Sherman Lamont Daniels v. State ( 2020 )


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  •                                         In The
    Court of Appeals
    Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo
    No. 07-18-00357-CR
    SHERMAN LAMONT DANIELS, APPELLANT
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE
    On Appeal from the 30th District Court
    Wichita County, Texas1
    Trial Court No. 45,165-A, Honorable Robert P. Brotherton, Presiding
    March 27, 2020
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Before QUINN, C.J., and PIRTLE and PARKER, JJ.
    Appellant, Sherman Lamont Daniels, appeals the trial court’s judgment revoking
    his deferred adjudication community supervision, adjudicating him guilty of the offense of
    aggravated kidnapping,2 and sentencing him to five years’ confinement in the Institutional
    Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. In two issues, appellant contends
    1 By order of the Texas Supreme Court, this appeal was transferred to this Court from the Second
    Court of Appeals. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013).
    2   TEX. PENAL CODE. ANN. § 20.04 (West 2019).
    that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to conduct a unitary proceeding on the
    motion to adjudicate and failing to grant his motion for new trial based on an involuntary
    plea. We modify the judgment and affirm.
    Background
    In February of 2007, appellant pled guilty to aggravated kidnapping. Pursuant to
    a plea bargain, the trial court deferred adjudication of appellant’s guilt and placed him on
    seven years’ community supervision.          The trial court ordered several conditions of
    community supervision and informed appellant in writing that if he failed to comply with
    them, his community supervision could be revoked.
    In January of 2014, the State filed a motion to adjudicate the guilt of appellant. In
    the motion, the State alleged that appellant had violated four conditions of his community
    supervision.   In March, appellant pled true and the court extended his community
    supervision until February 2017.       An agreed order amending terms of community
    supervision was filed.
    In January 2017, the State filed its second motion to adjudicate the guilt of
    appellant. The State alleged multiple violations of the terms and conditions of appellant’s
    community supervision, including that appellant admitted to using alcohol on October 25,
    2014, admitted to using marijuana on April 15, 2016, and failed to report seven identified
    months. At a hearing on the State’s motion, appellant appeared with counsel and entered
    a plea of true to the State’s allegations.
    After the judge accepted appellant’s plea of true, the State rested as to the
    adjudication. The trial court accepted appellant’s plea and found appellant guilty of the
    2
    underlying offense of aggravated kidnapping. Appellant’s attorney announced that he
    was presenting mitigating evidence, and the hearing proceeded to punishment. Each
    party presented punishment evidence. The State offered three prior judgments which
    were admitted without objection. Appellant’s mitigation evidence consisted of appellant’s
    counselor and appellant’s long-time girlfriend, the victim of the aggravated kidnapping.
    At the conclusion of appellant’s mitigation evidence, the trial court took the matter under
    advisement.
    On June 5, 2018, the trial court emailed the parties explaining its rationale to
    sentence appellant to five years’ confinement and indicating the matter would be
    scheduled for imposition of sentence.
    Appellant obtained new counsel and filed a motion to withdraw his plea of true and
    a motion for new trial. In his motions, appellant argued that he was unaware of the
    consequences of his plea, his attorney failed to request a unitary revocation hearing that
    would allow the court to sentence appellant “other than commitment to TDCJ,” his
    attorney failed to advise him that “entering a plea of true would result in a revocation of
    his probation,” and that appellant “plead [sic] true with the belief that the [c]ourt would
    have the option to dismiss the State’s motion.”
    On August 10, the case was called for pronouncement of sentence. The trial court
    found appellant guilty of aggravated kidnapping and sentenced him to five years’
    confinement. Appellant’s counsel then presented evidence on his motion to withdraw his
    plea and motion for new trial. These motions were denied.
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    Appellant timely appealed the resulting judgment.        By his appeal, appellant
    contends that the trial court erred in failing to conduct a unitary proceeding on his motion
    to proceed, and in failing to grant his motion for new trial.
    Law and Analysis
    Adjudication Proceeding
    In his first issue, appellant asserts that the trial court erroneously bifurcated the
    motion to adjudicate proceeding which “made aggravated prison time inevitable.” An
    appellate court’s review of an order adjudicating guilt is limited to a determination of
    whether the trial court abused its discretion. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 42A.108(b)
    (West 2018); Rickels v. State, 
    202 S.W.3d 759
    , 763 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006).
    Appellant’s first issue relies on an email the judge sent to the parties following a
    hearing on the motion to proceed with adjudication. The email provides as follows:
    I have considered the evidence and argument of counsel in [appellant’s]
    case.
    I note the following:
    1. The matter before the [c]ourt was a motion to proceed with
    adjudication of guilt.
    2. I was not asked to conduct a unitary proceeding.
    3. Upon the [appellant’s] plea of true to the allegations, I found the
    allegations to be true and found [appellant] guilty of aggravated
    kidnapping on his original plea of guilty.
    4. The hearing proceeded to punishment.
    5. [Appellant’s] punishment evidence was compelling.
    6. Art. 42A.054 [of the Code of Criminal Procedure] prohibits me from
    placing [appellant] on [probated] community supervision.
    Despite [appellant’s] punishment evidence, the minimum sentence that I
    may impose is 5 years[’] confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal
    Justice.
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    According to appellant, the trial court accepted the plea, immediately found the
    allegations to be true, and proceeded to punishment—a process that effectively bifurcated
    the proceeding. Appellant urges that this process foreclosed the trial court’s ability to
    consider his request for discharge from community supervision and made his sentence
    to a term of confinement “inevitable.”
    When, as in this case, a defendant enters a plea of true at an adjudication hearing,
    “the proceeding becomes a unitary proceeding to determine the remaining issue of
    punishment.” Tapia v. State, 
    462 S.W.3d 29
    , 31 n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015) (citing Carroll
    v. State, 
    975 S.W.2d 630
    , 631-32 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998) (en banc)). In a unitary
    proceeding, the decision of the trial court “is not fixed until it renders judgment on guilt
    and punishment after all the evidence and arguments have been heard.” Barfield v. State,
    
    63 S.W.3d 446
    , 451 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (en banc). Even if the trial court employs
    procedures characteristic of bifurcation, the procedure remains a unitary trial “punctuated
    by a recess in the middle.” Saldana v. State, 
    150 S.W.3d 486
    , 489 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2004, no pet.).
    Here, the adjudication proceeding remained unitary. After hearing appellant’s
    mitigation evidence and his argument requesting that his community supervision be
    discharged, the trial court had discretion to discharge appellant from community
    supervision until the court sentenced him to confinement.3 We overrule appellant’s first
    issue.
    3 A continuation or modification of deferred adjudication community supervision was not an
    available option for appellant because his original community supervision of seven years was extended an
    additional three years in 2017. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 42A.103(a) (West 2018). The trial
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    Motion for New Trial
    In his second issue, appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his
    motion for new trial based on an involuntary plea. Appellant contends that his plea of true
    was not made knowingly and voluntarily because he believed the trial court had the option
    to discharge him from deferred adjudication community supervision. We review a trial
    court’s denial of a motion for new trial for abuse of discretion. Burch v. State, 
    541 S.W.3d 816
    , 820 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017). Under this standard, we must uphold the ruling if it is
    within the zone of reasonable disagreement, and we will reverse only if no reasonable
    view of the record could support the ruling.
    Id. At the
    beginning of the hearing on the motion to adjudicate, appellant was
    admonished about the consequences of his plea of true and he affirmed he understood.
    The record also shows that appellant understood the range of punishment he was facing.
    While appellant hoped he would be discharged from his community supervision, he
    clearly understood that the alternative might occur and that he could be revoked and sent
    to prison.
    At the hearing on the motion for new trial, appellant’s plea attorney testified that he
    explained the options available to appellant “considering that his options were limited.”
    Appellant’s options were to plead true or the court could find the allegations to be true
    and assess a prison sentence within the full range of punishment, or the court could deem
    the violations alleged by the State were not sufficient to merit appellant being adjudicated
    and revoked to prison. The fact that appellant was given a prison term as opposed to
    court did not have an option to place appellant on probation because the underlying offense is ineligible for
    straight probation. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 42A.054(a)(4) (West Supp. 2019).
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    being discharged did not render his plea involuntary or unknowing. Tovar-Torres v. State,
    
    860 S.W.2d 176
    , 178 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1993, no pet.) (per curiam) (“A plea is not
    rendered involuntary simply because a defendant received a greater punishment than he
    anticipated.”).
    The trial court has broad sentencing discretion after revoking community
    supervision and adjudicating guilt; the trial court’s decision to revoke, adjudicate, and
    sentence defendant, instead of discharging his community supervision, was not outside
    its broad sentencing discretion. Lyle v. State, No. 02-17-00227-CR, 2019 Tex. App.
    LEXIS 5939, at *7 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 11, 2019, pet. ref’d) (mem. op., not
    designated for publication). Finding no abuse of discretion in denying appellant’s motion
    for new trial, we overrule issue two.
    Reformation of Judgment
    In reviewing the record, it came to this Court’s attention that the trial court’s
    judgment contained in the clerk’s record includes a clerical error. The portion of the
    judgment detailing the conditions of community supervision that were violated states,
    “Term No. 12(b): The defendant failed to pay the supervision fee incurred herein in that
    the balance on such fee is delinquent in the amount of $2,700.75.”           However, the
    reporter’s record reveals that the State abandoned this alleged violation.
    This Court has the power to modify the judgment of the court below to make the
    record speak the truth when we have the necessary information to do so. TEX. R. APP.
    P. 43.2(b); Bigley v. State, 
    865 S.W.2d 26
    , 27-28 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (en banc).
    Appellate courts have the power to reform whatever the trial court could have corrected
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    by a judgment nunc pro tunc where the evidence necessary to correct the judgment
    appears in the record. Asberry v. State, 
    813 S.W.2d 526
    , 529 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1991,
    pet. ref’d). The power to reform a judgment is “not dependent upon the request of any
    party, nor does it turn on the question of whether a party has or has not objected in the
    trial court.”
    Id. at 529-30.
    Thus, we modify the trial court’s judgment to delete the finding
    of a violation based on “Term No. 12(b).”
    Conclusion
    Having found no abuse of discretion by the trial court, the judgment is affirmed as
    modified.
    Judy C. Parker
    Justice
    Do not publish.
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