The State of Texas v. Cory Prestman Olsen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2025
Docket01-25-00114-CR
StatusPublished

This text of The State of Texas v. Cory Prestman Olsen (The State of Texas v. Cory Prestman Olsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The State of Texas v. Cory Prestman Olsen, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 26, 2025

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-25-00114-CR NO. 01-25-00281-CR ——————————— THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant V. CORY PRESTMAN OLSEN, Appellee

and

IN RE SEAN TEARE, Relator

On Appeal from the 208th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 0526076

MEMORANDUM OPINION This case arises from a community supervision termination order issued by a

criminal district court in 1996, and the court’s recent Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment

issued in connection with the order granting judicial clemency to Appellee Cory

Prestman Olsen on a twenty-eight-year-old probation matter resulting in the

dismissal of the underlying case. The State filed a direct appeal and a companion

Petition for Writ of Mandamus challenging the trial court’s order granting

Appellee’s Motion for Judgment Nunc Pro Tunc. In two issues, the State argues

that (1) the trial court erred in granting the Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment in the absence

of evidence that a clerical error was made or evidence of the judgment that the

former judge rendered, and (2) a trial court cannot grant judicial clemency to Olsen

nearly thirty years after another judge terminated his probation.

Because we conclude the State can challenge the trial court’s Nunc Pro Tunc

Judgment on direct appeal, we deny the State’s Petition for Writ of Mandamus.

Addressing the State’s direct appeal, we hold the Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment is void.

We reverse and vacate the trial court’s Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment.

Background

In March 1989, Olsen was indicted for the felony offenses of attempted theft

of $20,000 (Cause No. 526076) and hindering secured creditors (Cause No.

2 526077).1 Olsen pled guilty to both charges and the court imposed community

supervision sentences of ten years in prison for each charge probated for ten years.2

In March 1995, after completing more than half of his probated sentence on

each charge, Olsen filed a motion to terminate his probation early. The motion

was titled “Motion to Terminate Probation,” and its caption reflects Cause Nos.

526077 and 526076, corresponding to each charge. In the Motion, Olsen argued

he had successfully completed “5 1/2 years [of his probation and such]

probationary period should be terminated in the best interest of both society and

[Olsen].” He stated he had been ordered to “pay restitution to the Complaining

Witness,” and the witness had “settled and discharged [the] entire amount.”3

In December 1996, the presiding trial court judge of the 208th District Court

signed an “Order Dismissing Cause/Order Terminating Probation” (“Termination

Order”) in each cause number, ordering that probation be terminated because

1 According to the indictment, the attempted theft charge stemmed from Olsen’s fraudulent reporting of his vehicle as stolen to his insurance company. And the charge for hindering secured creditors arose from Olsen’s transfer of a car, on which there was an unpaid balance remaining, without the consent of the secured party. 2 Olsen also was ordered to pay $28,000 in restitution for the conviction of hindering secured creditors. 3 Olsen noted in his motion that the restitution he owed for the conviction of hindering secured creditors had been discharged by the complaining witness’ filing for bankruptcy protection.

3 Olsen had “satisfactorily fulfilled the conditions of probation” for “a period of

excess of one-third of the probationary period to which [he] was sentenced[.]”

In the order for the offense of hindering secured creditors (“hindering case”),

the court also granted Olsen judicial clemency. The Termination Order for the

hindering case states that it is “ordered, adjudged, and decreed” that Olsen “be and

is hereby permitted to withdraw [his] plea of guilty.” As reflected below, the order

has a checkmark next to the option stating that “the indictment [] by which [Olsen]

was charged by and the same is hereby dismissed and the Judgment of conviction

is hereby set aside according to law.”

The Termination Order for the charge of attempted theft (“theft case”) is not

the same. While that order indicates that Olsen satisfactorily fulfilled the

conditions of probation “[f]or a period of excess of one-third of the probationary

4 period to which [he] was sentenced,”4 the order has no checkmarks next to the

three blanks indicating the ultimate relief granted. As reflected below, the order

does not indicate whether the court intended to grant Olsen judicial clemency

(option 1), to dismiss the proceedings against Olsen and declare him “discharged”

(option 2), or to “discharge him according to law” (option 3):

Motion for Judgment Nunc Pro Tunc

Over two decades later, in July 2023, Olsen filed a Motion to Correct

Judgment in the 208th District Court. He requested that the court amend the 1996

Termination Order in the theft case to check the box in the order dismissing the

case and granting judicial clemency, as the former judge had done in the hindering

case. Olsen requested that the court check the blank next to option 1 in the

Termination Order, which states:

4 The Termination Order for the hindering case also has that statement. 5 The defendant be and is hereby permitted to withdraw his/her plea of guilty or Nolo Contend[e]re and the indictment or information by which the defendant was charged by and the same is hereby dismissed and the Judgment of conviction is hereby set aside according to law[.]

Olsen argued that the court’s failure to check this box in the original Termination

Order was a clerical error. Olsen attached a proposed order to his motion, but the

trial court did not enter the order or rule on his motion.

Later, in May 2024, Olsen filed a Motion for Judgment Nunc Pro Tunc,

seeking the same relief but including authorities in support of his argument that “a

failure to render judgment and pronounce sentence may be corrected by the court

at any time.” (Emphasis in original.) Olsen argued that the trial court’s failure in

1996 to check the box in the Termination Order for the theft case was a clerical

error because the court had marked the requested box in the Termination Order for

the hindering case. According to Olsen, that was evidence of the court’s intent to

check the same box in the theft case.

Hearing on Motion for Judgment Nunc Pro Tunc

The trial court conducted a hearing on Olsen’s Motion for Judgment Nunc

Pro Tunc on January 14, 2025. In opposing the motion, the State argued that

because the clemency box was not checked in 1996 in the Termination Order for

the theft case, it would be “almost impossible to determine whether or not [the trial

court judge] intentionally omitted to check one of the boxes or [if] it was done by

accident on her part. So basically [there is] no way to determine whether it was 6 truly a clerical error or a judicial error.” The State argued that because nunc pro

tunc judgments are “exclusively for clerical errors,” a nunc pro tunc judgment was

“not the avenue to correct this issue,” and the matter “would better be addressed

through a writ or an appeal.”

Olsen argued that the trial court made a clerical error in 1996, as reflected by

the fact that both cases ran concurrently, and probation started and ended on the

same day for each. He argued, “It had to be a clerical error because no judgment

was rendered” in the theft case.

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