Lead Opinion
Dаniel W. Harr appeals from a judgment convicting him of three counts of possession of a firearm by a felon and sentencing him to a total of five years in prison, to be served "consecutive" to his § 971.17, Stats., commitment to the Mendota Mental Health Institution (Mendota), which resulted from an
We conclude that, under the plain language of applicable statutes, the trial court lacked authority to impose a prison sentence consecutive to a §971.17, STATS., commitment, and we therefore reverse and remand to the trial court for resentencing. We also conclude that, while Harr is entitled to credit of an additional thirty days on his sentence for time spent in jail pursuant to unsatisfied cash bail, he is not entitled to credit for any period of time after his NGI cоmmitment in the other case.
I. The Sentence
Harr was arrested in Sauk County in April 1995 on several firearms charges. While the charges were pending in the trial court, he was adjudged NGI in an unrelated criminal prosecution for battery to a peace officer, and, on February 1, 1996, he was committed to the Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) for institutional care for a period not to exceed fоrty months. DHSS placed him at Mendota.
Several months later, Harr pleaded no contest to three counts of possession of illegal firearms. On June 25,1996, the trial court sentenced him to three years in prison on the first count, stating that the sentence was to be "consecutive to your release from the commitment to Mendota Mental Health Institution." He was
Trial courts have only such sentencing powers as the legislature has granted. Grobarchik v. State,
"Sentence" is defined as " 'the judgment of a court by which the court imposes the punishment or penalty provided by statute for the offense upon the рerson found guilty.'" Grobarchik,
In State v. Szulczewski,
We rejected the argument. First, citing State v. Woods,
We next consider the appropriate remedy. In his argument to the trial court at the sentencing hearing, defense counsel stressed that Harr had "serious mental health problems," which were being "addressed" at Mendota, and pointed out that the "public-protection" sentencing objective would be met by Harr's continued confinement at Mendota for the remainder of his commitment.
It is apparent from the record and the trial court's remarks that, whatever reason or purpose the court may have had for structuring Harr's sentence the way it did, that purpose has been frustrated by our ruling that the sentence imposed was not consistent with applicable law and that, under Szulczewski, Harr's prison sentence would have to commence immediately.
In Grobarchik, the supreme court recognized that, "[a]s a general rule, resentencing is the proper method to correct a sentence which is not in accord with the law." Id. at 470,
II. Sentence Credit
Harr became subject to cash bail on the firearms charges on January 2, 1996, and because he was
Harr bases his argument on State v. Demars,
The defendant in Demars was initially jailed on February 9, 1983, on charges filed in Fond du Lac
We affirmed, concluding that his presentence confinement from the date of the filing of the "detainer" to sentencing did not constitute "custody in connection with the course of conduct for which sentence was imposed" under § 973.155, Stats. We reasoned that: (1) "custody" as used in the statute "must necessarily result from the occurrence of a legal event, process or authority which occasions, or is related to, confinement on the charge for which the defendant is ultimately sentenced";
In arriving at that conclusion, we acknowledged that the cases to which we had been referred all showed "the presence of a legal event, process or authority which occasioned at least in part, the custody of the defendant relative to the charge for which he was ultimately sentenced." Id. at 25-26,
In a later case — State v. Gavigan,
On appeal Gavigan argued that, after October 24, he was in custody "partially" because of his failure to make bail on the robbery charge and partially because of his fleeing conviction. As a result, he claimed his custody wаs " 'in connection with' a course of conduct (robbery) for which sentence was imposed." Id. at 393,
Once Gavigan pleaded guilty to and was sentenced on the fleeing charge, he was in custody solely for his conviction on that misdemeanor and not, as he argues, partly because of his failure to make bail on the robbery charge. When he began serving the misdemeanor sentence on October 24, Gavigan no longer was eligible to be released on bail for the robbery charge. Thus, we reject his argument that after October 24 his custody was "in connection with" the robbery charge because the custody was not due to his failure to make bail on the robbery charge, but was attributable solely to his misdemeanor conviction.
In State v. Beets,
In his reply brief, Harr concedes, "If [his] Section 971.17 commitment was a criminal sentence, the State's position on credit would be correct." He maintains, however, that because — as we noted above — his NGI commitment is not a sentence, the Gavigan/Beets rule is inapplicable. We disagree. In State v. Riley,
We conclude, therefore, that Harr is not entitled to any credit on his sentence for time served after his NGI commitment on February 1, 1996, because his confinement thereafter resulted solely from the NGI adjudication in the battery case. As to credit for the time between January 2 and February 1, when he was being held in jail for his inability to satisfy the cash-bail requirements in both cases, the State maintains that the same rule should apply: that, for credit to apply in such a situation, Harr must have been held "solely because of the unsatisfied cash bail in this case." (Emphasis added.) We think otherwise.
The question comes down to this: when a defendant is being held because he or she is unable to satisfy cash-bail requirements on two or more unrelated charges — as was Harr from January 2 to February 1 — is he or she entitled to sentence credit on
We therefore reverse and remand the judgment of conviction insofar as it denied Harr credit on his sentence in this case for the thirty days between January 2 and February 1, 1996. In all other respects, we affirm. Further proceedings shall be consistent with this opinion.
By the Court. Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded.
Notes
In State v. Randall,
In State v. Szulczewski,
The State makes a similar "stay" argument in this case, grounded on the same authority it advanced in Szulczewski: the provisions of § 973.15(8)(a)1, Stats., permitting sentenсes to be stayed for "legal cause," and State v. Strohbeen,
As counsel acknowledges, the committing court could shorten the forty-month maximum commitment.
Harr correctly points out that in State v. Demars,
The "at least in part" language apparently came from the criminal instructiоns committee's interpretive commentary on § 973.155, STATS., defining the statutory phrase "in connection with" as meaning that the custody must be, "at least in part, the result of a legal status ... stemming from the course of conduct for which sentence is being imposed." Wis J I—CRIMINAL SM-34A at 6.
In State v. Beets,
As indicated, the supreme court, adopting our reasoning in State v. Gavigan,
As we held above, of course — and as in Gavigan and Beets — when Harr was adjudged NGI and committed to Mendota, his сustody from that point on was not due, in whole or in part, to his inability to meet the bail on the firearms charge; it was occasioned solely by the process in the other case.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). We have remanded for resentencing because we have frustrated the trial court's structuring of Harr's sentence. The parties have
We generally will not address issues the parties have not raised. Waushara County v. Graf,
