Court Opinion

ID: 9907252
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-06 00:06:09.830574+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:58:16.489866
License: Public Domain

[Cite as State v. Padgett, 2023-Ohio-4357.]

                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                           THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                              CRAWFORD COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO,
                                                           CASE NO. 3-22-53
       PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,

       v.

AMANDA PADGETT,                                            OPINION

       DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

                Appeal from Crawford County Common Pleas Court
                           Trial Court No. 00-CR-0130

                                       Judgment Reversed

                            Date of Decision: December 4, 2023

APPEARANCES:

        Autumn D. Adams for Appellant
Case No. 3-22-53

WALDICK, J.,

       {¶1} Defendant-appellant, Amanda Padgett (“Padgett”), appeals the

November 28, 2022 judgment of the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas

sentencing her to six months in jail for a community control violation. For the

reasons set forth below, we reverse.

                         Factual and Procedural Background

       {¶2} On September 12, 2000, the Crawford County Grand Jury returned an

indictment against Padgett, charging her with nine counts of Forgery, each count a

fifth-degree felony in violation of R.C. 2913.31.

       {¶3} On October 30, 2000, an arraignment was held and Padgett entered an

initial plea of not guilty.

       {¶4} On November 29, 2000, a change of plea hearing was held. At that

time, Padgett withdrew her plea of not guilty and pled guilty to the nine-count

indictment. The trial court ordered a presentence investigation and scheduled

sentencing for a later date.

       {¶5} On January 2, 2001, a sentencing hearing was held and Padgett was

sentenced to a three-year term of community control. The sentence was journalized

by entry filed on January 4, 2001.

       {¶6} On February 13, 2003, the trial court issued a bench warrant for

Padgett’s arrest. The warrant included the information that Padgett had failed to

abide by the conditions of her supervision and that her whereabouts were unknown.

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Case No. 3-22-53

       {¶7} On February 9, 2004, the trial court filed a “Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment

Entry.” Omitting the caption, that entry reads in its entirety, “It has come to the

Court’s attention that when the original Bench Warrant was issued on February 13,

2003, due to an oversight, the offender’s community control supervision was not

tolled. Therefore, the offender’s community control supervision from February 13,

2003 has been tolled.” (Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment Entry, Docket No. 19).

       {¶8} On September 29, 2022, Padgett was located and served with the arrest

warrant that had been issued by the court in February of 2003.

       {¶9} On September 30, 2022, a “Notice of Violation” containing a motion to

revoke the community control was filed by the Crawford County Probation

Department. Specifically, that motion alleged that (1) Padgett had ceased reporting

for her required monthly visits to the probation office in April of 2002 and that her

whereabouts had been unknown since that time; (2) Padgett had failed to pay the

court-ordered restitution in the case; and (3) in April of 2002, Padgett had changed

her address without notifying her supervising officer. On those bases, the motion

requested that Padgett’s community control be revoked and sentence imposed.

       {¶10} On October 31, 2022, Padgett filed a motion asserting that the trial

court lacked jurisdiction to proceed on the pending community control revocation

motion, on the basis that Padgett had been sentenced to a three-year term of

community control in January of 2001 and the three-year term had since expired

without it having been tolled by the trial court and without probation revocation

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Case No. 3-22-53

proceedings having been initiated within the required time-frame. The motion also

asserted that, should the trial court proceed with the revocation hearing, Padgett

could not be sentenced to a prison term because she had not been given the notice

required by statute at the original sentencing hearing.1

           {¶11} On November 23, 2022, a community control revocation hearing was

held. At that time, Padgett admitted the alleged community control violations but

reasserted her objection to the proceeding. In response to Padgett’s objection, the

prosecution argued that the arrest warrant issued by the trial court in February of

2003, and the language contained therein, had served to preserve the court’s

jurisdiction. The state, however, agreed with Padgett’s assertion that a prison term

could not be imposed because the trial court had not properly reserved a specific

prison term at the time of sentencing.

           {¶12} Without setting forth any legal analysis on the record, the trial court

ruled that it did have jurisdiction to impose a community control violation sanction.

The trial court found that Padgett had violated her community control, ordered that

community control be revoked, and sentenced Padgett to six months in the county

jail, with 46 days of credit for jail time previously served. The trial court stayed the

sentence pending appeal.

1
    See, e.g., State v. Brooks, 103 Ohio St.3d 134, 2004-Ohio-4746.

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Case No. 3-22-53

       {¶13} On December 22, 2022, Padgett filed this appeal, in which she has

raised one assignment of error for our review.

                               Assignment of Error

       The State failed to initiate any community control revocation
       procedures until almost 20 years after Padgett’s community
       control should have been over thus the Trial Court did not have
       authority over Padgett to enforce any sanctions against her.

       {¶14} In the sole assignment of error, Padgett asserts that the trial court

lacked the authority to conduct the community control revocation proceeding in this

case. Specifically, Padgett argues that her original three-year term of community

control had long since expired because it was never properly tolled by the court after

Padgett absconded supervision and, further, that the potential five-year maximum

period of community control had also expired without probation revocation

proceedings having been initiated prior to that expiration. In support of her position,

Padgett relies on State v. Rue, 164 Ohio St.3d 270, 2020-Ohio-6706.

                                       Analysis

       {¶15} R.C. 2929.15 governs community control sanctions for felonies. In

relevant part, R.C. 2929.15(A)(1) provides that a court “may directly impose a

sentence that consists of one or more community control sanctions” when

sentencing an offender for a felony that does not require the imposition of a prison

term, a mandatory prison term, or a term of life imprisonment. “The duration of all

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Case No. 3-22-53

community control sanctions imposed on an offender * * * shall not exceed five

years.” Id.

       {¶16} R.C. 2929.15(A)(1) further provides that a sentence of community

control may be tolled under certain conditions:

       If the offender absconds or otherwise leaves the jurisdiction of the
       court in which the offender resides without obtaining permission from
       the court or the offender’s probation officer to leave the jurisdiction
       of the court, or if the offender is confined in any institution for the
       commission of any offense while under a community control sanction,
       the period of the community control sanction ceases to run until the
       offender is brought before the court for its further action.

R.C. 2929.15(A)(1).

       {¶17} In State v. Rue, 164 Ohio St.3d 270, 2020-Ohio-6706, the Supreme

Court of Ohio addressed a situation analogous to that of the instant case, where a

felony offender sentenced to community control had absconded supervision but

where the commencement of the revocation proceedings did not occur before the

expiration of the community-control term. Id., at ¶ 1-11. On those facts, the Ohio

Supreme Court held that pursuant to R.C. 2929.15(A)(1), the tolling of a community

control term is not automatically self-executing. Rather, the Supreme Court held,

as it had previously, that “a trial court is ‘authorized to conduct proceedings on the

alleged community-control violations even though they were conducted after the

expiration of the term of community control, provided that the notice of violations

was properly given and the revocation proceedings were commenced before the

expiration.’” Rue, at ¶ 18, quoting State ex rel. Hemsley v. Unruh, 128 Ohio St.3d

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Case No. 3-22-53

307, 2011-Ohio-226, ¶ 13 (emphasis added). Thus, pursuant to the holding in Rue,

a trial court lacks the authority to conduct a community control revocation

proceeding initiated after the expiration of the community control term, unless some

other circumstance intervened to render the original expiration date inoperative. Id.

at ¶ 20.

           {¶18} In the instant case, Padgett was sentenced to a three-year term of

community control on January 4, 2001. The community control revocation

proceeding challenged by Padgett on appeal was initiated on September 30, 2022,

which was well over 18 years after Padgett’s three-year community-control term

would have expired on January 4, 2004. Accordingly, pursuant to State v. Rue,

supra, the trial court lacked the authority to conduct the community control

revocation hearing in 2022 unless Padgett’s community-control term had been

previously tolled by some other qualifying circumstance before the term expired.

           {¶19} At the November 23, 2022, community control revocation hearing, the

prosecution argued that the arrest warrant issued for Padgett by the trial court on

February 13, 2003, had served to preserve the court’s authority to proceed with the

revocation hearing.2 We disagree. While that arrest warrant contained language

stating that Padgett “has failed to abide by conditions of supervision” and stating

that her whereabouts were unknown, we do not find that merely issuing the arrest

2
    The State of Ohio did not file a merit brief in this appeal.

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Case No. 3-22-53

warrant constitutes a “determination” by the trial court in “timely initiated

proceedings” that the defendant had absconded, as required by the Ohio Supreme

Court’s decision in Rue.      Additionally, as the Ohio Supreme Court deemed

necessary in Rue, the arrest warrant contained no language that would have served

to put Padgett on notice, even constructively, that her term of community control

had been extended, or tolled, as a result of her failure to abide by the conditions of

her supervision. Finally, we note that the defendant in State v. Rue also had warrants

issued for his arrest after absconding supervision and, while not addressed directly

by the Ohio Supreme Court in its decision, the fact that a warrant had been issued

was seemingly not a factor relevant to the issue of whether the community control

term had been tolled by the trial court.

       {¶20} While not argued by the prosecution at the revocation hearing in

response to Padgett’s objection, we have also considered whether the “nunc pro

tunc” judgment entry filed by the trial court on February 9, 2004, served to toll

Padgett’s term of community control. As noted above, that entry reads:

       It has come to the Court’s attention that when the original Bench
       Warrant was issued on February 13, 2003, due to an oversight, the
       offender’s community control supervision was not tolled. Therefore,
       the offender’s community control supervision from February 13, 2003
       has been tolled.”

(Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment Entry, Docket No. 19).

       {¶21} However, as this court explained in Lowery v. Est. of White, 3d Dist.

Allen No. 1-2000-15, 2000-Ohio-1906:

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Case No. 3-22-53

       The purpose of a nunc pro tunc order is to have the judgment of the
       court reflect its true action so as to make the entry speak the truth.
       McKay v. McKay (1985), 24 Ohio App.3d 74, 75, 493 N.E.2d 317. A
       nunc pro tunc order may not be used to show what the court might or
       should have decided, or intended to decide, but what it actually
       decided. Id. As this court has previously explained:

                The purpose of a nunc pro tunc order is to correct the
                record, to explain now-for-then judicial action actually
                taken at some prior time, but mistakenly omitted or
                recited by the original entry. A nunc pro tunc order may
                not render a judgment or modify a judgment never made
                in the first instance. McKay v. McKay (1985), 24 Ohio
                App.3d 74, 75, 493 N.E.2d 317, 317-318. Such order
                may only “record[ ] judicial action previously and
                actually taken.” State v. Breedlove (1988), 46 Ohio
                App.3d 78, 81, 546 N.E.2d 420, 423.

       Showcase Homes, Inc. v. Ravenna Sav. Bank (1998), 126 Ohio
       App.3d 328, 330, 710 N.E.2d 347.

Id., at *1-2.

       {¶22} In the instant case, the trial court improperly attempted to use the

February 9, 2004 judgment entry to retroactively implement an order that had never

been made. Accordingly, the February 9, 2004 “nunc pro tunc entry” is invalid.

       {¶23} Thus, on the facts of the case before us, we find that at the time the

community control revocation action was filed on September 30, 2022, the original

three-year term of community control had long since expired because that term was

never tolled by the trial court after Padgett absconded supervision. Further, both the

original three-year term of community control and the potential five-year maximum

period of community control also expired without revocation proceedings having

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Case No. 3-22-53

been initiated prior to that expiration. For those reasons, and on the basis of State

v. Rue, 164 Ohio St.3d 270, 2020-Ohio-6706, the trial court lacked the authority in

this case to proceed with the community control revocation hearing in 2022.

       {¶24} The assignment of error is sustained.

                                    Conclusion

       {¶25} Having found error prejudicial to the defendant-appellant, Amanda

Padgett, in the particulars assigned and argued, the November 28, 2022 judgment

of the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas is reversed.

                                                                Judgment Reversed

MILLER, P.J. and WILLAMOWSKI, J., concur.

/hls

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