Stanley Vanoy Ransom v. State of Arkansas

2019 Ark. App. 563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 4, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 563 (Stanley Vanoy Ransom v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley Vanoy Ransom v. State of Arkansas, 2019 Ark. App. 563 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 563 Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document Date: 2021-06-18 11:09:51 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Foxit PhantomPDF Version: DIVISIONS I & IV 9.7.5 No. CR-19-186

Opinion Delivered December 4, 2019 STANLEY VANOY RANSOM APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NOS. 23CR-11-473 & 23CR- STATE OF ARKANSAS 11-1001] APPELLEE HONORABLE CHARLES E. CLAWSON, JR., JUDGE

REVERSED AND DISMISSED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

In 2012, Ransom was found guilty in two separate cases and placed on probation in

each one of them. The Faulkner County Circuit Court sentenced Ransom to eighty-four

months’ probation for robbery, seventy-two months’ probation for second-degree battery,

twelve months’ probation for domestic battery third, and twelve months’ probation for

resisting arrest in case number 473. In case number 1001, the court sentenced Ransom to

eighty-four months’ probation for failing to appear.

Fast forward to 2015 when the State filed petitions to revoke Ransom’s probation.

After hearings on the petitions, the court found that Ransom had violated the terms imposed

in each of the two cases that were originally adjudicated in 2012. The court’s decisions

were reduced to one written judgment, which was entered on 23 March 2015. The March

judgment, which we have reproduced as an addendum to this opinion, is straightforward.

It has two checkmarks. Next to the first checkmark the judgment reads, “[T]he Defendant has violated the terms and conditions of his probation.” Next to the second check mark is

this statement: “The Defendant shall serve 30 days in the Faulkner County Detention

Center, with a credit for 41 days spent in custody awaiting disposition of this matter.” The

rest of the form boxes or spaces are unchecked. Ransom did not appeal the March 2015

judgment.

In August 2015, the State filed a petition to revoke Ransom’s probation in case

number 473, which the State later amended in September 2015 to include case number

1001. In December 2015, the circuit court entered a judgment for the State on those

petitions. Ransom did not appeal.

In July 2016, the State again filed a petition to revoke and then amended it in case

number 473. In October 2016, the circuit court entered a judgment in case numbers 473

and 1001. Ransom did not appeal.

In 2017, the State filed two more petitions to revoke. The two petitions were

decided together by the circuit court in November 2018. The court revoked Ransom’s

probation in both cases. In case number 473, the court sentenced him to an aggregate term

of fifteen years in the Arkansas Department of Correction. In case number 1001, the court

sentenced Ransom to ten years’ imprisonment. These dispositions are reflected in two

separate judgments entered on 20 November 2018 (no. 473) and 3 December 2018 (no.

1001).

A few days after the December 3 judgment had been entered, Ransom filed posttrial

motions and asked the court to set aside the November and December 2018 judgments.

He argued that the court had no jurisdiction to revoke his probation because he was not on

probation. This in turn meant the November 2018 and December 2018 judgments must 2 be vacated. The posttrial motions were deemed denied by operation of law when the court

did not rule on them within thirty days after they were filed. Ark. R. Crim. P. 33.3(c)

(2019). Ransom timely appealed the two 2018 judgments; he did not appeal the deemed

denial of his posttrial motions.

In this court, Ransom argues that the circuit court’s 23 March 2015 judgment

sentenced him to thirty days in jail but did not extend his probation period. Consequently,

he was not on probation when the State filed any petition to revoke after he had served the

sentence imposed by the March 2015 judgment. Because he was not on probation when

the court purported to revoke any probation period after the March 2015 judgment was

entered, Ransom says that the now appealed 2018 judgments, for which he is currently

serving sentences, must be vacated.

The State contends, and our dissenting colleague agrees, that the unchecked boxes

in the March 2015 judgment were scrivener’s errors—meaning inadvertent errors by

omission—because the transcript from the 23 March 2015 revocation hearing shows that

the court intended to continue Ransom’s probation, and Ransom himself understood that

he was on probation. Therefore, there is no material problem dating from March 2015

going forward.

We first observe that the State has not argued that Ransom purged any error in the

23 March 2015 judgment because he acted as if he were on probation and allowed the State

to “revoke” his probation multiple times, unchallenged, until the 2018 judgments were

entered. In our view, such an argument is foreclosed by current case law—which may be

why the State did not make it—and the State has not otherwise advocated for a change in

the law. In fact, our research has not found one case in which an Arkansas appellate court 3 has held that a criminal defendant’s course of conduct waives an argument that the circuit

court lacked the authority to revoke a probation sentence.

The cases hold the opposite: a circuit court’s power to revoke a defendant’s

probation may be raised for the first time on appeal. See Trif v. State, 2016 Ark. App. 452,

at 4, 503 S.W.3d 802, 805 (whether circuit court can revoke probation or has jurisdiction

to do so may be raised for the first time on appeal). Ransom’s argument is therefore properly

before us.

To the State’s scrivener’s-error point, such an error is “essentially one that arises not

from an exercise of the court’s judicial discretion but from a mistake on the part of its officers

(or perhaps someone else).” Francis v. Protective Life Ins. Co., 371 Ark. 285, 293, 265 S.W.3d

117, 123 (2007) (citing Luckes v. Luckes, 262 Ark. 770, 772, 561 S.W.2d 300, 302 (1978)).

A circuit court’s power to correct mistakes or errors is to make “the record speak the truth,

but not to make it speak what it did not speak but ought to have spoken.” Lord v. Mazzanti,

339 Ark. 25, 29, 2 S.W.3d 76, 79 (1999). In this case, the State is trying to do just what it

cannot do—place words into the circuit court’s pen. The State never moved the circuit

court to correct the March 2015 judgment, not even after Ransom had filed a posttrial

motion pointing out the very omission that is the State’s so-called scrivener’s error. The

circuit court never extended Ransom’s probation period in writing; instead, it sentenced

him to thirty days’ imprisonment in 2015 (and a credit for forty-one days “spent in custody

awaiting disposition of this matter”). Years later, however, the State wants to correct a

substantive error, assuming for the sake of argument that it was an error, by way of

scrivener’s-error law.

4 True, the circuit court told Ransom during a 23 March 2015 hearing that it was

going to extend his probationary period:

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Related

Tonya D. Price v. State of Arkansas
2022 Ark. App. 104 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2022)
Ransom v. Arkansas, State of
E.D. Arkansas, 2022

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