Howard Togo Wood, Jr. v. State of Arkansas
This text of 2021 Ark. 201 (Howard Togo Wood, Jr. v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Cite as 2021 Ark. 201 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-21-118
Opinion Delivered: November 4, 2021 HOWARD TOGO WOOD, JR. APPELLANT PRO SE APPEAL FROM THE SCOTT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 64CR-13-36]
HONORABLE JERRY DON RAMEY, STATE OF ARKANSAS JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice
Howard Togo Wood, Jr., appeals the circuit court’s denial of his motion to correct
clerical errors in his sentencing order.1 In 2013, he pleaded guilty to first-degree sexual assault
and received a sentence of 360 months’ imprisonment. His motion alleged that the
sentencing order contained the following clerical errors: (1) an inaccurate criminal-history
score; (2) the wrong presumptive sentence; and (3) the incorrect date of his plea hearing. The
circuit court denied the motion, finding these issues were substantive rather than clerical.
1 On June 12, 2020, Wood filed a motion to correct clerical mistake in commitment order. On December 31, 2020, he filed a motion to amend/amendment to motion to correct clerical mistake in commitment order. Both motions were denied by orders entered on January 7, 2021. Wood designated the incorrect date in his notice of appeal, citing a December 30, 2020 order that does not exist. In any event, Wood’s arguments are limited to those made in his original June 12 motion. He fails to make the new arguments from his December 31 amended motion; as such, we consider Wood to have abandoned them on appeal. We agree as to the first two alleged errors, but not the third one. We thus affirm in part and
reverse and remand in part.
Under Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 60, a circuit court may set aside a judgment
and enter an order nunc pro tunc. Robinson v. State, 2020 Ark. 324, 608 S.W.3d 596. The
question on appeal is whether there has been an abuse of that discretion. Id. An abuse of
discretion lies when the circuit court renders its decision improvidently, thoughtlessly, or
without due consideration. Id.
A circuit court has the power to correct clerical errors nunc pro tunc so that the record
speaks the truth. Barnett v. State, 2020 Ark. 181, 598 S.W.3d 835. Under Rule 60(b), a circuit
court may at any time correct clerical mistakes in judgments, decrees, orders, or other parts
of the record and errors arising from oversight or omission. Id. A circuit court’s power to
correct mistakes or errors is to make the record speak the truth, but not to make it speak
what it ought to have spoken. Id.
Wood’s first two claims are that the sentencing order incorrectly reflected his
criminal-history score and his presumptive sentence. Wood asserts that the circuit court
should have corrected the sentencing order to reflect a criminal-history score of zero in place
of the criminal-history score of one. Wood also contends that the presumptive sentence
should be changed from fifty-four months’ imprisonment to forty-two months’
imprisonment. According to Wood, these are clerical errors subject to change under Rule
60(b). While we cannot say there would never be such an occasion to correct these figures as
clerical errors, this record provides no basis to do so here.
2 A circuit court’s power to correct errors in a sentencing order precludes the court
from making the record “speak what it did not speak but ought to have spoken.” Barnett,
2020 Ark. 181, at 1–2, 598 S.W.3d at 836. In other words, the court cannot correct
unverified history. No evidence showed (1) whether these two issues are clerical errors that
were simply recorded incorrectly, (2) whether they were substantive errors, or (3) whether
they are, in fact, correct. The record is silent on how Wood’s criminal-history score was
calculated and how the court computed his presumptive sentence at fifty-four months’
imprisonment. Wood attached a printout of what purports to be his criminal history. But
we have no means to assess whether this is complete and accurate. To grant relief, the circuit
court would have had to speculate about the printout’s true meaning and look behind the
sentencing order. We cannot find that the circuit court abused its discretion in declining to
take this step in the context of a motion to correct a clerical error. Thus, we affirm the circuit
court’s denial of Wood’s motion on these grounds.
But we grant Wood partial relief. Wood’s third claim of a clerical error pertains to
the date on the sentencing order showing that Wood pleaded guilty on July 2, 2013, when
in fact the plea hearing was July 16, 2013. Because the transcript reflects the true date he
entered his plea, and this court has found that the plea hearing occurred on that date, there
is no alternative to the July 2, 2013 date on the sentencing order being a clerical error. Wood
v. State, 2015 Ark. 477, at 7,478 S.W.3d 194, 199. For that reason, the circuit court abused
its discretion when it refused to enter an order nunc pro tunc correcting this clerical error. We
remand for it to enter an amended sentencing order to correct the date.
3 Affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.
WOMACK, J., concurs without opinion.
WEBB, J., dissents.
BARBARA W. WEBB, Justice, dissenting. I respectfully dissent. Although the majority
correctly cites the standard of review, it fails to apply it. Apparently, it fails to apprehend that
the circuit court denied Mr. Wood’s motion to correct clerical errors in his sentencing order
because the court lost jurisdiction to make those corrections after ninety days. This was clear
error, as the majority correctly notes: “Under Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 60, a circuit
court may set aside a judgment and enter an order nunc pro tunc.” However, rather than
merely reversing and remanding this case for further proceedings, the majority steps into the
role of the circuit court.
Although the analysis it employed in ferreting out the correct date of the plea hearing
was in some sense commendable, it was a course not endorsed by either the appellant or the
appellee. Although the majority’s conclusion is undeniably correct, fact-finding is the
province of the circuit court, not the Arkansas Supreme Court.
The majority’s efforts to act as a trial court were far less effective with regard to the
criminal-history score and the presumptive sentence that is derived in part from the criminal-
history score. The majority acknowledges that Wood attached a printout of what purports
to be his criminal history. I note that the authenticity of this document was never challenged
in the circuit court. Nonetheless, the majority, acting as a trial court raised the authenticity
of the document on its own motion and denied Mr. Wood the relief he requested because
4 it was not sure. This misstep proves why the majority’s usurping the circuit court’s role as a
trier of fact is ill-advised.
I do not doubt the veracity of the majority’s statement that “we have no means to
assess whether this is complete and accurate.” However, it is simply erroneous to project this
court’s shortcomings onto the circuit court and assume that it was similarly encumbered. As
noted previously, the circuit court did not deny Mr. Wood’s motion to correct the clerical
mistakes on his sentencing order because it had to “speculate” about an issue of fact. The
circuit court denied Mr. Wood’s motion because it made a mistake of law.
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