State v. Holmes

277 A.2d 914, 108 R.I. 579, 1971 R.I. LEXIS 1310
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 2, 1971
Docket1238-Ex. &c
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 277 A.2d 914 (State v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Holmes, 277 A.2d 914, 108 R.I. 579, 1971 R.I. LEXIS 1310 (R.I. 1971).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This case is before us on an exception to a Superior Court justice’s denial of the appellant’s motion *580 for reduction of his sentence by the number of days spent in confinement awaiting trial and sentencing. The motion was made on the authority of G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §12-19-2.

The record establishes that some time in 1967, appellant was placed on a deferred sentence in connection with indictment No. 35490. On July 3, 1968, the grand jury returned two other indictments against appellant, which indictments were numbered 68-780 (unlawful sale of a narcotic drug) and 68-781 (unlawful possession of a narcotic drug). Thereafter, specifically August 2, 1968, appellant was committed to the Adult Correctional Institutions pending disposition of all three indictments. It was not until April 10, 1969, that appellant was brought before a Superior Court justice for disposition. Thus, from August 2, 1968 to April 10, 1969, appellant was confined 245 days awaiting such disposition.

On April 10, 1969, the Superior Court justice, before whom appellant appeared, made the following dispositions: for violating the terms of his deferred sentence given in connection with indictment 35490, appellant was sentenced to three years, the execution of which was suspended, subject to five years’ probation.

On appellant’s plea of nolo to indictment 68-781, he was given a five-year sentence, the execution of which was also suspended and made subject to a five-year probation. On indictment 68-780, sentence was deferred.

Some two months later, specifically June 19, 1969, appellant was presented before the same .Superior Court justice who had imposed the sentences on April 10, 1969, on the state’s charge that appellant had violated the terms of his probation and the Superior Court justice so found. As a consequence of this finding, the Superior Court justice further deferred sentencing of appellant on indictment 68-780 but vacated the suspension of execution of the three *581 and five-year sentences imposed in connection with indictments 35490 and 68-781, respectively.

The appellant was thereupon ordered confined to the Adult Correctional Institutions to serve said three and five-year sentences concurrently.

Thereafter, specifically on August 18, 1970, appellant filed the instant motion. It sought, in effect, to have appellant’s three and five-year sentences reduced by the 245 days which appellant had been confined prior to the imposition of such sentences. The motion was heard by the same Superior Court justice who had imposed the sentences, suspended execution thereof, and subsequently vacated such suspension as heretofore related. At this hearing, the Superior Court- justice denied the appellant’s motion and an exception to such denial was duly prosecuted to this court.

It is clear from a reading of his decision that the Superior Court justice construed §12-19-2 as intending that the sentence imposed should reflect the amount of time already spent prior to sentencing. In other words, the sentence, once imposed, would not thereafter be subject to reduction by virtue of the statute in question. So con-construed, the Superior Court justice indicated that before a sentence was imposed, it was obligatory on a sentencing judge to first determine whether the person to be sentenced had already been confined in consequence of the offense for which he was to be sentenced, and then impose a sentence which would represent th'e time that defendant was to serve thereafter. In reaching this decision denying appellant’s motion, he pointed out that the three and five-year sentences imposed were substantially less than the authorized maximum sentences, thereby suggesting that appellant had received the benefit intended by §12-19-2. He acknowledged that when imposing the sentences in question he made no reference to this, but justified the *582 record’s silence in this regard on the ground that to require a sentencing judge to have the record disclose every mitigating circumstance which influenced the imposition of a sentence less than the provided maximum, would make a mockery of the sentencing process.

This brings us to a consideration of the legislative intendment of §12-19-2. It provides:

“Selection of method and amount or term of punishment. — Whenever it is provided that any offense shall be punished by a fine or imprisonment, the court imposing such punishment may, in its discretion, select the kind of punishment to be imposed, and if such punishment be fine or imprisonment, the amount or term of the same within the limits prescribed by law, provided, however, if the punishment to be imposed is imprisonment, such sentence or sentences imposed shall be reduced by the number of days spent in confinement while awaiting trial and while awaiting sentencing, and provided, further, however, that in the case of a person sentenced to a life sentence, the time at which he shall become eligible to apply for parole shall be reduced by the number of days so spent in confinement while awaiting trial and while awaiting sentencing; and any sentence or sentences in effect at present, including the provision as to a life sentence as heretofore described may be reduced in a like manner by the court which imposed such sentence upon application by the person serving such sentence to the said court.”

At the outset, we deem it advisable to point out that the phrase “while awaiting trial and while awaiting sentencing” must be construed as embracing confinement time spent for any reason whatsoever in connection with an offense for which a defendant is subsequently sentenced.

Thus, in the instant case, appellant was confined 245 days between August 2, 1968 and April 10, 1969, awaiting disposition of the deferred sentence given in connection with indictment 35490 and the same amount of time await *583 ing either trial or disposition of a plea of nolo or guilty in connection with indictments 68-780 and 68-781. Clearly, then, the sentences imposed on April 10, 1969, were subject to the provisions of §12-19-2, it having become effective May 22, 1968.

The ultimate question before us, therefore, is whether the Superior Court justice was correct in his determination that the sentences of three and five years respectively reflected credit for the 245 days which appellant had been confined prior to the imposition of these sentences. In reaching his determination, the Superior Court justice, expressing his belief that the statute was actually meaningful only when minimum and maximum sentences were involved, used two hypothetical cases. First, he considered the case of two men convicted of robbery, the punishment for which is from five years to life. Continuing with his hypothesis, the sentencing judge believes that the minimum sentence should be imposed on both defendants. Defendant A, however, was confined for one year awaiting trial and sentence, while defendant B had been out on bail. In such circumstance the Superior Court justice whose decision is here under review, construed §12-19-2 as requiring him, under the facts stated, to sentence defendant A to four years and defendant B to five.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 A.2d 914, 108 R.I. 579, 1971 R.I. LEXIS 1310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holmes-ri-1971.