Williams v. Puckett
This text of 624 So. 2d 496 (Williams v. Puckett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Danny L. WILLIAMS
v.
Steve W. PUCKETT, Superintendent, Mississippi Department of Corrections; Christine Houston, Director of Records, Mississippi Department of Corrections; and State of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Danny L. Williams, pro se.
Michael C. Moore, Atty. Gen., Charles W. Maris, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
*497 Before HAWKINS, C.J., and PITTMAN and BANKS, JJ.
BANKS, Justice, for the court:
Here we are asked to examine our statutory scheme in relation to parole eligibility, "earned time",[1] consecutive sentences and mandatory sentences and find that the Department of Corrections is in error in calculating both the date of eligibility for parole and the date of presumptive release for Williams based on earned time commutation. Williams' contentions find some support in the plain language of the controlling statutes. Nevertheless, we pay deference to the construction utilized by the administering agencies and our prior decisions and reject his claim.
I
On February 7, 1985, Appellant Danny Williams was arrested in connection with an armed robbery. At the time, Williams was serving five years' probation on a 1984 conviction for uttering forgery. Williams' probation on the five-year sentence was revoked on February 15, 1985. He was sentenced to serve out the five years on the forgery charge.
On February 28, 1985, Williams was indicted by the Panola County Grand Jury for armed robbery. Williams pleaded guilty to the armed robbery charge on October 28, 1985, and the court sentenced him to ten years to be served consecutively with his earlier five-year sentence for forgery. In accordance with Mississippi Code Annotated § 47-7-3(1)(d) (1993), the court stated in the sentencing order that "said sentence shall not be reduced or suspended, nor shall Defendant be eligible for parole, probation, early release or good time."
On January 30, 1991, Williams filed in the Sunflower County Circuit Court a "Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus or in the Alternative Motion to Show Cause." He claimed the date he had been scheduled for earned-time release by the Mississippi Department of Corrections contravened the guidelines set forth in the Mississippi Code. He sought to have the Sunflower County Circuit Court enter an order mandating that the Department of Corrections recompute his earned-time release date. Williams argued that the Mississippi Department of Corrections had erred in the treatment of his jail sentences for purposes of calculating his parole and earned-time release dates.
The MDOC had scheduled Williams to be eligible for parole on April 27, 1996, and earned-time release on January 13, 1998. Williams' probation on his five-year forgery sentence was revoked on February 15, 1985. He was given nineteen days credit for the time he spent in jail after being arrested for forgery and armed robbery in Panola County. The MDOC, therefore, slated January 27, 1985, as the day Williams technically began serving his five-year forgery sentence. They calculated his earliest possible parole date by figuring that Williams would have to serve at least one-quarter of his five-year forgery sentence (one year and three months) plus all ten years on his armed robbery sentence, since he was not eligible for parole on that term. The MDOC considered Williams to be serving his five-year sentence through the day he became officially eligible for parole on that sentence. That day, one year and three months from January 27, 1985, was April 27, 1986. Using this logic, the Department of Corrections designated April 27, 1996 as Williams' parole date.
As of April 27, 1986, Williams had thirteen years and nine months official jail time left to serve the ten-year sentence plus the balance of the five-year sentence. To compute Williams' earned-time release date, the MDOC added that remaining jail time to April 27, 1986, and subtracted the good time Williams had been credited with through April 27, 1986. The date arrived at was January 13, 1998.
Williams asserted that these calculations resulted from an erroneous application of the parole and earned-time statutes and that he should have been eligible for release in ten *498 years from the inception of his sentence. Williams was subsequently allowed to amend his petition to assert that he was entitled to be released in approximately seven years and eleven months, despite the fact he had a ten-year, no-parole sentence for armed robbery. Williams has abandoned that claim on appeal.
A hearing was held on June 18, 1991, before Fourth Circuit Magistrate Betty Sanders. At the close of the hearing, the magistrate found as follows:
[Williams] began his first sentence, five years for forgery, on January 27, 1985 and was eligible for parole on April 27, 1986. One fourth (1/4) of his sentence, MISS. CODE ANN., Section 47-7-3 (Supp. 1990). He accumulated enough earned time to complete the five-year sentence on January 12, 1988. The 10 year mandatory sentence was then added changing his projected discharge date to January 13, 1998, with a parole eligibility date of April 27, 1996. Petitioner has accumulated no meritorious earned time.[2]
The magistrate recommended that Williams' case be dismissed with prejudice. On July 18, 1991, the Panola County Circuit Court entered an order adopting the findings and recommendations of the magistrate. Williams timely filed notice of appeal to this court.
II
Relying on Mississippi Code Annotated Miss. Code Ann. § 47-5-139(2) and § 47-7-3, Williams asserts that he should have been eligible for both parole and earned-time release in a flat ten years. Section 47-5-139(2) says, "An offender under two (2) or more consecutive sentences shall be allowed commutation [for earned time] based upon the total term of the sentences." Miss. Code Ann. § 47-5-139(2) (Supp. 1992). Section 47-7-3 provides that every prisoner sentenced to a "term or terms" of more than one-year shall be eligible for parole after serving onefourth thereof, or if the "term or terms" exceed thirty (30) years or the sentence is for a term of life then the prisoner may be released after serving ten (10) years. Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-3. There is an exception applicable here which provides that where the sentence is for armed robbery there is no parole for sentences of less than ten (10) years and parole eligibility at ten (10) years for sentences in excess of ten years.
Williams suggests that, under § 47-5-139(2), he is allowed to commute as much as seven and one-half years of a fifteen year sentence. That commutation is statutorily limited only by the provision that earned time shall not effect a release prior to eligibility for parole. Miss. Code Ann. § 47-5-139(4). The only question then, per Williams, is when should he be eligible for parole. This he suggests, quite logically, is governed by the parole statute.
Section 47-7-3(1)(d) of the Mississippi Code makes armed robbery convicts sentenced to a "term or terms" in excess of ten (10) years eligible for parole after ten years. Miss. Code Ann.
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624 So. 2d 496, 1993 WL 374231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-puckett-miss-1993.