Bernard A. JOYNER, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*671 Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender, and Shannon P. McKenna, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
Bill McCollum, Attorney General, and Nikole Hiciano, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Before COPE, SUAREZ, and CORTIÑAS, JJ.
COPE, J.
This is an appeal from an order denying a motion under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(a) for additional credit for jail time served. We affirm.
According to the motion filed by defendant-appellant Bernard Joyner, in 2004 the defendant entered into a plea agreement and was sentenced to five years probation for the offense of false imprisonment. According to the motion, he was incarcerated for 122 days prior to his release on probation.
In 2006, the defendant was arrested for violation of probation. He entered a plea of admission to the violation and was sentenced to two years incarceration in the Department of Corrections. He was incarcerated for seventy-eight days in jail prior to his commitment to the Department. The trial court awarded seventy-eight days of credit for jail time served.
The defendant subsequently filed the motion now before us, contending that he is entitled to credit for an additional 122 days, representing the 122 days he served in 2004 prior to his initial placement on probation. The trial court summarily denied the motion. The defendant has appealed.
To support the denial, the court attached the following agreement dated February 15, 2007:
AGREEMENT On CREDIT FOR TIME SERVED
1. I, Bernard Joyner, am the Defendant in Case No. FO336010
2. I am (check one):
____ pleading guilty
____ pleading no contest
____ admitting to a violation of community control
*672 X Admitting to a violation of probation
3. I understand and agree that as part of my plea bargain I will be receiving the following credit for time served (check one and fill in as appropriate):
[✓] From 11-29, 2006 to 2-15, 2007
[] ____ days credit for time served
[] all credit for time served
[] no credit for time served
(Emphasis in original). The form was signed by the defendant, defense counsel, the assistant state attorney, and the judge.[1]
The question before us is whether the agreement operated as a waiver of the defendant's claim for the 122 days he served in 2004. By statute a defendant is to be given "credit for all of the time she or he spent in the county jail before sentence." § 921.161(1), Fla. Stat. (2004). Credit for time served may be waived, however, as part of a plea agreement. Prangler v. State,
We affirm the denial of relief on authority of Johnson v. State,
At the court's request, the parties have addressed the question whether there is an internal conflict of this court's decisions regarding whether there is a waiver of credit for time served, when a provision in the plea agreement states that credit is to be provided from a particular date.[2] The defendant contends that there is a conflict between the language just quoted in Johnson and four of this court's earlier decisions: Griffin v. State,
In Cozza, this court remanded because the plea colloquy was not in the postconviction record on appeal.
In Ryan, the defendant accepted a plea offer by the court and the court pronounced sentence.
In Griffin, this court enforced a waiver of credit for time served for the period prior to the defendant's sentencing on March 6, 2000.
In Sommers, the defendant was sentenced to a split sentence of twelve years incarceration followed by ten years of probation.
Sommers contended that he was entitled to additional credit for time served, namely, the time he served on his original prison sentence in the Department of Corrections. The State maintained that the defendant's plea agreement which resolved the second affidavit of violation (when the defendant was sentenced to community control and probation) amounted to a waiver of a claim of credit for time served when, eleven months later, the defendant was sentenced to fifteen years incarceration. This court disagreed, saying that the earlier agreement "does not amount to a global waiver of credit for all time served, as the state suggests." Id. at 380 n. 1. See generally § 921.0017, Fla. Stat. (2001) (requiring credit for time served in certain split sentence cases).
In the case now before us the defendant entered the agreement quoted above, which provided for credit for time served between two stated dates. The present case is indistinguishable from this court's decision in Johnson,
Affirmed.[4]
NOTES
Notes
[1] The plea colloquy was not transcribed. The sole basis of denial of relief was the agreement.
[2] The court expresses its appreciation to the public defender and the State for filing their responses on an expedited basis. The defendant had asserted an entitlement to immediate release from incarceration.
[3] This agreement apparently provided for credit which would be applied against the defendant's two-year term of community control.
[4] Speaking for himself, the writer of this opinion suggests that the Agreement on Credit for Time Served could be improved by including an express waiver clause, see Hinkel v. State,
