ORDER
In this application for writ of mandamus, the relator requests that we order the trial court to enter a judgment
nunc pro tunc
awarding him a certain period of pre-trial jail-time credit.
1
The Fourteenth Court of Appeals has already denied the relator mandamus relief,
2
and rightly so. Today
The relator was arrested on July 12, 2006, charged with murder. But on December 17, 2007, some seventeen months later, after the relator’s co-defendant claimed that the relator was not involved in the murder, but only helped destroy the body, the State re-indicted the relator for tampering with evidence, a third degree felony offense at the time of its commission. 4 The relator pled guilty to this newly charged offense in accordance with a plea bargain with the State. The terms of the plea bargain did not embrace credit against the relator’s sentence for any pretrial jail time. At the time that the relator entered his plea, on March 4, 2008, counsel for the relator made a statement for the record that he intended, at some later date, to make an issue of whether the relator should be credited for the time he spent in jail on the original murder charge, before he was re-indicted for tampering with evidence. He alerted the trial court that “it’s something you may have to deal with down the road” in the guise of a motion nunc pro tunc, but he also assured the trial court that “it is not affecting the plea in this case today.” The trial court accepted the guilty plea and sentenced the relator to ten years’ confinement in the penitentiary, crediting him with no more than the 78 days between the date of re-indictment for tampering with evidence and the date of sentencing. The trial court also dismissed the murder indictment.
The relator’s present counsel (different than trial counsel) subsequently filed a motion for judgment nunc pro tunc, which the trial court denied. Present counsel then filed an application for writ of mandamus in the court of appeals. That court denied mandamus relief, observing that whether the relator was entitled to credit against his sentence for the time he spent in jail on the murder charge before he was re-indicted for tampering with evidence was a matter for judicial determination, requiring the trial court “to weigh and resolve conflicting legal claims.” 5 Relying upon this Court’s opinion in Collins v. State, 6 the court of appeals held that “[b]ecause the trial court was required to make a determination regarding whether [the relator] was entitled to additional jail time credit, no ministerial act was implicated.” 7 Mandamus relief is unavailable to compel non-ministerial judicial acts. 8
The moral of the story: If a claim of pre-trial jail-time credit involves a question of the proper construction of the statute, as here, trial counsel would do well to try to preserve the issue for appellate resolution. Post-conviction remedies will prove to be of no avail.
filed a statement respecting the denial of relief.
I join the Court’s order with these understandings:
(1) Its last sentence (“Post-conviction remedies will be of no avail”) is limited to extraordinary writs that directly seek a nunc pro tunc change in the judgment.
(2) Our decision does not address the question whether extraordinary writs may be used to bring a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to seek proper award of jail-time credit in the judgment of conviction.
Notes
.
See Ex parte Florence,
.
In re Sean Huston Brown,
. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 42.03, § 2(a)(1) (“In all criminal cases the judge of the court in which the defendant is convicted shall give the defendant credit on the defendant's sentence for the time that the defendant has spent ... in jail for the case ... from the time of his arrest and confinement until his sentence by the trial court”).
. See Tex. Penal Code § 37.09(c) & (d)(1) prior to amendment by Acts 2007, 80th Leg. ch. 287, § 1, p. 561, eff. Sept. 1, 2007.
. In re Brown, supra at *2.
.
. In re Brown, supra.
.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Young v. Sixth. Jud. Dist. Court of Appeals,
.
Ex parte Ybarra,
.
See Simon v. Levario,
.
. Tex.R.Apf. P.72.1 & 72.2.
