David L. MADDOX, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.
Alfonso Edwards, Petitioner,
v.
State of Florida, Respondent.
Jason Tyrone Speights, Petitioner,
v.
State of Florida, Respondent.
Terry Hyden, Petitioner,
v.
State of Florida, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*93 James B. Gibson, Public Defender, and Michael S. Becker, Assistant Public Defender, Seventh Judicial Circuit, Daytona Beach, Florida, for Petitioner in No. SC92805.
James B. Gibson, Public Defender, and Brynn Newton, Assistant Public Defender, Seventh Judicial Circuit, Daytona Beach, Florida, for Petitioner in No. SC93000.
Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender, and Angela Shelley, P. Douglas Brinkmeyer and Michael J. Minerva, Assistant Public Defenders, Second Judicial Circuit, Tallahassee, Florida, for Petitioner in No. SC93207.
Richard L. Jorandby, Public Defender, and Susan D. Cline, Assistant Public Defender, Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, West Palm Beach, Florida, for Petitioner in No. SC93966.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, James W. Rogers, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, and Wesley Heidt, Assistant Attorney General, Daytona Beach, Florida, for Respondents David L. Maddox and Alfonso Edwards in Nos. SC92805 and SC93000.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and James W. Rogers and Trina Kramer, Assistant Attorneys General, Tallahassee, Florida, for Respondent Jason Speights in No. SC93207.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, James W. Rogers, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, Celia Terenzio, Bureau Chief, and Ettie Feistmann and Elaine L. Thompson, Assistant Attorneys General, West Palm Beach, Florida, for Respondent Terry Hyden in No. SC93966.
PARIENTE, J.
We have for review the en banc decision of the Fifth District Court of Appeal in *94 Maddox v. State,
For purposes of oral argument, on our own motion, we consolidated Maddox with Hyden, Edwards v. State,
We anticipate that the amendments to rule 3.800(b) recently promulgated by this Court in Amendments to Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure 3.111(e) & 3.800 & Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure 9.020(h), 9.140, & 9.600,
We conclude that nothing in the Act or our prior jurisprudence prevents appellate courts from addressing certain unpreserved sentencing errors on direct appeal. Thus, in those cases where the appellant's first appellate brief was filed before our recent enactment of rule 3.800(b) in Amendments II, we approve of the district courts' holdings in Nelson, Bain, Jordan and Hyden to the extent that they recognize *95 that a narrow class of unpreserved sentencing errors can be raised on direct appeal as fundamental error.[4] We disapprove of the Fifth District's decision in Maddox to the extent it holds that no sentencing error may be considered on direct appeal unless such error has been preserved for review by either a contemporaneous objection during the sentencing hearing or a motion to correct sentence filed in the trial court after the sentencing hearing pursuant to rule 3.800(b). However, as will be explained in this opinion, we agree with the ultimate result in Maddox that sentencing errors regarding assessment of costs are not fundamental errors that can be raised on appeal if not preserved for appellate review.
CONSIDERATION OF "FUNDAMENTAL" SENTENCING ERRORS ON DIRECT APPEAL IN LIGHT OF THE ACT
The primary sections of the Act that are at issue in this case provide that:
(3) An appeal may not be taken from a judgment or order of a trial court unless a prejudicial error is alleged and is properly preserved or, if not properly preserved, would constitute fundamental error. A judgment or sentence may be reversed on appeal only when an appellate court determines after a review of the complete record that prejudicial error occurred and was properly preserved in the trial court or, if not properly preserved, would constitute fundamental error.
(4) If a defendant pleads nolo contendere without expressly reserving the right to appeal a legally dispositive issue, or if a defendant pleads guilty without expressly reserving the right to appeal a legally dispositive issue, the defendant may not appeal the judgment or sentence.
§ 924.051(3)-(4). The goal of the 1996 enactment of the Criminal Appeal Reform Act was "to ensure that all claims of error are raised and resolved at the first opportunity." § 924.051(8). This goal is consistent with the policy of this Court that sentencing errors should be handled by the trial courts at the earliest opportunity rather than on appeal or in the postconviction process. See Amendments II,
Section 924.051(3) specifically gives defendants the right to raise, and appellate courts the authority to correct, "fundamental error." The Act neither defines "fundamental error" nor differentiates between trial and sentencing error. It is certainly reasonable to assume that, rather than attempting to alter the definition of fundamental error as it evolved through case law, the Legislature intentionally deferred to the judicially created definition of "fundamental error." See Bain,
As Judge Altenbernd observed, "In its narrowest functional definition, `fundamental error' describes an error that can be remedied on direct appeal, even though the appellant made no contemporaneous objection in the trial court and, thus, the trial judge had no opportunity to correct the error." Judge v. State,
Although most of this Court's definitions of fundamental error describe trial error, this Court has at times referred to unpreserved errors in the sentencing context as "fundamental" and corrected them on direct appeal. See State v. Johnson,
Although the entry of a guilty plea foreclosed the defendant's ability to appeal events occurring before the entry of the plea other than a claim that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, see Robinson v. State,
We thus conclude that section 924.051(3) of the Act specifically recognizes the ability of defendants to raise fundamental sentencing errors on direct appeal. We likewise find that the language of section 924.051(4), concerning the right to appeal following the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, does not preclude this Court from considering on appeal fundamental sentencing errors. In Amendments I, we found that under section 924.051(4), "the principle of Robinson controls" and defendants "must have the right to appeal that limited class of issues described in Robinson." Amendments I,
We next examine whether this Court's procedural rules preclude the consideration of all unpreserved sentencing errors on appeal, no matter the nature of the error or its seriousness. In concluding that unpreserved sentencing errors should no longer be considered on direct appeal, the Fifth District in Maddox relied upon this Court's promulgation of procedural rules that both provide a mechanism for preservation of sentencing errors following the hearing and require that sentencing errors be preserved for review. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.800(b); Fla. R.App. P. 9.140(b)(2)(B), 9.140(d).[7]
We acknowledge that rule 9.140(d) requires that sentencing errors be preserved, either through a contemporaneous objection or the filing of a motion pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(b). We adopted both of these rules in 1996 in response to the passage of the Act. See Amendments I,
As the Second District pointed out in Bain, "[T]he question of whether an error is fundamental has never turned on the existence vel non of a mechanism for correcting it in the lower court."
The reason that courts correct error as fundamental despite the failure of the parties to adhere to procedural rules requiring preservation is not to protect the interests of a particular aggrieved party, but rather to protect the interests of justice itself. See Bain,
THE GOAL OF JUDICIAL EFFICIENCY
In addition to our recognition of the possibility that the failure to review certain serious sentencing errors would undermine the fairness of the judicial process, we do not find that rigid adherence to the contemporaneous objection rule always serves the goal of judicial efficiency. As Judge Altenbernd observed:
If a goal of criminal appeal reform is efficiency, we are hard pressed to argue that this court should not order correction of an illegal sentence or a facial conflict between oral and written sentences on a direct appeal when we have jurisdiction over other issues. Although it is preferable for the trial courts to correct their own sentencing errors, little is gained if the appellate courts require prisoners to file, and trial courts to process, more postconviction motions to correct errors that can be safely identified on direct appeal.
Denson v. State,
The assumption of some of the appellate courts that declined to address even serious unpreserved sentencing errors on appeal was that defendants would not be without a remedy because they could seek postconviction relief. See Maddox,
Certainly, there is little risk that a defendant will suffer an injustice because of this new procedure; if any aspect of a sentencing is "fundamentally" erroneous and if counsel fails to object at sentencing or file a motion within thirty days in accordance with the rule, the remedy of ineffective assistance of counsel will be available. It is hard to imagine that the failure to preserve a sentencing error that would formerly have been characterized as "fundamental" would not support an "ineffective assistance" claim.
Id. (emphasis supplied). But see Judge,
Another potential problem with requiring defendants to correct unpreserved sentencing errors through postconviction motions is that defendants in noncapital cases will not necessarily be afforded counsel during collateral proceedings. See Russo v. Akers,
As the State made clear during oral argument, it has no interest in any defendant serving a sentence that is longer than the sentence authorized by law. Based on all these considerations, we conclude that the interests of justice will not be advanced if appellate courts decline to correct certain categories of sentencing errors for criminal defendants whose appellate briefs were filed during the window period after the enactment of the Act but before the adoption of our recent procedural changes in Amendments II.
TYPES OF UNPRESERVED SENTENCING ERRORS THAT SHOULD BE CORRECTED ON APPEAL DURING THIS WINDOW PERIOD
The more difficult question arises when we attempt to provide a meaningful predictor of what unpreserved sentencing errors should still be considered on direct appeal after the Act and before the effective date of Amendments II. "It is no secret that the courts have struggled to establish a meaningful definition of `fundamental error' that would be predictive as compared to descriptive." Denson,
In addition to the lack of a predictive definition of fundamental error, in many cases decided before the Act, this Court did not analyze whether an unpreserved sentencing error constituted fundamental error before correcting it on appeal. Compare Wood,
However, there is no doubt that the Act and our subsequent procedural rules changed the legal landscape to limit the types of unpreserved sentencing errors that may be raised on direct appeal to only those that can be deemed "fundamental." See Hyden,
The first requirement for a sentencing error to be correctable on appeal continues to be that it is patent. In other words, the error must be apparent from the record. See, e.g., State v. Montague,
More important, however, is the second requirement: in order to be considered fundamental, an error must be serious. In determining the seriousness of an error, the inquiry must focus on the nature of the error, its qualitative effect on the sentencing process and its quantitative effect on the sentence. See Bain, 730 So.2d *100 at 304-05. In most cases, a fundamental sentencing error will be one that affects the determination of the length of the sentence such that the interests of justice will not be served if the error remains uncorrected. See Johnson,
Our societal values are such that in the sentencing context we are more solicitous of personal liberty than of pecuniary interests. Thus, an error that improperly extends the defendant's incarceration or supervision likely would impress us as fundamental. But only in an extreme case would an improper cost assessment or public defender's lien qualify as fundamental error.
Bain,
We also reaffirm the principle that whether an unpreserved sentencing error is considered a "fundamental" error for direct appeal does not equate with whether that error constitutes an illegal sentence correctable through a rule 3.800(a) motion filed at any time, even decades after the sentence became final. In explaining the difference between unpreserved sentencing errors cognizable on direct appeal and those cognizable in the postconviction process, Judge Altenbernd observed:
"Generally, fundamental errors are those of constitutional dimension. But not all errors of constitutional dimension are fundamental." On direct appeal, there is a healthy tendency to occasionally find a constitutional "dimension" in some errors and to declare the errors "fundamental," even though they may not rise to the level of an actual deprivation of the appellant's constitutional rights. ... The mere fact that an error, especially a procedural error, is fundamental for purposes of relief on direct appeal is no guaranty that the error must be corrected on postconviction motion when it was neither preserved in the trial court nor argued on direct appeal.
Judge,
For example, in Summers v. State,
The appellate courts have been confronted with a variety of unpreserved sentencing errors and many of these cases have been accepted for review in this Court. See Appendix (chart summarizing related cases pending before this Court). These unpreserved errors range from the erroneous assessment of de minimis costs to errors that increase the actual length of the defendant's sentence. In an attempt to be predictive as well as descriptive, we review the cases pending in our Court in which we have been asked to determine whether an unpreserved sentencing error can be corrected on direct appeal in order to categorize the types of sentencing errors that constitute patent, serious sentencing errors that should be corrected during this window period as fundamental error.
A. Sentences Exceeding the Statutory Maximum
In Leonard v. State,
As the First District reasoned, "The extraordinary provision made for remedying illegal sentences evidences the utmost importance of correcting such errors, even at the expense of legal principles that might preclude relief from trial court errors of less consequence." Sanders v. State,
With the exception of the Fifth District, the district courts are in accord that this type of patent and serious sentencing error, which has a quantitative impact on the length of sentence served by the defendant, should be corrected on direct appeal as fundamental error. See, e.g., Bain,
B. Improper Habitualization
We also accepted jurisdiction in several cases in which the defendant alleges *102 that a habitual offender sentence was imposed in violation of the statutory requirements. See Speights,
When a habitual violent felony offender sentence is imposed without record evidence of a prior conviction of an enumerated predicate felony, but without any objection by the defendant to the imposition of such a sentence, and the resulting sentence is above the statutory maximum without habitualization but below the statutory maximum period of incarceration after habitualization, is the sentencing error one that may be raised on appeal for the first time, and corrected despite the lack of any motion in the trial court to correct the sentence pursuant to Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.800(b)?
Speights,
The consequences to the defendant of improper habitualization are graphically demonstrated in Speights, where the defendant's guidelines sentence was six years and two months and the statutory maximum for the offense without habitualization was fifteen years. However, because the defendant was improperly habitualized, he received a twenty-two year sentence. The First District reasoned that even though the offense of carjacking was not a statutorily-authorized predicate offense for habitualizaton, the sentence was not "illegal" because it did not exceed the statutory maximum for the offense after habitualization. See id. After the First District's decision, the State conceded error during oral argument in Speights v. State, and pursuant to that concession, we ordered the trial court to correct the sentence immediately. See Speights v. State,
Further, without expressly receding from Speights, the First District in McKnight in fact corrected a similar error of improper habitualization "because habitual offender sentencing is expressly prohibited for possession of cocaine, and the sentence exceeds the maximum permissible non-habitual offender statute for that offense."
Because we find that improper habitualization of the defendant contrary to specific statutory requirements is a patent, serious error that has a quantifiable effect on the length of the defendant's incarceration, we find that this type of error should be corrected on direct appeal as fundamental. For these reasons we approve the First District's opinions in McKnight and Nelson and the Second District's opinion in Denson on this issue. Accordingly, we answer the certified question in Speights in the affirmative and, as we did by previous order in Speights, quash the district court's opinion in Edwards. We also disapprove *103 the district court's decisions in Smith and Jerry.
C. Impact on Length of Incarceration
We have pending for our review the district courts' decisions in Seccia v. State,
We have previously required that defendants contemporaneously object to alleged sentencing errors in the scoresheet if the error is based upon disputed factual matters. See Montague,
We further note that district courts have addressed sentencing errors that could significantly impact a defendant's length of incarceration. Although the Fourth District first stated in Hyden,
D. Deviation from Oral Pronouncement of Sentence: Increased Length of Incarceration
In a number of cases pending on review, the defendant claims that the written sentence is in error because it conflicts with the trial court's oral pronouncement of sentence at the sentencing hearing. See Greenwood v. State,
We conclude that serious errors resulting from deviations in the written sentence from the oral pronouncement should continue to be corrected on appeal during this window period where the sentencing error has a qualitative effect on the integrity of the sentencing process or when it has a quantitative effect on the length of the sentence. We agree with the Second District in Denson that a deviation from an oral pronouncement that results in an increased term of incarceration is a patent, serious sentencing error that should be corrected on appeal as fundamental during this window period.
We thus disapprove the opinion in Greenwood, in which the State concedes that a deviation from the oral pronouncement resulted in a written sentence that failed to give the defendant credit for six-months' of jail time. The failure to award jail credit for time previously served is a fundamental sentencing error that should be corrected during the window period even though unpreserved. See State v. Mancino,
Similarly, we conclude that in these cases the appellate courts should correct errors such as those that occurred in Peavy v. State,
E. Deviation from Oral Pronouncement of Condition of Probation
The next category of sentencing errors we have for review are those involving conditions of probation. In Hyden, the Fourth District concluded that it would not correct an unpreserved error arising when the trial court failed to orally announce conditions of probation at the sentencing hearing that were subsequently imposed in the written sentencing order.
Prior to the Act, we differentiated between "general conditions of probation" and "special conditions of probation." See Williams,
However, we distinguished special conditions of probation, which are not statutorily authorized or mandated or found among the first eleven general conditions of probation listed in the rules of criminal procedure. See Williams,
Because we allowed courts to impose general conditions of probation that have not been orally pronounced, it is clear that our primary concern in correcting unannounced special conditions of probation is the due process violation occurring when a person does not have notice and an opportunity to object to the condition of probation. However, following our promulgation of rule 3.800(b), defendants have been given a procedural mechanism to object to the imposition of special conditions of probation that have not been orally pronounced. This procedural mechanism satisfies due process concerns because the defendant has an opportunity to object following the imposition of the special condition of probation.
In a somewhat related context, we found that absent a contemporaneous objection, a defendant could challenge a condition of probation as being overly burdensome "only if it is so egregious as to be the equivalent of fundamental error." Larson,
Further, we do not find that the deviation from the oral pronouncement of the conditions of probation imposed in Hyden is an error, let alone fundamental error. See Brock,
We thus find that considering the nature of the claimed error, the absence of any qualitative effect on the sentencing process, and the absence of any quantitative effect on the sentence, the imposition of the condition of probation that was not orally announced in Hyden does not constitute a fundamental sentencing error that should be considered on direct appeal. We also note that in none of our pending cases has the appellant made a claim that he or she did not have notice of the deviation from oral pronouncement of the conditions of probation in time to file a rule 3.800(b) motion.[13]
Accordingly, we approve the district court's opinion in Hyden to the extent that it is consistent with this opinion.
F. Departure Sentences
A number of defendants in cases we have accepted for review have alleged that their sentences were erroneously imposed because the trial court did not comply with statutory and procedural requirements to orally announce the reasons for departure during the sentencing hearing and to file written reasons for imposing a departure sentence within seven days after sentencing. See Butler v. State,
The sentencing statutes provide that the "recommended guidelines sentence" is "assumed to be appropriate for the offender." § 921.0016(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (Supp.1996). The Legislature codified the sentencing guidelines in order to provide "a uniform set of standards to guide the sentencing judge in the sentence decision making process" and to "eliminate unwarranted variation in the sentencing process by reducing the subjectivity" in evaluating sentencing criteria. § 921.001(4), Fla. Stat. (1995); see also Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.701(b). To accomplish these goals, the statute mandates that if a trial judge decides to impose a sentence that departs from the guidelines by more than twenty-five percent, the written sentence
must be accompanied by a written statement delineating the reasons for the departure, filed within 7 days after the date of sentencing. A written transcription of orally stated reasons for departure from the guidelines at sentencing is permissible if it is filed by the court within 7 days after the date of sentencing.
§ 921.0016(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (Supp.1996). Likewise, this Court's procedural rules require that the trial court file written reasons justifying the imposition of a departure sentence. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.701(d)(11).[14]
*107 Commencing with Pope v. State,
In the departure context, however, this Court distinguished between departure sentences following a trial and those based on a negotiated plea. A valid plea agreement constitutes clear and convincing grounds for the trial judge to impose a departure sentence. See State v. Williams,
We conclude that for defendants who did not agree to the imposition of a departure sentence in a plea agreement, the policy reasons for correcting a departure sentence in which the trial court failed to file statutorily required written reasons for departure are still applicable following the Act. We conclude that this statutory omission is an important one that affects the integrity of the sentencing process concerning the critical question of the length of the sentence. For example, in Butler, the appellant's guideline sentence was two-and-one-half to five-and-one-half years, whereas the trial court imposed a fifteen-year sentence and did not file any written reasons for imposing the departure sentence. Thus, we disapprove the First District's opinion in Butler, where the First District held that the defendant could not raise the unpreserved error.[15] However, we do not recede from our opinion in Davis that precluded consideration of this *108 type of error under 3.800(a) as an illegal sentence to be considered at any time.
We next consider whether the failure to file written reasons in a timely manner also constitutes a serious, patent sentencing error that can be corrected as fundamental error. We recognize that prior to the Act, we found that the failure to file any written reasons for departure and the failure to timely file written reasons for departure were "closely related." Davis,
In contrast to the statute construed in our earlier departure cases, the 1996 statute only requires that written reasons for departure be filed within seven days following sentencing. See § 921.0016(1)(c). Further, rule 3.800(b) gave defendants thirty days in which to challenge a departure sentence based on invalid reasons. In our opinion, while there is a qualitative effect on the integrity of the sentencing process when the trial court fails to file any written reasons for imposing a departure sentence, this same concern is not present when the written reasons are filed late but within sufficient time for the defendant to file a motion to correct the sentence on this basis. See Weiss,
In Johnson, the trial court did not orally announce reasons for imposing a departure sentence during the sentencing hearing as required by rule 3.702(d)(18)(A), but filed written reasons for departure within the seven days allowed by statute.
G. Improper Assessment of Costs
We next address the largest single category of unpreserved sentencing errors that have inundated the appellate courtsunpreserved errors in assessment of costs. Along with a great number of other cases pending before us,[16] the sentencing errors at issue in both Maddox and Hyden involve the improper imposition of costs.[17] These errors were not *109 preserved for appellate review by either a contemporaneous objection or the filing of a motion to correct the sentence pursuant to rule 3.800(b). In contrast to those serious, patent sentencing errors that should be corrected on direct appeal as fundamental, we find that unpreserved errors in the assessment of costs do not warrant the attention of the appellate courts. As pointed out by Judge Warner in the Fourth District's en banc opinion in Hyden, judicial efficiency is sacrificed when a defendant utilizes "all of the resources of the appellate systema brief filed by a public defender, the services of the clerk and court, and the review of the case by three judgesin order to correct such mistakes which frequently involve nominal sums."
Prior to the Act, this Court considered the imposition of discretionary costs without notice and an opportunity to object to be fundamental error because it violated due process. See Wood,
Even before the Act, we found that if a statute or rule mandates the imposition of costs, no error occurs when the costs are imposed without actual notice and an opportunity to object. See State v. Beasley,
The addition of Rule 3.800(b) and Rule 9.140(d) has changed the legal landscape with respect to whether it remains fundamental error to impose a public defender's fee or costs where the defendant failed to move to correct the sentence or order of probation. Wood explains that without adequate notice and a meaningful hearing, the requirements of due process are not met in imposing costs upon a defendant who may be indigent. See544 So.2d at 1006 . Assuming that prior to the sentence a defendant is not given notice of the state's intent to impose costs and a public defenders' fee, once the fees are imposed in the sentence, the defendant surely has notice of them. If the defendant contests either the ability to pay such fees or the amount, he or she can file a motion to correct the sentence, pursuant to Rule 3.800(b), contesting the imposition and requesting a hearing. This gives the defendant, the trial court, and the state an expeditious manner for correcting the problem by holding a hearing on the matter.
Hyden,
The improper assessment of six dollars in costs in Maddox,
As with the pending cases in which the defendant asserts error because of a deviation from the oral pronouncement imposing conditions of probation, in none of the pending cases where the defendant asserts an improper error in the imposition of a cost has the appellant made a claim that the appellate record establishes that he or she did not have notice of the imposition of the costs in time to file a rule 3.800(b) motion.
We thus approve of the district courts' opinions in Maddox and Hyden to the extent that they recognize that unpreserved errors in the assessment of costs do not constitute fundamental error that are correctable on direct appeal. However, we disapprove the dicta in both cases that is inconsistent with the definition of fundamental sentencing error set forth in this opinion.[18]
CONCLUSION
It is the duty of this Court to ensure the fair and efficient administration of the criminal justice system. We have recognized in Amendments II that the procedural rules we previously promulgated did not provide a failsafe mechanism to correct and preserve sentencing errors in the trial court. Neither the interests of justice nor judicial economy will be served by preventing the appellate courts from correcting as fundamental error those serious, patent sentencing errors that have been brought to the courts' attention through the issues raised on appeal. Thus, during the window period between the enactment of the Criminal Appeal Reform Act and this Court's recent opinion in Amendments II, the appellate courts should correct as fundamental error those serious, patent sentencing errors that fit into the types of categories and descriptions set forth in this opinion.
It is so ordered.
SHAW, ANSTEAD, LEWIS and QUINCE, JJ., concur.
WELLS, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with an opinion, in which HARDING, C.J., concurs.
APPENDIX Adside v. State,WELLS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I certainly respect and appreciate the hard work of Justice Pariente in this labyrinth of cases. In concur in the result obtained in all cases except Butler v. State,
I write further for two reasons. First, to acknowledge that I believe Judge Joanos's opinion in Nelson v. State,
Second, I believe the result in these cases is dictated by the necessity of orderly process. I am concerned that if all these cases are forced into postconviction that there will be an overwhelmingly adverse impact on the trial courts and, more importantly, that justice in some of these cases will never be served.
Finally, though, I must state that I am concerned about the nebulous definition of fundamental error as being "patent and serious." "Serious" is, of course, a relative value judgment, and I believe it will be very difficult to apply. However, I resolve this concern for now with a recognition that this is an evolving definition for a limited period of time. The definition perhaps can be refined as it is applied.
HARDING, C.J., concurs.
NOTES
Notes
[1] We have jurisdiction over the district court's decision in Maddox on the basis of direct and express conflict. See art. V, § (3)(b)3, Fla. Const.
[2] Different provisions of the Florida Constitution grant our authority to review each of these decisions. We have jurisdiction over the decision in Hyden because the district court certified conflict with Neal v. State,
[3] In our opinion on rehearing in Amendments II, we clarified that rule 3.800(b) was not intended to apply to capital defendants.
[4] In this opinion we address only the question of whether unpreserved sentencing errors should be corrected in those noncapital criminal appeals filed in the window period between the effective date of the Act and the effective date of our recent amendment to rule 3.800(b) in Amendments II.
[5] In Robinson, this Court stated that four types of errors could be raised on appeal if the defendant pleaded guilty: (1) lack of subject matter jurisdiction; (2) illegality of the sentence; (3) failure of the government to abide by a plea agreement; and (4) the voluntary and intelligent character of the plea.
[6] The Court in Robinson stated that defendants who pleaded guilty could raise an "illegal" sentence on appeal.
[7] We agree with the Fifth District that the purpose of our promulgation of rule 3.800(b) was to provide a means for defendants to correct these sentencing errors by filing a motion in the trial court within 30 days of the entry of judgment and thereby preserve any error for appellate review. See Amendments I,
[8] We note that in Davis,
[9] We recognize that pursuant to section 921.001(5), Florida Statutes (1993), the sentencing guidelines may have, for some cases, provided statutory authority for the trial court to impose a higher sentence than allowed by the "statutory maximum." See Mays v. State,
[10] The State has conceded error in Leonard v. State, No. SC93332, and we have issued a separate opinion in that case quashing the district court's decision. See Leonard v. State,
[11] In this regard, we note that the defendant in Rider v. State,
[12] At the oral pronouncement of sentence, the trial court ordered the defendant to submit to periodic testing, while the written order required him to submit to testing at any time. This is an inconsequential variation because section 948.03(1)(k)1., Florida Statutes (Supp. 1996), authorizes "random testing."
[13] Although in a few briefs filed recently in related cases the defendants point out that the record does not affirmatively establish whether the defendant was in fact served with the written order of probation, the absence of a conclusive showing on the appellate record regarding whether the defendant was served makes this type of claim inappropriate for direct appeal.
[14] We note that the Legislature recently amended the sentencing statute applicable to felonies committed after October 1, 1998. See ch. 97-194, Laws of Florida (creating the Florida Criminal Punishment Code, codified at sections 921.002-921.0026, Florida Statutes (1997)); see also § 921.0027, Fla. Stat. (1999). Under this statute, the trial judge must calculate the "lowest permissible sentence." See § 921.00265, Fla. Stat. (1999). Written reasons for imposing a departure sentence are still required when a judge imposes a downward departure. See §§ 921.002(1)(f), .0025, .0026, Fla. Stat. (1999); see Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.704(d)(25)(26). However, the statute allows the judge to impose a sentence "up to and including the statutory maximum for any offense," section 921.002(1)(g), without requiring the filing of any reasons for doing so. See §§ 921.002(1)(f)(h), 921.0026; Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.704(d)(25)-(26).
[15] We reject the appellant's argument in Butler v. State,
[16] See note 18, infra.
[17] In Hyden,
[18] We thus approve of the following cases that are pending before this Court: Burch v. State,
