Court Opinion

ID: 4163321
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-04-26 13:15:30.947807+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:37:54.621906
License: Public Domain

[Cite as State v. Dardinger, 2017-Ohio-1525.]

                           IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
                  FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
                            HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

STATE OF OHIO,                                     :     APPEAL NO. C-160467
                                                         TRIAL NO. B-1205948
        Plaintiff-Appellee,                        :

  vs.                                              :        O P I N I O N.

JEFFREY DARDINGER,                                 :

    Defendant-Appellant.                           :

Criminal Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas

Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed as Modified

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: April 26, 2017

Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Scott M. Heenan,
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,

Office of the Ohio Public Defender and Allen Vender, Assistant State Public
Defender, for Defendant-Appellant.
                  OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

Per Curiam.

       {¶1}   Defendant-appellant Jeffrey Dardinger presents on appeal a single

assignment of error challenging the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court’s

judgment overruling his “Motion to Vacate Postrelease Control.” Dardinger was

sentenced in conformity with the statutes concerning postrelease control. And his

motion was subject to dismissal for lack of jurisdiction. We, therefore, affirm the

court’s judgment as modified.

       {¶2}   Dardinger was convicted in February 2013 upon his guilty plea to illegal

use of a minor in nudity-oriented material and was sentenced to three years on

community control. He did not appeal that conviction.

       {¶3}   In May 2013, Dardinger pled guilty to violating his community control.

In a single hearing, the trial court accepted the plea, found Dardinger guilty, and

imposed a nine-month prison term.         Before accepting the plea, the court notified

Dardinger that, upon his release from prison, he would be subject to a five-year

mandatory term of postrelease control. The court did not incorporate postrelease

control in the judgment of conviction. No appeal was taken from that conviction.

       {¶4}   In September 2013, the trial court entered a judgment of conviction

nunc pro tunc to May 2013, “correct[ing]” Dardinger’s sentence for his community-

control violation to include the five-year mandatory period of postrelease control.

Again, the judgment was not appealed.

       {¶5}   In January 2016, Dardinger filed with the common pleas court his

“Motion to Vacate Postrelease Control.”        Dardinger supported his motion with

evidentiary material demonstrating the following: that on February 5, 2014, following

his January 22, 2014 release from confinement, the Ohio Adult Parole Authority

notified him, by telephone and then in writing at the agency’s offices, of its decision to

not place him on postrelease control; that he was ordered to return to the adult parole

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                  OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

authority’s offices a day later and told that he would be on postrelease control; and that

two months later, he received written notice of that fact and of the duration of his

postrelease control. In his motion, Dardinger asked the common pleas court to “vacate

his postrelease control” on the grounds that (1) the adult parole authority had no

authority to place him on postrelease control upon his release from confinement,

because that portion of his sentence was void when it was not imposed in conformity

with the statutory mandates concerning postrelease control, and (2) the adult parole

authority’s “unexplained reimposition” of postrelease control, after he had “completed

his sentence” and had been told that he would not be placed on postrelease control,

denied him the protection against multiple punishments for the same offense in

successive proceedings, secured by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth

Amendment to the United States Constitution.

       {¶6}   We conclude that the motion was subject to dismissal, because the

common pleas court had no jurisdiction to entertain it.

       {¶7}   Not reviewable under Crim.R. 57(B), 33, or 32.1 or under
the postconviction, mandamus, declaratory-judgment, or habeas
statutes. Dardinger did not specify in his postconviction motion a statute or rule
under which the relief sought might have been afforded, leaving the common pleas

court to “recast” the motion “into whatever category necessary to identify and establish

the criteria by which the motion should be judged.” State v. Schlee, 117 Ohio St.3d 153,

2008-Ohio-545, 882 N.E.2d 431, ¶ 12 and syllabus.

       {¶8}   Under R.C. 2953.21 et seq., governing the proceedings upon a petition

for postconviction relief, a common pleas court may grant a petitioner relief from his

conviction upon proof of a constitutional violation during the proceedings leading to

his conviction that rendered that conviction void or voidable. See R.C. 2953.21(A)(1);

State v. Powell, 90 Ohio App.3d 260, 264, 629 N.E.2d 13 (1st Dist.1993). With his

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                 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

claim that he had not been sentenced in conformity with the postrelease-control

statutes, Dardinger sought relief based on an alleged statutory, rather than

constitutional, violation. See R.C. 2953.21(A)(1). His double-jeopardy claim alleged a

constitutional violation, but not in the proceedings leading to his conviction.

Accordingly, the claims advanced by Dardinger in his motion were not reviewable by

the common pleas court under the standards provided by the postconviction statutes.

       {¶9}   Dardinger’s motion was also not reviewable under Crim.R. 33 as a

motion for a new trial, when his conviction had followed a guilty plea, not a trial, or

under Crim.R. 32.1 as a motion to withdraw a guilty plea, when he did not seek in his

motion to withdraw his plea. Nor was the motion reviewable under R.C. Chapter

2731 as a petition for a writ of mandamus, under R.C. Chapter 2721 as a declaratory-

judgment action, or under R.C. Chapter 2725 as a petition for a writ of habeas

corpus, when the motion did not satisfy those statutes’ procedural requirements. See

R.C. 2731.04, 2721.12(A), and 2725.04.

       {¶10} No relief under the jurisdiction to correct a void
judgment. A court always has jurisdiction to correct a void judgment. See State
ex rel. Cruzado v. Zaleski, 111 Ohio St.3d 353, 2006-Ohio-5795, 856 N.E.2d 263, ¶

18-19. When a sentence is not imposed in conformity with the postrelease-control

statutes, that portion of the sentence is void and subject to correction at any time

before the offender is released from prison. State v. Fischer, 128 Ohio St.3d 92,

2010-Ohio-6238, 942 N.E.2d 332, paragraph one of the syllabus and ¶ 26-27; State

v. Bloomer, 122 Ohio St.3d 200, 2009-Ohio-2462, 909 N.E.2d 1254, ¶ 70-73. But

the postrelease-control portion of Dardinger’s sentence was not void.

       {¶11} In May 2013, following a combined plea-and-sentencing hearing,
Dardinger was found guilty and sentenced to prison upon his guilty plea to violating

the community-control sanction imposed for his fifth-degree-felony sex offense. The

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                  OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

postrelease-control statutes mandated that his prison sentence include a five-year

period of postrelease control and required that he be notified, both at his sentencing

hearing and in the judgment of conviction, of the length and mandatory nature of his

postrelease control, of the consequences of violating postrelease control, and of the

length of confinement that could be imposed for a postrelease-control violation. See

R.C. 2967.28(A)(3) and (B)(1), 2929.14(D), and 2929.19(B)(2)(c) through (e); State

v. Ketterer, 126 Ohio St.3d 448, 2010-Ohio-3831, 935 N.E.2d 9, ¶ 77-79; Bloomer at

¶ 69; State v. Jordan, 104 Ohio St.3d 21, 2004-Ohio-6085, 817 N.E.2d 864,

paragraph one of the syllabus. Accord State v. Smith, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-

120163, 2012-Ohio-5965, ¶ 10-11.

       {¶12} At the combined plea-and-sentencing hearing, the postrelease-control
notification provided by the trial court before accepting Dardinger’s guilty plea

satisfied the statutory requirements. But the court did not provide postrelease-

control notification during the sentencing portion of the hearing. And the court

failed to include postrelease control in the judgment of conviction.

       {¶13} In State v. Graham, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-130375, 2014-Ohio-
1024, we held that the postrelease-control portion of Graham’s sentence was void,

when the trial court had provided proper postrelease-control notification at

Graham’s guilty-plea hearing, but had failed to notify him at his subsequent

sentencing hearing that postrelease control was mandatory. Id. at ¶ 5-6. But when,

as here, the trial court provided proper postrelease-control notification before

accepting the defendant’s guilty plea and then proceeded immediately to sentencing,

the plea hearing and the sentencing hearing cannot, for purposes of the postrelease-

control statutes, reasonably be deemed to have been conducted separately. See State

v. Russell, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 16AP-108, 2016-Ohio-3349, ¶ 9; State v. Jackson,

12th Dist. Butler Nos. CA2005-02-033 and CA2005-03-051, 2006-Ohio-1147, ¶ 18-

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                  OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

19. See also State v. Brooks, 103 Ohio St.3d 134, 2004-Ohio-4746, 814 N.E.2d 837, ¶

17, fn. 1 (noting that there is “no reason to consider the plea hearing and sentencing

hearing to be two separate hearings” for purposes of the notification required under

former R.C. 2929.19(B)(5) in sentencing an offender to community control, when

sentencing proceeds immediately after the plea hearing). Therefore, the postrelease-

control notification provided by the trial court before accepting Dardinger’s guilty

plea at the combined plea-and-sentencing hearing satisfied the statutory

requirement that he be notified concerning postrelease control at the sentencing

hearing. See Russell at ¶ 11-12; State v. Pelphrey, 4th Dist. Scioto No. 11CA3418,

2013-Ohio-593, ¶ 11; Jackson at ¶ 18-19.

       {¶14} When postrelease-control notification was properly given at the
sentencing hearing, the failure to incorporate postrelease control in the judgment of

conviction may be corrected by a Crim.R. 36 nunc pro tunc entry at any time before the

defendant has completed his prison term. State v. Qualls, 131 Ohio St.3d 499, 2012-

Ohio-1111, 967 N.E.2d 718, ¶ 24. Dardinger was given proper postrelease-control

notification at the combined plea-and-sentencing hearing and had not yet been

released from prison. Thus, the trial court properly incorporated postrelease control

into Dardinger’s judgment of conviction, when it entered judgment nunc pro tunc to

May 2013 correcting his sentence to include the statutorily mandated five-year period

of postrelease control.

       {¶15} The adult parole authority derives its authority to impose postrelease
control from the judgment of conviction. See Woods v. Telb, 89 Ohio St.3d 504, 512-

513, 733 N.E.2d 1103 (2000) (holding that the separation-of-powers doctrine of the

United States and Ohio Constitutions permits the adult parole authority to impose

postrelease control only if postrelease control has been properly incorporated into the

judgment of conviction). Because the trial court complied with the postrelease-control

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                 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

statutes, the adult parole authority was required to impose the five-year mandatory

period of postrelease control when Dardinger was released from prison in January

2014. And the challenged “reimposition” of postrelease control, after Dardinger had

completed his prison term and had mistakenly been told that he would not be on

postrelease control, did not implicate the double-jeopardy protection against multiple

punishments, because he had no legitimate expectation in the finality of his sentence

when he knew, or should have known, that his sentence was “legally incomplete.” See

State v. Singleton, 124 Ohio St.3d 173, 2009-Ohio-6434, 920 N.E.2d 958, ¶ 33.

       {¶16} Dardinger was sentenced in conformity with the postrelease-control
statutes. Consequently, that portion of his sentence was not void, and the common

pleas court could not exercise its jurisdiction to correct a void judgment to afford

Dardinger the relief sought in his motion.

       {¶17} Affirmed as modified. Because the common pleas court had no
jurisdiction to grant Dardinger the relief sought in his “Motion to Vacate Postrelease

Control,” the court should have dismissed the motion.          Accordingly, upon the

authority of App.R. 12(A)(1)(a), we modify the judgment appealed from to reflect the

dismissal of the motion. And we affirm the judgment as modified.

                                                                Affirmed as modified.

MOCK, P.J., ZAYAS and MYERS, JJ.

Please note:

       The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.

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