Five different and unrelated cases are still one “sentence” and credit for time served applies to all five, not each individual case
State v. Vaden (HSC March 15, 2023)
Background. Jonathan Vaden was on probation when he was
prosecuted for five separate criminal cases alleging various drug and property
offenses. After spending several months in jail, Vaden pleaded no contest to
every offense except for a class A drug offense. The parties waived a presentence
(PSI) report and the circuit court of the second circuit—with the Honorable
Judge Richard T. Bissen, Jr. presiding—did not order one. Vaden was sentenced
to four years probation in each case with the condition that he complete the
Maui Drug Court Program. He petitioned into the program by having his probation
revoked and resentenced to a new term of probation.
He was ultimately terminated from the program. His
probation was revoked and he was resentenced to prison. He was sentenced to 5
years prison for the felonies, 1 year for the misdemeanors, and 30 days for the
petty misdemeanors in the four unrelated cases. Those counts and cases ran
concurrently to each other. In this case there was a class B felony. He was
sentenced to 10 years in that, 5 years in the other felony count, and 1 year in
the misdemeanor. Those counts ran concurrently to each other, but consecutively
to the four unrelated cases. The total came to 15 years. The resentencing order
did not identify the credit he had served in any case and the Department of
Public Safety did not give the court the certificates of detention showing his
credit.
He was credited 340 days against the four
unrelated cases and 1 days for the 10-year sentence. Vaden moved to correct the
credit calculation and argued that he was entitled to the credit that had
accrued in the 10-year sentence because it accrued simultaneously with the four
unrelated cases. The motion was denied. Vaden appealed and the ICA affirmed. He
petitioned for a writ of certiorari.
A note about PSI reports. The HSC took issue with
the waived PSI report. It noted that these reports have “many uses in the
criminal justice process.” State v. Carlton, 146 Hawai'i 16, 27, 455
P.3d 356, 367 (2019). It gives victims and their families an opportunity to be
heard. HRS § 706-604(3). The Hawai'i Paroling Authority uses it to determine
the minimum term of imprisonment. HRS § 706-669(2). Probation officers and
mental health professionals conducting court-ordered assessments get it too.
HRS §§ 806-73(b)(3)(F) & 806-73(b)(3)(C). The HSC noted that waiving a PSI
may be appropriate when a recent pre-existing one has been made, “trial courts
should not consent to their waiver as a matter of course” pursuant to HRS § 706-601(3).
And about certificates of detention. The HSC also took issue
with the lack of a certificate of detention from DPS. DPS is required to
provide the sentencing court with a certificate showing how long the defendant
was in custody. HRS § 706-671(1). A certificate is also required when the defendant
is resentenced in the same case. HRS § 706-671(2). That did not happen here.
The HSC observed that this is particularly problematic because the calculation
may be wrong.
The types of jail credit. Jail credit is determined
by HRS § 706-671:
(1) When a defendant who is
sentenced to imprisonment has previously been detained in any State or local
correctional or other institution following the defendant’s arrest for the
crime for which sentence is imposed, such period of detention following the
defendant’s arrest shall be deducted from the minimum and maximum terms of such
sentence. . . .
(2) When a judgment of
conviction or a sentence is . . . vacated and a new sentence is thereafter imposed
upon the defendant for the same crime, the period of detention and imprisonment
theretofore served shall be deducted from the minimum and maximum terms of the
new sentence. . . .
The HSC noted that HRS § 706-671(1) controls
credit for detention time from arrest to the initial sentence. Subsection (2)
credits time served as part of the sentence. It applies when a defendant serves
time pursuant to probation that is later revoke. State v. Delima, 78 Hawai'i
343, 348, 893 P.2d 194, 199 (1995). According to the HSC, the 340 days at issue
are three different time periods: time served from arrest to the initial
sentencing, which is governed by HRS § 706-671(1); time served under probation controlled
by subsection (2); and time served from reassert for violating the Drug Court
Program and resentencing, which is also under subsection (1).
There court must credit the “aggregate” once
across all five cases. When the issue is determining credit under HRS § 706-671(1), “credit
for presentence imprisonment is properly granted against only the aggregate of
the consecutive sentence terms.” State v. Tauiliili, 96 Hawai'i 195, 199,
29 P.3d 914, 918 (2001). The HSC held that this case remains good law and that
Vaden is entitled to credit just once against the aggregate of later imposed
consecutive sentences.
The HSC rejected Vaden’s argument that he was
entitled to credit for this case and that it cannot be transferred to the four
other cases. See State v. March, 94 Hawai'i 250, 255, 11 p.3d 1094, 1099
(2000). The HSC held that nothing in the plain text of HRS § 706-671(1)
suggests he is entitled to what the HSC called “double dipping.” The HSC noted
that term “sentence” in the jail credit statute could refer to more than one
case:
The statute’s use of the
singular “sentence” reflects the fact that the word may refer not only to a
particular term of incarceration imposed for a conviction on a single criminal
count, but also to the sum of the terms of incarceration and other penalties imposed
on a defendant for their crimes. Multiple consecutive sentences are really just
one sentence.
That meant that Vaden already received credit for
this case. It was credited against the four unrelated cases as part of a single
sentence. The HSC applied the same meaning for subsection (2) with credit for
time served from an earlier sentence. The HSC also noted that crediting against
each individual case would be unfair and curb the sentencing court’s ability to
impose consecutive sentences.
For instance, if a defendant
commits five misdemeanors in five separate cases and serves one year before
sentencing, they would receive five years of credit if the court imposes consecutive
statutory maximum terms (one year for each misdemeanor). In that situation, the
defendant would ultimately serve no additional jail time, and the court’s
decision to impose consecutive would be pointless.
Not a Double Jeopardy problem either. No person “subject
for the same offence” shall not be “twice put in jeopardy of life or limb[.]”
U.S. Const. Art. V. See also Haw. Const. Art. I, Sec. 10. Double
Jeopardy “protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.” North
Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 717 (1969). This requires that the “punishment
already exacted must be fully ‘credited’ in imposing sentence upon a new
conviction for the same offense.” Id. at 718-719.
The HSC rejected Vaden’s constitutional argument.
If Vaden’s jail time accrued on probation was vacated and if the trial court
refused to credit that time against a sentence imposed for a “new conviction
for the same offense,” there would be a Double Jeopardy violation. That, according
to the HSC, is not what happened. His 340 days were served before sentencing
and his probation was not vacated, but revoked. Moreover, the HSC noted that
his constitutional rights would only be at issue if the “total punishment”
exceeded the statutory maximum—that would be 21 years, not the concurrent 10.
Justice Wilson’s Dissent. Justice Wilson wrote a
lengthy dissent.
Based on the plain
language of the statutory provisions, Vaden’s presentence detention time and
probation incarceration time should be deducted from each of the
five-year and ten-year sentences comprising his fifteen-year consecutive
sentence, rather than just once from the aggregate fifteen-year consecutive
sentence. The Majority’s misinterpretation of the credit due Vaden for his
previous incarceration improperly extends Vaden’s sentence by failing to deduct
340 days credit from Vaden’s ten-year sentence. Depriving Vaden of credit toward
each of the offenses . . . contravenes important Hawai'i public policy,
codified in HRS § 353L-3(b), to reduce the State’s incarceration population.
Justice Wilson explained that the jail credit
statute refers to a single sentence and the entitlement of credit for time
served. It makes no distinction between concurrent and consecutive sentences. “Respectfully,
the language required to reach [the Majority’s] result is ringingly absent from
the statute’ plain terms.” The Majority, according to Justice Wilson, is
fixated on Tauiliili, and not the language of the statute itself, and
the case should be overruled. He also took issue with the fact that the “Majority
increases the period of incarceration for all defendants receiving a consecutive
sentence who have been held in custody prior to imposition of a consecutive
sentence.” The Legislature has addressed the impact of mass incarceration in Hawai'i
and the need to reduce the incarcerated population. HRS § 353L-3(b). This
mandate to reduce the inmate population should have been considered when
interpreting the jail credit statute. “Inventing an exception to preclude
credit for time served in the context of consecutive sentencing perpetuates
overincarceration, and defies the legislature’s mandate to reduce the
population of incarcerated individuals in Hawai'i.” He would have awarded the
jail credit in this case.
Moreover, the plea agreement in which the
defendant agreed to consecutive terms if he did not complete Drug Court was
unlawful and unenforceable. He would have also vacated and remanded for
resentencing entirely to consider the factors of HRS § 706-606. Justice McKenna
joined.
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