OPINION
Aрpellant, Arthur Maurice Meineke, was charged by indictment with the felony offense of arson. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 28.02 (Vernon 2003). A jury found appellant guilty and the trial court, pursuant to a sentencing agreement, ordered him to serve 30 years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. In two points of error, appellant argues that the trial court: (1) erred by ordering him to serve an illegal sentence; and (2) lacked jurisdiction to hold a post-conviction hearing to correct the sentence. We affirm.
The record reflects that on the evening of May 30, 2003, appellant and his wife were engaged in a heated argument. At approximately 10:00 p.m., appellant’s wife left their mobile home. Appellant then set fire to his wife’s clothes and a portion of their home. Accordingly, appellant was subsequently indicted by a grаnd jury for arson. The indictment also contained two enhancement paragraphs alleging prior convictions for murder and aggravated assault.
Prior to trial, appellant elected to have a jury to both determine guilt and assess punishment. However, after the jury began deliberations, appellant entered into an agreement with the State whereby, if the jury found him guilty, he would switch his punishment election to the court in еxchange for the court assessing punishment at 30 years’ confinement. The jury returned a guilty verdict on December 17,
After signing the judgment, the trial court apparently realized that, absent affirmative findings on the enhancement allegations, the thirty-year sentence was outside the limits for un-enhanced аrson and, therefore, illegal. 1 To correct this oversight, the court recalled appellant the next morning, December 18, 2003, and reconvened to make findings on the enhancements. Based on a docket entry, it appears the court arraigned appellant on the enhancement charges, accepted his pleas of “true” to both enhancement paragraphs, and reaffirmed its original sentence of 30 years. 2
In his first point of error, appellant contends the trial court exceeded its authority by entering an illegal sentence and by subsequently holding a post-conviction hearing on enhancement allegations to correct the sentence. Appellant claims that because the trial court initially made no findings on the two enhancement paragraphs, it impliedly found the allegatiоns “not true.” Thus, the subsequent sentence of 30 years exceeded the statutory range of punishment and constituted an illegal sentence. Further, appellant argues that when the trial court attempted to re-litigate the enhancement allegations — and ultimately “re-sentence” him — the court exceeded its authority.
We first consider whether a trial court can correct an illegal sentence by holding a post-conviction hearing in order to enter findings that make the sentence comport with the law.
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In answering this
First, appellant relies on
Tooke v. State,
After sentence was first imposed on [the defendant], the trial court was without power to set aside that sentence and order a new sentence. Such attempted resentencing is null and void and of no legal effect. The original sentence was a valid and proper sentence. The court’s failure to consider the enhancement paragrаph of the indictment prior to first sentencing [the defendant] should not enlarge the court’s power over the case.
Id. Consequently, this court modified the sentence to reflect the original 5 to 50 years’ punishment. Id.
Similarly, in
Dickerson,
the First Court of Appeals reformed a judgment to reflect the original sentence after a trial court attempted to re-sentence a defendant with enhancements.
The State appealed, claiming that the 25 year sentence should have been upheld because the court “had the authority to correct an error in the assessment of punishment.” Id. at 763. In affirming the trial court’s оriginal sentence, the First Court of Appeals echoed this court’s decision in Tooke and went on to explain that:
While ... the trial court meant to find the enhancement paragraphs true, three things occurred before it did so: (1) the court imposed a lawful punishment; (2) the court pronounced a valid and proper sentence; and (3) [the defendant] accepted the sentence. Under these procedural facts, the trial court was not free to “retract the sеntence ... given here” and “resentence” [the defendant], regardless of the fact that the punishment originally assessed was the product of mistake or oversight.
Id. (emphasis in original). Accordingly, the court reformed the judgment by deleting the enhancement finding of “true” and changing the “25 years” to “2 years.” Id.
We do not find either of these cases dispositive of the issue presented in this case. We agree that both
Tooke
and
Dickerson
stand for the proposition that a court cannot retract a
valid
sentence and re-
Here, the trial court’s initial sentence was invalid. Texas jurisprudence undoubtedly recognizes a court’s authority to correct an invalid sentence.
Id.
(Cochran, J., concurring) (“[B]oth trial and appellate courts may always take cognizance of an illegal or unauthorized sentence, with or without the prompting of the parties.”);
Mizell v. State,
For example, a court has authority to receive a motion for new trial or a motion in arrest of judgment within that time period.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 21, 22;
McClinton,
Therefore, it is clearly established that a trial court can correct an illegal sentence and can take whatever action is necessary, within its inherent powers, to do so. In fact, appellant concedes this point in his appellate brief. However, the bounds of these powers are unclear. Appellant contends that the court’s authоrity is limited to reducing an incorrect or illegal sentence. He further argues that the court is absolutely precluded from revising a sentence if it involves making findings on enhancements for the first time during re-sentencing.
In support of his contentions on this point, appellant relies on
Ware v. State.
In
Ware,
the Fort Worth Court of Appeals upheld a trial court’s decision to re-sentence a defendant — by reducing his sentence — in order to bring the sentence
Appellant cites
Ware
for the proposition that if a court is going to correct an illegal sentenсe, it can only do so by reducing the sentence. However, we do not read Ware to be so limiting. Rather, we understand
Ware
to mean exactly what already has been established,
i.e.,
that a court has plenary authority to correct an illegal sentence. The fact that the court of appeals in
Ware
permitted the trial court to correct the sentence by reducing it does not mean that reduction is the
only
method a trial court can use to correct an invalid judgment.
See, e.g.,
Tex.R.App. P. 21, 22;
McClinton,
Moreover, in an unpublished opinion from this court, we upheld a trial court’s sentence after it held a post-conviction hearing in which the court made findings on two enhancement paragraphs.
Lewis v. State,
No. 14-97-01308-CR,
I was thinking about this case, although I said on the record that the defendant was sentenced to 2 to 20 years in prison, and of course, that was based on my finding the enhancement paragraphs true, it occurred to me I had never actually said that on the record. I omitted to put that on there, and I wanted to make this clear on the record that I made that finding.
I found both the first and second enhancement paragraphs to be true, prior to pronouncing sentence, but I failed to say that on the record.
Id.
The trial court also entered handwritten notations on the judgment which indicated it had found the enhancements true. This court explained that the “trial court did not err because there is no require
Lewis
is directly applicable to the issue at hand in this case. Here, the trial court entered judgment on December 17, 2003, but held a subsequent hearing on December 18. Much like the trial court in
Lewis,
the court made findings
on the record
at the post-conviction hearing. As in
Lewis,
we similarly find that the trial court did not err by not orally reading the enhancemеnts allegations in open court. The court was not required to make an oral pronouncement of its findings on the enhancements.
See Turner v. State,
We observe that when the trial court initially assessed a sentence of thirty years, the only evidence to support the enhancement allegations were three business records from the Harris Country Sheriff’s Department. Each of these records contained a description of appellant, a statement of the offense for which he had been convicted, and fingerprints. However, there was no additional evidence, such as expert testimony that the fingerprints were those of appellant. During the punishment stage of a trial, the State has the burden of proving “the defendant on trial is in fact the same defendant named in the ... alleged felony convictions.”
Ex Parte Augusta,
In his second point of error, appellant contends the trial court was without jurisdiction to hold the post-conviction hearing because he already had filed his notice of appeal. While filing a notice of appeal properly invokes the appellate court’s jurisdiction,
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it does not automatically terminate the trial court’s jurisdiction.
See Ware,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. As enhanced, the arson conviction was punishable by a term of "life, or for any term of not more than 99 years or less than 25 years.” See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 12.42(d) (Vernon Supp.2004-05). Without affirmative findings on the enhancements, the penalty for arson is limited to a term of "not more than 20 years or less than 2 years.” See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 12.33 (Vernon 2003).
. Appellant alleges the trial judge apparently signed the judgment on December 17, 2003, but later interlineated an "8” over the "7.” He argues that this improperly made it appear that the judgment was signed and sentence wаs entered on December 18, 2003. Appellant also points out that the date on his Notice of Appeal was altered and complains that the docket entry reflecting what actually transpired was blacked out.
A review of the judgment does, in fact, reveal two different dates. Written next to the entry for “Date of Judgment” is "12/17/03” and next to “Date Sentence Imposed” is “12/18/03.” However, while the trial court’s alterations may raise some question as to when each action actually took place, there was no impropriety in the court acting as it did. See generally Turner v. State,116 Tex.Crim. 154 ,31 S.W.2d 809 (1930) (" ‘The power of the court to alter its docket entries and records during the term wherein they are made, includes the right within such time to revise, correct and change its sentences, however formally pronounced ... ’ ”) (quoting 2 J. Bishop, Criminal Procedure § 1298 (2d ed. 1872)).
.Appellant couchеs the issue in the following terms: “whether the trial court, upon revisiting the issue of punishment ... and in trying to correct the illegal sentencing [is] obligated to correct the sentence ... only to the extent that it was illegal, that is not by revisiting the issue of whether enhancements have been proven ... but simply by assessing punishment within the result which had been legally reached, viz., an implicit rejection of enhancements and a finding that Appellant be sentenced for (unenhanced) arson.” Therefore, appellant’s ultimate complaint is that he should have been sentenced to no more than twenty years. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. §§ 12.33, 28.02 (Vernon 2003).
On the other hand, the State frames the question as: "whether [the trial court] had legal authority to enter the exact same sentence, with a written finding on the enhancements, one day after orally pronouncing the sentence without an oral finding on the еnhancements.”
. Additional reasoning supporting our conclusion can be found in
Junious v. State,
. Although appellant does not specifically assert, as a separate point of error, that the
. Only an appellate court can order a new trial as to punishment only.
State v. Hight,
.
See, e.g.,
Tex.R.App. P. 23.1;
Olivo v. State,
