Appellant Sammy Earl Stewart filed a petition, denied by the trial court, requesting that the court reconsider and/or modify the sentence imposed in his criminal case. Stewart appeals the adverse decision, and we affirm because the trial court correctly found it did not have the authority to grant the relief that Stewart requested.
The judgment at issue was entered in 1997. Generally speaking, absent a statute, rule, or available writ, once the circuit court enters a judgment-and-commitment order, jurisdiction is transferred to the executive branch of our government. Whitney v. State ,
A circuit court's decision to deny relief under Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-90-111 (Repl. 2016) will not be overturned unless that decision is clearly erroneous. Green v. State ,
An appellant may not change the grounds for his or her argument on appeal and is instead limited to the scope and nature of the objections presented at trial.
*474Stover v. State ,
Section 16-90-111 allows the trial court to correct an illegal sentence at any time because a claim that a sentence is illegal on its face presents an issue of subject-matter jurisdiction. Latham v. State ,
Stewart's allegations in the petition raised no issue of an illegal sentence. He did not question the legality or validity of the sentence in his petition. Stewart appealed his judgment, and this court affirmed. Stewart v. State ,
Affirmed.
Hart, J., concurs.
Josephine Linker Hart, Justice, concurring.
The circuit court was correct when it determined that it had no jurisdiction to entertain Mr. Stewart's motion to modify his sentence. In his petition to the circuit court, Mr. Stewart failed to allege that his sentence was "illegal." The law in this state is clear that once a valid sentence is placed into execution, the circuit court loses jurisdiction to modify that sentence. Green v. State ,
There is simply no basis for the majority's assertion that Mr. Stewart has changed his argument on appeal. Although Mr. Stewart did not cite section 16-90-111 in his petition, the circuit court obviously understood that was the statute he was proceeding under, and it ruled accordingly.
