State ex rel. Culp v. Rolf

568 S.W.3d 443
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 2018
DocketWD 82270
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 568 S.W.3d 443 (State ex rel. Culp v. Rolf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Culp v. Rolf, 568 S.W.3d 443 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Alok Ahuja, Judge

In October 2015 Relator Christopher Culp was convicted in the Circuit Court of Lafayette County of one count of felony stealing, and was sentenced to a term of seven years' imprisonment. The circuit court suspended the imposition of Culp's sentence and placed him on five years' probation. The Board of Probation and Parole filed probation violation reports against Culp in March and April 2017. Because the circuit court did not hold a hearing or otherwise address the alleged probation violations, Culp filed a motion to be discharged from probation in September 2018. In his motion, Culp contended that his probation term had expired due to the passage of time, and due to his accrual of earned compliance credits under § 217.703.1 The circuit court denied Culp's motion for discharge from probation, concluding that Culp's accrual of earned compliance credits had been suspended by the pending violation reports.

Culp then filed a Petition for Writ of Mandamus and/or Prohibition in this Court, arguing that his probationary period had expired. Because we agree that Culp's probationary period had expired by the time he filed his motion for discharge from probation, we now issue our permanent writ in mandamus directing the circuit court to vacate its order denying Culp's motion. The circuit court only retained the authority to adjudicate the probation violations alleged in the March and *445April 2017 reports if the court satisfied the standards in § 559.036.8.

Factual Background

On August 24, 2015, Culp was charged in the Circuit Court of Lafayette County with one count of felony stealing (Case No. 15LF-CR-00646). The charge was based on the allegation that, on or about May 21, 2015, Culp "appropriated a trailer and a tractor blade of a value of at least five hundred dollars." On October 19, 2015, Culp pleaded guilty to felony stealing. On the same day, the circuit court sentenced him to a term of seven years' imprisonment. The court suspended the execution of Culp's sentence, and ordered him to serve a five-year term of supervised probation.2

On March 16, 2017, the Department of Corrections' Board of Probation and Parole filed a Field Violation Report with the circuit court. The report stated that Culp had violated the conditions of his probation by possessing prescription drugs, methamphetamine, and marijuana, and by assaulting another person in an altercation over drugs. The report "recommend[ed] that Culp's probation be revoked and he be sentenced to the Department of Corrections." The March 2017 violation report stated that, based on earned compliance credits which had accrued as of March 2017, Culp had an "earned discharge date" of June 26, 2019; the report stated that "[c]ontinued supervision compliance will result in an optimal discharge date of 5-2-2018."

Based on the assault and drug-possession allegations contained in the Field Violation Report, the State filed an Application for Revocation of Probation in the circuit court on March 21, 2017. The circuit court issued a warrant for Culp's arrest the following day.

The Board of Probation and Parole filed a supplemental Field Violation Report with the circuit court on April 11, 2017, providing additional details concerning the drug possession and assault allegations contained in the March 16 report. The April 2017 report stated that Culp had an "earned discharge date" of June 26, 2019, and an "optimal discharge date" of June 1, 2018.

Following the filing of the supplemental violation report in April 2017, no further action took place in Culp's case for more than seventeen months. Then, on September 28, 2018, Culp filed a Motion to Withdraw Warrant and Discharge Mr. Culp from Probation. The Motion noted that under § 217.703, offenders like Culp are entitled to accrue "earned compliance credits," which shorten the offender's time on probation or parole by thirty days for every full calendar month in which the offender is in compliance with the conditions of his or her supervision. Culp's Motion argued that he was in "compliance" within the meaning of § 217.703 in every month other than March and April 2017 (the months in which the Board of Probation and Parole had filed Field Violation Reports against him). The Motion contended that Culp had accordingly earned thirty-day compliance credits for every month *446beginning in December 2015, excluding March and April 2017. Based on his accrual of earned compliance credits, the Motion to Discharge asserted that Culp's probation had expired on June 1, 2018 (his "optimal discharge date"), and that he was accordingly entitled to be finally discharged from probation.

The circuit court denied Culp's Motion to Discharge on October 17, 2018. The court concluded that Culp's "probation has not yet expired because his receipt of earned compliance credit has been stayed by the pending Motion for Probation Revocation."

Culp filed his Petition for Writ of Mandamus and/or Prohibition in this Court on November 6, 2018. Culp's Petition argued that his probationary period expired on his optimal discharge date of June 1, 2018, and that the circuit court had erroneously concluded that the State's filing of a motion for probation revocation had suspended Culp's accrual of earned compliance credits. Culp's Petition requested that we issue "a writ of mandamus and/or prohibition ... requiring [the circuit court] to discharge [Culp] from probation and prohibiting [the circuit court] from revoking [Culp]'s probation in State v. Culp , 15LF-CR00646-01."

We requested that the Respondent file suggestions in opposition to Culp's Petition. The Lafayette County Prosecuting Attorney's office filed Suggestions in Opposition on Respondent's behalf on November 20, 2018. The Suggestions in Opposition noted that, after the filing of Culp's writ petition in this Court, the circuit court held a probation revocation hearing on November 19, 2018, at which the circuit court found that Culp had violated the conditions of his probation. According to the Suggestions in Opposition, the circuit court did not enter a dispositional order at that time, however.

The Suggestions in Opposition argued that, "[i]f [probation is] revoked and [earned compliance credits] rescinded, [Culp]'s probation violation hearing would [have been] held within the probation term." If, on the other hand, Culp continued to accrue earned compliance credits despite the filing of the violation reports in March and April 2017, and his probation term therefore expired on June 1, 2018, the Suggestions in Opposition argued that a November 2018 probation revocation hearing was nevertheless proper. The Suggestions in Opposition argued that a post-probation hearing was authorized under § 559.036.8, because the circuit court had manifested its intent to revoke probation during the probation period by issuing a warrant for Culp's arrest, and had exercised "every reasonable effort" to conduct a revocation hearing within the probation period, but was thwarted because "the whereabouts of [Culp] were unknown until November 5, 2018."

Culp filed a reply memorandum to respond to the Respondent's contention that "every reasonable effort" had been made to conduct a probation revocation hearing prior to June 1, 2018. Culp asserted that he had not absconded from probation, but was instead incarcerated on other charges in the Department of Corrections' Western Missouri Correctional Center in Cameron.

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Bluebook (online)
568 S.W.3d 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-culp-v-rolf-moctapp-2018.