
    sentence is partially void and never becomes final in that limited respect," 
    2020-Ohio-1009
    ,
    at ¶ 37, has been overtaken by subsequent Supreme Court authority (here with regard to
    sentencing entries that did impose postrelease control, see 2003 sentencing entries; see
    also Mandamus Petition at ¶ 39 ("[t]hese three cases were the only cases for which
    postrelease could be, and was, in fact, imposed by the trial court at sentencing").
    No. 20AP-489                                                                               13
    {¶ 31} Understood in light of Harper and Hudson and Bell and for the reasons
    discussed above, the legal effect of the nunc pro tunc entries here was to add a coda
    signifying little more than, 'and the court means it.' The imposition of postrelease control
    had not been appealed, and was res judicata. The law requires a five-year period of
    postrelease control for Mr. Randlett. R.C. 2967.28(B)(1); see also R.C. 2967.28(F)(4)(c)
    ("period of post-release control for all of the sentences should be the period of post-release
    control that expires last"). Here, moreover, and even beyond the "appropriate periods"
    sentencing entry language that had effectuated postrelease control in many cases under
    reasonably longstanding authority of this court, the record contains a clear "Notice (Prison
    Imposed)," signed by the defendant and his lawyer and filed in the trial court on April 7,
    2003 reciting that the relevant "Post-Release Control" period is, for "felony sex offenders –
    mandatory 5 years."
    {¶ 32} Thus, in appraising whether the res judicata entries' imposition of postrelease
    control without specification of the mandatory five-year nature of that term adequately
    directs that postrelease control be for the "appropriate periods," we need not even turn to
    the direction provided by Fraley v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab & Corr., __ Ohio St.3d __, 2020-
    Ohio-4410.    That decision states:    "When a statute requires sentences to be served
    consecutively and the sentencing entry is silent as to how the sentences are to run, the
    statute controls." Id. at ¶ 13 (citation omitted). Analogy from that principle of Fraley to
    this current matter, with the trial court having adverted to postrelease control for the
    "appropriate periods," would not be much of a stretch in concluding that the Department
    of Corrections must observe statutory law in the face of silence as to the mandatory five-
    year nature of the period. See also id. at ¶ 17-18 ("DRC's role is not to correct a sentencing
    court's errors and impose the sentence it believes the court should have imposed. * * * *
    DRC has a clear legal duty to carry out the sentence that the trial court imposed * * *."). As
    we have observed, however, the written court record, including the "Notice (Prison
    Imposed)" document, is not silent (and is consistent with statute). The Fraley reminder
    thus supports, but is not necessary to, the conclusion that the sentencing entries as they
    issued in 2003 required a five-year mandatory period for the postrelease control to which
    they adverted.
    No. 20AP-489                                                                              14
    {¶ 33} Because Mr. Randlett had been sentenced in the original 2003 entries to what
    was to amount to a five-year mandatory period of postrelease control, we do not accept his
    predicate that the nunc pro tunc entries imposed that component of his sentence for the
    first time. See supra at ¶ 17. We conclude, therefore, that Mr. Randlett does not have a
    clear legal right to the "extraordinary remedy" he seeks. Compare, e.g., State ex rel. Evans
    v. Chambers-Smith, 
    156 Ohio St.3d 430
    , 
    2019-Ohio-1335
    , ¶ 13 (prison record case:
    "Mandamus, as an extraordinary remedy, is available to inmates to correct prison records
    only upon an allegation of present harm"); State v. White, 10th Dist. No. 19AP-153, 2020-
    Ohio-4313, ¶ 3 (offender "cannot be heard now to complain that the trial court improperly
    used the nunc pro tunc mechanism to reduce the postrelease control term to its statutorily
    specified three-year period: as the state submits, that alteration in no way harms" him; also
    citing Hudson and Harper in noting at ¶ 2 that "[b]ecause a claimed mistake in postrelease
    control does not make even that portion of [a years' old] sentence void, any such asserted
    error that was not challenged on direct appeal from the sentence 'is now barred by the
    doctrine of res judicata' ").
    {¶ 34} Lacking a clear legal right to the extraordinary remedy he seeks, Mr. Randlett
    is not entitled to the writ. Therefore we need not explore whether any adequate remedy at
    law also would operate to bar his mandamus pursuit. We deny Mr. Randlett's petition for a
    writ of mandamus, and the state's motion to dismiss the petition is rendered moot.
    Petition for writ of mandamus denied;
    motion to dismiss petition rendered moot.
    SADLER and LUPER SCHUSTER, JJ., concur.
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