Huff v. McLarty

246 S.E.2d 302, 241 Ga. 442, 1978 Ga. LEXIS 1015
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 28, 1978
Docket33418
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 246 S.E.2d 302 (Huff v. McLarty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huff v. McLarty, 246 S.E.2d 302, 241 Ga. 442, 1978 Ga. LEXIS 1015 (Ga. 1978).

Opinions

Hall, Justice.

This is an appeal by the Sheriff of Clarke County, Georgia, from an order of the superior court in a habeas corpus action releasing McLarty from custody on the ground that the term of his probationary sentence had expired. The major issue presented concerns the time at which a sentence begins to run.

In 1973, McLarty was one of the "Athens Eight” who were arrested during a sit-in at the office of the President of the University of Georgia. McLarty was convicted of criminal trespass, and was sentenced to pay a $500 fine and to serve 12 months on probation. In McLarty v. State, 231 Ga. 444 (202 SE2d 37) (1973) this court affirmed the conviction. The remittitur from this court was duly sent down to the trial court, and was entered there on December 6, 1973. Subsequently, on December 13, 1973, this court was notified that McLarty was seeking review in the United States Supreme Court. This court issued no [443]*443supersedeas staying our judgment and received no notice of any supersedeas issued by the United States Supreme Court. During the period of the United States Supreme Court’s review, McLarty was free and not under bond.

In June 1974, McLarty read in the newspaper that his appeal to the United States Supreme Court had been denied for lack of a substantial federal question. 417 U. S. 938 (94 SC 3062) (1974). He then presented himself in turn to the county solicitor and to the trial judge who sentenced him. With both men McLarty discussed beginning his sentence, and indicated that he did not have $500 and would like to pay his fine in installments. It should have been obvious to both men that McLarty’s purpose in visiting them was that he stood ready to begin his sentence or to make necessary arrangements with them to do so, but both men told him erroneously that it was premature to do so, and that he must await the return of the remittitur from the United States Supreme Court. In fact, under these circumstances there is no remittitur from the United States Supreme Court.

Subsequent to his having presented himself to these officials, McLarty went about his business as a student at the University of Georgia, and was at all times available in the City of Athens where his probation was scheduled to be served. He heard nothing further concerning the sentence.

In March, 1975, the trial judge issued a bench warrant for his arrest for failure to pay the fine. His "probation” was then "revoked” and he was sentenced to serve 12 months in confinement. He was incarcerated on March 19,1975, filed a habeas corpus action on March 20, 1975, and on that day was released after signing his own bond for $1,000. On May 21,1975, a hearing was held on his petition. The habeas court ruled that the payment of the fine was not a condition precedent to his being allowed to serve his sentence on probation, and that his probationary period began to run on December 6, 1973, when the remittitur came down from this court. Consequently, the 12-month probationary period had ended before the county sought to incarcerate McLarty in March, 1975, and he was thus entitled to his release.

We agree with the habeas court’s result although we [444]*444find that the term of probation began to run at a different time.

The sheriff is the appellant here. He (in his brief), and the head of the Athens probation office, the solicitor and the trial judge (the latter three in conversations with McLarty), were mistaken about two basic points, and those points control the result of this lawsuit. First, they all erred in taking the position that McLarty’s payment of the $500 fine was a condition precedent to his being allowed to begin the period of probation. Second, the solicitor and the trial judge erred in refusing as premature his June, 1974 offer to begin his probation.

Considering the fine, the habeas court in its order correctly decided this issue as follows: "Condition 8 [among the conditions of probation written on the sentencing document, requires him] 'To Pay the Fine of $500.00 herein ordered . . .’ At no place in Condition 8 or elsewhere on the sentencing document, is the Defendant given notice that the Court intended the payment or [psychiatric] evaluation to be a condition precedent. While . . . the Court may have lawfully required the payment of a fine as a condition precedent under Code § 27-2709, due process demands that the Defendant be made aware that said condition is in fact a condition precedent. There is no record that the trial court’s intent was communicated to the Petitioner at the time of his sentencing.”

We further find that at the habeas hearing the trial judge testified and acknowledged that there was nothing in the sentencing document which required that the fine be paid by any certain date, and nothing therein showed that it was a condition precedent to beginning probation. The judge testified merely that it was "the standard policy” to treat the fine as a condition precedent. The probation official testified that it was "the precedent that has been set by his [the trial judge’s] court over the years...”

Such a policy may not lawfully be pursued where it amounts, as here, to varying the terms of the sentence actually imposed. "Sentences for criminal offenses shall be certain, definite, and free from ambiguity, and where the contrary appears, the benefit of the doubt shall be given the accused. [Cits.]” Buice v. Bryan, 212 Ga. 508, [445]*445509-510 (93 SE2d 676) (1956). Accord, Cross v. Huff, 208 Ga. 392 (67 SE2d 124) (1951). McLarty had the right to rely on the sentencing document, having been told nothing contradictory thereof at the time of sentencing. Because that document did not make the payment of the fine a condition precedent but showed it as merely one of several conditions of continuing probation, it was not a condition precedent. This demolishes the sheriffs argument here that for failure to pay the fine the probationary period never began to run.

That brings us to the next question, concerning when the period of probation did begin. The governing statute is Code Ann. § 27-2505 entitled "Time from which sentences run.” In pertinent part that statute reads: "It shall be the duty of the several judges, in the imposition of sentence for violation of the penal laws, to specify that the term of service under such sentence shall be computed as from the date of sentence, provided the defendant is confined in jail or otherwise incarcerated, and has no appeal or motion for new trial pending, except in such cases as may be appealed to the State Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court for reversal of the conviction, in which event the sentence shall be computed from the date the remittitur of the appellate court is made the judgment of the court in which the conviction is had, provided the defendant is not at liberty under bond but is incarcerated or in custody of the sheriff of the county where convicted:...” As an initial matter, we think the only reasonable construction of the term "Supreme Court” in the statute means the Georgia Supreme Court and not the United States Supreme Court.

The last quoted proviso, "provided the defendant is not at liberty under bond” must be construed to mean not at liberty under bond or otherwise to give effect to the obvious statutory intent which is that the sentence shall not begin when the remittitur from the appellate court is made the judgment of the trial court, for defendants who are then still at large.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 S.E.2d 302, 241 Ga. 442, 1978 Ga. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-v-mclarty-ga-1978.