Howell v. State

569 S.W.2d 428, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 620
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 569 S.W.2d 428 (Howell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howell v. State, 569 S.W.2d 428, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 620 (Tenn. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

HENRY, Chief Justice.

We granted certiorari in this criminal action arising under the Post-Conviction Procedure Act (§ 40-1801, et seq., T.C.A.) to deal with the troublesome and recurring problem of the proper method of computing *430 parole eligibility in cases wherein consecutive determinate or life sentences are imposed. 1

I.

Petitioner pled guilty on February 20, 1974, to two charges of first degree murder. In this petition he does not deny guilt but insists that he agreed to plead guilty and take consecutive life sentences because his attorney and the trial judge advised him that he would be eligible for parole earlier under two consecutive life sentences than under the two consecutive thirty-five year sentences upon which he was insisting.

The Court of Criminal Appeals found as a fact that “his lawyers apparently told him that his parole eligibility date would come sooner on consecutive life sentences than on the thirty or thirty-five year consecutive sentences which he hoped for; and that the trial judge advised him according to T.C.A. § 40-3613 as it existed prior to amendment in April 1973 2 . that life sentences would be treated the same as twenty-five year sentences for purposes of service.” Thereafter, the Court of Criminal Appeals held:

Unquestionably Howell agreed to the life sentences under mistaken advice as to their true effect.

We accept these findings made by the Court of Criminal Appeals; however, we cannot accept that court’s conclusion that “the mistake really makes no difference in terms of parole eligibility” and that in either case he is “eligible for parole after 30 full calendar years.” 3 This conclusion not only overlooks significant aspects of consecutive sentencing but sub silentio is premised upon a treatment of two or more consecutive sentences as being a single sentence.

II.

The Court of Criminal Appeals, in arriving at a total service of 30 years, in effect, held that the two consecutive sentences of thirty or thirty-five years should be combined and eligibility computed on the basis of a single sentence of sixty to seventy years, subject to the maximum limitation of thirty full calendar years, as set forth in § 40-3613, T.C.A. The facts show that the alternative sentence was either to be 30 or 35 years. For sake of clarity we will assume a 35 year figure. Graphically, this is the resulting situation, according to the Court of Criminal Appeals and the state:

30 years IN PENITENTIARY

40 years * ON PAROLE

This, according to the Court of Criminal Appeals, is the same as two consecutive life sentences because of the same limitation of thirty years.

We reject this reasoning. It assumes a single sentence of 70 years and a single life sentence. If this were the situation, we would agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals; however, we are not dealing with single sentences but with two consecutive sentences.

§ 40-3613, T.C.A., reads in pertinent part: [A]ny person who shall have been convicted and sentenced to a term of impris *431 onment in the state penitentiary for a period or term of sixty-five (65) years or more, or life, may become eligible for parole provided such person shall have been confined or served a term in the state penitentiary of not less than thirty (30) full calendar years . . . . (Emphasis supplied.)

It is self-evident that this statute does not contemplate consecutive sentences. It originated as Sec. 3, of Chapter 8, Public Acts of 1913 (the indeterminate sentence law) and has no application to determinate sentences, with the exception of life sentences — but not to multiple life sentences.

The parole eligibility date on a determinate sentence is set by § 40-3612 at “one half (V2) of the sentence imposed by the court.” (Emphasis supplied). 4 This section originated as a part of Chapter 276 of the Acts of 1937; it contains no provision for aggregating sentences and also is singular in concept.

The Court of Criminal Appeals cites no authority for the concept of cumulating the sentences. The State’s brief, however, supporting the position taken by the Court of Criminal Appeals, relies upon § 40-2710, T.C.A., for the proposition that if a person is sentenced for two or more separate offenses, the total of the sentences should be treated as one continuous term of imprisonment. 5 This insistence completely ignores the fact that this Code section was lifted verbatim from Section 1, Chapter 8, Public Acts of 1913, which created Tennessee’s Indeterminate Sentence Law, and has no application to determinate sentences. The indeterminate sentence law does not apply to murder in the first degree. Franks v. State, 187 Tenn. 174, 213 S.W.2d 105 (1948).

We reject the approach taken by the Court of Criminal Appeals and the position advocated by the state.

III.

The petitioner takes the position that two consecutive thirty-five year sentences are significantly more advantageous in terms of parole eligibility to two consecutive life sentences.

His reasoning is ingenious and superficially plausible. He argues that when one is sentenced to two consecutive sentences, the second does not commence until the first has expired. Thus, he says that a 35 year sentence, under § 40-3612, is “built” in seventeen and one-half years, assuming all other conditions of parole eligibility have been met, and that at that time he is entitled to be released for the second half, or seventeen and one-half years. He would not begin to serve his second 35 year sentence until his 17½ years of parole on his first 35 year sentence had expired. Graphically, this is his insistence:

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Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.2d 428, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-state-tenn-1978.