Lead Opinion
Following defendant Melvin T. Franklin’s arrest on drug charges, the trial court placed him on home detention with electronic monitoring. Following a bench trial, the court convicted Franklin of Dealing in a Narcotic Drug, a class B felony,
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of credit time for the period Franklin spent on home detention, and Franklin petitioned our Court to grant transfer, which we did on July 16,1997.
Franklin raises for our consideration the sole issue of whether the trial court erred in not granting him credit for at least some portion of the time he served on home detention. Franklin bases his argument on this Court’s holding in Capes v. State,
In Capes, the Court of Appeals had rejected the appellant’s credit time argument on grounds that pre-trial home detention did not serve the goals and purposes of credit time— primarily furthering good behavior in prison. We acknowledged this but pointed out that post-conviction home detention also did not serve those goals and purposes and yet the legislature had specifically provided for credit time for post-conviction home detention. Id. (referring to Ind.Code § 35-38-2.6-6 (1993)). We then observed that there was no good reason to provide credit time to post-conviction home detainees but not pre-trial home detainees. Id. We also concluded that Capes was “confined” for purposes of calculating the accumulation of credit time. Id.
In reaching its decision to affirm the trial court’s denial of credit timé, the Court of Appeals concluded that our holding in Capes v. State was no longer controlling law, and that the “decision is no longer dispositive to [that court’s] analysis.” Franklin v. State,
We think the Court of Appeals was wrong to conclude that Capes was no longer controlling. On occasion, an amendment to existing legislation may explicitly overrule or otherwise definitively affect the holding of a case decided earlier by the Supreme Court. Such an amendment may indicate either a complete change in the law — usually in response to an appellate decision — or merely a clarification of the legislature’s original intent. Joe v. Lebow,
All of that having been said, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the amendment to the post-conviction home detention statute evinces legislative intent that credit time can no longer be awarded to pretrial home detainees. Today, if Franklin were serving time on home detention as part of a community corrections program, he would not be eligible for credit time. We agree that under these circumstances it is appropriate to overrule Capes and hold that Franklin is therefore not eligible for credit for the time he served on pre-trial home detention.
We grant transfer and affirm the trial court.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4 — 1(a) (1993 and Supp. 1995).
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-6(a) (1993 and Supp. 1995).
Concurrence Opinion
concur in result, for the reason that they believe that it is not inappropriate for the Court of Appeals to reach a result contrary to a precedent of this Court if the reasoning behind that precedent is clearly no longer applicable.
