Treece v. State
This text of 616 S.E.2d 424 (Treece v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Petitioner pled guilty but mentally ill on February 7, 1994, to two counts of second degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC) and one count of first degree sexual exploitation of a minor. The charges stemmed from petitioner’s sexual activity with his fourteen-year-old stepdaughter which he videotaped. We granted a wilt of certiorari to review the denial of post-conviction relief (PCR) and now affirm.
FACTS
At petitioner’s plea hearing, counsel informed the judge that the sexual exploitation statute, S.C.Code Ann. § 16-15-395 (Supp.2004), mandates a consecutive sentence to other charges. Petitioner was sentenced to twenty years on one count of CSC, suspended upon service of fifteen years with five years probation; fifteen years on the second count of CSC; and fifteen years on the sexual exploitation charge. [136]*136The plea judge did not specify whether the sentences were to run consecutively or concurrently.
After sentencing, petitioner was advised by his caseworker at the Department of Corrections (DOC) that his sentences were concurrent and he was serving a fifteen-year term. His projected max-out date was September 11, 2001. In December 1999, however, petitioner’s caseworker informed petitioner that his sentence for sexual exploitation was to run consecutively and not concurrently, adding five years to his max-out date which was now projected to be August 16, 2006. Although petitioner filed a grievance, DOC refused to change his classification. Petitioner then filed this action.
ISSUE
Is petitioner’s sentence for sexual exploitation to run concurrently or consecutively?
DISCUSSION
The PCR court found that DOC properly calculated petitioner’s sentence for sexual exploitation as consecutive under § 16-15-395.1 This section provides for a sentence of three to twenty years for sexual exploitation of a minor with the additional provision that: “[sentences imposed pursuant to this section must run consecutively with and commence at the expiration of another sentence being served by the person sentenced.”
It is well-settled that sentences are deemed to run concurrently “unless the intention that one should begin at the end of the other is expressed.” Finley v. State, 219 S.C. 278, 282, 64 S.E.2d 881, 882 (1954). This rule of construction has never been applied, however, where the legislature has mandated a consecutive sentence for a particular offense. In fact, we have recognized that “judicial discretion in ... determining that sentences run concurrent or consecutive is subject to statutory [137]*137restriction.” State v. De La Cruz, 302 S.C. 13, 15, 393 S.E.2d 184, 186 (1990). Under § 16-15-395, the plea judge had no authority to order anything but a consecutive sentence for the sexual exploitation charge.
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
616 S.E.2d 424, 365 S.C. 134, 2005 S.C. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treece-v-state-sc-2005.