Thomas v. State

516 S.W.3d 498, 2017 WL 1244453, 2017 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 373
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 2017
DocketNO. PD-0295-16
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 516 S.W.3d 498 (Thomas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. State, 516 S.W.3d 498, 2017 WL 1244453, 2017 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 373 (Tex. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Alcala, J.,

delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

In this State’s petition for discretionary review, we address the proper remedy for an illegal sentence imposed as a result of a charge-bargained guilty plea. Cody Lang Thomas, appellant, agreed to enter an open plea of guilty to state-jail felony theft as a lesser-included offense of the charged offense of third-degree felony engaging in organized criminal activity. Because the State sought to enhance the state-jail felony theft charge with two prior convictions, the parties believed that appellant was subject to a punishment range for a second-degree felony. The trial judge sentenced appellant to twenty years’ imprisonment. On appeal, the court of appeals determined that this twenty-year sentence was illegal due to an improper application of prior-conviction enhancements resulting in a sentence outside the statutory range, and it remanded the case for a new punishment hearing. In its petition for discretionary review, the State does not challenge the court of appeals’s holding that appellant’s sentence was illegal, but it contends that the court of appeals erred by remanding appellant’s case for resentenc-ing because the proper remedy for the illegal sentence under these circumstances is setting aside appellant’s guilty plea.1 We agree with the State’s position that, because this was a negotiated plea-bargain agreement for an illegal range of punishment, the parties must be returned to their original positions prior to entering into that plea bargain. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’s judgment that had remanded this case for a new punishment hearing, and we instead set aside appellant’s guilty plea and remand this case for a new trial in its entirety.

I. Background

Appellant was indicted for the offense of engaging in organized criminal activity. Tex. Penal Code § 71.02(a). The alleged underlying offense was theft of property worth more than $1,500 but less than $20,000, a state-jail’felony. Id. § 31.03(e)(4) (West 2015). Because the underlying offense of theft was a state-jail felony, the [500]*500engaging in organized criminal activity charge was a third-degree felony, punishable by two to ten years in prison. Id. § 71.02(b). However, appellant had several prior criminal convictions, including convictions for: (1) third-degree felony escape and (2) state-jail felony burglary of a building, the sentence for which had been enhanced to a third-degree felony punishment range by two additional prior state-jail felony convictions. The State gave oral notice to appellant that, if his case went to trial, it would seek to use these prior convictions to enhance his sentence for the engaging in organized criminal activity charge. Both appellant and the State mistakenly believed that, with these prior convictions serving as enhancements, the punishment range for the charge of engaging in organized criminal activity would be from twenty-five to ninety-nine years or life under the Habitual Felon statute. See id. § 12.42(d).2 Appellant and the State negotiated a charge-bargain agreement. The State agreed to reduce the engaging in organized crime charge to the lesser-included offense of state-jail felony theft in exchange for appellant’s plea of guilty to the lesser offense and his plea of true to the enhancements. The printed plea admonishment reflected the parties’ understanding that, due to the enhancements, the theft charge would be punished as a second-degree felony, punishable by two to twenty years’ imprisonment and a fine not to exceed $10,000. After advising appellant of the potential two to twenty year punishment range, the trial judge accepted appellant’s plea to the theft offense and found the enhancements due to his prior convictions true. The trial judge then sentenced appellant to twenty years’ imprisonment.

On appeal, appellant asserted that the sentence imposed against him was illegal because it was improper to combine his prior convictions to enhance the range of punishment for state-jail felony theft to that of a second-degree felony. The court of appeals sustained appellant’s challenge. Thomas v. State, 481 S.W.3d 685, 686 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2015) (reh’g denied). The court of appeals explained that a sentence for a state-jail felony—here, theft—may not be enhanced under Section 12.425 of the Texas Penal Code through a combination of a prior conviction for a non-state jail felony (the third-degree felony escape conviction) and a prior conviction for an enhanced state-jail felony (the state-jail-felony burglary conviction). Id. at 693; Tex. Penal Code § 12.425. Thus, the court of appeals held that the enhanced sentence imposed by the trial court was outside the permissible range of punishment for a state-jail felony, Thomas, 481 S.W.3d at 693. Because the twenty-year sentence assessed was outside the permissible range of punishment, the court of appeals determined that the proper remedy was to remand the case to the trial court for a new punishment hearing. Id. (citing Ex parte Rich, 194 S.W.3d 508, 514 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)).

The State filed a motion for rehearing in which it asked the court of appeals to reform its judgment by remanding the case to the trial court for a new trial in its entirety, rather than remanding only for a new punishment hearing, The State asserted that, had it realized that appellant would be facing only up to two years’ confinement for the state-jail offense, it very likely would not have entered into the plea agreement. The State contended that the “crux of the original plea agreement [501]*501dealt with removing the [engaging in organized criminal activity] language in the indictment and capping the punishment at twenty years in the penitentiary.” The State further averred that appellant “readily admitted and pled true to the two enhancement paragraphs in order to obtain this benefit.” Citing language from this Court’s opinion in Ex parte Adkins, the State contended that the proper remedy was to set aside the plea agreement because to uphold the agreement under these circumstances would “adjust the ten- or of the mutual obligation entered into by the parties” and would “create a new bargain not contemplated by the parties or the trial court when it accepted the plea agreement and entered its judgment accordingly.” See 767 S.W.2d 809, 811 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989). The court of appeals summarily rejected these arguments by overruling the State’s motion.

In the instant proceeding, neither the State nor appellant challenges the correctness of the court of appeals’s analysis with respect to the impermissibility of combining appellant’s two prior convictions to enhance the range of punishment for a state-jail felony to that of a second-degree felony. The sole question at issue in this proceeding, therefore, is the propriety of the court of appeals’s decision to remedy the illegal sentence by upholding appellant’s conviction and remanding the case to the trial court for a new punishment hearing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
516 S.W.3d 498, 2017 WL 1244453, 2017 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-state-texcrimapp-2017.