Sharvelt Marquette Mister v. State of Arkansas

2022 Ark. 35, 639 S.W.3d 331
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 17, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. 35 (Sharvelt Marquette Mister v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharvelt Marquette Mister v. State of Arkansas, 2022 Ark. 35, 639 S.W.3d 331 (Ark. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. 35 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-20-740

Opinion Delivered: February 17, 2022

SHARVELT MARQUETTE MISTER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NOS. 66FCR-00-1053, 66FCR-01-238, STATE OF ARKANSAS 66FCR-01-239, 66FCR-07-953, 66FCR-07- APPELLEE 969, 66FCR-10-1319, 66FCR-10-1320]

HONORABLE J. MICHAEL FITZHUGH, JUDGE

AFFIRMED.

COURTNEY RAE HUDSON, Associate Justice

Appellant Sharvelt Marquette Mister appeals from the Sebastian County Circuit Court’s

denial of his petition to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section

16-90-111 (Repl. 2016). For reversal, Mister argues that (1) the rights vested in him by the Fourth,

Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution were violated by his

unlawful arrest, rendering his sentences void and illegal; (2) his sentences violate the Eighth

Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment; and (3) his trial counsel was

ineffective by failing to move for dismissal of his charges based on a lack of probable cause to

support his arrest. We accepted certification of this case from the Arkansas Court of Appeals as

a subsequent appeal following an appeal that was decided by this court. See Arkansas Supreme

Court Rule 1-2(a)(7) (2021). We affirm. On August 21, 2001, Mister pled guilty to three felony drug offenses for which he

received a sentence of nineteen years’ imprisonment and a ten-year suspended imposition of

sentence (“SIS”) on each charge. On September 19, 2007, Mister pled guilty to three additional

drug offenses and received sentences of twelve years’ imprisonment and an eight-year SIS for

each of those charges. The State petitioned to revoke the six suspended sentences on December

27, 2010, alleging that on December 2 and December 20, 2010, Mister committed the offenses

of delivery of cocaine. The circuit court granted the petition to revoke after a hearing and

sentenced Mister to twenty-one years’ imprisonment on each of the three 2001 convictions and

eighteen years’ imprisonment on each of the three 2007 convictions. The court ran the three

21-year sentences concurrently, ran two of the 18-year sentences concurrently to each other but

consecutive to the three 21-year sentences, and ran the third 18-year sentence consecutively to

both the three 21-year sentences and the two 18-year sentences, for a total of fifty-seven years’

imprisonment. Mister appealed his revocation, which was affirmed. Mister v. State, 2012 Ark.

App. 375. The denial of Mister’s subsequent petition for postconviction relief pursuant to Ark.

R. Crim. P. 37 was also affirmed on appeal. Mister v. State, 2014 Ark. 445, 446 S.W.3d 624.

In 2011, Mister was tried and convicted on the two counts of delivery of cocaine forming

the basis for his revocation. He was sentenced as a habitual offender to forty years’ imprisonment

in CR-10-1319 and twenty-five years’ imprisonment, plus a twenty-five-year SIS, in CR-10-1320.

The sentences were ordered to be run consecutively to each other and to the fifty-seven-year

sentence imposed in the revocation proceeding. Mister appealed both of these convictions,

which were affirmed in Mister v. State, 2012 Ark. App. 536, and Mister v. State, 2013 Ark. App.

49. Mister appealed from the denial of his Rule 37 petition in CR-10-1320, which was also

2 affirmed. Mister v. State, 2014 Ark. 446. He subsequently filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus

in the Lincoln County Circuit Court, the denial of which was affirmed by this court in Mister v.

State, 2019 Ark. 187, 575 S.W.3d 410.

On September 11, 2020, Mister filed his current petition to correct an illegal sentence

pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 16-90-111. He alleged that the sentences imposed in his 2011

convictions and in his revocation were “null and void” because the arrest warrant and criminal

information were not accompanied by a sworn affidavit or supported by probable cause. Mister

claimed that his illegal detention violated the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure and his

constitutional rights as protected by the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the

United States Constitution and that the circuit court was divested of jurisdiction to render

judgment in his cases based on his unlawful arrest. He also asserted Supremacy Clause and

separation-of-powers violations and claimed that the prosecution, the circuit court, and the

attorneys had violated their oaths of office and engaged in “acts of treason.” 1 Finally, Mister

alleged that his trial counsel was ineffective by not moving to dismiss the charges based on the

illegal arrest.

The circuit court entered an order denying Mister’s petition on September 17, 2020.

With regard to Mister’s challenges to the validity of his arrest, the court found that this was not

a jurisdictional defect that would render the sentences imposed illegal. The court also found

that Mister had failed to show that his sentences were facially illegal and that his allegations of a

constitutional violation did not render the judgments invalid. As to Mister’s treason argument,

1 Mister does not challenge the denial of these claims on appeal, and they are therefore deemed abandoned. Owens v. Payne, 2020 Ark. 413, 612 S.W.3d 169.

3 the circuit court stated that this allegation was “absurd and without any substantial proof.”

Mister’s appeal from the circuit court’s order on October 27, 2020, was untimely. However, he

subsequently obtained counsel, who filed a motion for leave to file a belated appeal that was

granted by the court of appeals.

In his first point on appeal, Mister continues to argue that his sentences were rendered

void and illegal because of his allegedly unlawful arrest. Specifically, he claims that he was

arrested on December 20, 2010, following a controlled buy; that an unsworn affidavit titled

“Affidavit of Probable Cause Determination” was faxed to the prosecutor’s office the next day;

that no formal first appearances or probable-cause hearings were ever conducted by a neutral

judicial officer; and that when criminal charges were finally filed against him on July 12, 2011,

the charging instruments were not supported by attached affidavits given upon oath or

affirmation. Mister asserts that his requests from the Sebastian County Circuit Clerk for an

affidavit of probable cause determination, an arrest warrant, or a record of his first judicial

appearance also revealed no such documents in the record. He argues that the failure to present

any sworn evidence to a neutral and detached judicial officer for an independent determination

of probable cause either before or after his arrest “does not satisfy the 4th, 5th, and 14th

Amendment subject matter jurisdiction standards” and that because jurisdiction over him never

attached, his sentences are therefore illegal.

Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-90-111(a) provides authority to a circuit court to

correct a facially illegal sentence—as opposed to one imposed illegally—at any time.2 Willingham

2 We have held that a claim that a sentence is imposed in an illegal manner is governed by the time limitations set out in Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.2(c) (2021), which

4 v. State, 2021 Ark. 177, 631 S.W.3d 558; Rea v. State, 2021 Ark. 134. In addition, a circuit court

may reduce a sentence upon revocation of probation as provided by law. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-

90-111(b)(2).

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2022 Ark. 35, 639 S.W.3d 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharvelt-marquette-mister-v-state-of-arkansas-ark-2022.