Court Opinion

ID: 5141875
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-30 23:13:09.250565+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:31.362132
License: Public Domain

12/30/2021
        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                         AT KNOXVILLE
                        Assigned on Briefs November 16, 2021

         STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TIMOTHY HOWARD SMARTT

               Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County
               Nos. 277012, 292896, 304933 Tom Greenholtz, Judge

                             No. E2021-00125-CCA-R3-CD

The defendant, Timothy Howard Smartt, challenges the revocation of his community
corrections placement on grounds that the sentence in case number 277012 expired before
the issuance of the revocation warrant and that the court erred by ordering that he serve the
balance of the total remaining sentences in confinement. Discerning no error, we affirm.

            Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed

JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. KELLY
THOMAS, JR., and JILL BARTEE AYERS, JJ., joined.

Alan C. Blount (on appeal) and Rebecca J. Stern (at hearing), Chattanooga, Tennessee, for
the appellant, Timothy Howard Smartt.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Katherine C. Redding, Assistant
Attorney General; Neal Pinkston, District Attorney General; and Leslie Longshore,
Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                        OPINION

             The history and relationship among the cases at issue in this appeal is
complex, perhaps best described as a miasma of excesses. We attempt to untangle them
here.

                                   Case Number 277012

              In July 2010, the Hamilton County Grand Jury charged the defendant with
one count of initiating the process for manufacturing methamphetamine and one count of
possession of drug paraphernalia in case number 277012. The defendant was arrested on
September 16, 2010, and, on January 19, 2011, he pleaded guilty to initiating the process
for manufacturing methamphetamine in exchange for a sentence of 8 years’ probation to
commence on February 11, 2011, and dismissal of the remaining charge. The trial court
awarded jail credit for the period from September 16, 2010, to January 19, 2011.

              On February 8, 2012, a probation violation warrant issued, alleging that the
defendant had violated the terms of his probation by failing to pay his fees and by
absconding. The defendant was arrested on the warrant on February 10, 2012. A February
24, 2012 addendum to the violation warrant alleged that the defendant had further violated
the terms of his probation by garnering a new arrest for possession of a prohibited weapon
(brass knuckles) and being out of the county without the permission of his probation
supervisor. On June 25, 2012, the trial court revoked the defendant’s probation and ordered
him to serve 11 months’ and 29 days’ incarceration before being returned to probation.
The court also extended the term of probation by two years, making the new term of
probation in case number 277012 10 years. The court awarded jail credit for the period
from February 10 to June 25, 2012.

              On February 8, 2013, a probation violation warrant issued, alleging that the
defendant had violated the terms of his probation by failing to pay fines and costs and
absconding. The violation report that formed the basis for the warrant indicated that the
defendant had been released from the workhouse on August 8, 2012. The defendant was
arrested on the violation warrant on March 8, 2013. On May 13, 2013, the trial court
revoked the defendant’s probation and ordered him to serve 11 months and 29 days before
being returned to probation. The court awarded the defendant jail credit for the period from
March 8 to May 13, 2013.

               On April 29, 2014, a probation violation warrant issued, alleging that the
defendant had violated the terms of his probation by garnering new arrests for the
possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia, theft, and failing to report his new arrests. The
violation report stated that the defendant had been released from confinement in November
2013. The defendant was arrested on May 24, 2014. On October 28, 2014, the trial court
revoked the defendant’s probation and ordered him to serve the balance of his sentence in
confinement. The court also ordered that the defendant be furloughed into the Hamilton
County Drug Court program as soon as the necessary preparations were made. The court
granted jail credit for the period from May 24 to October 28, 2014.

              The defendant was furloughed into the drug court program on December 4,
2014. Based upon the trial court’s order, the defendant was to remain incarcerated between
the time of the revocation and his furlough, for which period he would be entitled to credit
for time served, but we can find no award for these days in the record. On February 25,
2015, a drug court violation warrant issued, and the defendant was arrested that same day.
On March 12, 2015, the trial court again ordered the defendant furloughed to drug court,
                                             -2-
but no award of credit against the sentence in case number 277012 for the time served
between his arrest and the furlough order appears in the record.

              On May 4, 2015, a second drug court violation warrant issued. The defendant
was arrested on July 29, 2015. On September 3, 2015, the trial court revoked the
defendant’s drug court placement and ordered him to serve 11 months and 29 days before
being placed on enhanced probation. The court also ordered that he be given “credit for
time served” and noted specifically the period between July 29 and September 9, 2015, but
did not include credit for the time between the second furlough into the drug court program
and the May 4, 2015 violation warrant.

               No further action occurred in case number 277012 until August 23, 2018
when a “Probation Order” was issued for case numbers 277012, 292896, 301729, and
304933 that imposed a total effective period of probation of 20 years to commence on
September 4, 2018. Probation violation reports for case number 292896 state that the
defendant was released from confinement and returned to probation on February 15, 2016.
At a July 18, 2019 hearing to dispose of violation warrants filed in case numbers 292896,
301729, and 304933, the State indicated to the trial court that case number 277012 had
been “inadvertently” omitted from the probation violation report and that “the State hasn’t
filed on that number technically.” The court told the State that it could not revoke the
defendant’s probation in case number 277012 due to a lack of notice. During that hearing,
the defendant asked the court to place him into a program supervised by Rick Ingram. The
trial court stated that “it is crystal clear that supervised probation does not work” but
entertained the idea of “a community corrections placement.” The court granted the
defendant additional time “to investigate” a community corrections placement and reset
the case for August 7, 2019.

              On July 31, 2019, an addendum to the violation report originally filed on
April 26, 2019, added case numbers 277012 and 301729 and indicated specifically that
“[d]ocket 277012 has been inadvertently left off of previous violations.” A violation
warrant issued for case number 277012 on August 7, 2019. An order filed on August 15,
2019, includes case number 277012 and indicates that “probation is partially revoked and
[d]efendant’s remaining time is to be served upon Southeast Tennessee Community
Corrections Program.” The record does not indicate that the trial court intended that the
defendant be released to probation supervised by the community corrections program under
the terms of Code section 40-36-106(f), which states that the trial court may “permit[] an
eligible defendant to participate in a community-based alternative to incarceration as a
condition of probation in conjunction with a suspended sentence.” See T.C.A. § 40-36-
106(f). Instead, the record, considered as a whole, indicates that the court sentenced the
defendant to a community corrections placement following the revocation. See id. §§ 40-
35-310(b); -311(e)(1)(B). The fill-in-the-blank revocation order has check marks next to
                                            -3-
the lines for “Full Revocation” and “Restore to Probation,” but “Probation” has been
marked through and replaced with “CC,” suggesting that the defendant was to be restored
to community corrections even though he was not previously sentenced to a community
corrections placement. That same order indicates in the “Special Conditions” portion:
“Assign to Southeast TN Comm. Corrections Prog.” The order “assign[s]” the defendant
to the community corrections program. The order granted the defendant jail credit for the
period running between August 9 and 12, 2019. A written order filed on August 15, 2019,
provides that the defendant’s “probation is partially revoked and [d]efendant’s remaining
time is to be served upon Southeast Tennessee Community Corrections Program.”

              A subsequent violation report filed on May 26, 2020, is styled as a
community corrections violation. The court’s revocation order filed on January 5, 2021,
is styled as an “Order Finding Violation of Community Corrections and Ordering
Revocation of Sentences” and includes a finding that the parties agreed in August 2019
that the defendant’s “sentence would be served on the . . . Community Corrections Program
after time served.” These filings confirm that the defendant was serving a sentence of
community corrections at the time the May 2020 violation warrant was filed. In
consequence, he would be entitled to “street time” for the period between his placement on
community corrections on August 12, 2019, and the filing of the violation warrant on May
28, 2020. The defendant was arrested on June 10, 2020, and incarcerated until his
community corrections placement was revoked on January 5, 2021, for which period he
would be entitled to jail credit towards case number 277012.

                                  Case Number 292896

               In September 2014, the Hamilton County Grand Jury charged the defendant
with theft of property valued at less than $500, simple possession of alprazolam, marijuana,
and methamphetamine; possession with intent to sell hydrocodone, clonazepam, and
diazepam; possession of drug paraphernalia; and failure to appear. On October 28, 2014,
the defendant pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement with the State to theft under
$500, possession with intent to sell hydrocodone, and failure to appear in exchange for
concurrent sentences of 11 months and 29 days, six years, and two years, respectively, and
dismissal of the remaining charges. Additionally, the agreement called for the defendant
to be furloughed into the Hamilton County Drug Court program. The judgment forms for
case number 292896 awarded the defendant jail credit for the period from April 19 to
October 28, 2014, despite that the court had already awarded the defendant jail credit for
this same period toward the sentence in case number 277012 and that the sentence in case
number 292896 was aligned consecutively to the sentence in case number 277012.

            As indicated, the defendant was furloughed to the Hamilton County Drug
Court on December 4, 2014, and a violation warrant issued on February 25, 2015, alleging
                                            -4-
that the defendant had violated the conditions of drug court. The defendant was again
furloughed to drug court on March 12, 2015. The defendant’s drug court placement was
revoked on September 3, 2015, and he was sentenced to serve 11 months and 29 days
before being returned to enhanced probation. Amended judgment forms for case number
292896 filed on September 10, 2015, provided that the defendant had been “removed from
drug c[our]t” and that he was to “serve 11 mos. 29 days w/credit for time served; balance
on supervised probation.” The amended judgment forms also gave the defendant credit for
the periods from April 19 to 21, 2014, and February 25 to September 10, 2015, despite
having awarded this same credit in case number 227012 and despite the consecutive
alignment of the sentences.

              On August 18, 2016, a probation violation warrant issued that listed only
case number 292896. Following the defendant’s January 9, 2017 arrest, an amended
violation warrant, which again included only case number 292896, issued on January 30,
2017. The trial court revoked the defendant’s probation in case number 292896 on
September 13, 2017, and returned him to probation with credit for time served. The fill-
in-the-blank orders revoking probation in each count reflect that probation was revoked
and that he was given credit for “time served,” but none of the orders reflects whether the
revocation was a “Full Revocation” or a “Partial Revocation.” Additionally, none indicates
the actual disposition following revocation. The orders awarded the defendant jail credit
for the period from January 9 to September 13, 2017.

               A probation violation warrant issued in case number 292896 on January 5,
2018. The violation report that formed the basis for the warrant indicated that the defendant
was released from confinement on September 14, 2017, and that he tested positive for the
use of methamphetamine, amphetamines, and oxycodone at his probation intake
appointment on October 5, 2017. The defendant remained on probation until the issuance
of the violation warrant in January 2018 but continued to perform very poorly, continuing
to use drugs, failing to report, failing to pay fees and costs, and failing to comply with drug
treatment opportunities extended to him. The defendant was arrested on March 1, 2018,
and an amended violation warrant issued on April 25, 2018, alleging that the defendant had
further violated the terms of his probation by being charged with attempting to possess
contraband in a penal facility. The court disposed of the probation violation in case number
292896 as part of a global “Probation Order” that purported to cover case numbers 277012
(despite that no violation warrant had issued in this case), 292896, 301729 (no information
about this case appears in the record prior to this order), and 304933 (a new case that we
will consider in more detail below). That order, entered on August 23, 2018, imposed a
total effective period of probation of 20 years, ordered the defendant to remain in jail until
September 4, 2018, to “complete Miracle Lake,” and to pay “restitution as ordered.” The
plea documents signed by the defendant relate only to case numbers 292896 and 304933.

                                              -5-
Neither the Probation Order nor the individual revocation orders entered for each count of
case number 292896 reflects an award of jail credits.

               A probation violation warrant issued in case number 292896 on May 9, 2019,
based upon an April 26, 2019 violation report that alleged that the defendant had violated
the terms of his probation by overdosing on methamphetamine and heroin while visiting a
patient at Erlanger Hospital. The defendant was arrested on May 27, 2019. An addendum
to the violation report added case numbers 277012 and 301729 and indicated that “Docket
277012 has been inadvertently left off of previous violations.” On August 12, 2019, the
trial court revoked the defendant’s probation in case numbers 277012, 292896, and 304933
and, as explained above, placed the defendant on community corrections for the balance of
his sentence. A community corrections violation report issued on May 26, 2020, alleging
that the defendant had garnered new arrests for theft and drug possession and that he had
absconded and missed his curfew. A community corrections violation capias order issued
on May 27, 2020, and an arrest warrant issued the following day. The defendant was
arrested on June 10, 2020, and his community corrections placement in case number
292896 was revoked on January 5, 2021.

                                   Case Number 301729

               Little information about this case appears in the record on appeal. The case
is referenced for the first time in the Probation Order filed on August 23, 2018, where it is
listed alongside case numbers 277012, 292896, and 304933. It is not referenced again until
it is mentioned in the “Addendum to Violation of Probation” issued on July 31, 2019. That
addendum indicates that the defendant pleaded guilty in case number 301729 to theft of
property valued at $1,000 or more but less than $10,000 and possession of
methamphetamine on September 13, 2017, in exchange for a sentence of “two years with
11/29 consecutive on state probation concurrent with his other docket numbers.” No
indictment, plea documents, or judgment forms for case number 301729 appear in the
record. The only documents filed on September 13, 2017, that appear in the record relate
to the revocation of the defendant’s probation in case number 292896. An affidavit of
complaint appended to the January 30, 2017 amended violation warrant in case number
292896 includes misdemeanor charges relating to the theft of property and possession of a
controlled substance, but it is not clear that these charges are the same as those from case
number 301729. The case number next appears in an addendum to the April 26, 2019
probation violation report, where it is alleged that case number 301729 should have been
included in the probation violation warrant issued on January 5, 2018. The revocation
order for Counts 2 and 7 of case number 301729 was appended to the community
corrections violation report filed on May 26, 2020. That order reflects the revocation of
original sentences of two years’ probation for a conviction of theft of property valued at
$1,000 or more but less than $10,000 and 11 months’ and 29 days’ probation for a
                                             -6-
conviction of simple possession of methamphetamine. That order also grants the defendant
jail credit for the period from May 28 to August 12, 2019, despite that a separate order
grants the defendant jail credit for August 9 through 12, 2019, in case number 277012 and
that, per the revocation orders, the sentence in case number 301729 was aligned
consecutively to case number 277012. The August 23, 2018 Probation Order, however,
states that “301729 is conc[urrent] w/ all.” As indicated, the community corrections
violation report filed on May 26, 2020, lists case number 301729. Similarly, the
community corrections violation capias order, filed on the following day, lists case number
301729. None of the community corrections violation warrants filed on May 28, 2020,
however, include case number 301729 and were issued only in case numbers 277012,
292896, and 304933. The 53-page written order revoking the defendant’s community
corrections placement, which was filed on January 5, 2021, and which contains 162
footnotes, makes only a single mention of case number 301729: “There is a fourth case,
Case No. 301729, that has convictions and sentences that are also wrapped up in these
events. However, the sentences in this case are running concurrently with the longer
sentences in the other cases and do not affect the disposition herein.” It is not clear whether,
by this remark, the court intended to convey that the two-year effective sentence in case
number 301729 had expired.

                                    Case Number 304933

              In May 2018, the Hamilton County Grand Jury charged the defendant in case
number 304933 with one count of burglary of a business and one count of theft of property
valued at $10,000 or more but less than $60,000. Plea documents reflect that on August
23, 2018, the defendant pleaded guilty as charged in exchange for concurrent sentences of
four years’ probation to be served consecutively to the sentence imposed in case number
292896. The documents also provided that the defendant was to be released from custody
on September 4, 2018, “to complete Miracle Lake as a condition of probation.” Case
number 304933 was also mentioned in the August 23, 2018 Probation Order that, as
indicated, imposes a total sentence of 20 years’ probation for all of the defendant’s then-
active cases.

              A probation violation report issued on April 26, 2019, but listed only case
number 292896. A probation violation warrant issued on May 9, 2019, listed case numbers
292896 and 304933. An addendum to the violation report added case number 304933, and
the defendant’s probation was revoked on August 12, 2019, and he was sentenced to
community corrections. The community corrections violation report, capias order, and
warrants issued in May 2020 all included case number 304933.

                                              -7-
                                    Pre-Hearing Summary

              Thus, prior to the community corrections violation hearing held in November
and December 2020, the defendant was serving a total effective sentence of 20 years’
probation as follows:

              Case number 277012:      eight years to be served as 10
                      years’ probation following a two-year extension of
                      the probationary term in June 2012

              Case number 292896:      six years’ probation to be served
                      consecutively to case number 277012

              Case number 301729:      two years’ probation, alignment
                      unclear from the record

              Case number 304933:      four years’ probation to be served
                      consecutively to case numbers 277012 and 292896

                                           Hearing

           The trial court conducted a bifurcated probation violation hearing on
November 10 and December 18, 2020, via video conference.1

               Tabitha McDermott, a case officer with Southeast Tennessee Community
Corrections, testified that she had supervised the defendant “prior to him being
transferred.” Ms. McDermott testified that the defendant had struggled to comply with the
terms of his community corrections placement because of his drug addiction. The
defendant admitted having used methamphetamine in December 2019. He was sent to
Buffalo Valley in December 2019 and successfully completed the drug rehabilitation
program there in January 2020. Following his return from Buffalo Valley, the defendant
asked that his supervision be transferred to Dayton, Tennessee, and “our office did the
transfer form and transferred [the defendant] over there to the separate program where he
was under Mona Masters’[] supervision.” Ms. McDermott testified that, in addition to the
rehabilitation program at Buffalo Valley, the defendant had completed a rehabilitation
program at Miracle Lake in 2018 before being assigned to community corrections.

1
        In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Tennessee Supreme Court suspended all in-person
court proceedings on March 13, 2020. See In Re: COVID-19 Pandemic, No. ADM2020-00428 (Tenn. Mar.
13, 2020) (Order). The court later modified “the suspension of in-person court proceedings, with
appropriate safeguards,” to include the continued and increased use of, among other things, video
conferencing. In Re: COVID-19 Pandemic, No. ADM2020-00428 (Tenn. Apr. 24, 2020) (Order).
                                               -8-
               Mona Masters, a case officer for the Twelfth Judicial District Community
Corrections program, testified that she began supervising the defendant following his move
to Rhea County. Ms. Masters met with the defendant on three occasions, all in February
2020. During his February 6, 2020, intake visit, the defendant tested positive for the use
of opiates, and the defendant told Ms. Masters that he had been given Dilaudid during a
recent hospital stay. She said that she had asked for documentation to support his claim
but had never received it. On February 24, 2020, Ms. Masters attempted to conduct a home
visit at the address the defendant had provided, but “it appeared to be nobody lived there.”
She attempted to call the landlord to determine whether the defendant actually lived at the
address, but “was unable to get a call back.”

              Someone telephoned Ms. Masters on February 26, 2020, and told her that the
defendant was in the hospital. The defendant’s girlfriend telephoned Ms. Masters on
March 4 and 12, 2020, and reported “that he was once again in the hospital.” Ms. Masters
was unable to obtain any documentation to establish the veracity of this report. Ms.
Masters attempted a second home visit on March 26, 2020, and noted that the “[r]esidence
appears abandoned, no one home.” Thereafter, Ms. Masters contacted Ms. McDermott to
begin the process of moving forward with a community corrections violation report.

              Ms. Masters testified that her agency made several adjustments in April 2020
in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including “video reporting” and conducting in-
person reporting and drug testing “only on an as-needed basis.” Despite the changes, the
defendant did not report to Ms. Masters in any form beyond February 19, 2020.

                Shannon Morgan, program coordinator for the Hamilton County Recovery
Court, testified that an assessment “for risk and need” completed by the defendant indicated
that the defendant “would be considered high risk and would be someone that we would,
per the score, accept into the drug court program.” Ms. Morgan met with the defendant,
and he communicated “his desire to join the drug court program” and “the needs that he
thinks that he has and his intentions for sobriety.” The defendant acknowledged “that he
has a significant drug addiction issue and does want help for that problem.” Ms. Morgan
testified that, should the defendant be admitted into the drug court program, he would likely
be placed “in inpatient treatment” followed by living in a recovery residence. Ms. Morgan
said that the defendant had expressed a willingness “to do anything we recommended.”

              The 38-year-old defendant testified that he had two teenaged sons, both of
whom were in the custody of their mother, and a 14-month-old daughter with special needs,
who was in State custody at the time of the hearing. He explained that his daughter’s
mother also suffered from addiction issues and was “going through recovery” and
attempting to regain custody of their daughter. The defendant said that both of his parents
                                             -9-
died as a result of drug overdoses and that the only other family member with whom he
was close was in recovery for drug addiction. Following his mother’s death, he lost his
home, his grandfather died, and his daughter was born. The defendant himself overdosed
sometime thereafter and was then admitted into Buffalo Valley for addiction treatment.

               The defendant admitted that he had failed to complete a previous drug court
placement, saying that the drug court team at the time “was super aggressive and I wasn’t
ready to take advice, to be honest.” He insisted that things would be different should he be
admitted to the program again because he had “lost everything that I love in this world.”
The defendant said that he wanted “a chance to salvage the things I got left that I love and
do the right thing.” He insisted that he had “hit absolutely rock bottom” and that he was
“willing to do whatever it takes” to get “my life back.”

               The defendant said that he had discussed spending the balance of his
sentences in confinement so that he would having nothing hanging over his head, but he
insisted that “there’s nothing but drugs” in prison. He said that it was easy to obtain drugs
while incarcerated and that he was sure he would lapse into drug use if sentenced to
incarceration. He acknowledged that “[u]ntil about two months ago” he was using drugs
on a regular basis despite being incarcerated.

              The defendant testified that he went to the emergency room on February 26,
2020, because he had “an infection, cellulitis, in my legs and my feet.” He said that he was
not admitted to the hospital on that date. When he was “still having trouble and infection”
on March 4, 2020, he went to the emergency room at East Ridge Hospital. The defendant
said that he was not admitted to the hospital on that date but was admitted on March 12,
2020, when he spent a single night.

                During cross-examination, the defendant said that he did not report to Ms.
Masters following his release from the hospital in March 2020 because he “still had the
infection” and “could barely walk.” He said that he was evicted while he was in the hospital
“and that’s why there wasn’t no one there” when Ms. Masters conducted the home visit.
When asked if his eviction was the reason he stopped reporting, the defendant replied that
“[a]ctually, [Ms. Masters] was super aggressive,” which attitude led him to make the wrong
decisions. He said that, in contrast to Ms. Masters’ “super aggressive” demeanor, Ms.
McDermott “listened to me, was willing to help me, and I had a great relationship with
her.” He acknowledged that he had attended more than one drug rehabilitation program
but said that “those are short-term programs. I need a long-term that has housing after it.”
He said that, without “housing to go to,” he would be in “an unhealthy environment where
I can’t utilize the tools that I’ve learned because it’s in my face.”

                                            -10-
              The defendant reiterated that while a sentence of confinement would resolve
his immediate housing need, it would do little to address his addiction issues because
“there’s drugs there just as bad.” He acknowledged that he had gotten clean while in the
workhouse but insinuated that that was only because he had “a hopeful chance of getting
out.” He added that “[a]t the end of 14 years I’m still going to be put out and nowhere to
go, no housing.” He said that when released on probation, “I have no family, nowhere to
go, no address, and it’s not [d]oing me good just be putting me out there with no address
and I’m jumping place to place.” He said that he wanted the “chance to be able to have
housing to where I don’t have to worry about nowhere to sleep or go.”

               The defendant admitted that he had pleaded guilty to the unauthorized use of
a vehicle in the general sessions court. He explained that he and his girlfriend had gotten
a ride from a friend to a motel and that, after confirming that they would be staying there
for the night, he went back out to the friend’s vehicle to retrieve their belongings. The
friend also asked the defendant to bring him “a container” from the vehicle. While the
defendant was retrieving the items from the vehicle, the police arrived, discovered that the
vehicle had been reported stolen, and arrested the defendant. The container that allegedly
belonged to the friend contained drugs. The defendant admitted that both he and his
girlfriend had used methamphetamine and heroin despite that they had their infant daughter
with them. He claimed that they were taking care of their daughter despite using drugs,
saying, “Just because I was on drugs I might not have give her my full attention, but I still
had good intentions.” He understood that “[t]hat’s the reason we lost our daughter, and I
take full responsibility for that.”

               Upon questioning by the court, the defendant admitted that he had not
reported to Ms. Masters after his March 12, 2020 hospital stay but insisted that he “was
going to plan on” turning himself in after he found a place for his family to stay. He said
that he “always had good intentions of turning myself in, and it was always on my mind”
but that it got put “on the back burner” when he started getting high again. He admitted
that absconding had been a basis for each of his previous violations and that he had not
turned himself in on any of those previous occasions. When the trial court noted the
similarity between the conditions of a community corrections placement and the conditions
of a drug court placement and asked the defendant how he could fail at one but succeed at
the other, the defendant again insisted that a lack of housing was the issue. He again noted
Ms. Masters’ “aggressive” personality and blamed it for his inability to develop a
relationship with her.

               At the conclusion of the hearing, defense counsel urged the trial court to place
the defendant into the drug court program. The State asked the court to place the balance
of the sentences into execution. Defense counsel stated that the defendant had “practically
flattened his time” and that it was not her opinion that a short period of time—only about
                                             -11-
a year by her calculation—would benefit him much. The prosecutor agreed that the
defendant had approximately “2,500 days built” against his sentences. The trial court took
the matter under advisement.

               In a 53-page written order, the trial court found that the defendant had
violated the terms of his release and revoked the defendant’s community corrections
sentence. The court noted that the defendant had repeatedly violated the terms of his
release into the community despite having availed himself of a number of drug
rehabilitation programs. The court agreed that the defendant’s failure to abide by the terms
of his release was driven by his drug addiction but concluded that “compelling
circumstances do not exist” to warrant “additional chances in yet another community-based
solution, particularly in one that has already been tried and has not been successful.” The
court ordered “each of the unexpired sentences into execution.” The court granted the
defendant “credit for time served in pretrial or prehearing custody” and for the time he
spent on community corrections “from his assignment on August 14, 2019, through the
issuance of the probationary capias on May 27, 2020, plus any other credits earned and
retained by the [d]efendant.”

              In this timely appeal, the defendant asserts that the trial court abused its
discretion by revoking his community corrections placement in case number 277012
because the sentence in that case expired before the violation warrant issued in that case.
As to the remaining cases, the defendant contends that the trial court erred by ordering
those sentences into execution, arguing that a drug court placement would have better
served both the defendant and the community. The State avers that the trial court did not
err.

                                           Analysis

              We consider first the defendant’s assertion that the sentence in case number
277012 expired prior to the issuance of the violation warrant on May 28, 2020. The
defendant did not raise the issue in the trial court, and the court did not address the issue in
its revocation order. That being said, because the defendant’s claim is essentially a
challenge to the subject matter jurisdiction of the trial court and because the defendant
cannot waive subject matter jurisdiction, the timeliness of the challenge is not an issue. See
State v. Demetrius D. Blakemore, No. W2019-00555-CCA-R3-CD, 2020 WL 864170, at
*2 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Feb. 19, 2020) (citing State v. Almeko Chiffon Woods, No.
W2007-02025-CCA-R3-CD, 2008 WL 3983107, at *3 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Aug.
28, 2008) (noting that a defendant has no power to waive subject matter jurisdiction); see
also State v. Nick Defillipis, No. M2007-01647-CCA-R3-CD, 2008 WL 2388632, at *3
(Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, June 12, 2008)). If the sentence in case number 277012 had

                                             -12-
expired, the trial court’s order revoking his community corrections placement and ordering
that sentence into execution was void.

              The defendant specifically does not challenge the award of jail credits in this
case. As best we can determine based solely on the record on appeal, the trial court
specifically awarded jail credit in case number 277012 for at least the following periods:

      September 16, 2010 to January 19, 2011                               126 days
      February 10, 2012 to June 25, 2012                                   137 days
      March 8, 2013 to May 13, 2013                                        67 days
      May 24, 2014 to October 28, 2014                                     158 days
      July 29, 2015 to September 9, 2015                                   43 days
      August 9, 2019 to August 12, 2019                                    4 days

The record also demonstrates that the defendant is entitled to credit in case number 277012
for his incarceration for the following periods:

      January 19, 2011 to February 11, 2011                                24 days
      June 26, 2012 to August 8, 2012                                      44 days
      May 14, 2013 to November 2013                                        172-201
                                                                           days
      October 29, 2014 to December 4, 2014                                 37 days
      February 25, 2015 to March 12, 2015                                  16 days
      September 10, 2015 to February 15, 2016                              159 days
      June 10, 2020 to January 5, 2021                                     210 days

These were periods when the record reflects that the defendant was serving a period of
incarceration imposed following a revocation or being held without bond pending a
revocation hearing. The record does not clearly indicate whether Hamilton County Drug
Court participants are given “street time” for the time they spend in the program, but, if the
court intended to grant the defendant credit for time spent in the drug court program, that
credit would cover the following periods:

      December 5, 2014 to February 25, 2015                                84 days
      March 13, 2015 to May 4, 2015                                        53 days

To be sure, nothing in the record awards the defendant credit against the sentence in case
number 277012 for this time. He was, however, given credit for the periods from April 19
to April 21, 2014 and February 25 to September 10, 2015, or 201 days, against the sentence
in case number 292896 despite that that sentence was to be served consecutively to the one

                                            -13-
imposed in case number 277012. Our case law holds that, where sentences are aligned
consecutively, the defendant is typically entitled to credit only on the first sentence because
the practical effect of consecutive awards of the full amount of jail credit would be to
double the credit. See, e.g., Timothy L. Dulworth v. Henry Steward, Warden, No. W2012-
00314-CCA-R3-HC, 2012 WL 2742210, at *2 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, July 9, 2012);
State v. Joyce Elizabeth Cleveland, No. M2005-02783-CCA-R3-CD, 2006 WL 2682821,
at *2 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, Sept. 14, 2006); Marvin Rainer v. David G. Mills,
Warden, No. W2004-02676-CCA-R3-HC, 2006 WL 156990, at *5 (Tenn. Crim. App.,
Jackson, Jan. 20, 2006); State v. Hobert Dean Davis, No. E2000-02879-CCA-R3-CD, 2002
WL 340597, at *3 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Mar.4, 2002). So long as the credits are
awarded on only one sentence, there has been no double-dipping.

               The defendant is also entitled to “street time” for the period between his
transfer to community corrections on August 12, 2019 and the issuance of the violation
warrant on May 28, 2020, which equaled 291 days. See T.C.A. § 40-36-106(e)(4). He is
not, however, entitled to credit for the time he spent on probation. “[T]he time a defendant
serves on probation is not counted toward the completion of his or her sentence unless a
defendant successfully completes the entire term of probation.” State v. Hunter, 1 S.W.3d
643, 648 (Tenn. 1999) (citing State v. Taylor, 992 S.W.2d 941, 944 (Tenn. 1999); Young
v. State, 539 S.W.2d 850, 855 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1976)). We note that the current version
of Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-310, which became effective on July 1, 2021,
gives the trial court discretion to “give credit against the original judgment by the amount
of time the defendant has successfully served on probation and suspension of sentence prior
to the violation or a portion of that amount of time.” T.C.A. § 40-35-310(b) (2021).

                The original sentence in case number 277012 was eight years to be served
on probation. The defendant could have satisfied this sentence by either serving 2,920 days
of incarceration or successfully completing eight uninterrupted years of probation. By our
calculation, based solely on the record on appeal, it appears that the defendant had served
far short of the total number of days of incarceration required to flatten his sentence before
the issuance of the May 2020 revocation warrant. Additionally, the record clearly
establishes that the defendant’s term of probation was anything but uninterrupted.
Violation warrants were issued in case number 277012 in February 2012, February 2013,
April 2014, February 2015, March 2015, August 2019, and May 2020. Each of these
warrants stopped the running of the defendant’s term of probation, and, “[e]ach time when
the trial court revoked the appellant’s probation and then reinstated it, the appellant began
serving his original sentence anew.” Hunter, 1 S.W.3d at 646. Furthermore, as part of the
2012 revocation, the trial court extended the period of probation by two years as authorized
by Code section 40-35-308(c), bringing his new probationary term in case number 277012
to 10 years. To allow the defendant to piece together the periods of probation and
incarceration in the manner he desires “would allow a defendant to serve his or her
                                             -14-
probation sentence in increments of time chosen at the defendant’s convenience” and
would, in effect, “reward[]” the defendant “with a reduction on his . . . sentence for abusing
the opportunity to serve the sentence without being subjected to total confinement.” Id. at
648. The record clearly establishes that the defendant failed to complete a 10-year term of
probation. Consequently, the trial court retained jurisdiction to revoke the community
corrections sentence in case number 277012.

               The 1989 Sentencing Act expresses a burden of proof for revocation cases:
“If the trial judge finds that the defendant has violated the conditions of probation and
suspension by a preponderance of the evidence, the trial judge shall have the right by order
duly entered upon the minutes of the court to revoke the probation and suspension of
sentence . . . .” T.C.A. § 40-35-311(e)(1). Upon a finding by a preponderance of the
evidence that the defendant has violated the conditions of probation, the trial court may
revoke the defendant’s probation and “[c]ause the defendant to commence the execution
of the judgment as originally entered, or otherwise in accordance with § 40-35-310.” Id.;
see also Stamps v. State, 614 S.W.2d 71, 73 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1980). Following a
revocation, “the trial judge may order the original judgment so rendered to be in full force
and effect from the date of the revocation of the suspension, and that it be executed
accordingly.” T.C.A. § 40-35-310(a). In other words, “[t]he trial judge retains the
discretionary authority to order the defendant to serve the original sentence.” Reams, 265
S.W.3d at 430 (citing State v. Duke, 902 S.W.2d 424, 427 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995)).

               “Given the similar nature of a community corrections sentence and a
sentence of probation, . . . the same principles are applicable in deciding whether a
community corrections sentence revocation was proper.” State v. Harkins, 811 S.W.2d 79,
83 (Tenn. 1991). The accepted appellate standard of review of a community corrections
revocation is abuse of discretion. See State v. Shaffer, 45 S.W.3d 553, 554 (Tenn. 2001);
see also State v. Reams, 265 S.W.3d 423, 430 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2007). Generally, “[a]
trial court abuses its discretion when it applies incorrect legal standards, reaches an illogical
conclusion, bases its ruling on a clearly erroneous assessment of the proof, or applies
reasoning that causes an injustice to the complaining party.” State v. Phelps, 329 S.W.3d
436, 443 (Tenn. 2010).

               In our view, the trial court did not err by revoking the defendant’s community
corrections placement and ordering “the defendant to commence the execution of the
judgment as originally entered.” Id. § 40-35-311(e)(1)(A). The defendant conceded that
he had violated the terms of his release by absconding and by committing the offense of
the unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. It is well-settled that the trial court does not abuse
its discretion by choosing incarceration from among the alternatives available following
the revocation of a community corrections placement. Moreover, the revocation at issue
was the ninth revocation in the group of cases at issue, and, contrary to the defendant’s
                                              -15-
assertion on appeal, the trial court did not err by considering the defendant’s history of
supervision when determining that he should serve the balance of his sentences in
confinement. The record establishes that the defendant was either unwilling or unable to
successfully complete a sentence involving release into the community. That the
defendant’s indiscretions relate to his drug addiction does not excuse his abysmal record
of performance, particularly given that the defendant has already enjoyed the benefit of
multiple in-patient drug rehabilitation programs at state expense.

              Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court revoking the
defendant’s probation and ordering him to serve the balance of his sentence in confinement.

                                                   _________________________________
                                                  JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE

                                           -16-