Vernon Eggleston v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 12, 2017
Docket1347162
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vernon Eggleston v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Vernon Eggleston v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vernon Eggleston v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Humphreys, Decker and O’Brien UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

VERNON EGGLESTON MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1347-16-2 JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER SEPTEMBER 12, 2017 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Joi Jeter Taylor, Judge1

Catherine French, Senior Appellate Coordinator (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

Donald E. Jeffrey, III, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on briefs), for appellee.

Vernon Eggleston appeals a ruling involving a circuit court’s enforcement of a term of

post-release supervision, ordered pursuant to Code § 19.2-295.2, by imposing a term of post-release

incarceration. On appeal, he asserts that only the Parole Board was authorized to enforce the terms

of the supervision by re-incarcerating him and that the circuit court lacked concurrent jurisdiction to

do so. We hold that the circuit court, in sentencing the appellant for the underlying offenses,

ordered only a term of post-release supervision, not one of post-release incarceration. Accordingly,

no suspended term of confinement was available for imposition by either body. Consequently, we

vacate the circuit court’s order imposing post-release incarceration without reaching the appellant’s

claim.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Judge Margaret P. Spencer entered the original sentencing order in this case. Judge Taylor entered a nunc pro tunc sentencing order and presided over all other post-sentencing proceedings. I. BACKGROUND

In 2011, the appellant was convicted of burglary and grand larceny offenses committed

earlier that year. In 2012, he was sentenced to serve a combined three years of incarceration for

those offenses. “[P]ursuant to Code [§ ]19.2-295.2,” the circuit court issued a sentencing order

(the first order) directing that the appellant “be subject to a period of post-release supervision of

[three years].” The order “suspended” that period of supervision contingent upon compliance

with “terms and conditions” established by the Parole Board, as well as good behavior and

various other conditions. The order did not specify any period of post-release confinement to

accompany the three years of post-release supervision.

In 2013, the appellant began his three years of post-release supervision. In 2015, the

appellant’s probation officer issued a major violation report. Based on the appellant’s failure to

abide by the probation condition requiring him to obey all laws, the probation officer asked the

circuit court to issue a capias to bring the appellant before the Parole Board. The court ordered

the issuance of a capias to bring the appellant “before this Court forthwith to show cause why his

previously suspended sentence(s) should not be revoked.” (Emphasis added).

In January 2016, the court entered an amended sentencing order (the second order) nunc

pro tunc to the date of the first order. The amended order clarified that following the appellant’s

release from his term of active incarceration, he was “subject to a period of post-release

supervision of [three] years pursuant to Code [§ ]19.2-295.2” during which he was required to be

of good behavior. That second order did not suspend the post-release supervision period as the

original order had. It simply listed supervision as one of the terms to which the appellant was

subject upon release. The second order, like the first, did not mention a period of post-release

confinement to accompany the post-release supervision.

-2- Following execution of the capias, the appellant filed a motion to dismiss the show cause,

alleging that the probation officer had asked that the appellant be brought before the Parole

Board rather than the court. He asserted pursuant to Code § 19.2-295.2 that only the Parole

Board, not the circuit court, had jurisdiction to revoke the “suspended time.” The

Commonwealth opposed the motion, arguing that the circuit court retained concurrent

jurisdiction. The prosecutor also represented that the Parole Board was “confused” by the

sentencing order’s reference to post-release “supervision” without specific reference to a “term

of [additional] imprisonment” that was “suspended under post-release supervision.” The

prosecutor asked the court to amend the sentencing order a second time, to clarify that it had

ordered a three-year term of incarceration and suspended that term subject to compliance with

the three-year period of post-release supervision. The prosecutor suggested, alternatively, that

“suspended time was created by operation of law under [Code §] 19.2-295.2.”

The circuit court denied the appellant’s motion to dismiss. It ruled that pursuant to Code

§ 19.2-295.2, it had “jurisdiction and authority,” upon request from the Parole Board, to

“conduct a hearing to determine the grounds to terminate the period of post[-]release supervision

and, if appropriate, recommit the [appellant] to the Department of Corrections.” The court did

not address the Commonwealth’s motion to amend the sentencing order a second time, and no

such order was entered.

At another hearing several weeks later, the Commonwealth introduced a transcript

excerpt showing that when the judge sentenced the appellant in 2012, she stated from the bench

that she was “impos[ing] a period of post-release supervision -- post-release incarceration of

three years.” (Emphasis added). The 2012 transcript further reflected that the judge stated that

the period was “suspend[ed] for three years” upon various conditions, including complying with

supervision. Based on the content of the 2012 transcript, the prosecutor renewed her motion for

-3- a second nunc pro tunc order, seeking clarification that when the appellant was originally

sentenced in 2012, the court ordered not only post-release supervision but also a three-year

period of suspended post-release incarceration. The appellant maintained that entry of a second

nunc pro tunc order was not necessary and that the Parole Board had “sole authority” to revoke

any suspended incarceration. The prosecutor posed the question, “[W]hat is post-release

supervision without a suspended term of imprisonment[?]” The judge responded, “Right, . . .

[t]hat was the [c]ourt’s rationale . . . when I . . . [denied] the motion [to dismiss] earlier.”

Nevertheless, in an order entered on August 26, 2016, the judge explicitly denied the

prosecutor’s request to enter a second nunc pro tunc order to reflect that the court, in 2012, had

pronounced and suspended a specific period of post-release incarceration.

Ruling on the merits of the show cause in the same order (the revocation order), the court

found that the appellant was “in violation of the terms and conditions of his post-release

supervision/incarceration,” despite the absence of a sentencing order pronouncing a period of

post-release incarceration. The court revoked three years of post-release incarceration but

re-suspended the three years “for time served” upon various conditions, including the payment of

court costs.

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant challenges the circuit court order purporting to revoke and re-suspend three

years of post-release incarceration. He contends that only the Parole Board may terminate

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