Court Opinion

ID: 9599822
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 01:21:41.656848+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:01:46.982750
License: Public Domain

PIERCE, Judge.
Defendant, Calvin Roy Nealous, appeals from a denial of his Crim. P. 35(a) motion to correct an allegedly illegal sentence. We agree with defendant that the trial court was required to give him credit for the period he served in jail before being sentenced on the charge of attempted escape. Thus, we reverse the order and remand the cause for resentencing.
While serving a sentence at a community responsibility center on work release, defendant walked away from the facility, was captured, and was then held in the county jail on a charge of escape. He pled guilty to attempted escape, and the court imposed a one-year sentence to run consecutive to his previous sentence.
In his post-conviction motion, defendant sought credit for his confinement from April 11, 1983, when he was arrested on *625the escape charge until May 23, 1983, when he pled guilty and was sentenced for the attempted escape. However, the court declined to give him credit for these 43 days of presentence confinement, stating that the Department of Corrections had given him credit on his previous sentence for the 43 days. We agree with defendant that the credit should have been applied to his attempted escape sentence.
Schubert v. People, 698 P.2d 788 (Colo. 1984) is dispositive. There, the court ruled:
“Section 16-11-806 requires a sentencing judge to credit a defendant with that period of time spent in custody as the result of the charge for which the sentence is imposed or as the result of the conduct on which such charge is based.”
Defendant was incarcerated from April 11 until May 23, 1983, in the Jefferson County Jail directly as a result of his conduct which led to the escape charge. Although his escape may not have been the exclusive cause of his confinement in that he would otherwise have spent the time on work release, the 43-day jail confinement, until defendant resumed service on his previous sentence, was connected to his escape charge. See Torand v. People, 698 P.2d 797 (Colo.1985). Hence, defendant was entitled to receive credit against the attempted escape sentence for this period of incarceration.
Although defendant appears erroneously to have received credit against his previous sentence for the 43 days of confinement and although he is not entitled to duplicate credit for time served, nevertheless, § 16-11-306, C.R.S. (1984 Cum.Supp.) requires that, without exception, credit for presen-tence confinement must be given with respect to the transaction for which the defendant is to be sentenced. Schubert v. People, supra; Torand v. People, supra. Therefore, the court may not ignore the legislative mandate, and defendant should be given credit on his sentence with respect to the attempted escape. Any duplication of credit may thereafter be administratively corrected by the Department of Corrections.
The order denying Nealous’ motion is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions that the mittimus be amended to reflect that defendant is entitled to 43 days of credit against his sentence.
TURSI, J., concurs.
VAN CISE, J., dissents.