STATE v. Allen WRAY.
No. 2013-214-C.A.
Supreme Court of Rhode Island.
Nov. 10, 2014.
103 A.3d 884
Matthew S. Dawson, Esq., Providence, for Defendant.
Present: SUTTELL, C.J., GOLDBERG, FLAHERTY, ROBINSON, and INDEGLIA, JJ.
OPINION
Chief Justice SUTTELL, for the Court.
The defendant, Allen Wray, appeals from an order of the Superior Court denying his motion for credit for time served while awaiting trial and sentencing. This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions and reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that this case may be decided without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm in part and vacate in part the order of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Procedural History
On January 30, 2006, defendant appeared in District Court and was held without bail on a charge of two counts of first-degree robbery.1 On the same day, he also appeared in Superior Court and was presented as a violator of probation for four previously imposed suspended sentences resulting from drug-related charges (case number P2/97-2695A).2 On
April 12, 2006, defendant was adjudicated a probation violator and the suspension was removed from those sentences.3
On April 14, 2006, two days after he was adjudicated a violator, defendant was indicted on the two counts of first-degree robbery with which he had been charged in January; he was tried in December 2008 and found guilty on both counts. The defendant was sentenced on April 24, 2009 to twenty years, ten years to serve and ten years suspended, with probation, on each count, both sentences to run concurrently with each other and with the sentences in defendant‘s prior drug-related charges.4 The warrant for commitment indicated that the sentences for defendant‘s robbery conviction were to begin on the day of sentencing, April 24, 2009.
The defendant, acting pro se, filed a “motion to reduce/modify sentence” on May 7, 2012, as well as a petition for writ of mandamus on May 30, 2012, arguing that his sentence in the robbery case should have been reduced by the number of days that he spent incarcerated between his arrest in January 2006 and his sentencing in April 2009. The defendant asserted that he was entitled to credit for this time pursuant to the plain language of
II
Standard of Review
The disposition of the issue presented on appeal requires us to construe certain provisions of
III
Discussion
On appeal, defendant argues that he is entitled to credit for time served between January 30, 2006, when he was charged with robbery and presented as a probation violator, and April 24, 2009, when he was sentenced for the robbery charges, pursuant to the so-called “dead-time” provision of
The state, for its part, argues that defendant is not entitled to credit for the period of time between April 12, 2006 and April 24, 2009, because he was serving the execution of a previously suspended sentence rather than merely being confined while awaiting trial or sentencing. As for the period of time between January 30, 2006 and April 12, 2006, the state has submitted that, “[u]pon information and belief derived from an official at the Adult Correctional Institutions,” defendant was credited with “77 days of awaiting sentence/trial time” with respect to the execution of his previously suspended sentences. The state argues, therefore, that defendant is not entitled to credit to his robbery sentences because this period of time has already been credited to his drug-related sentences.
As this Court has previously explained, the Legislature‘s “enactment of the so-called dead-time provisions of
“The credit provided for in
Here, it is clear that defendant was not “in limbo” from April 12, 2006 to April 24, 2009; rather, he was serving the execution of the previously suspended sentences for the drug-related charges. See Skirvin, 113 R.I. at 446 n. 1, 322 A.2d at 300 n. 1. On April 12, 2006, when defendant was adjudicated a probation violator, his status changed from “an awaiting trial or sentencing status to that of one serving a * * * prison sentence.” Skirvin, 113 R.I. at 447, 322 A.2d at 300. The fact that he also happened to be awaiting trial and sentencing for the robbery charges from April 12, 2006 until April 24, 2009 did not change the nature of his incarceration with regard to the drug-related charges; thus, he is not entitled to credit in his robbery sentences for this period of time.
The period of time from January 30, 2006 to April 12, 2006, however, does not lend itself to the same analysis. During this portion of time, defendant was being held without bail on the pending robbery charges and had been presented as a probation violator, but he had not yet been adjudicated a violator and had not yet begun serving his previously suspended sentences for the drug-related charges. Even if defendant has been credited with this time in his sentences for the drug-related charges, as the state contends, the mandatory dead-time provision of
The rationale for the dead-time provision in
In the case of concurrent sentences, however, like the case at bar, this rationale does not obtain. On April 12, 2006, defendant began serving four concurrent twelve-year sentences for the drug-related charges; and, on April 24, 2009, he began serving two additional ten-year sentences for the robbery charges, to run concurrently with each other and with the sentences for the drug-related charges. If only the twelve-year sentences were to be credited with the time during which he was incarcerated prior to April 12, 2006, then defendant would still find himself, after finishing all of his sentences, having been incarcerated longer than if he had not been held prior to April 12, 2006. Thus, in order to maintain the concurrent nature of the sentences, defendant was entitled to a credit for those days in his concurrent sentences for both the drug-related charges and the robbery charges. See Skirvin, 113 R.I. at 448, 322 A.2d at 301.
Additionally, the state contends that the defendant should not receive credit for the time between January 30, 2006 and April 12, 2006 in his sentences for the robbery charges, because those sentences were specifically set to begin on April 24, 2009. To the extent that the sentencing justice may have intended the sentences to begin on April 24, 2009, without any credit for the time already served, he was in error.
IV
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm in part and vacate in part the order of the Superior Court and remand the record to the Superior Court with instructions to notify the warden of the Adult Correctional Institutions to apply the provisions of
Notes
“(a) Whenever it is provided that any offense shall be punished by a fine or imprisonment, the court imposing punishment may, in its discretion, select the kind of punishment to be imposed, and, if the punishment is fine or imprisonment, its amount or term within the limits prescribed by law; provided, if the punishment to be imposed is imprisonment, the sentence or sentences imposed shall be reduced by the number of days spent in confinement while awaiting trial and while awaiting sentencing * * *.”
