State v. Hamlin

950 P.2d 336, 151 Or. App. 481, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 3, 1997
Docket94CR1251FE; CA A94624
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 950 P.2d 336 (State v. Hamlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hamlin, 950 P.2d 336, 151 Or. App. 481, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1865 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

*483 DE MUNIZ, P. J.

The state appeals an amended judgment imposing sentences on defendant’s convictions for the felony offenses of unlawful manufacture, delivery, and possession of the controlled substance marijuana (MCS, DCS and PCS), ORS 475.992(l)(a), (2)(a) and (4)(a), and the misdemeanor offense of endangering the welfare of a minor, ORS 163.575(l)(b). Defendant cross-appeals the denial of her motion to suppress. We reverse on appeal and affirm on cross-appeal.

Defendant was found guilty after a trial to the court. At the original sentencing on July 3, 1996, the sentencing court imposed concurrent presumptive 18-month prison sentences on the MCS and DCS convictions. 1 On the conviction for PCS, defendant was placed on probation to the Corrections Division for a period of 36 months with a 30-day jail term, the jail term to be served concurrently with the MCS sentence. On the PCS conviction, the form judgment had an “x” in the box for “Defendant to report immediately to Adult Parole & Probation Dept.” Incarceration was to begin on August 1, which was 30 days from the sentencing.

The written judgment was entered on July 3. On the same day, defendant filed a “Motion to Reconsider” challenging the enhancing factor of “substantial quantity” on the ground that there was no evidence of “substantial quantity.” The state responded that the evidence supported the enhancing factor and also argued that there was no legal authority for a motion to reconsider. On July 15, defendant filed a notice of appeal, and the state moved to dismiss defendant’s motion to reconsider on the ground that the circuit court had lost jurisdiction. Defendant then moved to dismiss her appeal “without prejudice,” and this court dismissed the appeal.

On July 29, the sentencing court reconsidered defendant’s sentences and entered the amended judgment from which the state appeals. The court sentenced defendant to concurrent terms of three years’ probation on the convictions of MCS, DCS and PCS, with 90-days incarceration in the *484 county jail. 2 The state assigns error to the court’s vacating the original prison sentences imposed on the MCS and DCS convictions and imposing probationary sentences on those convictions.

The state’s first argument is that the sentencing court lacked authority to resentence defendant. It contends that the only post-judgment motions authorized by the criminal code are a motion in arrest of judgment, ORS 136.500, and a motion for a new trial, ORS 136.535. The state argues that, because a motion to reconsider does not come within those statutes, the sentencing court lacked statutory authority to modify the judgment.

However, the rule in Oregon is otherwise. In State ex rel O’Leary v. Jacobs, 295 Or 632, 669 P2d 1128 (1983), the defendant filed a motion for reconsideration of his sentence two years after his sentence had been imposed. The state sought a writ of mandamus after the trial court resentenced the defendant. The Supreme Court recognized that there was “no statute authorizing a motion and hearing” for the purpose of reconsidering a defendant’s sentence. Id. at 635. Nonetheless, the court considered the defendant’s new sentence under the “well established majority common law rule” that a trial judge has the power to modify or vacate a valid sentence before the sentence has been executed. Id. at 636. Under that rule, the court held that the trial court was without authority to modify the defendant’s sentence because it had already been executed. Here, the sentencing court had the power to reconsider defendant’s sentence if the original sentence had not been executed. 3

*485 The issue before us, thus, is whether defendant’s sentence had been executed before resentencing. Before the passage of the sentencing guidelines, probation was a release by the court before commencement of the sentence, either because the court suspended the imposition of a sentence or suspended the execution of a sentence after it was imposed. State v. Ludwig, 218 Or 483,487, 344 P2d 764 (1959); see also Anderson v. Alexander, 191 Or 409, 424, 229 P2d 633, 230 P2d 770 (1951) (“When a court suspends the pronouncement of sentence, the judicial process has not been completed. It remains in a state of suspense[.]”). Under that system, execution of a sentence equated with the start of incarceration, and that understanding is incorporated in ORS 137.370(1). 4 See Ludwig, 218 Or at 487 (“ORS 137.370 provides that service of sentence begins when the prisoner is received at the penitentiary.”).

The state acknowledges that defendant had not begun to serve the terms of incarceration imposed by the July 3 judgment before the resentencing. 5 It argues, however, that now a probationary sentence is a “sentence,” Holcomb v. Sunderland, 321 Or 99,104, 894 P2d 457 (1995), and begins on imposition of sentence unless otherwise ordered. See, e.g., State v. Quackenbush, 116 Or App 453, 455-56, 841 P2d 671 (1992). The sentences here were concurrent. See ORS 137.123(1) (“A sentence shall be deemed to be a concurrent term unless the judgment expressly provides for consecutive *486 sentences.”). Therefore, the state reasons, because the power of a trial judge to modify a sentence “ends once the convict has been placed in the custody of the Corrections Division pursuant to a valid sentence,” O’Leary, 295 Or at 634, and because here defendant had started to serve a valid probationary sentence on the PCS conviction to the “Corrections Division of the State of Oregon,” the sentencing court was without authority to modify the terms of imprisonment of the concurrent MCS and DCS judgments.

The state relies on State v. Perry, 140 Or App 18,914 P2d 29 (1996), in which the sentencing court had imposed a sentence of six months’ imprisonment on the defendant’s conviction for burglary and a 45-day jail term on the defendant’s conviction for attempting to elude. At the time of sentencing, the court did not state whether the sentences were to be concurrent or consecutive, and the defendant was immediately incarcerated on the attempting to elude conviction.

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Bluebook (online)
950 P.2d 336, 151 Or. App. 481, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hamlin-orctapp-1997.