Paige v. State

115 P.3d 1244, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 57, 2005 WL 1415304
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 17, 2005
DocketA-8663, A-8664
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 P.3d 1244 (Paige v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paige v. State, 115 P.3d 1244, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 57, 2005 WL 1415304 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

In this case, the sentencing judge did not specify during his remarks at sentencing whether the defendant’s sentences were concurrent or consecutive. We hold that, under former AS 12.55.025(e), when a sentencing judge does not specify whether a defendant’s sentences are concurrent or consecutive, the sentences must be deemed concurrent.

Factual background,

Adrian Paige was convicted of multiple offenses arising out of two separate criminal episodes.

The first incident took place on August 20, 2002. As a result of this incident a jury convicted Paige of one class C felony, criminal mischief in the third degree, 1 and three misdemeanors: assault in the fourth degree, 2 resisting arrest, 3 and misconduct involving *1246 weapons in the fifth degree. 4

The second episode took place on October 25, 2002. As a result of this incident, a jury convicted Paige of two felonies: robbery in the second degree (a class B felony), 5 and theft in the second degree (a class C felony). 6

Paige was sentenced for all of these crimes in a single sentencing proceeding. For the first incident, Superior Court Judge Larry Weeks sentenced Paige to 5 years of imprisonment with 2 years suspended for criminal mischief, 1 year of imprisonment with 6 months suspended for assault and resisting arrest, and 90 days of imprisonment for the weapons misconduct. Judge Weeks did not say whether he imposed these sentences concurrently or consecutively.

For the second incident, Judge Weeks sentenced Paige to 10 years of imprisonment with 4 years suspended for the second-degree robbery, and he sentenced Paige to 5 years of imprisonment for the theft. Here, Judge Weeks stated his intention to impose these sentences concurrently with each other. Thus, Paige’s composite sentence from this second incident was 10 years of imprisonment with 4 years suspended.

Judge Weeks did not say whether Paige’s sentences from the first incident were consecutive to or concurrent with Paige’s sentences from the second incident.

But later, when Judge Weeks issued his written judgments in Paige’s case, Judge Weeks specified that Paige’s sentences on each count arising from the first incident were to be served consecutively to one another, and he further specified that Paige’s sentences from the first incident were to be served consecutively to his sentence from the second incident. Thus, according to Paige’s written judgments, he received a composite sentence (from both cases) of 17 years and 90 days of imprisonment, with 7 years suspended.

Why we conclude that Paige’s sentences must be deemed concurrent with each other

Both the Alaska Supreme Court and this Court have consistently held that a judge’s oral sentencing remarks control over any conflicting provision in the later written judgment. 7 We must therefore decide the legal effect of Judge Weeks’s sentencing remarks — where, with one exception, he failed to specify whether Paige’s sentences were consecutive or concurrent.

It is important to note, at the outset, that Alaska sentencing law has recently changed. Until last year, the statutory rules governing the imposition of consecutive and concurrent sentences were found in AS 12.55.025(e) and (g). But in its 2004 session, the Alaska legislature repealed these two statutes and enacted a new statute, AS 12.55.127, that contains a different set of rules. 8 Paige was sentenced under the former law, and our decision today deals with that former law. We express no opinion on the meaning or proper application of the new statute.

Paige relies on Griffith v. State 9 for the proposition that, under Alaska law until the 2004 amendment, if a sentencing judge did not specify whether a sentence is imposed concurrently or consecutively, the sentence will be deemed to have been imposed concurrently. 10

We recently addressed this same issue in Baker v. State, 110 P.3d 996 (Alaska App. 2005). In Balter, we reaffirmed the rule that when a sentencing judge did not specify that a defendant’s sentences were to be served consecutively, or when the judge’s remarks, taken as a whole, did not clearly show the judge’s intent to impose consecutive sen- *1247 tenees, the sentences should be deemed to have been imposed concurrently. 11

As we noted earlier, former AS 12.55.025(e) and (g) were in effect when Paige was sentenced. His case is therefore governed by our decision in Baker.

The State argues that Judge Weeks’s sentencing remarks demonstrate his intent to impose consecutive sentences. It is true that, in his sentencing remarks, Judge Weeks referred to the fact that Paige had “a terrible record going back over a lot of years.” But after making this statement, Judge Weeks made only general sentencing remarks discussing the factors that sentencing judges must consider in imposing sentence. We have carefully reviewed the record of the sentencing, and we conclude that Judge Weeks’s sentencing remarks, viewed in context, do not clearly establish his intention to impose consecutive sentences. Therefore, under Baker, Paige’s sentences must be deemed concurrent.

The State also challenges the Griffith-Baker rule. The State relies on our decision in State v. Andrews, where we construed former AS 12.55.025(e) and (g) as establishing a preference for consecutive sentences. 12 The State suggests that this statutory preference for consecutive sentences had the effect of altering the traditional Alaska rule that sentences would be deemed concurrent unless the sentencing judge specified otherwise. The State argues that, under the former statutes, when a sentencing judge was silent as to whether a defendant’s sentences were consecutive or concurrent, those sentences should be deemed consecutive.

However, the State’s sole argument on this point consists of citing Judge Mannheimer’s concurring opinion in an unpublished decision of this Court, Stotesbury v. State. 13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 P.3d 1244, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 57, 2005 WL 1415304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paige-v-state-alaskactapp-2005.