People v. Watts
This text of 464 N.W.2d 715 (People v. Watts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Defendant pled guilty of malicious destruction of police property. MCL 750.377b; MSA 28.609(2). He was sentenced to serve a term of two to four years in prison, with his sentence being consecutive to the sentence he was then serving in that he was on parole at the time of the instant oifense. He now appeals and we affirm.
Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in denying him credit against his sentence for time served. We disagree. This Court has previously held that a defendant who has received a consecutive sentence is not entitled to credit against the subsequent sentence for time served. Rather, any credit for time served should be applied against the first sentence. See People v Brown, 186 Mich App 350; 463 NW2d 491 (1990). 1 While we agree with the Brown decision, and that decision is controlling under Administrative Order No. 1990-6, further discussion of the issue is appropriate.
Because defendant was on parole at the time of the instant offense, the sentence for the instant *688 offense must be consecutive to the sentence for which he was on parole. Moreover, the new sentence will begin to run only after the expiration of the previous sentence:
If a person is convicted and sentenced to a term of imprisonment for a felony committed while the person was on parole from a sentence for a previous offense, the term of imprisonment imposed for the later offense shall begin to run at the expiration of the remaining portion of the term of imprisonment imposed for the previous offense. [MCL 768.7a(2); MSA 28.1080(1X2). Emphasis added.]
Also relevant to this case is MCL 791.238; MSA 28.2308, which provides in pertinent part:
(1) Each prisoner on parole shall remain in the legal custody and under the control of the commission. The deputy director of the bureau of field services, upon a showing of probable violation of parole, may issue a warrant for the return of any paroled prisoner. Pending a hearing upon any charge of parole violation, the prisoner shall remain incarcerated.
(2) A prisoner violating the provisions of his or her parole and for whose return a warrant has been issued by the deputy director of the bureau of field services shall be treated as an escaped prisoner and shall be liable, when arrested, to serve out the unexpired portion of his or her maximum imprisonment. The time from the date of the declared violation to the date of the prisoner’s availability for return to an institution shall not be counted as time served. The warrant of the deputy director of the bureau of field services shall be a sufficient warrant authorizing all officers named in the warrant to detain the paroled prisoner in any jail of the state until his or her return to the state penal institution.
*689 (6) A parole shall be construed as a permit to the prisoner to leave the prison, and not as a release. While at large, the paroled prisoner shall be considered to be serving out the sentence imposed by the court and shall be entitled to good time the same as if conñned in prison. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, time spent on parole is counted toward service of the sentence. The statute does, however, create a period of "dead time,” during which a parole violator is not considered to be serving his sentence following a violation of parole. See Browning v Dep’t of Corrections, 385 Mich 179; 188 NW2d 552 (1971). That dead time runs from the date that the parolee commits the act constituting a parole violation to the date he is available for return to the penal institution. Id. In the case of an in-state parolee, the latter date is the date of his arrest. Id. at 188. Therefore, after an arrest, the parolee again begins serving his sentence for the prior conviction. This is true even if the parolee is incarcerated in a county jail awaiting trial for a new charge.
In the case at bar, however, there was no dead time for defendant. Defendant committed the instant offense while in custody following his arrest for retail fraud. Thus, defendant was always available for return to the institution and has never ceased serving his sentence for the prior conviction. More to the point, defendant was continuing to serve his sentence for the prior offense while incarcerated awaiting trial for the instant offense. Therefore, defendant will receive credit for the time spent in the county jail. The credit, however, will be against his prior sentence, not the current sentence. Indeed, to give defendant credit for time served for his current sentence would result in the jail time being counted twice. As we noted in
*690 People v Cantu, 117 Mich App 399, 403; 323 NW2d 719 (1982), multiple credit is improper.
This conclusion is buttressed by the fact that MCL 768.7a(2); MSA 28.1030(1)(2), quoted above, provides that the instant sentence is to begin running at the expiration of the prior sentence. Defendant’s prior sentence had not expired during the time, he was in jail — he had not been discharged from his sentence. Accordingly, defendant’s current sentence could not yet have begun to run while he was in jail awaiting trial, and, therefore, credit for time served would be inappropriate.
Some difficulty arises when we consider how the Department of Corrections treats this issue. At the hearing on defendant’s motion for resentencing, Ronald Shull, the records administrator for the department, testified concerning the calculations of parole and release dates and the application of credits, both disciplinary and for time served, to consecutive sentences received while on parole. As we understand Shull’s testimony, the department adds the máximums for the two sentences and calculates a new parole date on the basis of the minimum of the new sentence (the minimum of the old sentence being irrelevant since it has already been served). It is also, apparently, the Department of Corrections’ position that jail credit should be granted regarding the minimum of the new sentence, thus affecting the defendant’s earliest parole date. 2 Except for the issue of credit for time served, this procedure seems reasonable, though it should be noted that it does not strictly *691 comply with the statutes, which are conflicting on this point. 3
However, for the reasons stated above, we do not agree that credit for time served should be applied to the new sentence. We hold that, because the second sentence is not to begin until the expiration of the first sentence, which had not expired before the sentencing for the second offense, defendant is not entitled to credit for time served against his second sentence. 4 _
*692 Defendant also argues that the sentence imposed should shock our judicial conscience. See
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464 N.W.2d 715, 186 Mich. App. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-watts-michctapp-1991.