State of Texas v. Crook, James ( 2008 )


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  •             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. PD-0001-07
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    v.
    JAMES CROOK, Appellee
    ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    FROM THE EIGHTH COURT OF APPEALS
    EL PASO COUNTY
    HERVEY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which MEYERS, PRICE, and
    KEASLER , JJ., joined. KELLER , P.J., concurred. HOLCOMB, J. filed a dissenting opinion in
    which JOHNSON and COCHRAN , JJ., joined. COCHRAN , J. filed a dissenting opinion in which
    WOMACK , J., joined.
    OPINION
    In this case, we decide that the trial court was required to order appellee’s thirteen fines (of
    $10,000 each) to run concurrently.
    A jury convicted appellee in a single criminal action of thirteen counts of barratry,1 which
    1
    See Section 38.12, TEX . PEN . CODE, (defining “barratry”).
    Crook–2
    arose out of the same criminal episode.2 The jury assessed punishment on each count at 10 years
    confinement with a recommendation of community supervision (probation) for this portion of
    appellee’s sentence. The jury also assessed a $10,000 fine on each count with no recommendation
    of probation for this portion of appellee’s sentence. The trial court placed appellee on probation for
    seven years on each count and ordered these periods of probation to run concurrently. Over the
    state’s objection, the trial court also ordered the $10,000 fines to run concurrently. The state
    appealed, claiming that this portion of appellee’s sentence is illegal,3 because the trial court was
    required to order the fines to run consecutively instead of concurrently. The court of appeals rejected
    this claim,4 and we granted review.5
    2
    See Section 3.01, TEX . PEN . CODE, (defining “criminal episode”).
    3
    The state appealed under the statutory provision authorizing it to appeal a “sentence in a case
    on the ground that the sentence is illegal.” See Article 44.01(b), TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC.
    4
    See State v. Crook, 
    2005 WL 1536230
    (Tex.App.-El Paso, delivered June 30, 2005) (not
    designated for publication).
    5
    The grounds upon which we granted review state:
    QUESTION FOR REVIEW ONE: Because in a single prosecution resulting in a
    multi-count conviction for repeated commission of the same offense (such as this
    case), the imprisonment assessed each count (including probation) runs concurrently,
    but fines must always be cumulated, didn’t the Court of Appeals err in holding that
    the trial court did not act without authority and did not render an illegal sentence
    when it refused to cumulate the fines totaling $130,000, instead ordering concurrent
    payment of the fines, in effect, ordering payment of one fine of $10,000?
    QUESTION FOR REVIEW TWO: Didn’t the Court of Appeals err in holding that
    the law requiring cumulation of fines applies only in misdemeanor cases and not in
    all cases, including felonies?
    QUESTION FOR REVIEW THREE: Didn’t the Court of Appeals err in holding that
    Crook–3
    With exceptions not applicable here, the general rule in cases like this is set out in Section
    3.03(a), TEX . PEN . CODE, which, in relevant part, provides that “sentences shall run concurrently”
    when “the accused is found guilty of more than one offense arising out of the same criminal episode
    prosecuted in a single criminal action.”6 It is undisputed in this case that appellee was “found guilty
    of more than one offense arising out of the same criminal episode prosecuted in a single criminal
    action.” We do not understand the State to claim otherwise or to dispute that appellee’s probationary
    terms should run concurrently. We understand the State to claim only that appellee’s fines should
    run consecutively (and not concurrently).
    This Court has decided, however, that a fine is part of a sentence. See State v. Ross, 
    953 S.W.2d 748
    , 750 (Tex.Cr.App. 1997) (“[A] sentence is nothing more than the portion of the
    judgment setting out the terms of punishment. For example, the sentence in this case would include
    the facts that appellant is to serve sixteen years in the penitentiary beginning July 28, 1995, that his
    term is concurrent and that he must pay a $500 fine.”) (emphasis in original); see also State v. Kersh,
    
    127 S.W.3d 775
    , 777 (Tex.Cr.App. 2004) (sentence includes a fine).7 The concurrent sentences
    because case law interpreting section 3.03 of the Penal Code simply states that
    section 3.03 does not apply to fines, the trial court had the discretion to not cumulate
    the fines?
    6
    Section 3.03(a) states:
    When an accused is found guilty of more than one offense arising out of the same
    criminal episode prosecuted in a single criminal action, a sentence for each offense
    for which he has been found guilty shall be pronounced. Except as provided by
    Subsection (b), the sentences shall run concurrently.
    7
    We further note that, if a “sentence” did not include a fine, then the state’s appeal could not
    be based on Article 44.01(b) as an “appeal [of] a sentence in a case on the ground that the sentence
    is illegal.”
    Crook–4
    provision of Section 3.03(a) would, therefore, seem to plainly require that the fines in this case run
    concurrently.
    The state argues, however, that this would be inconsistent with over 100 years of case law,
    which the state claims requires a holding in this case that fines run consecutively even though the
    terms of confinement (in this case, the probationary terms) run concurrently.8 These cases, however,
    either pre-date Section 3.03(a)9 or rely on these pre-section 3.03(a) cases in holding that the
    concurrent sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) does not apply to fines.10 These cases, therefore,
    provide little, if any, guidance on whether this Court should construe the concurrent sentences
    provision of Section 3.03(a) to apply to fines. In addition, we have not found, and the state does not
    cite to, any decision from this Court addressing the issue of whether the concurrent sentences
    provision of Section 3.03(a) should be construed to apply to fines. We, therefore, conclude that this
    is an issue of first impression before this Court.
    The argument has been made that the Legislature could not have intended the concurrent
    sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) to apply to fines, because a fine does not “run” like a term of
    8
    See, e.g., Ex parte Banks, 
    53 S.W. 688
    , 689 (Tex.Cr.App. 1899); Veteto v. State, 
    8 S.W.3d 806
    , 818 (Tex.App.–Waco 2000, pet. ref’d); Mills v. State, 
    848 S.W.2d 879
    , 880 (Tex.App.–Houston
    [1st Dist.] 1993, pet. ref’d); Juarez v. State, 
    796 S.W.2d 523
    , 526 (Tex.App.–San Antonio 1990, pet.
    ref’d); Rocky Mountain v. State, 
    789 S.W.2d 663
    , 664-65 (Tex.App.–Houston [1st Dist.] 1990, pet.
    ref’d) and cited cases decided between 1899 and 1937.
    9
    See, e.g., 
    Banks, 53 S.W. at 689
    ; 
    Mills, 848 S.W.2d at 880
    (“for at least 75 years before the
    enactment of section 3.03, the [Texas] Court of Criminal Appeals held that judgments imposing
    fines are cumulative”); Rocky 
    Mountain, 789 S.W.2d at 665
    and cases cited (same).
    10
    See, e.g., 
    Veteto, 8 S.W.3d at 818
    ; 
    Mills, 848 S.W.2d at 880
    ; Rocky 
    Mountain, 789 S.W.2d at 665
    and cases cited.
    Crook–5
    confinement (or probation), which, unlike a fine, involves the passage of time. See Mountain 
    State, 789 S.W.2d at 664-65
    (setting out, but not necessarily adopting, the argument that “as a matter of
    common sense, only that portion of a sentence involving the passage of time can ‘run’”); see also
    
    Juarez, 796 S.W.2d at 526
    (relying on the Practice Commentary to Section 3.03 to decide that its
    concurrent sentences provision does not apply to fines).11 It is, however, not apparent to us that the
    Legislature’s use of the term “run” in Section 3.03(a) was meant to make a distinction between a
    term of confinement (or probation) and a fine for concurrent sentencing purposes.12 The Practice
    Commentary is not definitive either, since its first sentence would seem to support construing the
    concurrent sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) to apply to the entire sentence, including fines.
    See Practice Commentary to Section 3.03 (“In effect this section treats multiple convictions resulting
    from prosecution of joined offenses as a single conviction for sentencing purposes.”).
    The legislative history of Section 3.03(a) also does not support the claim that the
    11
    In 
    Juarez, 796 S.W.2d at 596
    , the San Antonio Court of Appeals relied on the following
    emphasized portion of the Practice Commentary to Section 3.03 to decide that the concurrent
    sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) does not apply to fines.
    In effect [Section 3.03(a)] treats multiple convictions resulting from prosecution of
    joined offenses as a single conviction for sentencing purposes. A separate sentence
    is pronounced for each conviction–so that, for example, if one conviction is
    invalidated on appeal valid sentences will remain–but any imprisonment assessed
    must run concurrently.
    See Practice Commentary to Section 3.03 (Vernon’s 1974) (emphasis supplied).
    12
    Appellee argues that construing the concurrent sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) to
    make this distinction between a term of confinement and a fine would have the result of making it
    discretionary with the trial court on whether to run the fines concurrently or consecutively and that
    the trial court in this case did not abuse it discretion to order the fines to run concurrently. See
    Article 42.08(a), TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC.
    Crook–6
    Legislature’s use of the term “run” in Section 3.03(a) was intended to make a distinction between
    terms of imprisonment and fines for concurrent sentencing purposes. What is presently Section
    3.03(a) was enacted by the 63rd Legislature in 1973 as part of the complete revision of the Texas
    Penal Code.13 Prior to the enactment of Section 3.03(a) in 1973, the state could not obtain multiple
    convictions in the same criminal proceeding when a person committed multiple crimes during the
    same criminal episode. Section 3.03(a) changed prior law by providing for multiple convictions in
    one criminal proceeding under these circumstances with the defendant having the right to
    “concurrent sentences.”14
    Testifying on behalf of the Criminal Defense Lawyers Association at a Senate Sub-
    Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on March 27, 1973, Frank Maloney described the structure
    of Chapter 3. He testified that Chapter 3 was intended to permit the state to obtain multiple
    convictions and sentences in one criminal proceeding for multiple offenses committed during the
    same “criminal episode.” He testified that all sentences in convictions obtained under Section
    3.03(a) would run concurrently with the defendant being required to serve the harshest one imposed.
    13
    See Acts 1973, 63rd Leg., ch. 399, § 3.03, eff. January 1, 1974.
    14
    In a hearing before the Senate Jurisprudence Committee on May 8, 1973, Senator
    Santiesteban described what Chapter 3 was intended to accomplish. In describing then current law,
    Senator Santiesteban stated that if a person broke into a store, robbed and killed the storekeeper, and
    then set fire to the store, this person had to be tried on different indictments and in different trials for
    each of these crimes. Senator Santiesteban stated that, under the proposed Chapter 3, this person
    could be indicted for all these crimes in one multi-count indictment and tried for them in one trial,
    and the judge “shall sentence him with concurrent sentences.” Senator Santiesteban described
    Chapter 3 as a “drastic change” in the law. See www.tsl.state.tx.us Senate Jurisprudence Committee
    hearing on 5/8/73, File 894 (13:17-14:42).
    Crook–7
    He further described the defendant’s right to sever,15 which, if exercised, would expose the defendant
    to the possibility of consecutive sentences in the trial court’s discretion.16
    Testifying on behalf of the Texas County and District Attorneys Association at a House
    Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on February 26, 1973, Tom Hanna, who was the
    Jefferson County District Attorney, agreed with Frank Maloney’s description of Chapter 3. Mr.
    Hanna also testified that one of the purposes of Chapter 3 was to provide prosecutors with the ability
    to clear crowded dockets and to save tax-payer money by disposing of multiple crimes in one trial.
    He further testified that sentences under Section 3.03(a) must “run concurrently” unless the
    defendant exercised the right to sever, in which case the trial court would have the discretion to stack
    the sentences. Mr. Hanna testified that Chapter 3 was a “finely worked out balance” with
    prosecutors receiving the ability to clear crowded dockets and defendants receiving the right to
    concurrent sentences.17
    There is nothing in the legislative history of Section 3.03(a) or any other provision of the
    1974 Penal Code to indicate that anyone at any time ever took the position or even suggested that
    the concurrent sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) should not apply to fines.18 The main dispute
    15
    See Section 3.04(a), TEX . PEN . CODE.
    16
    See Section 3.04(b), TEX . PEN . CODE; www.tsl.state.tx.us Senate Sub-Committee on
    Criminal Matters hearing on 3/27/73, File 966 (0-46:45)
    17
    See House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on February 26, 1973: Tape 1,
    Side 2 (145-600); Tape 2, Side 1 (0-600).
    18
    See www.tsl.state.tx.us (1) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on February
    13, 1973: Files 930, 931; (2) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on February 14,
    1973: Files 932, 933, 934; (3) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on February 20,
    Crook–8
    or point of debate among the interested parties centered on the definition of “criminal episode” in
    Section 3.01 and not on whether some distinction should be made between terms of imprisonment
    and fines for concurrent sentencing purposes under Section 3.03(a).19 Nothing in the legislative
    1973: Files 935, 936, 937, 938, 939; (4) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on
    February 21, 1973: File 940; (5) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on February
    27, 1973: Files 941, 942, 943; (6) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on February
    28, 1973: Files 944, 945, 946, 947; (7) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on
    March 7, 1973: Files 948, 949, 950, 951; (8) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing
    on March 13, 1973: Files 952, 953, 954; (9) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on
    March 14, 1973: Files 956, 957; (10) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on March
    20, 1973: Files 958, 959, 960; (11) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on March
    21, 1973: Files 961, 962, 963, 964, 965; (12) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing
    on March 27, 1973: Files 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971; (12) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal
    Matters hearing on April 3, 1973: Files 972, 973, 974; (13) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal
    Matters hearing on April 4, 1973: Files 975, 976; (14) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters
    hearing on April 10, 1973: Files 977, 978; (15) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing
    on April 24, 1973: Files 979, 980; (16) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on April
    25, 1973: File 981; (17) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on May 1, 1973: File
    982; (18) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on May 2, 1973: Files 983, 984, 985.
    See www.tsl.state.tx.us (1) Senate Jurisprudence Committee hearing on May 8, 1973: Files
    894, 895.
    See www.tsl.state.tx.us (1) Senate Floor Session on May 15, 1973: Files 140, 141, 142; (2)
    Senate Floor Session on May 16, 1973: Files 143, 144, 145, 146, 147.
    See (1) House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on February 26, 1973: Tapes
    1, 2; (2) House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on March 5, 1973: Tapes 1, 2, 3; (3)
    House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on March 12, 1973: Tapes 1, 2; (4) House
    Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on March 14, 1973: Tapes 1, 2; (5) House Criminal
    Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on March 19, 1973: Tapes 1, 2; (6) House Criminal
    Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on March 21, 1973: Tapes 1, 2.
    See (1) House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee hearing on May 16, 1973: Tape 1-A.
    See (1) House Floor Proceeding on May 18, 1973: Tape 1-B; (2) House Floor Proceeding on
    May 19, 1973: Tape 2-A; (3) House Floor Proceedings on May 21 and 23, 1973: Tapes 2-B, 3-A,
    3-B, 4-A, 4-B.
    19
    See www.tsl.state.tx.us: (1) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on 2/13/73,
    File 931 (21:14-31:30); (2) Senate Sub-Committee on Criminal Matters hearing on 3/27/73, File 966
    (0:00-46:45); (3) Senate Jurisprudence Committee hearing on 5/8/73, File 894 (13:17-14:42); (4)
    Senate Floor Session on 5/15/73, File 140 (42:00-45:20).
    See also (1) House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on 2/26/73, Tape 1, Side
    2 (145-610); (2) House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on 2/26/73, Tape 2, Side 1
    Crook–9
    history of Section 3.03(a) indicates that the Legislature intended for the concurrent sentences
    provision of Section 3.03(a) to apply to anything but the entire sentence, including fines. This would
    be consistent with the language that the Legislature used in Section 3.03(a) that “the sentences shall
    run concurrently.” We decide that the concurrent sentences provision of Section 3.03(a) applies to
    the entire sentence, including fines.20
    The judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
    (0-610); House Floor Session on 5/21/73, Tape 2-B (22-83).
    See also (1) State Bar of Texas Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, Working Papers
    on Title I, Draft 1 (8/10/70) (generally providing that a defendant “may not be sentenced for more
    than one offense” if the “defendant is adjudged guilty of more than one offense arising out of the
    same criminal episode”); (2) State Bar of Texas Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, Final
    Draft (October 1970) (same).
    20
    The dissenting opinion claims that our holding in this case changes a “long-standing rule of
    cumulating fines for multiple counts of the same criminal episode.” See Dissenting op. at 5
    (suggesting that the “thought of changing the long-standing rule of cumulating fines for multiple
    counts of the same criminal episode did not even occur to the participants [in the legislative process],
    precisely because it has been such a long-standing and well-established rule”). There was, however,
    no such long-standing rule prior to1973 when the Legislature enacted Section 3.03(a) authorizing
    a single criminal prosecution for multiple offenses arising out of the same criminal episode. As the
    legislative history of Chapter 3 indicates, this (i.e., authorizing a single criminal prosecution for
    multiple offenses arising out of the same criminal episode) was a “drastic change” in the law. See
    www.tsl.state.tx.us Senate Jurisprudence Committee hearing on 5/8/73, File 894 (13:17-14:42).
    Therefore, prior to 1973, there could not have been a long-standing rule for the Legislature to deviate
    from with respect to concurrent sentences for same-criminal-episode multiple convictions prosecuted
    in a single criminal action.
    Under these circumstances, we believe that it is more reasonable to conclude that, when the
    participants in the 1973 legislative process referred to “sentences” under Section 3.03(a) running
    concurrently, they meant what they said and intended for “sentence” to refer to the entire sentence
    (including fines). This is consistent with the language of Section 3.03(a), particularly the term
    “sentence,” and the “finely worked out balance” that Section 3.03(a) was intended to accomplish.
    See House Criminal Jurisprudence Sub-Committee hearing on February 26, 1973: Tape 1, Side 2
    (145-600); Tape 2, Side 1 (0-600). We believe that the overwhelming majority of the materials that
    we have examined support a conclusion that “sentence” in Section 3.03(a) should be construed to
    encompass the entire sentence (including fines). We decline to decide otherwise by essentially
    quibbling over the term “run.”
    Crook–10
    Hervey, J.
    Delivered: February 6, 2008
    Publish
    

Document Info

Docket Number: PD-0001-07

Filed Date: 2/6/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/15/2015