MEMORANDUM OPINION
Gregory Mitchell Sarkissian seeks a writ of mandamus compelling Respondent, the Honorable J.D. Langley, Judge of the 85th District Court of Brazos County, to rule on his motion for judgment nunc pro tunc, in which Sarkissian requests pre-sentence jail time credit. The State responds that Sarkissian is not entitled to the relief requested because: (1) he has presented no evidence that Respondent had actual knowledge of his motion; and (2) he is not entitled to the pre-sentence jail time credit which he seeks. We will deny Sarkissian’s petition.
A jury convicted Sarkissian of burglary of a habitation in March 1994 and assessed his punishment at eighty years’ imprisonment. The Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction in August 1995.
See Sarkissian v. State,
No. 14-94-00395-CR,
Mandamus may issue to compel a trial court to rule on a motion which has been pending before the court for a reasonable period of time.
See In re Hearn,
Here, there is nothing in the limited record before this Court to establish that Sarkissian has ever requested a ruling on his motion for judgment nunc pro tunc or otherwise called that motion to Respondent’s attention. Therefore, we deny Sarkissian’s petition for mandamus relief.
Chief Justice GRAY concurs in the result with the following note:
“For the reasons expressed in my dissent to the request for a response dated January 9, 2008, I concur in the denial of Sarkissian’s petition for writ of mandamus only without a separate opinion.”
