Stouffer v. Pearson

887 A.2d 623, 390 Md. 36, 2005 Md. LEXIS 730
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 8, 2005
Docket1, September Term, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 887 A.2d 623 (Stouffer v. Pearson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stouffer v. Pearson, 887 A.2d 623, 390 Md. 36, 2005 Md. LEXIS 730 (Md. 2005).

Opinion

GREENE, J.

Inmate, James L. Pearson, respondent, filed a petition for habeas corpus relief in the Circuit Court for Washington County. 1 After a hearing in the Circuit Court (Wright, J. presiding) the court found that Mr. Pearson was entitled to an immediate release and ordered him to be released from the custody of the Division of Corrections (DOC) 2 after recalculation of diminution of confinement credits and verification of the expiration dates of his terms of confinement. 3 The Court *41 of Special Appeals, in an unreported opinion, affirmed the trial court’s judgment that Mr. Pearson was entitled to an immediate release. In holding that Mr. Pearson’s “consecutive” sentence for crimes he committed while on parole did not commence at the termination of his parole, the intermediate appellate court explained that if parole is not revoked prior to the imposition of a new consecutive sentence, parole cannot be considered a term of confinement. In other words, parole is not a sentence in esse. 4 The DOC sought certiorari. We granted the DOC’s petition for writ of certiorari filed March 10, 2005. Stouffer v. Pearson, 386 Md. 180, 872 A.2d 46 (2005).

In our review of the recalculation of Mr. Pearson’s release date, we must determine what the proper commencement date of a consecutive sentence would have been, prior to June 1, 1994, while an offender was on parole and parole had not yet been revoked. In our resolution of this question, we hold that for sentencing purposes parole is not synonymous with incarceration or a sentence being served. Further, we hold that Mr. Pearson’s sentencing in 1979, for crimes committed while on parole, cannot run consecutively to his term of parole because his parole was not revoked until after he was sentenced. Therefore, we conclude that Mr. Pearson is entitled to an immediate release.

Facts

On February 1, 1972, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City sentenced Mr. Pearson to twenty-years imprisonment, to commence on August 3, 1971, for robbery with a deadly weapon. 5 On June 1, 1977, the Maryland Parole Commission (MPC) paroled Mr. Pearson. On March 29, 1978, the MPC issued a *42 retake warrant for Mr. Pearson. Mr. Pearson was arrested and incarcerated in Baltimore City.

On February 27, 1979, Mr. Pearson was sentenced in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City (Ross, J.) to a twenty-year term of incarceration for second-degree murder, to run “consecutive with any sentence on violation of parole [sic]” and a ten-year term for use of a handgun during the commission of a felony, consecutive to the second-degree murder sentence. Mr. Pearson was also sentenced to three years imprisonment for unlawfully carrying a handgun, to be served concurrently. On April 10, 1979, the MPC revoked Mr. Pearson’s parole, ordering him to serve the balance of the original 1972 sentence, less eight months (or 245 days) “street time” credit. The DOC’s adjusted maximum expiration date on Mr. Pearson’s original 1972 sentence was August 28, 1992; his 1979 sentence would commence on August 28, 1992, and expire on November 24, 2021. 6

Mr. Pearson filed a writ of habeas corpus on July 15, 2004, requesting an immediate release from incarceration, alleging that “at common law, a sentence imposed consecutively to a *43 parole violation term commences on the date of imposition if, at the time of sentencing, parole has not yet been revoked.” Mr. Pearson’s habeas corpus hearing was held in the Circuit Court for Washington County on September 23, 2004. 7 On September 30, 2004, Judge Wright ordered Mr. Pearson released from custody and found that,

at common law, a sentence imposed consecutively to a parole violation term commences on the date of imposition if, at the time of sentencing, parole has not yet been revoked. In so far as the Division of Correction has stipulated that the petitioner! ] would be entitled to immediate release if that were the case, the petitioner! ] [is] ordered to be released from the custody of the Division of Correction upon recalculation of the[ ] individual diminution of confinement credits and verification of the maximum expiration dates of the[ ] terms of confinement.

Discussion

The DOC contends that Md.Code (1999, 2005 Supp.), § 9-202(c) of the Correctional Services Article, provides that the imposition of a parolee’s consecutive sentence commences at the expiration of the parole period and not on the date of imposition. 8 The DOC further maintains that Mr. Pearson’s *44 thirty-year consecutive sentence imposed in 1979 commenced in 1992, after Mr. Pearson served parole on his original 1972 twenty-year sentence. According to the DOC, when Mr. Pearson’s new consecutive sentence was imposed, and no revocation of parole occurred, the new sentence would commence when his parole term was completed.

Mr. Pearson contends, however, that the date on which the sentencing judge imposed the thirty-year sentence was the date the sentence began. Mr. Pearson asserts that the Court of Special Appeals was correct when it affirmed the trial court and concluded that Maryland common law “prohibits the imposition of a sentence that is consecutive to a term of confinement that is not yet in existence____”

Furthermore, Mr. Pearson maintains that § 9-202(c) should be applied retroactively. Thus, his release would have been effective after he served his original term of confinement, and his new sentence would have commenced on the date it was imposed and not after the original term was completed. On the other hand, the DOC contends that § 9-202(c) may not be applied retroactively to sentences imposed prior to the *45 statute’s 1994 effective date. We agree on this point and conclude that if the Legislature intended for the statute to apply retroactively, the language of the statute would have clearly expressed that intent.

A review of the applicable statutory and common law in 1979 is required to determine the effect of the sentencing judge ordering Mr. Pearson’s new sentence to run consecutively to his original parole term.

Statutory Law 9

In 1999, the Legislature recodified Article 27 § 690C as Maryland Code § 9-202 of the Correctional Services Article. Section 9-202(c) states that a sentence imposed for a crime committed by a parolee commences if parole was revoked before sentencing, after the original term expired, or on the date of sentencing, if parole was not revoked. The enactment of § 9-202 was the first time the issue of sentencing before revocation of parole was specifically addressed by the Legislature. 10

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
887 A.2d 623, 390 Md. 36, 2005 Md. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stouffer-v-pearson-md-2005.