Patrick White pled guilty to being a habitual violator (OCGA § 40-5-58) and driving under the influence of alcohol (OCGA § 40-6-391). On October 18, 1991, hе was sentenced to five years probation on the habitual violator charge and twelve months probation on the DUI charge, to be served consecutively. He now appeals an оrder revoking or modifying his probation, because the order sent him to a state detention center for two years, four months and twenty-three days, the remainder
The order on appeal was precipitated by a petition for “modifiсation/revocation of probation” filed by White’s probation officer on March 10, 1997 in which it was аlleged that White “reported to the Probation Officer intoxicated, and registered .105 grams blood/alcoIhol concentration . . .” in violation of a condition of his probation. A hearing was held thе next day and the court entered an order finding that the terms of probation had been breached by both technical violations of probation conditions and “serious infraction of rules/regulatiоns in a Community Corrections facility.” The court ordered White be “[r]emanded to a State Detention [Center] for 2 yrs, 4 months, & 23 days.”
Six months later White moved the court to “vacate void sentence” on the ground that tо be confined in a state detention center, an “alternative to confinement” under OCGA § 42-8-34.1, for that length of time is the equivalent of incarceration and that it is improper for a court to imposе any period of continuous and uninterrupted incarceration as a condition of probation. The court denied the motion and White appealed.
The State moves to dismiss the apрeal on the ground that an appeal of an order revoking probation is discretionary under OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (5) and White failed to follow the procedure mandated by OCGA § 5-6-35 (b).
The Supreme Court instructed in Self v. Bayneum:
It is true that if a trial court determines a sentence is void, “then a new and valid sentence can be imposed by the triаl judge at any time,”
The underlying subject matter of White’s apрeal is the probation revocation from which White failed to apply for a discretionаry appeal and therefore his appeal must be dismissed.
As stated in Rebich: “A party should review the discretionаry application statute to see if it covers the underlying subject matter of the appeаl. If it does, then the party must file an application for appeal as provided under OCGA § 5-6-35. This aрproach fulfills the legislature’s intent to give appellate courts more discretion in managing thеir
White contends Dunlap v. State
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
See State v. Wilbanks,
OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (6).
Bayneum, supra.
Id.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) McCranie v. State,
Gonzalez v. State,
Rebich, supra,
Akins v. Life Investors Ins. &c.,
See generally Hughes v. Town of Tyrone,
