Cullum v. Adkins

2023 IL App (4th) 220574-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 26, 2023
Docket4-22-0574
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (4th) 220574-U (Cullum v. Adkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cullum v. Adkins, 2023 IL App (4th) 220574-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE 2023 IL App (4th) 220574-U This Order was filed under FILED Supreme Court Rule 23 and is April 26, 2023 not precedent except in the NO. 4-22-0574 Carla Bender limited circumstances allowed 4th District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

DETRICK CULLUM, ) Appeal from the Petitioner-Appellant, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Fulton County FELICIA ADKINS, Warden, ) No. 21MR129 Respondent-Appellee. ) ) Honorable ) Bruce C. Beal, ) Judge Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice DeArmond and Justice Steigmann concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The trial court did not err by dismissing petitioner’s pro se petition for habeas corpus relief.

¶2 In September 2021, petitioner, Detrick Cullum, an inmate in the Illinois Department

of Corrections (DOC), filed a pro se petition for habeas corpus relief. He named as respondent,

the warden of the DOC facility in which he was imprisoned. (Petitioner currently resides in

Danville Correctional Center, a different DOC facility than where he was incarcerated when his

petition was originally filed. We substitute Felicia Adkins, the warden of petitioner’s current

facility, as respondent in the case. See Hennings v. Chandler, 229 Ill. 2d 18, 23-24 n.2, 890 N.E.2d

920, 923 n.2 (2008) (stating that the proper responding party in a habeas corpus case is the

petitioner’s current custodian)). In June 2022, the trial court dismissed petitioner’s habeas corpus

petition on respondent’s motion. Petitioner appeals that dismissal. We affirm. ¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Following a March 2011bench trial, petitioner was found guilty of three counts of

aggravated criminal sexual assault (720 ILCS 5/12-14(a)(2), (3), (4) (West 2008)); two counts of

aggravated kidnaping (id. § 10-2(a)(3)); two counts of kidnapping (id. § 10-1(a)(1), (3)); one count

of aggravated possession of a stolen motor vehicle (625 ILCS 5/4-103.2(a)(7)(A) (West 2008));

one count of possession of a stolen motor vehicle (id. § 4-103(a)(1)); one count of aggravated

battery on a public way (720 ILCS 5/12-4(b)(8) (West 2008)); and one count of aggravated fleeing

or attempting to elude a police officer (625 ILCS 5/11-204.1(a)(3) (West 2008)). The trial court

sentenced petitioner to concurrent terms of imprisonment for each offense, imposing an aggregate

term of 10 years in prison.

¶5 Petitioner filed a direct appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence against

him; arguing the trial court erred at sentencing by failing to merge various counts or comply with

the one-act, one-crime rule; and asserting the court failed to conduct an adequate inquiry into his

pro se posttrial claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. People v. Cullum, 2013 IL App (1st)

111776-U, ¶ 6. On review, the First District affirmed the lower court’s findings of guilt but

determined it erred when imposing petitioner’s sentence. Id. ¶¶ 73-75. Specifically, it found

(1) petitioner’s convictions for kidnapping and possession of a stolen motor vehicle merged into

his other offenses; (2) two of petitioner’s convictions for aggravated criminal sexual assault and

one of his convictions for aggravated kidnapping should be vacated under the one-act, one crime

rule, and (3) petitioner’s sentences were void because the trial court improperly failed to impose

consecutive sentences (see 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(d)(2) (West 2012) (requiring the trial court to impose

consecutive sentences where the defendant is convicted of aggravated criminal sexual assault)).

Id. The First District remanded the matter for a new sentencing hearing. Id. ¶ 75.

-2- ¶6 In April 2014, the trial court resentenced petitioner to 10 years in prison for

aggravated criminal sexual assault, 6 years in prison for aggravated kidnapping, 5 years in prison

for aggravated possession of a stolen motor vehicle, 3 years in prison for aggravated battery on a

public way, and 2 years in prison for aggravated fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer.

The trial court also ordered petitioner’s 10-year sentence for aggravated criminal sexual assault to

run consecutively to his 6-year sentence for aggravated kidnapping. It otherwise ordered

petitioner’s remaining sentences to run concurrently.

¶7 Petitioner appealed from his resentencing. He argued, in part, that his original

concurrent sentences were not void and, thus, neither subject to increase nor appeal by the State.

People v. Cullum, 2016 IL App (1st) 141546-U, ¶ 12. Relative to that claim, petitioner agreed that

his original concurrent sentences were improper and that he should have received consecutive

sentences. Id. ¶ 14. However, he asserted that his original sentence “should never have been

addressed in” his prior appeal, relying on the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in People v.

Castleberry, 2015 IL 116916, 43 N.E.3d 932. In that case, the supreme court abolished the void

sentencing rule, under which a sentence that failed to conform to statutory requirements was

deemed void. Id. ¶ 19. It also held that absent the void sentencing rule, the State’s argument during

the defendant’s direct appeal that a statutory 15-year sentencing enhancement should be applied

to his sentence, “was a de facto cross-appeal” and “impermissible.” Id. ¶ 23.

¶8 The First District rejected petitioner’s argument and affirmed the trial court’s

judgment. Cullum, 2016 IL App (1st) 141546-U, ¶ 36. First, it concluded that its judgment in

petitioner’s 2013 appeal was “the law of the case,” where, following its decision, petitioner had

not been granted rehearing or leave to appeal to the supreme court. Id. ¶ ¶ 16-18. It noted that one

exception to the law of the case doctrine was “where the supreme court makes a contrary ruling

-3- on the precise issue of law on which the appellate court had based its prior decision.” Id. ¶ 17.

However, it found that exception inapplicable “because Castleberry abolished the void sentence

rule in the context of a sentence being increased,” and petitioner’s case “involved the imposition

of the same sentences to run consecutively versus concurrently rather than a sentence increase.”

(Emphasis in original.) Id. ¶ 18. (Although the appellate court stated the trial court imposed the

same sentences on remand and identified petitioner as having been originally sentenced to 6 years

in prison for aggravated kidnapping (id. ¶ 2, 18), both the attachments to petitioner’s

habeas corpus petition in this case and the First District’s 2013 decision reflect that the trial court

originally sentenced petitioner to 10 years in prison in connection with all of his aggravated

criminal sexual assault, aggravated kidnapping, and kidnapping counts (Cullum, 2013 IL App (1st)

111776-U, ¶ 5). Thus, petitioner’s aggravated kidnapping sentence actually decreased from 10

years in prison to 6 years in prison upon resentencing.).

¶9 The First District also held that regardless of whether it applied the law-of-the-case

doctrine, it would still find Castleberry distinguishable and that it did not require reinstatement of

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2023 IL App (4th) 220574-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullum-v-adkins-illappct-2023.