State v. Miller , 127 Ohio St. 3d 407 ( 2010 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Miller, 
    127 Ohio St. 3d 407
    , 2010-Ohio-5705.]
    THE STATE OF OHIO, APPELLEE, v. MILLER, APPELLANT.
    [Cite as State v. Miller, 
    127 Ohio St. 3d 407
    , 2010-Ohio-5705.]
    Criminal law — Sentencing — Nunc pro tunc — Court may not use a nunc pro
    tunc entry to impose a sanction that the court did not impose as part of the
    sentence — Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
    (No. 2009-1606 — Submitted September 15, 2010 — Decided
    November 30, 2010.)
    APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County,
    No. 91543, 2009-Ohio-3307.
    __________________
    SYLLABUS OF THE COURT
    A court may not use a nunc pro tunc entry to impose a sanction that the
    court did not impose as part of the sentence.
    __________________
    O’CONNOR, J.
    {¶ 1} After appellant, Andrew Miller, was indicted on two counts of
    felonious assault, the state offered him the opportunity to plead guilty to a single
    count of aggravated assault. In discussing the plea agreement with Miller, a
    visiting judge informed him that the victim had requested $20,410 in restitution.
    Miller’s attorney acknowledged that Miller was aware of the request for
    restitution but stated that restitution “was of concern” to Miller. Nevertheless,
    after consulting with counsel, Miller eventually pleaded guilty to the reduced
    charge.     The visiting judge informed Miller that his sentence would include
    community control, court costs, random drug tests, and restitution. Miller stated
    that he understood the consequences of his guilty plea.
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 2} Two weeks later, at the sentencing hearing, the visiting judge
    sentenced Miller to an 18-month suspended prison sentence, community control,
    and drug testing, but the judge did not impose fines. He also failed to impose
    restitution either orally or by journal entry.
    {¶ 3} Almost two months later, the state moved the trial court “to
    convene a hearing to determine restitution.” The state’s motion asserted that
    restitution to the victim in the amount of $20,409.35 was part of the plea
    agreement and that it had been “inadvertently omitted from the plea and
    sentencing orders.”
    {¶ 4} Two months later, the trial court judge wrote on the motion, “The
    court, having been read the transcript of the plea proceedings by [the court
    reporter] is satisfied that [Miller] entered his guilty plea with full knowledge of
    and agreement to the restitution [amount] of $20,409.35; the court finds that the
    order of restitution was inadvertently omitted by the visiting judge at sentencing.
    The court therefore amends the sentencing entry to also include [restitution] of
    $20,409.35 * * *.”
    {¶ 5} Miller appealed, asserting that the trial court had “abused its
    discretion by entering a restitution order after the final sentencing order had been
    journalized.” A divided court of appeals affirmed, holding that the trial court has
    “continued jurisdiction to correct clerical mistakes.” State v. Miller, Cuyahoga
    App. No. 91543, 2009-Ohio-3307, ¶ 16. We granted discretionary review, 
    124 Ohio St. 3d 1447
    , 2010-Ohio-188, 
    920 N.E.2d 376
    , and now reverse.
    Analysis
    {¶ 6} In holding that the trial court could impose restitution on Miller
    through an “amended journal entry,” the court of appeals concluded that the trial
    court retained jurisdiction to include restitution as part of the sentence even
    though restitution had not been imposed at sentencing or in the sentencing entry.
    Miller, 2009-Ohio-3307, ¶ 10. It was error to do so.
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    January Term, 2010
    {¶ 7} The court of appeals recognized that the trial court had failed to
    both advise Miller of the restitution amount at sentencing and include restitution
    in the original sentencing entry. 
    Id. But the
    court of appeals held that the
    amendment was permissible. 
    Id. {¶ 8}
    In reaching its conclusion, the appellate court relied on State v.
    Middleton, Preble App. No. CA2004-01-003, 2005-Ohio-681. There, the trial
    judge had been informed, erroneously, that the burglary count against the
    defendant was a third-degree felony. 
    Id. at ¶
    4. In fact, the defendant had been
    charged with a second-degree felony. 
    Id. The court
    sentenced the defendant to
    four years’ imprisonment. 
    Id. The court
    then adjourned the sentencing hearing.
    
    Id. at ¶
    5.
    {¶ 9} Immediately after the hearing, and while the defendant was still
    present, the judge was informed of the error, i.e., that the charge was burglary in
    the second degree for which the potential prison term was two to eight years. 
    Id. at ¶
    4. “The court then stated on the record, while appellant was still present in
    the courtroom, that it was imposing seven years for the burglary count.” 
    Id. at ¶
    5.
    {¶ 10} On appeal, Middleton argued that the trial court could not modify
    the sentence after it had orally announced it and had adjourned the sentencing
    hearing. 
    Id. at ¶
    8. In rejecting that claim, the court of appeals held that the trial
    court did not "modify" an imposed sentence, because the seven-year prison
    sentence that Middleton challenged was the only one journalized. 
    Id. at ¶
    9.
    {¶ 11} In dicta, the court of appeals continued, “Nevertheless, we can find
    no law preventing the common pleas court from imposing the seven-year sentence
    once it became aware at the sentencing hearing that the burglary count was
    actually a second-degree felony. Crim.R. 36 states that ‘errors * * * arising from
    oversight or omission, may be corrected by the court at any time.’ In this case,
    the common pleas court corrected an error it had made when it initially sentenced
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    appellant for a third-degree felony instead of the second-degree felony of which
    appellant was convicted. The court’s mistake was due to a clerical error in the
    pre-sentence investigation report. Appellant was fully aware that he had pled
    guilty to and was convicted of a second-degree felony. In a written waiver,
    appellant had previously acknowledged that the maximum penalty for the
    burglary charge, a second-degree felony, was eight years. We find no error by
    the common pleas court in immediately correcting a mistake arising from an
    oversight that occurred at the sentencing hearing.” 
    Id. at ¶
    10.
    {¶ 12} Unlike the court of appeals in this matter, we do not find
    Middleton dispositive here.     Foremost, as the court of appeals in Middleton
    observed, the axiomatic rule is that a court speaks through its journal entries.
    Middleton, 2005-Ohio-681, ¶ 9. See, e.g., Gaskins v. Shiplevy (1996), 76 Ohio
    St.3d 380, 382, 
    667 N.E.2d 1194
    . Thus, in Middleton, there was no reversible
    error, because the court’s journal entry was consistent with the sentence that was
    imposed on the appellant. That sentence was never modified, and it was upheld
    on that basis.
    {¶ 13} But the case before us is wholly distinguishable from Middleton. It
    is not the original journal entry that is at issue here, but rather, a substantially
    altered one. In fact, we are presented with a journal entry that was modified
    several months after the visiting judge had pronounced sentence and after he had
    issued the journal entry memorializing that sentence. Moreover, it was modified
    based on the trial judge’s review of transcripts of hearings in which she did not
    participate. Thus, Middleton does not control or persuade.
    {¶ 14} Moreover, a trial court lacks the authority to reconsider its own
    valid, final judgment in a criminal case, with two exceptions: (1) when a void
    sentence has been imposed and (2) when the judgment contains a clerical error.
    State ex rel. Cruzado v. Zaleski, 
    111 Ohio St. 3d 353
    , 2006-Ohio-5795, 
    856 N.E.2d 263
    , ¶ 19, citing Crim.R. 36. The court of appeals in this case suggested
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    January Term, 2010
    that the latter exception applied and that nothing more than a nunc pro tunc entry
    was invoked. Not so.
    {¶ 15} A clerical error or mistake refers to “ ‘a mistake or omission,
    mechanical in nature and apparent on the record, which does not involve a legal
    decision or judgment.’ ” Cruzado, 
    111 Ohio St. 3d 353
    , 2006-Ohio-5795, 
    856 N.E.2d 263
    , ¶ 19, quoting State v. Brown (2000), 
    136 Ohio App. 3d 816
    , 819-820,
    
    737 N.E.2d 1057
    . “Although courts possess inherent authority to correct clerical
    errors in judgment entries so that the record speaks the truth, ‘nunc pro tunc
    entries “are limited in proper use to reflecting what the court actually decided, not
    what the court might or should have decided.” ’ ” Cruzado, 
    111 Ohio St. 3d 353
    ,
    2006-Ohio-5795, 
    856 N.E.2d 263
    , ¶ 19, quoting State ex rel. Mayer v. Henson, 
    97 Ohio St. 3d 276
    , 2002-Ohio-6323, 
    779 N.E.2d 223
    , ¶ 14, quoting State ex rel.
    Fogle v. Steiner (1995), 
    74 Ohio St. 3d 158
    , 164, 
    656 N.E.2d 1288
    . The amended
    journal entry in this case may reflect what the trial court should have decided at
    sentencing.   It does not reflect what the trial court did decide but recorded
    improperly. Thus, the use of the nunc pro tunc entry to impose restitution upon
    Miller was improper because it does not reflect the events that actually occurred
    at the sentencing hearing.
    {¶ 16} Notably, the determination of restitution entails a substantive legal
    decision or judgment and is not merely a mechanical part of a judgment.
    Restitution is a financial sanction, based on a victim’s economic loss, that is
    imposed by a judge as part of a felony sentence. See R.C. 2929.18(A)(1). See
    also State v. Danison, 
    105 Ohio St. 3d 127
    , 2005-Ohio-781, 
    823 N.E.2d 444
    ,
    syllabus. It is not an order that is so “mechanical in nature” that its omission can
    be corrected as if it were a clerical mistake. Londrico v. Delores C. Knowlton,
    Inc. (1993), 
    88 Ohio App. 3d 282
    , 285, 
    623 N.E.2d 723
    . As the dissenting judge
    stated, a nunc pro tunc order cannot cure the failure of a judge to impose
    restitution in the first instance at sentencing. Miller, 2009-Ohio-3307, ¶ 24.
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Accord Caprita v. Caprita (1945), 
    145 Ohio St. 5
    , 
    30 Ohio Op. 238
    , 
    60 N.E.2d 483
    ,
    paragraph two of the syllabus (a nunc pro tunc entry corrects a judicial record that
    fails to show a correct order or judgment of the court because the order or
    judgment was not recorded properly in the first place). We agree and therefore
    hold that a court may not use a nunc pro tunc entry to impose a sanction that the
    court did not impose as part of the sentence.
    {¶ 17} We need go no further. The trial court improperly used a nunc pro
    tunc entry to impose a sanction on Miller that was not imposed by the visiting
    judge at sentencing. It was error to do so, and the court of appeals erred in
    affirming the order. We therefore reverse its decision and remand the cause to the
    trial court to vacate the nunc pro tunc order and the order of restitution.
    Judgment reversed
    and cause remanded.
    BROWN, C.J.,       and PFEIFER, LUNDBERG STRATTON, O’DONNELL,
    LANZINGER, and CUPP, JJ., concur.
    __________________
    Robert L. Tobik, Cuyahoga County Public Defender, and John T. Martin,
    Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
    ______________________
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