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Camp v. State
Lisa M. Ivey of Stubbs, Sills & Frye, P. C., Anniston, for appellant.
Steve Marshall, att'y gen., and Cecil G. Brendle, Jr., asst. att'y gen., for appellee.
Terry Leavon Camp appeals from the circuit court's revocation of his probation. He argues that his sentence is illegal because, he says, the split portion of his original sentence does not comply with § 15-18-8(b), Ala. Code 1975. He says that, under Ex parte McGowan, 346 So.3d 10 (Ala. 2021), the circuit court lacked the authority to revoke his probation. We agree.
Camp pleaded guilty in June 2016 to second-degree assault, see § 13A-6-21, Ala. Code 1975. The circuit court sentenced him to 15 years in prison, split to serve 3 years followed by 4 years of probation.1
Nearly a year after he began serving his probation Camp "absconded supervision," and, in October 2020, the circuit court revoked Camp's probation and "re-split" his sentence, ordering him to serve another 45 days in jail, followed by probation.
A few weeks after Camp got out of jail, his probation officer moved to revoke his probation, alleging that he had violated the conditions of his probation by committing the new offense of unlawful possession of a controlled substance. After a hearing, the circuit court revoked Camp's probation and ordered him to serve his full sentence. Camp appealed.
On appeal, Camp argues that the circuit court's revocation of his probation in October 2020 and the "re-splitting" of his sentence, adding 45 days to his confinement, was an illegal sentence. Because this split sentence was unauthorized, he says, the circuit court lacked the authority to later revoke the probation imposed as part of that sentence.2
We agree with Camp that the split portion of his sentence does not comply with § 15-18-8. But we conclude that the sentencing error occurred, not when the circuit court added 45 days to Camp's confinement, but when it first split Camp's 15-year sentence and ordered him to serve 3 years’ imprisonment on a Class C felony conviction.3
Second-degree assault is a Class C felony offense. § 13A-6-21, Ala. Code 1975. When Camp committed that offense in 2016 and when the circuit court sentenced him for that conviction in June 2016, the sentencing range for a Class C felony was "not more than 10 years or less than 1 year and 1 day and must be in accordance with subsection (b) of Section 15-18-8 unless sentencing is pursuant to Section 13A-5-9 [Ala. Code 1975]." § 13A-5-6(a)(3), Ala. Code 1975.4 Under § 13A-5-9, when a defendant who has been previously convicted of a Class A, Class B, or Class C felony is convicted of a Class C felony, "he or she must be punished for a Class B felony." § 13A-5-9(a)(1), Ala. Code 1975. The sentencing range for a Class B felony is 2 to 20 years. § 13A-5-6(a)(2), Ala. Code 1975.
Section 15-18-8(b) provides:
"Unless a defendant is sentenced to probation, drug court, or a pretrial diversion program, when a defendant is convicted of an offense that constitutes a Class C or D felony offense and receives a sentence of not more than 15 years, the judge presiding over the case shall order that the convicted defendant be confined in a prison, jail-type institution, treatment institution, or community corrections program for a Class C felony offense ... for a period not exceeding two years in cases where the imposed sentence is not more than 15 years, and that the execution of the remainder of the sentence be suspended notwithstanding any provision of the law to the contrary and that the defendant be placed on probation for a period not exceeding three years and upon such terms as the court deems best."
(Emphasis added.) The circuit court sentenced Camp to 15 years in prison for his Class C felony conviction. That sentence was within the statutory range for a defendant sentenced as a habitual felony offender under § 13A-5-9. The circuit court's imposition of a three-year split, though, was not authorized by § 15-18-8.
Although § 13A-5-9 did not require the circuit court to split the 15-year sentence it imposed on Camp, any split it imposed had to comply with § 15-18-8(b). See Shugart v. State, [Ms. CR-20-0067, May 28, 2021] ––– So. 3d –––– (Ala. Crim. App. 2021). And under § 15-18-8(b), a defendant who is convicted of a Class C felony and who receives a 15-year sentence cannot receive a split sentence with imprisonment exceeding 2 years. That is because the limit for the length of a split term for a Class C felony conviction "turn[s] on the classification of the felony conviction, not ... the length of the imposed base sentence." Smith v. State, 334 So.3d 250 (Ala. Crim. App. 2020). Thus, because the circuit court did not have the authority under § 15-18-8(b) to order Camp to serve 3 years in jail on a 15-year sentence for a Class C felony conviction, Camp's sentence is unauthorized.
Because Camp's original split sentence is an unauthorized sentence, the circuit court's orders revoking Camp's probation are void. Ex parte McGowan, supra.
Shugart v. State, ––– So. 3d at ––––. Because "a void order will not support an appeal," see Ex parte Butler, 295 So. 3d 1115, 1117 (Ala. Crim. App. 2019), we dismiss Camp's appeal from the circuit court's revocation order.5
APPEAL DISMISSED.
1 Although the record does not show whether the circuit court sentenced Camp as a habitual felony offender, a 15-year sentence for a second-degree-assault conviction is appropriate for a defendant sentenced as a habitual felony offender under § 13A-5-9, Ala. Code 1975. See Norwood v. State, 424 So. 2d 1351, 1352 (Ala. Crim. App. 1982) .
2 Camp asserts this argument in a footnote in his brief on appeal. He noted, though, that he was raising the issue out of "an abundance of caution" because, he said, he recognized that, under this Court's decision in McGowan v. State, 346 So.3d 1 (Ala. Crim. App. 2019), "the removal of the illegal manner of execution of a sentence renders the illegality moot." (Camp's brief, p. 2.) Following the Alabama Supreme Court's decision in Ex parte McGowan, Camp filed a notice of supplemental authority arguing that his sentence is illegal and that the circuit court lacked the authority to revoke a probationary...
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