Jeffery AUSTIN, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Jeffery Austin, Avon Park, pro se.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Melynda L. Melear, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
Jeffery Austin appeals the summary denial of his rule 3.800(a) motion to correct an illegal sentence. We affirm the denial as to the first two grounds of his motion, which were previously denied, see Raley v. State,
With respect to the third ground, the state concedes that appellant was erroneously sentenced as a habitual offender for the life felony of armed kidnapping, committed in 1991 when the habitual offender statute did not provide for habitual sentencing for life felonies. See §§ 787.01(2), 775.087(1)(a), & 775.084(4), Fla. Stat. (1991); Lamont v. State,
Considering Bover first, we find it inapposite. In Bover, the third district concluded that a claim that the predicate offenses relied on to habitualize the defendant were not sequential must be brought under rule 3.850, not under rule 3.800, because the claim really is that the plea was involuntary or counsel was ineffective in not realizing that the offenses relied on for habitualization were not sequential. See
The instant case, however, does not involve a challenge to the sufficiency of the predicate offenses. The third district, which issued Bover, has itself granted relief under rule 3.800(a) for a claim such as Appellant's, see Beaudoin v. State,
Although this erroneous sentence was not one of the types of illegal sentences enumerated in this court's recent opinion in Blakley, in which this court stated that the only kinds of illegal sentence challenges cognizable under the rule "are those that are illegal because they exceed the [statutory] maximum, ... those that were unconstitutionally increased after they had been imposed, and those for which no record, earned jail credit was given,"
We reverse the summary denial as to this ground and remand for resentencing on the armed kidnapping count only. The trial court may exceed the sentencing guidelines in resentencing if there are valid grounds to do so. See Corbitt,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
WARNER, C.J., DELL and HAZOURI, JJ., concur.
