Ronnie Lee Bowling v. Randy White Warden, Kentucky State Penitentiary

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 2016
Docket2014 SC 000235
StatusUnknown

This text of Ronnie Lee Bowling v. Randy White Warden, Kentucky State Penitentiary (Ronnie Lee Bowling v. Randy White Warden, Kentucky State Penitentiary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronnie Lee Bowling v. Randy White Warden, Kentucky State Penitentiary, (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

MODIFIED: FEBRUARY 18, 2016 RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 0 P LI ED

oSuprrtur Gatti of 2014-SC-000235-CL

RONNIE LEE BOWLING MOVANT

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY, SOUTHERN DIVISION LONDON V. HONORABLE AMUL R. THAPAR, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE CIVIL NO. 12-A89-ART

RANDY WHITE (WARDEN, KENTUCKY STATE PENITENTIARY) RESPONDENT

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE NOBLE

CERTIFICATION OF LAW

Ronnie Lee Bowling is currently on Kentucky's death row for a pair of murder convictions obtained in 1992. In 1996, he was also convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to twenty years in prison, with that sentence being served concurrently with the earlier one. The judgment in the latter case failed to award Bowling substantial jail-time credit he was entitled to that would mean he had served out that sentence in 2009. Nonetheless, the Department of Corrections has treated that twenty-year sentence as though it had been served out at that time. This case arises from a petition for habeas corpus that Bowling filed in United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky challenging his 1996 conviction. Before that court may exercise jurisdiction, however, it must first determine that Bowling is "in custody" under the challenged

conviction. Unable to resolve the question, in part because of a perceived

conflict in our case law, the district court certified two questions to this Court.

See Bowling v. White, CIV. 12-189-ART, 2014 WL 1883732 (E.D. Ky. Apr. 29,

2014).

This Court accepted the certification but agreed only to consider one of

the questions:

Does Bard v. Commonwealth, 359 S.W.3d 1 (Ky. 2011), control Bowling's case, so that the Department of Corrections lacked authority to correct the sentencing court's failure to award jail-time credit in Bowling's Rockcastle County Case?'

Although Bard v. Commonwealth continues to be good law, it does not

control Bowling's case, which presents a different factual scenario. Thus, as to

the district court's certified question, under the present version of KRS

532.120(3), the Department of Corrections may award an inmate jail-time

credit that was mistakenly left off.the judgment of conviction and sentence

entered at a time when the trial court was statutorily commanded to award

appropriate credit. Whether Corrections properly did so, and thus did not have

Bowling in custody on that charge at the time he filed his habeas petition,

requires fact-finding that must be done by the district court.

I. Background

The record in this case is sparse because it concerns the certification of a

question of law, and we are thus dependent on the facts as articulated by the

I The second question was: "Factually, has Bowling's Rockcastle County sentence expired?" We did not certify the second question because it required a factual determination that is the task of the trial court, not of a court that is only certifying the law. 2 district court in its request. Nonetheless, some recounting of this case's background is necessary to understand the issues. Ronnie Lee Bowling's various cases arise from a crime spree in January and February 1989. During that time, he robbed and killed two men in Laurel County, also committing burglaries in the process. Shortly after the second murder, Bowling entered a gas station in Rockcastle County, where he shot the owner, attempting but failing to kill him. Police immediately chased Bowling, and he was quickly arrested. He was indicted for his crimes in both Laurel and Rockcastle Counties.

The Laurel County case went to trial first, in 1992. Bowling was convicted on all counts and sentenced to death in December 1992. Both his convictions and his sentence were affirmed by this Court in 1997. See Bowling v. Commonwealth, 942 S.W.2d 293, 297 (Ky. 1997). According to his Department of Corrections Resident Record Card, 2 Bowling was remanded to the custody of the Department of Corrections on December 9, 1992. The Rockcastle County charges did not go to trial until 1996, by which time Bowling had been incarcerated for almost seven years. He was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment. Though the court stated orally that this sentence would be served consecutively to any other sentence, the written judgment was silent on that point, and thus the sentence automatically ran concurrently with the 1992 sentence. See KRS 532.110(2); KRS 197.035(2). This Court affirmed this conviction and sentence

2 A copy of this document, dated June 15, 2011, is attached to Bowling's brief. The copy appears to have been filed with the district court on October 19, 2012. 3 in Bowling v. Commonwealth, 96-SC-442-MR (October 15, 1998) (unpublished), and the Court of Appeals later affirmed the denial of Bowling's Criminal Rule 11.42 motion challenging his conviction, Bowling v. Commonwealth, 2003-CA-002339-MR, 2005 WL 3116032 (Ky. App. Nov. 23,

2005). At the time of the Rockcastle County conviction, the circuit court was required to give Bowling any so-called jail-time credit to which he was entitled. See KRS 532.120(3) (1992) ("Time spent in custody prior to the commencement

of a sentence as a result of the charge that culminated in the sentence shall be credited by the court imposing sentence toward service of the maximum term of imprisonment."). Thus, the judgment in that case should have given Bowling credit for the time he had served between his arrest and initial conviction. The circuit court nevertheless awarded Bowling "0 days" of jail-time credit. That judgment was not amended, and that aspect of the decision was not appealed. Nonetheless, the Department of Corrections claims his sentence has been running since his arrest in 1989. On September 12, 2012, Bowling filed a petition for habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky challenging his conviction in the Rockcastle County case. For a federal district court to have jurisdiction over a habeas petition in a given case made by a person convicted in state court, however, the person must be "in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court." 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254. That jurisdiction exists as long as the petition was filed while the petitioner was in custody under the challenged judgment, even if his sentence 4 expires before it can be decided. Maleng v. Cook, 490 U.S. 488, 490-91 (1989) ("We have interpreted the statutory language as requiring that the habeas petitioner be (in custody' under the conviction or sentence under attack at the time his petition is filed."). The petitioner's in-custody status must be related, in some way, to the conviction he challenges in the habeas petition. See Sinclair v. Blackburn, 599 F.2d 673, 676 (5th Cir. 1979) ("p]urisdiction exists if

there is a positive, demonstrable relationship between the prior conviction and the petitioner's present incarceration.").

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Related

Benton v. Maryland
395 U.S. 784 (Supreme Court, 1969)
Maleng v. Cook
490 U.S. 488 (Supreme Court, 1989)
Robert Emanuel Sciberras v. United States
404 F.2d 247 (Tenth Circuit, 1968)
Mays v. Dinwiddie
580 F.3d 1136 (Tenth Circuit, 2009)
Bowling v. Commonwealth
942 S.W.2d 293 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1997)
Winstead v. Commonwealth
327 S.W.3d 479 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2010)
Bard v. Commonwealth
359 S.W.3d 1 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2011)

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