Lead Opinion
Stephen J. Gardner appeals the summary denial of his motion for postconviction relief filed pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. Because we reverse for resentencing on his claim that his sentencing violated double jeopardy principles, Mr. Gardner’s other claims are rendered moot.
Mr. Gardner, a minor in 2003 and 2004 at the time of the crimes for which he was charged, was prosecuted as an adult pursuant to section 985.227, Florida Statutes (2003). He alleges that the sentencing court violated the principles of double jeopardy by initially sentencing him to multiple, concurrent eight-year terms of incarceration for various felonies but later — after returning from a lunch break— by resentencing him to concurrent ten-year minimum mandatory sentences on those same charges. Double jeopardy may be raised for the first time in a 3.850 motion even if not raised at trial or on direct appeal. See Plowman v. State,
The relevant proceedings ended after the trial court sentenced Mr. Gardner to a combination of sentences for his various charges amounting to eight years’ imprisonment followed by two years’ community control and thirteen years’ drug offender probation, ordered restitution be paid, and imposed several other conditions on probation. The trial court found sufficient grounds for a downward departure from the Criminal Punishment Code Sentencing Guidelines after concluding that Mr. Gardner required specialized treatment for a mental disorder unrelated to substance abuse or addiction, that he was amenable to treatment, and that the need for payment of restitution outweighed the need for a lengthy prison sentence.
The court noted the objection, clarified the remaining terms of the various sentences, and concluded the proceedings:
*631 THE COURT: Any misdemeanors, time served.
MR. BODIFORD: Of course, that’s it. THE COURT: Thank you.
MR. BODIFORD: Judge, thank you for your indulgence.
THE COURT: Thank you everyone.
MR. ROSARIO: Thank you, Your Hon- or.
THE COURT: Have a good day. All right, let’s take a 10-minute lunch break.
THE COURT: One more thing, Mr. Gardner, I don’t know what excuse it is that you gave me before or someone gave me before for those [tattoo] teardrops, but my recollection of those teardrops is that they are indeed gang-related.
You’re to have no association upon your release from custody with any known gangs or anyone that is known to be affiliated with a gang; do you understand that?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: Thank you.
Mr. Gardner was taken from the room, and the court then took the announced lunch break. Notably, there is no discussion in the record up to this point of the possible application of a minimum mandatory sentence.
The same attorneys were before the court again following the lunch break. Returning to Mr. Gardner’s ease, the prosecutor announced that he had forgotten to place on the record his objection to the court’s having sentenced Gardner to a term below the minimum mandatory sentence for his offenses.
The court continued the discussion with counsel and Mr. Gardner’s family before Mr. Gardner returned to the courtroom. Upon Mr. Gardner’s return, the court referred to the proceeding held before the break and the discussion with counsel after lunch, declared that a ten-year minimum mandatory sentence applied to his case, and imposed the longer sentence. At the conclusion of the second hearing, Mr. Gardner’s sentence was increased from eight years’ incarceration on the armed burglary charges to ten-year minimum mandatory sentences; the other terms remained unchanged.
Critical to the court’s belief that resen-tencing was necessary seems to be its conclusion that failure to sentence Mr. Gardner to the ten-year minimum mandatory sentence would result in an automatic reversal on appeal by the State. That conclusion is well-supported. See § 775.087(2)(b), (d), Fla. Stat. (2003) (prohibiting imposition of a lesser sentence than otherwise required by law and clarifying the legislative intent that “the minimum terms of imprisonment imposed pursuant to this subsection shall be imposed for each qualifying felony count for which the person is convicted”); State v. Calza-da-Padron,
Nevertheless, the court had no authority to reopen the proceedings once the hearing had concluded and double jeopardy had attached. “Florida law generally accords a level of finality to a sentence once it has been orally pronounced and the defendant has begun to serve the sentence.” Delemos v. State,
Absent a proper appeal, double jeopardy considerations bar increasing even an illegal sentence:
Once a sentence has been imposed and the person begins to serve the sentence, that sentence may not be increased without running afoul of double jeopardy principles. Ashley v. State,850 So.2d 1265 , 1267 (Fla.2003). This is true even if the original sentence was illegal or othenvise erroneous and the correction conforms to applicable law or to the court’s and parties’ intentions at sentencing.
Pate v. State,
[E]ven if the sentence ... were illegal for failing to include the minimum mandatory term, this court has previously held that double jeopardy bars an increase in a sentence once it is imposed and the defendant begins serving it, at least in the absence of a proper appeal .... Under those circumstances, the State is compelled to object and appeal the sentence or the sentence stands as originally imposed.
Delemos,
Although it may appear to serve the interests of judicial economy to permit a trial court to fix an apparently erroneous sentence without requiring a motion or proper appeal, there are clear procedures for correcting such errors on appeal if properly preserved. See Delemos,
Accordingly, we are compelled to reverse the denial of Mr. Gardner’s motion for postconviction relief on this ground and remand with directions that the trial court reimpose the original eight-year sentences
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. See § 921.0026(2)(d), Fla. Stat. (2003). We note that the eight-year sentence is consistent with what Mr. Gardner apparently believed to be successful, restitution-focused plea negotiations with the State and court at the change-of-plea hearing despite the ultimately open nature of his plea.
. In its answer brief, the State accepts Mr. Gardner's statement of the case and statement of facts. While the State suggests that the objection to the downward departure and sentencing below the minimum mandatory occurred only moments after the start of the morning sentencing hearing, both Mr. Gardner's statement of the case and facts and the record reflect that this discussion occurred shortly after the court returned from lunch.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting.
I dissent. I am not certain whether we are holding that Mr. Gardner is entitled to the eight-year term of imprisonment, even though it is illegal, or that he is entitled to receive this sentence subject to the State’s right to have that sentence reversed in a subsequent appeal.
Although I dissent, I recognize the possibility that my disagreement is actually a disagreement with either the holding in Ashley v. State,
Mr. Gardner went to a sentencing hearing having agreed to a maximum prison sentence of ten years’ imprisonment.
Legally, the trial court was required to sentence the defendant pursuant to the express terms of the statute to the ten-year minimum term. The original sentence, which included a downward departure rather than the minimum mandatory term, was an erroneous sentence. See State v. Calzada-Padrón,
In Deísmos v. State,
In other jurisdictions, the defendant’s being taken into custody by the Department of Corrections or, at a minimum, the transfer of custody from the judiciary to the executive, is the point at which the defendant begins to serve the sentence, and the trial court loses its authority to resentence. See People v. Mendoza,
So long as a trial judge is not exercising his or her discretion to increase the severity of the overall sentence that the trial judge intended to impose at the oral pronouncement, I believe we could and should have a procedural mechanism by which trial judges are allowed to correct misstatements and confusions in sentences and to impose mandated sentencing conditions that were overlooked at oral pronouncement. When a judge inadvertently imposes a fifteen-year sentence on a third-degree felony and a five-year sentence on a second-degree felony, for example, I do not understand why constitutional double jeopardy should bar the judge from imposing the intended fifteen-year sentence for the second-degree felony even a few days after the mistake in the oral pronouncement.
A defendant has a right to a legal sentence. This defendant is about to receive the benefit of an illegal sentence, in all likelihood because a judge and several lawyers were anxious to go to lunch. Somehow, Florida’s technical approach to double jeopardy allows inadvertent mistakes to give defendants the right not to legal
. There may have been ineffective assistance of counsel in this case because it does not appear that Mr. Gardner understood that the trial court had no discretion and was compelled to impose a ten-year sentence.
