ISLAAM v. STATE OF FLORIDA

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 14, 2024
Docket2023-0419
StatusPublished

This text of ISLAAM v. STATE OF FLORIDA (ISLAAM 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
ISLAAM v. STATE OF FLORIDA, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

ABDUR-RASHID ISLAAM,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee.

No. 2D2023-0419

June 14, 2024

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pasco County; Kimberly Campbell, Judge.

J. Jervis Wise of Brunvand Wise, P.A., Clearwater, for Appellant.

Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Lydon Schultz, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa; and Laura Dempsey, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa (substituted as counsel of record), for Appellee.

LABRIT, Judge. Abdur-Rashid Islaam appeals an order modifying his judgment and sentence to add a $500,000 fine. Nearly a year after Mr. Islaam's original sentence was imposed, the State moved to modify it on the ground that the relevant criminal statute, section 893.20(2), Florida Statutes (2020), mandated imposition of the $500,000 fine. The trial court agreed and amended Mr. Islaam's sentence accordingly. Because the trial court could not have modified the sentence as it did unless the sentence was "illegal"—and because omission of the fine did not result in an "illegal sentence" under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(a)—we reverse with directions to reinstate the original judgment and sentence. I. Mr. Islaam pled guilty to engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise under section 893.20. In line with his plea agreement, the trial court sentenced him to sixty months in prison and ordered him to pay $650 in fines, costs, and fees. The trial court entered the judgment and sentence in December 2021. Then, on December 1, 2022, the State filed a Motion to Correct Incomplete Sentence. The State argued that section 893.20(2) requires a $500,000 fine to be imposed on every person convicted of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise. The State did not cite any legal authority by which the trial court could add the fine so long after Mr. Islaam's original sentencing. (Nor, for that matter, did the State address why it had not mentioned the fine during any prior proceeding.) But the State now contended that the fine was mandatory, and the trial court agreed. On February 3, 2023, the trial court set aside Mr. Islaam's original judgment for fines, costs, and fees and entered an amended one, bringing the amount Mr. Islaam owed from $650 to $500,650. Taking issue with his financial obligations being multiplied by a factor of over seven hundred after he had already spent thirteen months in prison, Mr. Islaam timely appealed. He challenges the amended judgment on three grounds. First, Mr. Islaam contends the trial court lacked authority to add the $500,000 fine more than a year after issuing his original judgment and sentence. Second, and in service of his first claim, he argues that imposition of the $500,000 fine is discretionary under section 893.20(2) and that the trial court erred by concluding

2 otherwise. Third, Mr. Islaam argues that the State waived its right to recover the $500,000 fine by neither requesting it as part of his plea agreement nor mentioning it at his original sentencing hearing. Although we decline to consider Mr. Islaam's third contention because it is unpreserved,1 we agree with his first two arguments. II. The State did not cite rule 3.800 in its motion to modify Mr. Islaam's sentence, but the motion was substantively indistinguishable from a rule 3.800 motion, as to which a trial court's ruling is reviewed de novo. See Zeno v. State, 330 So. 3d 1048, 1050 (Fla. 2d DCA 2021); Williams v. State, 244 So. 3d 1173, 1175 (Fla. 2d DCA 2018). Moreover, the arguments on appeal implicate the trial court's jurisdiction and a question of statutory interpretation, both of which are subject to de novo review. See Mendenhall v. State, 48 So. 3d 740, 747 (Fla. 2010) ("Questions of statutory interpretation are subject to de novo review."); IOU Cent. Inc. v. Pezzano Contracting & Dev., LLC, 311 So. 3d 295, 301 (Fla. 2d DCA 2020) ("The issue of whether a trial court has jurisdiction is a question of law that is . . . reviewed de novo."). A. Mr. Islaam argues that the trial court lacked authority to modify his sentence as it did more than a year after his original sentencing. "Generally, a trial court has no authority to modify a sentence after a defendant has begun serving it." Thomas v. State, 921 So. 2d 657, 661 (Fla. 2d DCA 2006). Rule 3.800 provides three exceptions to this

1 Mr. Islaam did not argue waiver below so the issue is

unpreserved. See Tillman v. State, 471 So. 2d 32, 35 (Fla. 1985); see also Pulte v. New Common Sch. Found., 334 So. 3d 677, 680 (Fla. 2d DCA 2022) ("[T]he failure to preserve an argument for appeal generally precludes our consideration of that argument on appeal.").

3 principle. Under rule 3.800(a)(1), a trial court may correct an "illegal sentence" at any time. Under rule 3.800(b), a trial court may correct a sentencing error at the State's request if the correction would benefit the defendant or fix a scrivener's error. And under rule 3.800(c), a trial court may modify a legal sentence within sixty days of its imposition. The State did not cite any provision of rule 3.800—or, indeed, any legal authority—in its motion to correct Mr. Islaam's sentence or at the hearing that followed. Neither did the trial court cite any rule or authority in granting the State's motion. The motion seemed to sound in the key of rule 3.800(b), asking the court to "correct" a sentence that the State described merely as "incomplete." But the correction the State sought would have neither fixed a mere scrivener's error nor benefitted Mr. Islaam, so rule 3.800(b) would have been inapplicable. And because the State did not file its motion until almost a year after Mr. Islaam's original sentencing, a rule 3.800(c) motion would have been time-barred. This leaves rule 3.800(a) as the only authority under which the State could have brought its motion. Rule 3.800(a)(1) allows a trial court to "at any time correct an illegal sentence imposed by it." On appeal, the State argues that Mr. Islaam's original sentence was illegal because it lacked the $500,000 fine, so it was correctable by the trial court at any time. For his part, Mr. Islaam argues that omitting the fine by no means rendered the original sentence illegal, so the trial court had no authority to modify it. The bar is high for classifying a sentence as "illegal" under rule 3.800(a). Our supreme court has described an illegal sentence as one "that patently fails to comport with statutory or constitutional limitations." Plott v. State, 148 So. 3d 90, 94 (Fla. 2014). To rise to this level, "the sentence must impose a kind of punishment that no judge

4 under the entire body of sentencing statutes could possibly inflict under any set of factual circumstances." Carter v. State, 786 So. 2d 1173, 1178 (Fla. 2001) (emphasis omitted). The State maintains that no judge could have imposed Mr. Islaam's original sentence because section 893.20(2) mandated that his sentence include a $500,000 fine. This brings us to the statutory interpretation question at the heart of this appeal. The State reads section 893.20(2) as mandating that a $500,000 fine be imposed on every person convicted under the statute. Mr. Islaam reads section 893.20(2) as leaving imposition of the fine to the trial court's discretion.

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Related

Carter v. State
786 So. 2d 1173 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2001)
Brown v. State
232 So. 2d 55 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1970)
Tillman v. State
471 So. 2d 32 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1985)
Kasischke v. State
991 So. 2d 803 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2008)
Brown v. State
237 So. 2d 129 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1970)
Thomas v. State
921 So. 2d 657 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2006)
Mendenhall v. State
48 So. 3d 740 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2010)
William J. Plott v. State of Florida
148 So. 3d 90 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2014)
Henson v. Santander Consumer USA Inc.
582 U.S. 79 (Supreme Court, 2017)
JESSIE WILLIAMS v. STATE OF FLORIDA
244 So. 3d 1173 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
ISLAAM v. STATE OF FLORIDA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/islaam-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2024.