Garmany v. State of Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 30, 2025
Docket1D2024-1892
StatusPublished

This text of Garmany v. State of Florida (Garmany v. State of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garmany v. State of Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D2024-1892 _____________________________

TY CHRISTOPHER GARMANY,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Hamilton County. Melissa G. Olin, Judge.

July 30, 2025

OSTERHAUS, C.J.

Some felony probationers who commit a “low-risk” violation of probation may not have their probation revoked and replaced with a prison sentence. § 948.06(2)(f)1., Fla. Stat. Ty Christopher Garmany argues that he qualified under this statute to have avoided the five-year prison sentence rendered by the trial court. We agree with Garmany’s argument that he passed most of § 948.06(2)(f)1.’s four-part test for avoiding a prison sentence, including the § 948.06(2)(f)1.d. condition involving a first “current term” violation. But we nonetheless affirm Garmany’s sentence. He didn’t qualify to avoid a prison sentence because his VOP wasn’t a “low-risk” technical violation as defined in the third part of the statutory test, see § 948.06(2)(f)1.c. I.

After Garmany pled guilty in 2022 to official misconduct arising from his position as a law enforcement officer, the trial court withheld adjudication and placed him on probation for five years. Garmany violated his probation in 2023, causing the trial court to revoke his probation, adjudicate him guilty, and sentence him to a year and a day in prison to be followed by a new term of probation running until 2027.

One of the conditions of Garmany’s new probationary term required him to comply with his probation officer’s instructions and to be truthful with the officer. In 2024, after Garmany’s release from prison, the State filed an affidavit alleging that he had violated his probation again. According to the affidavit, Garmany lied to his probation officer and obtained permission to visit his “aunt,” who was later discovered to be Garmany’s girlfriend and not his aunt. After the State discovered his ruse, Garmany admitted to lying to the officer about who he was visiting thereby violating his probation. At the probation revocation hearing, Garmany argued that he could not be sentenced to prison for his new VOP because the mandatory probation reinstatement provision in § 948.06(2)(f)1. applied to him. In response, the State argued that Garmany could not benefit from this probation reinstatement provision because it was his second VOP in the case. The court agreed with the State. It revoked Garmany’s probation and sentenced him to five years in prison. Garmany appealed.

II.

On appeal, Garmany argues that he met all four conditions of §948.06(2)(f)1.a.-d., so that the trial court could not lawfully resentence him to a five-year prison term. See Owens v. State, 303 So. 3d 993, 998 (Fla. 1st DCA 2020) (holding that a probationer must meet all four requirements to qualify for sentencing under section 948.06(2)(f)). Section 948.06(2)(f)1. states:

(f)1. Except as provided in subparagraph 3. or upon waiver by the probationer, the court shall modify or

2 continue a probationary term upon finding a probationer in violation when all of the following apply:

a. The term of supervision is probation. b. The probationer does not qualify as a violent felony offender of special concern, as defined in paragraph (8)(b). c. The violation is a low-risk technical violation, as defined in paragraph (9)(b). d. The court has not previously found the probationer in violation of his or her probation pursuant to a filed violation of probation affidavit during the current term of supervision. A probationer who has successfully completed sanctions through the alternative sanctioning program is eligible for mandatory modification or continuation of his or her probation.

There is no argument here about Garmany meeting the first two conditions of this statute in (f)1.a. and b. Rather, the parties dispute whether Garmany satisfied (f)1.c. and d.

Focusing on the fourth condition in (f)1.d., Garmany argues that he committed just a single VOP during “the current term” of supervision. § 948.06(2)(f)1.d., Fla. Stat. Garmany’s other VOP from earlier in the case occurred during a different, five-year probationary term. Indeed, the court had already revoked Garmany’s original 5-year probation term (pursuant to a different, State-filed affidavit in 2023), which led to an adjudication of guilt and to Garmany receiving a prison-plus-probation sentence. Under § 948.06(2)(f)1.d.’s “current term” parameter, Garmany argues that the statute disregards the first VOP and revocation, looking only to whether another VOP was found during the ”current term” of probation. Id.

The State counters with two arguments that Garmany failed to meet the requirements of § 948.06(2)(f)1. First, it defends the court’s conclusion that Garmany didn’t meet 948.06(2)(f)1.d.’s condition allowing for only a single VOP “during the current term” of supervision because of Garmany’s previous VOP. See Schmidt v. State, 310 So. 3d 135, 137 (Fla. 1st DCA 2020) (conditioning the application of § 948.06(2)(f)1. to instances where there is just one low-risk violation of probation). The State adds a second argument

3 under paragraph (f)1.c., a tipsy coachman argument, that Garmany’s violation also did not qualify under the statute as “a low-risk technical violation, as defined in paragraph (9)(b).” See § 948.06(2)(f)1.d., Fla. Stat.

Addressing, first, the “current term of supervision” issue, we agree with Garmany. Section 948.06 provides for the possibility of multiple terms of supervision within the same case in at least a couple of places. The statute at issue here, § 948.06(2)(f)1.d., conditions benefits based upon whether a VOP occurs during the “current” term of supervision. The statute’s focus on the current term guides us toward disregarding VOPs from other, previous terms of supervision if they exist in a case, such as they do here. Additionally, § 948.06(3) recognizes the potential for multiple terms of supervision or probationary terms within a single case by providing that: “When the court imposes a subsequent term of supervision following a revocation of probation or community control, it shall not provide credit for time served while on probation or community control toward any subsequent term of probation or community control.” (Emphasis added.) These clues within § 948.06 lead to the conclusion that different probationary terms may exist within a defendant’s single case. And some defendants may have probationary terms revoked and replaced by a different term of probation or community control.

Consequently here, in Garmany’s case, the straightforward conclusion is that his two VOPs occurred during different probationary terms of supervision. The trial court revoked Garmany’s original five-year probationary term in 2023 based on the State’s first affidavit filed during that probationary term ordered by the court. In that instance, Garmany conceded the State’s VOP allegations and the court terminated the first probationary term of supervision. The court then sentenced Garmany to a prison sentence followed by a new, shorter term of probation. After Garmany’s release from prison, he began serving the second, different, and shorter probationary term during which the State filed a second affidavit of violation stemming from new circumstances related to Garmany’s recent lie to the probation officer about visiting his “aunt.” This violation only jeopardized the second, current term of probation. And because the trial court hadn’t previously found a VOP during Garmany’s “current term”

4 of supervision, he wasn’t precluded by § 948.06(2)(f)1.d. from receiving the statute’s protection against a prison sentence.

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Related

Perkins v. State
576 So. 2d 1310 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1991)
Plante v. Smathers
372 So. 2d 933 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1979)
Holly v. Auld
450 So. 2d 217 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1984)
Maddox v. State
923 So. 2d 442 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2006)
Nassau County v. Willis
41 So. 3d 270 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Garmany v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garmany-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2025.