DocketNumber: No. 20330.
Judges: WOLFF, J.
Filed Date: 4/1/2005
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
{¶ 2} Sears was convicted of domestic violence in August 2003 and was sentenced to community control sanctions for a period not to exceed five years. The court indicated that it would impose a twelve month prison term if the terms of the community control were violated. On December 23, 2003, the court found that the terms of community control had been violated and imposed the twelve month sentence, ordering that it be served consecutively to the sentences imposed in Case Nos. 2000-CR-3686 and 2001-CR-1995. The termination entry did not specify the amount of jail time credit that Sears was to receive. The Department of Rehabilitation and Correction ("DRC") subsequently determined that Sears was entitled to seven days of aggregate jail time credit.
{¶ 3} Sears raises two assignments of error on appeal, both of which relate to the amount of jail time credit. We will address these assignments together.
"The trial court committed prejudicial error by entering a finding that appellant shall receive only seven days aggregate jail sentence which finding was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
"The trial court's conclusion that appellant receive aggregate credit for time served of only seven days was contrary to law."
{¶ 4} Sears claims that the trial court was required to make the factual determination as to the number of days of jail time credit that he was entitled to receive, that it was obligated to calculate this amount properly, and that it failed to do so. The state responds that, insofar as the trial court's entry was silent as to the amount of jail time credit, the entry was not incorrect. The state contends that the DRC, rather than the trial court, made the error of which Sears complains, and that the proper remedy is for Sears to file a petition for a writ of mandamus to require the DRC to award him the correct number of days.
{¶ 5} We have previously addressed the nature of the trial court's obligation with respect to the calculation of jail time credit.
{¶ 6} "Formerly, trial courts were required by Crim.R. 32.2 to recite, in the termination entry, the amount of time that a convicted defendant spent incarcerated before sentencing. However, Crim.R. 32.2 was amended, effective July 1, 1998, and no longer contains this requirement. The Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections [sic] understandably would appreciate a trial court's recitation, in its termination entry, of the amount of time that a convicted defendant has spent in jail upon a charge for which he was convicted, so that the Department may perform its duty pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 7} Thus, the trial court was not required to calculate the jail time credit, although that is the preferred practice.
{¶ 8} The cases relied upon by Sears predate the amendment of Crim.R. 32.2, and are thus unpersuasive. See State ex rel. Corder v. Wilson
(1991),
{¶ 9} The first and second assignments of error are overruled.
{¶ 10} The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
Fain, J. and Grady, J., concur.