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Pack v. State
John D. Coggin and Gina D. Coggin of The Coggin Firm, LLC, Centre, for appellant.
Steve Marshall, att'y gen., and Kristi O. Wilkerson, asst. att'y gen., for appellee.
In this appeal, we consider whether the two-year limit on a term of probation for a misdemeanor conviction in § 15-22-54(a), Ala. Code 1975, prevents a court from ordering a defendant sentenced at the same sentencing event for multiple misdemeanor convictions to serve consecutively the probationary terms on those convictions. We hold that the two-year limit in § 15-22-54(a) applies to each misdemeanor conviction and that a court may order a defendant to serve probationary terms consecutively if a separate misdemeanor conviction supports each term and each term does not exceed two years.
Kneely Brentison Pack pleaded guilty in 2015 to seven counts of home-repair fraud, see § 13A-9-111, Ala. Code 1975.1 Under the plea agreement, the DeKalb Circuit Court sentenced Pack on each count to 12 months in jail and 2 years’ probation. Also under the plea agreement, the court suspended the sentences and ordered Pack to serve the 2-year probationary terms consecutively, resulting in 14 years of probation. The court ordered Pack to pay an agreed-upon amount of $163,372 in restitution. Pack did not appeal his convictions or sentences.
The circuit court revoked Pack's probation after a hearing in August 2019.2 Based on the evidence, the circuit court found that Pack had violated the terms of his probation by committing the new offense of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol. The circuit court rejected Pack's argument that ordering him to serve consecutive terms of probation violated § 15-22-54. The circuit court, in a detailed order, cited the lack of statutory support for Pack's position but noted the issue was "ripe for appellate review." As a sanction for violating his probation, the circuit court ordered Pack to serve one year in jail. Pack appeals.
On appeal, Pack reiterates his challenge to the consecutive probationary terms. Pack argues that § 15-22-54(a) prohibits the consecutive terms of probation that he agreed to serve. According to Pack, he has already served more than two years of probation, and thus, he says, the circuit court no longer could revoke his probation.3
The version of § 15-22-54(a) applicable to Pack's case provided:
4
(Emphasis added.) Relying on the emphasized language above, Pack argues the circuit court could not order him to serve his two-year probationary terms consecutively.
These principles guide our examination of what a statute means:
DeKalb Cnty. LP Gas Co. v. Suburban Gas, Inc., 729 So. 2d 270, 275-76 (Ala. 1998).
Subsection 15-22-54(a) puts a two-year maximum on a probationary term for a defendant who is "guilty of a misdemeanor" (emphasis added). Pack reads that two-year limit as applying to the aggregate term of probation a court can impose at a sentencing event involving more than one misdemeanor conviction.
The legislature has adopted such an approach for some sentences under the Alabama Presumptive and Voluntary Sentencing Standards ("the Standards"). Under the Standards, a "sentencing event" includes "all convictions sentenced at the same time, whether included as counts in one case or in multiple cases." Presumptive and Voluntary Sentencing Manual 25 (emphasis in original). The Standards include both a range of punishment for offenses and rules for determining the "most serious offense" at a sentencing event. The maximum range of punishment for the most serious offense is generally the maximum range of punishment for the aggregate sentence for all convictions in that sentencing event. See, e.g., Showers v. State, 256 So. 3d 124, 127-28 (Ala. Crim. App. 2017).
But the plain meaning of the language in § 15-22-54(a) does not adopt such an approach and does not support Pack's position. The use of the singular noun "misdemeanor"—modified by the indefinite article "a"—shows the two-year limit applies to the probationary term imposed on each misdemeanor conviction. Had the legislature wanted to put in § 15-22-54(a) an aggregate limit on probationary terms ordered at a single sentencing event, it could have taken an approach like it did in the Standards for limiting an aggregate sentence of imprisonment. But the legislature did not take such an approach in § 15-22-54(a). That subsection simply puts a per-conviction limit on the duration of probation; it does not limit the aggregation of probationary terms.
Pack's reliance on this Court's decision in Minshew v. State, 975 So. 2d 395 (Ala. Crim. App. 2007), and the Alabama Supreme Court's decision in Ex parte Jackson, 415 So.2d 1169 (Ala. 1982), is unavailing. In Brand v. State, 93 So. 3d 985 (Ala. Crim. App. 2011), this Court held that the maximum set out in § 15-18-8, Ala. Code 1975, for the split portion of a sentence was not an aggregate limit. Rather, this Court held, § 15-18-8 applied to the split sentence imposed on an individual conviction and thus did not prohibit consecutive split sentences. In reaching that decision, this Court rejected Brand's reliance on Minshew and Jackson, explaining that the parts of those cases on which he relied were dicta:
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