Willie Earl Hall Jr. v. State

373 S.W.3d 168, 2012 WL 2135683, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4730
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 2012
Docket02-11-00303-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 373 S.W.3d 168 (Willie Earl Hall Jr. v. State) 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
Willie Earl Hall Jr. v. State, 373 S.W.3d 168, 2012 WL 2135683, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4730 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRIE LIVINGSTON, Chief Justice.

In two points, appellant Willie Earl Hall Jr. appeals the trial court’s “Judgment Revoking Community Supervision.” We affirm.

Background Facts

In 2008, when appellant was fifteen years old, the State filed a petition alleging that he had engaged in delinquent conduct. Appellant waived his rights to confront witnesses and to have a jury trial, and he entered into a plea bargain agreement with the State. The terms of the plea bargain included appellant’s stipulation that he had committed aggravated sexual assault of a seven-year-old child. 1 Based on the plea bargain, the juvenile court adjudicated appellant to be delinquent, assessed a five-year determinate sentence, suspended that sentence for five years, and placed appellant on probation. 2 Appellant’s probation began on June 26, 2008.

In July 2010, pursuant to the State’s motion and a hearing that appellant attended with counsel, appellant’s probation was transferred to a district court (the trial court); the transfer order recognizes that appellant had already been “found to have engaged in delinquent conduct.” 3 In conjunction with the transfer of his probation to the trial court, appellant signed a document stating that he would comply with the conditions of his community supervision.

Although no document filed in the juvenile court had alluded to a deferral of that court’s adjudication of appellant’s delinquency, and although the record from the juvenile court clearly shows that appellant had been adjudicated delinquent, documents filed in the trial court after the transfer, including one document titled “Certificate of Proceedings,” state that appellant had been placed on deferred adjudication in 2008. 4 The trial court imposed several conditions on appellant’s probation.

In March 2011, the State filed a “Petition to Proceed to Adjudication,” alleging *170 that appellant had violated several terms of the probation. That petition asked the trial court to require appellant to show cause why the court should not proceed to the adjudication of his guilt. Two months later, the State filed its “First Amended Petition to Revoke Probated Sentence,” which, unlike the first petition, prayed for the trial court to require appellant to appear and show cause why his “sentence should not be imposed and put into execution[ ] as the law provides.”

In July 2011, the trial court held a hearing on the amended petition to revoke appellant’s probated sentence, not the original petition to proceed to adjudication. 5 Toward the beginning of the hearing, appellant recognized that he had been placed on a “five-year straight probation” term while his sentence was suspended. Appellant pled true to several allegations contained in the State’s amended petition and judicially confessed to them; on the record, he expressed his understanding that by entering pleas of true, the trial court could find that he violated the terms of his probation and could sentence him to up to five years’ confinement. After appellant entered his pleas of true, the State rested. Appellant called a few witnesses to testify about his behavior and treatment while he was on probation. In closing arguments, appellant’s counsel asked the trial court to allow appellant to remain on probation, but the trial court verbally found that appellant had violated the terms of his probation and sentenced him to four years’ confinement. 6

Although the trial court did not verbally purport to adjudicate appellant’s guilt for aggravated sexual assault, the court originally entered a written judgment titled “Judgment Adjudicating Guilt.” Appellant appealed that judgment, contending that the judgment was improper. In an abatement order, we agreed that the judgment was improper; we noted, in part, that double jeopardy bars a conviction for the same act for which a juvenile has been adjudicated delinquent. We explained in the abatement order that while the trial court had statutory authority to revoke appellant’s probation and impose a prison sentence, it could not convict appellant of aggravated sexual assault. Because the trial court’s original written judgment adjudicating guilt differed from the court’s verbally expressed intentions at the end of the revocation hearing, we noted in our abatement order that the record suggested that a clerical error might have occurred. Therefore, we abated the appeal, remanded the case to the trial court, and ordered the trial court to conduct a hearing to determine whether the written judgment contained a clerical error that was subject to correction. We notified the trial court that if it determined that the written judgment contained a clerical error, the court needed to correct the error through a nunc pro tunc judgment and make findings of facts and conclusions of law concerning its decision about whether the judgment contained a clerical error.

Upon our abatement, the trial court held a hearing in which it expressed,

*171 The judgment [adjudicating guilt] does not reflect the intent of this Court, nor does it reflect what actually happened at juvenile.
Mr. Hall was on a determinate sentence probation which is what we would call in the adult system after transfer [of] a straight probation. It was entered in the clerk’s record as a determinate sentence deferred adjudication which this Court believes to be impossible. That is incorrect. It’s a clerical error by the clerk. That clerical order, unfortunately, was carried forward throughout the file, which the Court’s intent in this case, which ivas reflected in the revocation hearing, is that this is the straight probation that was transferred from juvenile. This Court does not have any intent to change that, nor does this Court believe this Court has the power to change a finding of guilt that’s already been entered into a deferred adjudication. And every document thereafter that reflects a deferred adjudication, including the judgment adjudicating guilt, needs to be changed to be in conformity with the determinate sentence straight probation that Mr. Hall was on. [Emphasis added.]

After the hearing concluded, the trial court signed a “Nunc Pro Tunc Order Correcting Minutes of the Court,” which changed the title of the original judgment from “Judgment Adjudicating Guilt” to “Judgment Revoking Community Supervision.” Appellant filed a supplemental brief in which he asserts two points and asks us to discharge him from custody and release him from further community supervision.

The Propriety of the Nunc Pro Tunc Order

In the first point of his supplemental brief, appellant argues that the trial court’s original judgment adjudicating guilt was not the product of a clerical error. Appellant first contends that the “trial court at the [abatement] hearing did not address whether the signing of the judgment adjudicating guilt was ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 S.W.3d 168, 2012 WL 2135683, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-earl-hall-jr-v-state-texapp-2012.