Opinion
No. 02SA157
November 25, 2002
Original Proceeding Pursuant to C.A.R. 21, District Court, City and
County of Denver, Case No. 00CR1723, Honorable Lawrence A. Manzanares, Judge Case No. 02SA157
RULE DISCHARGED
People v. Ostuni: Presentence Confinement — Interpretation of Sentencing Order
Pursuant to C.A.R. 21, Ostuni sought an order compelling the Colorado Department of Corrections to calculate his combined sentences by granting him 420 days of presentence confinement credit against his new sentences rather than against a previous sentence being served as the result of parole revocation. The supreme court issued a rule to show cause why the department should not be considered in violation of the district court's sentencing order and why it should not be ordered to comply.
The court discharged the rule, holding that an annotation indicating credit for time served, on a mittimus that expressly requires service of the defendant's new sentences concurrently with his parole violation, cannot reasonably be understood as anything more than a factual finding of the period of time the defendant spent in confinement prior to sentencing. Crediting that period of time against the sentence being served as the result of parole revocation rather than against the new sentence, therefore, was not a violation of the district court's order concerning the prisoner's presentence confinement credit.
Ken Salazar, Attorney General, Joseph P. Sanchez, Assistant Attorney General Litigation Section, Denver, Colorado, Attorney for Plaintiff
Felicio Ostuni, Sterling, Colorado, Pro Se Defendant
Felicio Ostuni petitioned this court pursuant to C.A.R. 21 for relief in the nature of mandamus, directed to the Colorado Department of Corrections. More particularly, he seeks an order compelling the department to calculate his combined sentences by granting him 420 days of presentence confinement credit against his new sentences rather than against a previous sentence being served as the result of parole revocation. We issued a rule to show cause why the department should not be considered in violation of the district court's sentencing order and why it should not be ordered to comply. Because we hold that the department is not in violation of the court's order concerning the prisoner's presentence confinement credit, we discharge the rule.
I.
Following his 1994 conviction for assault in the second degree, Felicio Ostuni was sentenced to the custody of the Colorado Department of Corrections for ten years. In early 1998, he was granted parole until his statutory discharge date of October 29, 2002. While on parole, Ostuni committed forgery and aggravated motor vehicle theft. He pleaded guilty to these charges, and the Denver District Court sentenced him to the custody of the department of corrections for six years on each count, plus a period of mandatory parole. The district court calculated that the defendant should be awarded 420 days credit for time served before sentencing and noted that amount on the mittimus remanding him to the custody of the department. The mittimus also indicated that both sentences were to run concurrently with each other and with Ostuni's parole violation. Following sentencing, the parole board revoked Ostuni's parole, ordering the revocation to be considered effective as of his hold date of May 11, 2000, and further ordered him returned to the custody of the department of corrections to serve the remainder of his earlier sentence.
Relying on section 16-11-306, 6 C.R.S. (2001), and the parole board's revocation order, the department credited 420 days of presentence confinement against the sentence Ostuni was returned to serve following his parole revocation. Ostuni complained to the Denver District Court, asserting that his presentence confinement should have been credited against his new sentences for forgery and motor vehicle theft. The court treated Ostuni's letter as a motion for presentence confinement credit, and because Ostuni's appeal of his conviction and sentences were pending in the court of appeals, it denied the motion for lack of jurisdiction. Ostuni then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the judicial district where he was incarcerated. That court similarly denied his petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and found that even if it were to enter a favorable ruling concerning the presentence confinement credit, habeas relief would not be appropriate at that time because the defendant would still not be eligible for immediate release.
The defendant now seeks relief from this court pursuant to C.A.R. 21.
II.
Relief pursuant to C.A.R. 21 is extraordinary in nature and is a matter wholly within the discretion of the supreme court. C.A.R. 21(a)(1); In re: People v. Lee, 18 P.3d 192, 195 (Colo. 2001); People v. District Court, 869 P.2d 1281, 1285 (Colo. 1994). Under some circumstances, it may be used to compel performance by public officials of a plain legal duty devolving upon them by virtue of their office. State v. Board of County Comm'rs of Mesa County, 897 P.2d 788, 791 (Colo. 1995). Particularly, we have found C.A.R. 21 an appropriate vehicle to compel compliance by the department of corrections with final court sentencing orders, where prisoners lack any other adequate remedy. See Bullard v. Department of Corrections, 949 P.2d 999 (Colo. 1997) (ordering department pursuant to C.A.R. 21 to comply with district court's unappealed order finding completion of sentence without service of mandatory parole term); see also People v. Grangruth, 990 P.2d 697 (Colo. 1999) (ordering department pursuant to C.A.R. 21 to comply with sentencing order directing it to apply presentence confinement credit to particular sentence, where sentencing order was not appealed and temporal realities of case made other remedies unavailable); Fields v. Suthers, 984 P.2d 1167 (Colo. 1999) (ordering department pursuant to C.A.R. 21 to comply with mittimus requiring presentence confinement credit for life sentence); Meredith v. Zavaras, 954 P.2d 597 (Colo. 1998) (ordering department pursuant to C.A.R. 21 to comply with sentencing order directing it to apply presentence confinement credit to particular sentence because other sentence was discharged, where sentencing order was not appealed and temporal realities of case made other remedies unavailable).
Our prior holdings have made clear beyond all question that prison officials have an obligation to enforce court orders mandating the deduction of a period of presentence confinement from a particular criminal sentence unless those officials have been relieved of their obligation by further judicial action. Grangruth, 990 P.2d at 701; Meredith, 954 P.2d at 602-03. Unlike those cases, however, in which the question of applying the credits was litigated in the district courts and expressly resolved against the department, the instant case involves the construction of the sentencing order itself. While there can be no question that the department must comply with an extant sentencing order of the trial court, the question remains whether a period of presentence confinement noted on the mittimus of a defendant who is ordered by the parole board to continue serving a previous sentence during the same time period should be understood as an order to deduct that period from his new sentence, or simply as a designation of the length of time for which the defendant is entitled to credit for confinement prior to his sentencing.
The General Assembly has now made clear that a person who is confined prior to the imposition of sentence for an offense is entitled to credit for the entire period of his confinement. § 18-1.3-405, 6 C.R.S. (2002) (formerly § 16-11-306); see also Schubert v. People, 698 P.2d 788, 792-93 (Colo. 1985). It has also imposed a duty on the trial court to make an explicit finding of the amount of presentence confinement credit to which the offender is entitled and to include that finding in the offender's mittimus along with his sentence. Rather than permitting the court to adjust an offender's sentence downward to account for presentence confinement, the legislature has reserved to the department the duty to deduct this period of confinement from the sentence. § 18-1.3-405; see Beecroft v. People, 874 P.2d 1041, 1045 n. 12 (Colo. 1994) ("When a defendant is sentenced to the DOC, the court does not have discretion to grant or deny confinement credit; the sentencing court must simply note if the defendant is entitled to confinement credit and if he is, note the amount of the credit."); see also Meredith, 954 P.2d at 605-06 (Kourlis, J., concurring) ("[T]he sole judicial function in connection with presentence confinement credit against a DOC sentence is to include on the mittimus the number of PCC days to which the defendant is entitled. . . . The DOC then has the statutory duty to credit the defendant with those PCC days.") (citation omitted); People v. Dempsey, 624 P.2d 374, 375 (Colo.App. 1981) ("[T]he only judicial function [under section 18-1.3-405] is to make a finding of fact concerning the number of days spent by a defendant in presentence confinement.").
This reservation to the department is immediately followed in the statute's text by specific instructions for allocating any presentence confinement credit required by this section when the offender was serving a sentence or was on parole for a previous offense at the time he committed the new offense. In that event, the statute requires the credit to be granted against any sentence that the offender continued to serve for his previous offense and not against the sentence for his new offense. See People v. Johnson, 797 P.2d 1296, 1298 n. 4 (Colo. 1990) (noting the addition of this provision in 1988 to prohibit duplicative crediting where offender was serving a sentence on parole at time of subsequent crime). While the responsibility for allocating presentence confinement credit among new and previous offenses is not expressly assigned to the department, as is its duty from the previous sentence to deduct presentence confinement credit generally, this is the clear inference to be drawn from both the nature and location of the specific limitation.
Section 18-1.3-405 requires credit only for offenses that are sufficiently the cause of presentence confinement, Schubert, 698 P.2d at 793, and this determination is clearly a matter for the sentencing court. Even before the 1988 inclusion of a special statutory parole provision, however, this court held that once a defendant's parole had been revoked and resumption of the service of his previous sentence had begun, his confinement could no longer be considered causally related to the charge or conduct for which he would receive a new sentence. Torand v. People, 698 P.2d 797, 800-01 (Colo. 1985). Unlike presentence confinement for a particular offense, whether and when a defendant's parole for a previous offense will be revoked and service of his previous sentence will resume is a matter determined by executive branch officers. While courts must decide (when the matter is properly before them) whether the department has correctly interpreted and applied controlling statutes and sentencing orders, the initial allocation of responsibilities in section 18-1.3-405 merely reflects the practical difficulty of avoiding duplicative credit for actions taken independently by executive and judicial branch officers.
In light of this statutory allocation of responsibilities, an annotation indicating credit for time served, on a mittimus that expressly requires service of the defendant's new sentences concurrently with his parole violation, cannot reasonably be understood as anything more than a factual finding of the period of time the defendant spent in confinement prior to sentencing. It in no way suggests a judicial determination that this period of time should be deducted from the defendant's new sentences rather than from the remainder of his previous sentence, much less any awareness of the difference such a determination would make to the defendant's overall circumstances. While it is clearly the duty of the department to enforce judicial orders unless or until it has been relieved of that responsibility by further judicial action, an annotation of "credit for time served" on such a mittimus must be construed as an order for a specific amount of credit to which the defendant is entitled by statute, but not a specific method for applying that credit to the defendant's entire sentence or for calculating the defendant's ultimate parole eligibility or mandatory release dates. Whether or not the department has correctly interpreted the statutory scheme prescribing the computation of multiple sentences and the accreditation of presentence confinement under the circumstances of Ostuni's case, its computation of his sentence is not in violation of a clear duty to obey the court's sentencing order.
III.
Because the petitioner has failed to demonstrate that the department is acting in violation of an order of the district court to give him credit for time served, the rule is discharged.
People v. Ostuni, No. 02SA157