Harris v. State
This text of 153 S.W.3d 394 (Harris v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court,
Appellant was convicted of possession of more than five pounds but less than 50 [395]*395pounds of marijuana. On October 28, 2002, after the punishment phase of the trial, the trial court sentenced Appellant to ten years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Institutional Division. The next day, the trial judge recalled Appellant. He explained that the State had previously submitted evidence of prior felony convictions for enhancement purposes, and that he found them to be true. Thus, according to Texas Penal Code, Section 12.42(d), the court was not able to sentence Appellant to any amount of time less than twenty-five years.1 The trial court then re-sentenced Appellant to 25 years in the TDCJ Institutional Division. Appellant appealed to the Fifth Court of Appeals, which affirmed the second sentence of the trial court. Harris v. State, No. 05-02-01761-CR, 2008 WL 21509054 (Tex.App.Dallas-2003, pet.granted) (not designated for publication), 2008 Tex.App. LEXIS 5614. We will reverse.
On appeal, Appellant argued that the trial court lost the power to set aside the original, valid sentence and re-sentence Appellant to a higher sentence because Appellant had already accepted the sentence and suffered some punishment as a result. The State responded that this issue was not preserved for review because Appellant did not object. The court failed to consider this issue, instead, the court of appeals held that the presumption of regularity that attaches to all judgments was controlling in this case.
The court noted that the October 28, 2002, record does not indicate that the trial court actually found the enhancements to be true. However, the court also pointed out that at the October 29, 2002, sentencing, the trial judge said he found them to be true and the written judgment reflects this finding. The court concluded that Appellant did not satisfy his burden to overcome the presumption; in other words, he could not prove that the 25-year sentence recited in the judgment of the court was false or in error. In relying on the presumption of regularity, however, the court of appeals failed to address the true issue in this case: did the trial court commit constitutional error by re-sentencing Appellant the day after it imposed the first sentence? The issue here is not whether or not the written judgment of the court is false or in error. Rather, the issue is whether the trial court even had the lawful authority 2 under federal Double Jeopardy principles to orally issue the second sentence, which increased Appellant’s sentence by 15 years over the first sentence, and then enter that second oral pronouncement of sentence into a written judgment.
We granted review in this case to determine the following: “Does the decision of the court of appeals conflict with the applicable decisions of the courts of appeals, the Court of Criminal Appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States?” We conclude that the court of appeals erred in [396]*396failing to address the Double Jeopardy claims of Appellant.3
Appellant argues that an increase in punishment after a defendant has commenced serving his sentence violates a defendant’s Double Jeopardy rights. He also asserts that after the trial court imposed the first sentence of ten years, the trial court no longer had the ability to set aside the original sentence and order a new sentence.
The State counters that when an original sentence is illegal or void, a trial court acts properly and within its authority in correcting the sentence and assessing a lawful punishment at a subsequent hearing. The State argues in the instant case that the original ten-year sentence was unlawful, because, under Texas Penal Code, Section 12.42(d), it was mándatory that Appellant be sentenced to between 25 and 99 yéars as a repeat offender if the two prior felony enhancements were found true. The State relies on Cooper v. State, 527 S.W.2d 898 (Tex.Crim.App.1975) in support of this argument.
In Cooper, the trial court mistakenly sentenced the defendant to a period of four years, when the statutory minimum for the crime charged was five; thus the trial court had the authority to later correct the first statutorily unauthorized sentence. Id at 898-99. These facts are distinguishable from the facts in the instant case. Here, the facts do not support the contention that Appellant’s sentence was statutorily unauthorized at the time it was pronounced.4 When Appellant was sentenced, the trial court did not specifically find the enhancements to be true on the record.5 The court then sentenced [397]*397Appellant within the range of punishment for an un-enhanced offense. The record states only that the trial judge, at the first sentencing proceeding, said the court had “received evidence of prior felony— prior convictions,” and proceeded to sentence appellant to ten years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.6 The record thus shows that the trial judge received the evidence of the prior convictions and considered them, but not that he found them true.7 The trial court erred to then find them true at a second sen-fencing hearing.8 This second attempt at sentencing violated Appellant’s rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause.9 Because the ten-year sentence was a valid and authorized sentence under the Texas Penal Code, the trial court’s second pronouncement of a 25-year sentence the following day was an unconstitutional 15-year increase.10
The trial court’s actions in this case were neither a mere correction of an unauthorized sentence, nor a nunc pro tunc order within the inherent authority of the [398]*398court that would permit revision of the written judgment to comply with the oral pronouncement of sentence. The first sentence imposed was authorized by law, and the court’s action on the second day was more than correcting a clerical error to make the judgment comply with the sentence pronounced. In the instant case, the trial court validly sentenced appellant one day, and the next day called appellant back and increased his sentence.11
Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals, and hold that the original ten-year sentence imposed by the trial court was a legal and authorized sentence.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
153 S.W.3d 394, 2005 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 6, 2005 WL 53429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-texcrimapp-2005.