Devonte Washington v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 19, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 100 (Devonte Washington v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devonte Washington v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 100 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 100 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CR-23-638

Opinion Delivered February 19, 2025

DEVONTE WASHINGTON APPEAL FROM THE ST. FRANCIS APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 62CR-22-353] V. HONORABLE CHRISTOPHER W. STATE OF ARKANSAS MORLEDGE, JUDGE APPELLEE REVERSED AND DISMISSED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

This revocation appeal returns to us from a remand to the circuit court in April 2024

to settle or supplement the record. In December 2022, the circuit court ordered Devonte

Washington to serve ten years’ probation after he pleaded guilty to possession of a controlled

substance with the purpose to deliver and possession of drug paraphernalia, both Class D

felonies. The court revoked Washington’s probation in June 2023 after a hearing and

sentenced him to 144 months’ imprisonment. He appealed.

The original record on appeal included a document titled “Conditions of Probation”

signed by the court and Washington and filed 6 December 2022. But it did not include a

contemporaneous sentencing order in the form developed by the Administrative Office of

the Courts (AOC), which the prosecuting attorney must complete and submit “[i]n every

action filed in the circuit courts . . . [w]hen any charge results in a commitment to the

Arkansas Department of Correction or any of the following—probation, suspended

1 imposition of sentence, commitment to Arkansas Community Correction or to the county

jail, a fine, restitution, and/or court costs[.]” Ark. Sup. Ct. Admin. Order No. 8(I)(a) &

(III)(d). We remanded for the circuit court either to supplement the record (if a sentencing

order had been entered but omitted) or to prepare one with the details of the December

2022 proceeding. Washington v. State, 2024 Ark. App. 268.

No sentencing order had been entered, it turns out. The supplemental record

includes one the circuit court prepared and filed 9 May 2024. Washington argues we must

reverse and dismiss the revocation judgment. He cites a line of decisions beginning with

Bradford v. State, 351 Ark. 394, 94 S.W.3d 904 (2003), that hold that although probation

and suspended impositions of sentence begin to run for some purposes when pronounced,

violating their conditions before the circuit court imposes them in a judgment cannot be

grounds for a revocation. Hogue v. State, 2024 Ark. App. 443, 698 S.W.3d 415; Townsend

v. State, 2023 Ark. App. 356, 676 S.W.3d 1; Burnett v. State, 2018 Ark. App. 220; Garduno-

Trejo v. State, 2010 Ark. App. 779, 379 S.W.3d 692. We note that in Hogue, which is recent

and squarely on point, the State confessed error. (Pity it didn’t do so again here.)

The May 2024 sentencing order indicates that in December 2022, the circuit court

meant to (but never did) impose probation with a judgment of conviction. The form

sentencing order accommodates that option. The form would also accommodate probation

imposed without a conviction, Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-303 (Supp. 2023), though that

would not be a “sentence” per se. We acknowledge the value of obtaining a defendant’s

written acknowledgement of each probation condition, as the circuit court did in December

2022. Ideally, the form sentencing order would include room for the conditions so this

2 could be done in one document.1 But a circuit court must—in the prescriptive sense—use

the AOC form sentencing order even when it imposes probation. Ark. Sup. Ct. Admin.

Order No. 8(I)(a) & (III)(d); see also In re Ark. Sup. Ct. Admin. Order No. 8, 2011 Ark. 544

(per curiam) (effective 1 January 2012). It’s now clear that this wasn’t done in late 2022

when it mattered. Assuming the facts of Garduno-Trejo, supra, left open the possibility that

some probation order might be sufficiently judgment-like to ground a revocation, as the

State argues, we decline to “distinguish cases to death” and instead apply the bright-line rule

that everyone can understand and follow.

Use the official form. File it promptly. Then no problems.

Reversed and dismissed.

TUCKER and THYER, JJ., agree.

Lassiter & Cassinelli, by: Michael Kiel Kaiser, for appellant.

Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: Jason Michael Johnson, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.

1 The equivalent federal forms include standard conditions of probation or supervised release and space for custom conditions. Admin. Office of the U.S. Courts, AO 245B, Judgment in a Criminal Case (2019), https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/ ao245b.pdf; Admin. Office of the U.S. Courts, AO 246, Probation Order Under 18 U.S.C. § 3607 (2017), https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/ao246.pdf. 3

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Related

Bradford v. State
94 S.W.3d 904 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2003)
Garduno-Trejo v. State
379 S.W.3d 692 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2010)
Rhonda Lynn Hogue v. State of Arkansas
2024 Ark. App. 443 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ark. App. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devonte-washington-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.