John M. SMILEY, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*193 Benjamin L. Crump, of Parks & Crump, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General; Trisha E. Meggs and Timothy A. Freeland, Assistant Attorneys General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
MICKLE, Judge.
In this direct appeal, John Smiley alleges errors 1) in the trial court's failure to inquire as to whether Smiley voluntarily absented himself from the sidebar conference where peremptory strikes were discussed; 2) in the lower court's admission of evidence of an uncharged physical offense; 3) in the directive that Smiley receive alcohol and drug abuse treatment, and in the discrepancies between orally pronounced general conditions and certain special conditions of probation set forth in the subsequent written order; 4) in the imposition of a $1,500.00 lump-sum charge for unspecified "court costs and fines"; and 5) in the failure of the written order to reflect the split sentence imposed. Finding no basis for reversal in either the first or second alleged errors, we affirm Smiley's conviction. As to the third alleged group of errors, we reverse the special conditions of probation and direct the trial court on remand to strike these conditions; we affirm the ruling requiring Smiley to receive alcohol and drug abuse treatment. On the fourth alleged error, we reverse the $1,500.00 in unspecified court costs and fines and remand for further proceedings. As to the fifth alleged error, we direct the lower tribunal to correct the written order to reflect that Smiley was sentenced to 67 months in prison, to be followed by 9 years of probation.
The first issue involves jury selection, which, in the case at bar, occurred after April 27, 1995, i.e., after Coney v. State,
The second issue involves an evidentiary ruling by the lower court. Smiley was charged with, and convicted of, the March 25, 1995, aggravated battery upon 71-year-old James Stokes. The state's theory at trial was that the 52-year-old appellant's attack on Stokes was intended in part to teach the victim a lesson because, just hours earlier on the date of the charged offense, Stokes had intervened in, or interfered with, the appellant's physical and verbal attacks upon a young boy. The jury was allowed to hear testimony relating to a verbal altercation between Smiley and Stokes arising from this same disagreement involving the boy. The defense filed a motion in limine arguing that evidence of Smiley's uncharged battery upon the boy was prejudicial and not relevant to the prosecution for the aggravated battery upon Stokes. We conclude that the evidence in question was admissible and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the prior physical incident into evidence as relevant to suggest the full context of the charged crime and the appellant's motive or absence of mistake in physically attacking Stokes. Craig v. State,
The appellant's third issue alleges two separate types of error. First, Smiley asserts that the trial court erred by including in the written order certain "special conditions" of probation not orally pronounced at sentencing. The state properly concedes that any special conditions not orally pronounced must be stricken. State v. Hart,
Smiley's fourth issue relates to assessed costs and fines. Costs assessed in a criminal case must be specifically authorized *195 by statute, and it is error to impose costs without reference to statutory authority or an explanation in the record as to what the costs represent. Spencer v. State,
The fifth and final alleged error requires a clerical correction so that the written order reflects that the appellant received a split sentence of imprisonment, to be followed by probation.
AFFIRMING judgment of conviction; AFFIRMING sentence in part, REVERSING sentence in part, and REMANDING for certain special conditions to be stricken, for "court costs and fines" to be clarified with reference to statutory authority, and for the written sentencing order to be corrected to reflect the split sentence imposed.
LAWRENCE and PADOVANO, JJ., concur.
