EDDIE OFFIONG ETTE, Appellant v. THE STATE OF TEXAS
NO. PD-0538-17
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS
September 19, 2018
ALCALA, J., delivered the opinion for the unanimous Court.
ON APPELLANT‘S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE SECOND COURT OF APPEALS TARRANT COUNTY
ALCALA, J.,
OPINION
In his petition for discretionary review, Eddie Offiong Ette, appellant, challenges the judgment of the court of appeals upholding the imposition of a $10,000 fine assessed as part of his punishment for
I. Background
A jury found appellant guilty of the first-degree felony offense of misapplication of fiduciary property in an amount exceeding $200,000.1 Appellant elected for the jury to assess his punishment. The jury instructions set out the applicable range of punishment, which could include a fine not to exceed $10,000. The jury‘s returned verdict form assessed appellant‘s punishment at ten years’ confinement and a $10,000 fine. It recommended that the confinement be suspended, but not the fine. Upon receiving the jury‘s unanimous verdict on punishment, the trial court read the verdict form aloud on the record in appellant‘s presence.2 Both appellant and the State declined to poll the jury. Immediately after reading the jury‘s verdict, the trial judge orally pronounced sentence. The trial judge sentenced appellant to a suspended ten-year term of confinement but did not mention the fine. The trial judge stated,
In Cause No. 1363508D; State of Texas versus [appellant]. The jury, having found you guilty upon your plea of not guilty to the offense of misapplication of fiduciary property, and having assessed your punishment at 10 years’ confinement in the penitentiary, and having recommended that your sentence be suspended, your sentence is hereby suspended and you will be placed on community supervision for a period of 10 years.3
On direct appeal, appellant contended that the $10,000 fine should not be imposed. Because the fine had not been orally pronounced at sentencing by the trial judge, and because the oral pronouncement
In contrast, the dissent argued that this Court‘s precedent holds that the oral pronouncement governs and the fine should be deleted. Id. at 796-97 (Kerr, J., dissenting). While noting that this rule applies most clearly in non-jury settings, the dissent argued that no court has viewed oral sentencing in a jury trial as purely ministerial or superfluous when done immediately after the jury verdict is read aloud in the defendant‘s presence. Id. at 793. The dissent relied on the rationale underlying the rule, which applies in both the jury and non-jury contexts, namely, that a defendant has a right to be sentenced in person and know with certainty that his sentence will be what was pronounced in his presence. Id. at 795.
In his petition for discretionary review, appellant‘s ground for review asserts that the “court of appeals erred in affirming a fine included in the judgment which had not been orally pronounced by the trial court at sentencing.” Appellant argues that this Court‘s precedent makes clear that fines are part of the sentence and must be pronounced in the defendant‘s presence and that the oral pronouncement of sentence controls over the written judgment when the two conflict. In response, the State argues that the court of appeals correctly resolved the discrepancy between the oral pronouncement and the written judgment. The State submits that jury verdicts are accorded great sanctity and should not be lightly annulled or disregarded. It notes that trial courts are generally powerless to change lawful jury verdicts and have little authority to do anything other than impose the sentence assessed by a jury. Accordingly, the State asserts that jury and non-jury punishment proceedings are different with respect to reviewing discrepancies at sentencing. In a non-jury context, such as a bench trial, a reviewing court is limited to the trial
II. Analysis
While the oral pronouncement of sentence has been held to control over a conflicting sentence embodied in the written judgment, that rule of precedence does not apply when a jury, rather than the trial court, assesses the conflicting aspect of punishment and the jury‘s lawful verdict is correctly read aloud in the defendant‘s presence. In this case, the jury verdict that was read aloud in appellant‘s presence correctly included the $10,000 fine, and the trial court was required to include that fine in the written judgment. Accordingly, we conclude that, despite the trial judge‘s failure to separately orally pronounce the $10,000 fine assessed by the jury, the fine may properly be imposed. We explain our conclusion by first setting forth the applicable law on sentencing. We then discuss why the general rule on oral pronouncements controlling over written judgments does not apply when, as here, a jury‘s lawful verdict is read aloud in court.
The assessment of punishment entails three components: the verdict, the judgment, and the sentence. The “verdict” is the “written declaration by a jury of its decision of the issue submitted to it in the case.”
Defendants have the right to have a jury assess their punishment. See
In this case, the fine was not orally pronounced as part of the sentence but was assessed as part of the jury‘s verdict and included in the written judgment. Thus, two competing principles are implicated. On one hand, this Court has interpreted fines as punitive and therefore part of the sentence assessed by the jury, and they must be pronounced in the defendant‘s presence. See Armstrong v. State, 340 S.W.3d 759, 767 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (“Fines are punitive, and they are intended to be part of the convicted defendant‘s sentence as they are imposed pursuant to Chapter 12 of the Texas Penal Code, which is entitled ‘Punishments.”; “[F]ines generally must be orally pronounced in the defendant‘s presence.”). On the other hand, a trial court must enter the lawful verdict of a jury as the court‘s judgment. See
As a general rule, when the oral pronouncement of sentence and the written judgment vary, the oral pronouncement controls. Taylor v. State, 131 S.W.3d 497, 500 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004); Madding, 70 S.W.3d at 135. Explaining the rationale for this rule, we have stated,
[T]he imposition of sentence is the crucial moment when all of the parties are physically present at the sentencing hearing and able to hear and respond to the imposition of sentence. Once he leaves the courtroom, the defendant begins serving the sentence imposed. Thus, “it is the pronouncement of sentence that is the appealable event, and the written sentence or order simply memorializes it and should comport therewith.”
Madding, 70 S.W.3d at 135 (quoting Coffey v. State, 979 S.W.2d 326, 328 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998)). Moreover, it “violates a defendant‘s constitutional right to due process to orally pronounce sentence to him and then later, without notice to the defendant and without giving him an opportunity to be heard, enter a written judgment imposing a significantly harsher sentence.” Id. 136-37. In Madding, we reasoned,
At a bare minimum, due process requires that a defendant be given notice of the punishment to which he has been sentenced. To orally pronounce one sentence to a defendant‘s face and then to sign a written judgment more than a month later, when the defendant is not present, that embodies an extravagantly different and more severe sentence than the oral sentence, violates any notion of constitutional due process and fair notice. A defendant has a due process “legitimate expectation” that the sentence he heard orally pronounced in the courtroom is the same sentence that he will be required to serve.
However, none of the cases in which this Court has held that the oral pronouncement controls over the written judgment involved a jury‘s verdict on punishment. Rather, we have held the oral pronouncement to control when the conflict concerned
III. Conclusion
We hold that the $10,000 fine assessed by the jury may be properly imposed despite the trial judge‘s failure to orally pronounce it. We, therefore, affirm the court of appeals‘s judgment upholding the imposition of the fine.
Delivered: September 19, 2018
PUBLISH
