We granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in
Fleming v. State,
The relevant facts in
Fleming
and
Burleson
are set forth in the Court of Appeals opinions. A jury found Denorris Fleming guilty of an armed robbery and simple assault which took place on April 21, 1996. At Fleming’s March 25, 1997 sentencing hearing, the trial court refused to consider Fleming’s first offender petition based on the court’s reading of
State v. Stuckey,
Former OCGA § 17-10-6.1 (b), in effect at the times of commissions of the crimes and original sentencings in these cases, provided:
Notwithstanding any other provisions of law to the contrary, any person convicted of a serious violent felony . . . [armed robbery; kidnapping; rape; aggravated child molestation; aggravated sodomy; aggravated sexual battery] shall be sentenced to a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment of ten years and no portion of the mandatory minimum sentence imposed shall be suspended, stayed, probated, deferred, or withheld by the sentencing court and shall not be reduced by any form of pardon, parole, or commutation of sentence by the State Board of Pardons and Paroles.
(Emphasis supplied.)
In 1997, the Court of Appeals addressed the relationship between then OCGA § 17-10-6.1 and the First Offender Act in
State v. Allmond,
Following the Allmond decision, the legislature declared its “expressed intent” that persons who commit a serious violent felony specified in the Sentence Reform Act of 1994 be sentenced to a mandatory term of imprisonment of not less than ten years. Ga. L. 1998, p. 180, § 1. Consequently, the legislature amended OCGA § 17-10-6.1 (b), 2 effective March 27, 1998, and enacted a new provision in *589 the First Offender Act, OCGA § 42-8-66, 3 effective on the same date, to state that a defendant who is convicted of a serious violent felony as defined in OCGA § 17-10-6.1 (a) is not eligible for first offender treatment under OCGA § 42-8-60. Now a majority of the Court of Appeals in Fleming overrules State v. Allmond, stating that it is doing so “based on several factors, most important of which is the legislature’s recent pronouncement” on the interplay of punishment for serious violent offenders under OCGA § 17-10-6.1 and the First Offender Act.
However, the majority analysis misses the mark. It is premised upon two concepts of statutory construction ill-suited to these appeals: If examination of a subsequent statute in pari materia reveals the meaning that the legislature attached to the words of a former statute, it will amount to a legislative declaration of its meaning and it will govern the construction of the former statute; and subsequent legislation declaring the intent of the legislature in enacting an earlier statute is entitled to great weight. See
Bd. of Trustees, Policemen’s Pension Fund &c. v. Christy,
But, judicial construction is necessary only when a statute is ambiguous; in fact, when the language of a statute is plain and unequivocal, judicial construction is not only unnecessary but forbidden.
City ofJesup v. Bennett,
More significantly, the Court of Appeals’ analysis of this penal statute providing for punishment, and its consequences for Fleming and Burleson, run afoul of basic precepts of criminal jurisprudence. A criminal statute’s unambiguous words may not be altered by judicial construction in order to extend punishment, however deserving of the punishment the person’s conduct may seem.
Waldroup v. State,
What is more, the Court of Appeals majority analysis implicates ex post facto concerns. “In general, a law is ex post facto if it inflicts upon the party ... a greater punishment than the law annexed to the crime at the time it was committed or it alters the situation of the accused to his disadvantage.
Todd v. State,
Finally, the
Fleming
majority stated it was relying in part on this Court’s decision in
Campbell v. State,
Accordingly, the judgments of the Court of Appeals are reversed and these cases are returned to the Court of Appeals for action consistent with this opinion.
Judgments reversed.
Notes
In Stuckey, the sentence imposed was held to be void based on the determination that the trial court had no jurisdiction to probate a sentence imposed on conviction of armed robbery; the case did not involve the First Offender Act.
Amended OCGA § 17-10-6.1 (b) added:
No person convicted of a serious violent felony as defined in subsection (a) of this Code section shall be sentenced as a first offender pursuant to Article 3 of Chapter 8 of Title 42, relating to probation for first offenders, or any other provision of Geor *589 gia law relating to the sentencing of first offenders. The State of Georgia shall have the right to appeal any sentence which is imposed by the superior court which does not conform to the provisions of this subsection in the same manner as is provided for other appeals by the state in accordance with Chapter 7 of Title 5, relating to appeals or certiorari by the state.
OCGA § 42-8-66 provides:
The provisions of this article shall not apply to any person who is convicted of a serious violent felony as defined in subsection (a) of Code Section 17-10-6.1.
