[Cite as State v. Holdcroft, 2012-Ohio-3066.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
WYANDOT COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO,
PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE, CASE NO. 16-10-13
v.
HENRY ALLEN HOLDCROFT, OPINION
DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Appeal from Wyandot County Common Pleas Court
Trial Court No. 98 CR 0044
Judgment Affirmed
Date of Decision: July 2, 2012
APPEARANCES:
Kristopher A. Haines for Appellant
Jonathan K. Miller for Appellee
Case No. 16-10-13
PRESTON, J.
{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Henry Allen Holdcroft (hereinafter “Holdcroft”),
appeals the November 16, 2010 judgment of the Wyandot County Court of
Common Pleas resentencing him to include post-release control (“PRC”) for a
mandatory period of five years for aggravated arson and a discretionary period of
up to three years for arson to be run concurrently to one another.
{¶2} On November 13, 1998, the Wyandot County Grand Jury indicted
Holdcroft on three counts: Count One, aggravated arson in violation of R.C.
2909.02(A)(3), a first degree felony; Count Two, complicity to commit aggravated
arson in violation of R.C. 2923.03(A)(1), a first degree felony; and Count Three,
arson in violation of R.C. 2909.03(A)(4), a third degree felony. (Doc. No. 1). The
charges stemmed from an incident where Holdcroft hired a third party to set fire to
his then-wife’s automobile and home.
{¶3} On June 9, 1999, the State filed a motion to dismiss Count Two of the
indictment on the basis that the charge was an allied offense of similar import to
Count One, aggravated arson. (Doc. No. 58). The trial court granted the State’s
motion to dismiss Count Two on June 25, 1999. (Doc. No. 79). On July 6-9,
1999, a jury trial was held on the remaining two counts of the indictment against
Holdcroft. The jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts. (Doc. Nos. 106-07).
-2-
Case No. 16-10-13
On July 29, 1999, the trial court filed a judgment entry of conviction. (Doc. No.
114).
{¶4} On September 10, 1999, the trial court sentenced Holdcroft to ten
years imprisonment on Count One, aggravated arson, and five years imprisonment
on Count Three, arson. The trial court ordered “that the sentence imposed for
Count Three shall be served consecutively to the sentence imposed in Count One.”
(Sept. 13, 1999 JE, Doc. No. 116). Holdcroft was ordered to make restitution to
the victim, Kathy Hurst, or the insurance carrier, in the sum of $5,775.00, and
$400.00 to Eric Goodman. The trial court also notified Holdcroft “that a period of
post-release control shall be imposed,” and that if he violated his post-release
control further restrictions upon his liberty could follow as a consequence. (Id.)
Holdcroft was also taxed with the costs of prosecution and all other fees permitted
under R.C. 2929.18(A)(4). This entry was journalized on September 13, 1999.
(Id.)
{¶5} On September 14, 1999, Holdcroft, pro se, filed a notice of appeal.
(Doc. No. 117). The trial court appointed appellate counsel, and the appeal was
assigned case no. 16-99-04. (Doc. No. 124). On appeal, Holdcroft asserted one
assignment of error, arguing that his convictions were against the manifest weight
of the evidence. State v. Holdcroft (Mar. 31, 2000), 3d Dist. No. 16-99-04. The
State also appealed the judgment of the trial court regarding “other acts” evidence
-3-
Case No. 16-10-13
that was excluded from trial. This Court subsequently overruled Holdcroft’s
assignment of error, sustained the State’s assignment of error, and upheld the
convictions. Id.
{¶6} While his direct appeal was pending before this Court, Holdcroft filed
a motion for the appointment of counsel in order to pursue post-conviction relief.
(Doc. No. 131). The trial court granted the motion and appointed counsel on
February 3, 2000. (Doc. No. 132).
{¶7} On May 5, 2000, Holdcroft, pro se, filed a notice of appeal to the Ohio
Supreme Court from this Court’s March 31, 2000 decision. (Doc. No. 134). The
Ohio Supreme Court, however, declined review. State v. Holdcroft, 89 Ohio St.3d
1464 (2000).
{¶8} On June 9, 2000, Holdcroft, through appointed appellate counsel, filed
a motion for a new trial, along with a motion to withdraw as appellate counsel.
(Doc. No. 135-136). The trial court granted the motion to withdraw but denied the
motion for a new trial. (Doc. Nos. 138, 141). On June 26, 2000, Holdcroft filed a
motion for judicial release, which the trial court also denied. (Doc. Nos. 137, 139).
{¶9} On July 13, 2006, Holdcroft filed a “motion to vacate or set aside and
modify sentence pursuant to R.C. 2945.25(A) & Crim.R. 52(B).” (Doc. No. 161.)
On July 20, 2006, the trial court overruled this motion, finding it was untimely and
lacked substantive merit “as the Defendant was not convicted of allied offenses of
-4-
Case No. 16-10-13
similar import. There were separate and distinct felonies committed by the
Defendant, one involving a dwelling and the other involving an automobile.”
(Doc. No. 163.)
{¶10} On August 16, 2006, Holdcroft, pro se, filed a notice of appeal from
the trial court’s denial of his motion. (Doc. No. 165). On appeal, Holdcroft argued
that his sentence was void because he was sentenced on two offenses that were
allied offenses of similar import. This Court overruled Holdcroft’s assignment of
error, finding that his motion was an untimely post-conviction motion, and, under
a plain error analysis, that the offenses were not allied offenses of similar import.
State v. Holdcroft, 3d Dist. No. 16-06-07, 2007-Ohio-586.
{¶11} On December 11, 2009, the State filed a motion to correct
Holdcroft’s sentence pursuant to R.C. 2929.191. (Doc. No. 186). On December
30, 2009, the State filed a motion for a de novo sentencing hearing to correct
Holdcroft’s sentence pursuant to State v. Singleton, 124 Ohio St.3d 173, 2009-
Ohio-6434. (Doc. No. 195). The trial court granted this motion and conducted a
de novo sentencing on January 26, 2010. (Doc. No. 198). Once again, the trial
court sentenced Holdcroft to ten years on Count One and five years on Count
Three. The trial court further ordered that Count Three be served consecutively to
Count One for an aggregate term of fifteen years. The trial court notified
Holdcroft that he would be subject to five years of mandatory post-release control
-5-
Case No. 16-10-13
as to Count One and three years of discretionary post-release control as to Count
Three. The trial court also noted that the terms of post-release control would not
be served consecutively to each other. The trial court further ordered that
Holdcroft “pay restitution to Kathy Hurst, or the insurance carrier, in the sum of
$5,775.00; and make restitution to Eric Goodman in the amount of $400.00.”
(Feb. 2, 2010 JE, Doc. No. 205)
{¶12} On February 12, 2010, Holdcroft filed a notice of appeal from the
trial court’s judgment entry of sentence. (Doc. No. 210). On May 26, 2010, while
the appeal was pending, Holdcroft, pro se, filed a petition for post-conviction
relief and various motions relating to that petition. (Doc. Nos. 223-26). The trial
court noted that Holdcroft was appointed counsel to handle the direct appeal of his
conviction, which was pending before this Court. (Doc. No. 227). The trial court
subsequently dismissed Holdcroft’s petition, concluding that it lacked jurisdiction
to rule because his appeal was pending before this Court. (Id.).
{¶13} However, on September 13, 2010, this Court dismissed Holdcroft’s
direct appeal from the trial court’s de novo resentencing in January of 2010. State
v. Holdcroft, 3d Dist. No. 16-10-01, 2010-Ohio-4290. As the basis for dismissing
the case, we determined that the judgment entry imposing Holdcroft’s sentence
and conviction did not constitute a final appealable order. Id. at ¶ 19. More
specifically, we found that the trial court’s de novo sentencing entry failed to
-6-
Case No. 16-10-13
allocate the amount of restitution between the victim, Kathy Hurst, and the
insurance company and that an order of restitution must set forth the amount or
method of payment as to each victim receiving restitution in order to be a final
appealable order. Id., citing State v. Kuhn, 3d Dist. No. 4-05-23, 2006-Ohio-1145,
¶ 8; State v. Hartley, 3d Dist. No. 14-09-42, 2010-Ohio-2018, ¶ 5. Because
Section 3(B)(2), Article IV of the Ohio Constitution limits our jurisdiction to
reviewing “final appealable orders,” we remanded Holdcroft’s appeal of his de
novo sentence to the trial court to resolve the restitution issue.1
{¶14} Subsequently, on November 16, 2010, the trial court issued a new
judgment entry pursuant to our decision. (Doc. No. 238). In this entry, the trial
court ordered Holdcroft to pay $5,775.00 to Kathy Hurst and also noted that
certain portions of the record supported this sum and that “Ms. Hurst will be
obligated to reimburse her insurance carrier for any money paid to her by it over
and above that which she spent for repairing the vehicle.” (Id.) The trial court
further noted that “[t]he defense interposed no objection to the restitution figures
offered.” (Id.)
1
As a result of this dismissal, on December 20, 2010, we found that the trial court incorrectly concluded
that it lacked jurisdiction to rule on Holdcroft’s petition for post-conviction relief. Nevertheless, we found
that the trial court correctly dismissed the petition and the motions related to it because a final order of
conviction and sentence had not been filed in the case. State v. Holdcroft, 3d Dist. No. 16-10-04, 2010-
Ohio-6262, ¶ 21.
-7-
Case No. 16-10-13
{¶15} On November 29, 2010, Holdcroft filed a notice of appeal. (Doc. No.
240). Holdcroft asserts nine assignments of error for our review. We elect to
address Holdcroft’s first assignment of error last and to combine his other eight
assignments of error for discussion.
SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE CONSECUTIVE, MAXIMUM SENTENCES VIOLATED
THE 6TH AMENDMENT TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION, AND
THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSES CONTAINED IN THE OHIO
AND U.S. CONSTITUTIONS.
THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE MAXIMUM, CONSECUTIVE SENTENCES AND THE
RESTITUTION ORDER WERE CONTRARY TO LAW
ANDABUSIVE.
FOURTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN CONVICTING AND
SENTENCING THE APPELLANT ON AGGRAVATED
ARSON AND ARSON COUNTS IN VIOLATION OF THE
DOUBLE JEOPARDY CLAUSE OF THE 5TH AMENDMENT
OF THE U.S. CONSTITUTION, ARTICLE I, SECTION 10 OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION AND OHIO’S MULTIPLE-
COUNT STATUTE.
FIFTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE SENTENCE SHOULD BE REVERSED AS IT
VIOLATES CRIMINAL RULE 32, AND THE 5TH, 6TH AND
14TH AMENDMENTS TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION,
BECAUSE IT WAS IMPOSED OVER TEN YEARS AFTER
THE GUILTY VERDICT.
-8-
Case No. 16-10-13
SIXTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE COURT ERRED WHEN IT FAILED TO CHANGE THE
VENUE OR GRANT A MISTRIAL DUE TO JURY TAINT
AND JURY MISCONDUCT THAT VIOLATED THE 6TH AND
14TH AMENDMENTS TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION, AND
ARTICLE I, SECTIONS 10 AND 16 OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION.
SEVENTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING OTHER ACTS
EVIDENCE IN VIOLATION OF EVID.R. 403 AND 404, THUS
DEPRIVING APPELLANT OF A FAIR TRIAL UNDER THE
6TH AND 14TH AMENDMENTS TO THE U.S.
CONSTITUTION, AND ARTICLE I, SECTIONS 10 AND 16
OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION.
EIGHTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
APPELLANT’S CONVICTION WAS NOT SUPPORTED BY
THE SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE IN VIOLATION
OF THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE OF THE 14TH
AMENDMENT TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION, AND
ARTICLE I, SECTIONS 1 & 16 OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION, AND THE CONVICTIONS WERE
AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.
NINTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
TRIAL COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL IN VIOLATION OF THE 6TH
AMENDMENT TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION AND
ARTICLE I, SECTIONS 10, 16 OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION.
{¶16} Initially, we must determine the scope of our review of these
assignments of error and whether they are properly before this Court. The State
-9-
Case No. 16-10-13
asserts that the only issues Holdcroft may now raise on appeal are those related to
PRC pursuant to State v. Fischer, 128 Ohio St.3d 92, 2010-Ohio-6238. Thus, the
State contends that Holdcroft is precluded from challenging the merits of his
conviction, including the determination of guilt and the lawful elements of his
sentence. In response, Holdcroft argues that unlike the facts at issue in Fischer,
which addressed sentences that were void for lacking proper PRC notification, his
case involves a sentencing entry that did not constitute a final, appealable order
because of the trial court’s restitution order. As such, he maintains that our prior
decisions are nullities because we did not have jurisdiction until a final appealable
order was rendered, i.e. on November 16, 2010, and that each of his assignments
of error is properly before this Court as if this were his first direct appeal.
{¶17} After reviewing the convoluted procedural history of this case, we
conclude that addressing Holdcroft’s assignments of error furthers the interests of
justice here. That being said, this Court is very familiar with this case and our
analysis of Holdcroft’s assignments of error will be done summarily.
{¶18} In his eighth assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that his
conviction was not supported by sufficient evidence and against the manifest
weight of the evidence. We disagree. After reviewing the record herein under the
applicable standards, we conclude that the State presented sufficient evidence and
that Holdcroft’s convictions were not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
-10-
Case No. 16-10-13
{¶19} In his second assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that Oregon v.
Ice, 555 U.S. 160, 129 S.Ct. 711 (2009) abrogated State v. Foster, 109 Ohio St.3d
1, 2006-Ohio-856; and therefore, the trial court was required to make factual
findings before imposing consecutive sentences. This Court has rejected this
argument before, and we reject it again. State v. Taylor, 3d Dist. No. 9-10-44,
2011-Ohio-1866, ¶ 90. We also reject Holdcroft’s argument that the trial court’s
application of Foster operated as an ex post facto law in violation of the Due
Process Clause. State v. Elmore, 122 Ohio St.3d 472, 2009-Ohio-3478, paragraph
one of the syllabus.
{¶20} In his third assignment of error, Holdcroft first argues that the trial
court erred in taking judicial notice of the same factual findings it had made at the
original sentencing hearing (pre-Foster) for the resentencing hearing (post-
Foster). We disagree. Foster simply stated that the trial courts were no longer
required to make factual findings; Foster did not forbid trial courts from
considering the relevant factors when sentencing. State v. Smith, 11th Dist. No.
2006-A-0082, 2007-Ohio-4772, ¶ 24. We also reject Holdcroft’s argument that
his sentence was not consistent with other sentences for similar arson convictions.
Finally, we reject his argument relative to the trial court’s restitution figure since
Holdcroft did not object to the same at the resentencing hearing. We cannot
-11-
Case No. 16-10-13
conclude that the trial court’s restitution order amounted to plain error when the
record supported its order herein.
{¶21} In his fourth assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that the trial court
erred by imposing sentences upon both his aggravated arson and arson convictions
since they constituted allied offenses of similar import. We disagree. The
evidence presented demonstrated that Holdcroft set two separate fires (one upon
the vehicle and one upon the porch); and therefore, separate animus exists for each
separate conviction. State v. Johnson, 128 Ohio St.3d 153, 2010-Ohio-6314, ¶ 49.
{¶22} In his fifth assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that the
unreasonable delay between his conviction in 1999 and his final sentence in 2010
violated Crim.R. 32 and the 5th, 6th, and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
We reject this argument as well. The trial court here did not simply refuse to
sentence Holdcroft; rather, it was subsequently determined upon appeal (almost
ten years later) that Holdcroft’s sentencing entry was non-final. Holdcroft was
also resentenced to correct a PRC notification issue. Consequently, we must reject
his arguments of unreasonable delay. See e.g. State v. Spears, 9th Dist. No. 24953,
2010-Ohio-1965.
{¶23} In his sixth assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that the trial court
erred when it failed to change the venue or grant a mistrial due to jury misconduct.
Since the record fails to indicate that any of the jurors who read the pretrial
-12-
Case No. 16-10-13
newspaper article were actually biased in this case, Holdcroft’s arguments lack
merit. State v. Wegmann, 3d Dist. No. 1-06-98, 2008-Ohio-622, ¶ 34-35.
{¶24} In his seventh assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that the trial
court erred by admitting other acts evidence in violation of Evid.R. 403 and 404,
and thereby, depriving him of a fair trial. We disagree. The evidence of
Holdcroft’s previous threat to his wife, Kathy Hurst, that he would burn her house
down if she ever left, and Holdcroft’s solicitation of Joshua Shula to burn his
wife’s car and trailer were admissible to show Holdcroft’s motive, intent, plan,
and identity under Evid.R. 404(B) and R.C. 2945.59. Furthermore, the trial
court’s admission of this evidence would be harmless error at most in light of the
other evidence presented.
{¶25} In his ninth assignment of error, Holdcroft argues that trial counsel
was ineffective for various reasons. A defendant asserting a claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel must establish: (1) the counsel’s performance was deficient
or unreasonable under the circumstances; and (2) the deficient performance
prejudiced the defendant. State v. Kole, 92 Ohio St.3d 303, 306 (2001), citing
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S.Ct. 2052 (1984). Prejudice
results when “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
State v. Bradley, 42 Ohio St. 3d 136, 142 (1989), citing Strickland at 691. “A
-13-
Case No. 16-10-13
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” Bradley at 142; Strickland at 694. Even if we assume that trial counsel
was ineffective as Holdcroft argues, he has failed to demonstrate prejudice.
{¶26} Holdcroft’s eighth, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and
ninth assignments of error are, therefore, overruled.
FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE COURT LACKED JURISDICTION TO IMPOSE
MANDATORY POST-RELEASE CONTROL UPON THE
APPELLANT.
{¶27} In his first assignment of error, Holdcroft asserts that the trial court
lacked jurisdiction to impose the mandatory, five-year term of PRC for his
aggravated arson conviction (Count One) because, by the time of the resentencing
hearing, he had already completed his ten-year-sentence on that conviction and
was serving the remainder of his five-year-sentence for his arson conviction
(Count Two). In response, the State contends that, at the time of the resentencing
hearing, Holdcroft was still serving his aggregate fifteen-year sentence in the case;
and therefore, the trial court has jurisdiction to impose PRC on both convictions.
{¶28} The relevant procedural history in this case is undisputed. On
September 13, 1999, the trial court ordered that Holdcroft serve ten years on
Count One, aggravated arson, and five years on Count Three, arson. The trial
court further ordered that the term of imprisonment for Count Three be served
-14-
Case No. 16-10-13
consecutively to the term for Count One, for an aggregate term of fifteen years.
The trial court resentenced Holdcroft to impose the proper terms of PRC in
January of 2010,2 imposing five years of mandatory PRC for Count One and up to
three years of discretionary PRC for Count Three. Thus, over ten years but less
than fifteen years transpired between the time of the sentencing and the
resentencing hearings.
{¶29} “‘When sentencing a felony offender to a term of imprisonment, a
trial court is required to notify the offender at the sentencing hearing about
postrelease control and is further required to incorporate that notice into its journal
entry imposing sentence.’” Hernandez v. Kelly, 108 Ohio St.3d 395, 2006-Ohio-
126, ¶ 15, quoting State v. Jordan, 104 Ohio St.3d 21, 2004-Ohio-6085, paragraph
one of the syllabus. A trial court’s failure to incorporate the proper notice of post-
release control—whether PRC is mandatory or discretionary, the duration of PRC,
and the possible consequences for violating PRC—renders the trial court’s
sentencing entry partially void. Fischer, 2010-Ohio-6238, at ¶ 27-29. Generally
speaking, the appropriate remedy to correct the trial court’s partially void
sentencing entry is to resentence the offender. Jordan, 2004-Ohio-6085, at ¶ 23;
2
The resentencing hearing was held on January 26, 2010, but the resentencing entry was not filed until
February 2, 2010.
-15-
Case No. 16-10-13
State v. Bezak, 114 Ohio St.3d 94, 2007-Ohio-3250, ¶ 16-17.3 However, an
offender that “has already served the prison term ordered by the trial court * * *
cannot be subject to resentencing in order to correct the trial court’s failure to
impose postrelease control.” Bezak, 2007-Ohio-3250, at ¶ 18. See also Hernandez,
2006-Ohio-126, at ¶ 32 (“In that his journalized sentence has expired, Hernandez
is entitled to the writ and release from prison and from further postrelease
control.”); State ex rel. Cruzado v. Zaleski, 111 Ohio St.3d 353, 2006-Ohio-5795,
¶ 28 (“Because Cruzado’s sentence had not yet been completed when he was
resentenced, Judge Zaleski was authorized to correct the invalid sentence to
include the appropriate, mandatory postrelease-control term.”); State v. Simpkins,
117 Ohio St.3d 420, 2008-Ohio-1197, syllabus (“In cases in which a defendant is
convicted of, or pleads guilty to, an offense for which postrelease control is
required but not properly included in the sentence, the sentence is void, and the
state is entitled to a new sentencing hearing to have postrelease control imposed
on the defendant unless the defendant has completed his sentence.”); State v.
Bloomer, 122 Ohio St.3d 200, 2009-Ohio-2462, ¶ 70 (“[O]nce an offender has
3
The nature of the resentencing hearing depends upon when the partially void sentence was entered. For
sentences entered on or after July 11, 2006, R.C. 2929.191 prescribes the resentencing hearing and
remedial mechanism to correct such sentencing entries. State v. Singleton, 124 Ohio St.3d 173, 2009-Ohio-
6434, paragraph two of the syllabus. For sentences entered prior to July 11, 2006, the proper remedy is a
resentencing hearing “limited to [the] proper imposition of postrelease control.” Fischer, 2010-Ohio-6238,
at ¶ 29. Although the majority in Fischer did not explicitly state that this limited resentencing hearing is an
R.C. 2929.191 hearing, it appears that an R.C. 2929.191 hearing would meet the majority’s requirements.
See Fischer, 2010-Ohio-6238, at ¶ 43, Fn. 3 (Lanzinger, J., dissenting) (noting that the majority’s opinion
effectively overruled paragraph one of the syllabus in Singleton, 2009-Ohio-6434, requiring a de novo
resentencing hearing).
-16-
Case No. 16-10-13
completed the prison term imposed in his original sentence, he cannot be subjected
to another sentencing to correct the trial court’s flawed imposition of postrelease
control.”).
{¶30} The issue sub judice is whether the trial court was without
jurisdiction to impose five years of mandatory PRC on Holdcroft’s aggravated
arson conviction (Count One) at the resentencing hearing because Holdcroft had
already served “the prison term ordered by the trial court.” Specifically, the issue
concerns whether the words “prison term” and “sentence” used by the Ohio
Supreme Court in Bezak, Hernandez, Cruzado, Simpkins, and Bloomer mean the
prison term the trial court ordered for each conviction (Count) or whether these
words refer to the entire term of imprisonment for all convictions (Counts) in the
case, i.e. the aggregate sentence imposed for the entire case. If the words have the
former meaning, the trial court was without jurisdiction to impose five years of
mandatory PRC on Holdcroft’s aggravated arson conviction (Count One) since
Holdcroft had already served his ten-year sentence on that conviction (Count). If
the words have the latter meaning, the trial court had jurisdiction to impose the
five years of mandatory PRC on Holdcroft’s aggravated arson conviction (Count
One) since Holdcroft was still incarcerated on his total aggregate sentence at the
time of the resentencing hearing. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the
words “prison term” and “sentence” as used by the Ohio Supreme Court in
-17-
Case No. 16-10-13
Hernandez and the cases that follow it mean the entire journalized sentence for all
convictions (Counts) in the case, i.e. the aggregate sentence; and therefore, the
trial court sub judice had jurisdiction to impose the mandatory five-year term of
PRC on Holdcroft’s aggravated arson conviction (Count One).
{¶31} The answer to our inquiry is not directly revealed by the Ohio
Supreme Court’s decisions in Hernandez, Bezak, or Bloomer because the
defendants in those cases were serving terms of imprisonment stemming from
single-count indictments. 2006-Ohio-126, at ¶ 4; 2007-Ohio-3250, at ¶ 1; 2009-
Ohio-2462, at ¶ 22. Comparison to the Court’s decision in Cruzado is also
inapposite since the offender was sentenced on two counts from two separate
indictments; the trial court ordered that the sentences be served concurrently; and,
the offender was resentenced prior to the expiration of the concurrent terms of
imprisonment. 2006-Ohio-5795, at ¶ 2, 8-9. Similarly, the offender in Simpkins
was sentenced to three concurrent terms of imprisonment stemming from a single
indictment, and the offender was resentenced prior to the expiration of the
concurrent terms of imprisonment. 2008-Ohio-1197, at ¶ 1-3.
{¶32} While the aforementioned cases do not directly answer the specific
question presented here, they do provide the policy lens through which similar
cases ought to be viewed. The Court in Hernandez explained that notifying an
offender of his post-release control obligations after he has already served the term
-18-
Case No. 16-10-13
of imprisonment “would circumvent the objective behind R.C. 2929.14(F) and
2967.28 to notify defendants of the imposition of postrelease control at the time of
their sentencing.” 2006-Ohio-126, at ¶ 28. Significant to the Court’s decision in
Hernandez was the fact that the offender had already been released from his
original term of imprisonment and had unknowingly violated his PRC. Id. at ¶ 5-6.
See also Simpkins, 2008-Ohio-1197, at ¶ 17. When the prison warden argued that
the trial court’s failure to properly notify the offender of PRC could be corrected
by simply holding a resentencing hearing, the Court rejected that argument—
comparing an after-the-fact PRC notification to an after-the-fact community
control notification. Hernandez, 2006-Ohio-126, at ¶ 31, citing State v. Brooks,
103 Ohio St.3d 134, 2004-Ohio-4746; Simpkins, 2008-Ohio-1197, at ¶ 17. The
Court in Hernandez observed that the purpose of R.C. 2929.19(B)(5), which
requires that the trial court provide offenders sentenced to community control with
notice of the possible consequences for violating their community control, is to
provide offenders with the notice before a violation of their community control.
2006-Ohio-126, at ¶ 31, citing Brooks, 2004-Ohio-4746, at ¶ 33. Similarly, the
purpose of R.C. 2929.19(B)(2)(c)-(e), formerly R.C. 2929.19(B)(3)(c)-(e), is to
provide the offender with notice of the possible consequences if he violates the
terms of post-release control before a violation of his post-release control has
actually occurred. Interpreting the terms “prison term” and “sentence” used in the
-19-
Case No. 16-10-13
aforementioned cases as the aggregate sentence on all convictions (Counts) in the
case is consistent with the purpose behind R.C. 2929.19(B)(2)(c)-(e), because the
offender would be notified about his PRC before his release from prison and,
consequently, before a violation of PRC could ever occur.
{¶33} Interpreting “prison term” and “sentence” used in the aforementioned
cases as the aggregate sentence on all convictions in the case is also consistent
with Ohio Revised Code Chapter 2929. For purposes of Chapter 2929, “prison
term” includes “[a] stated prison term,” and the “stated prison term” includes the
“combination of all prison terms and mandatory prison terms imposed by the
sentencing court.” R.C. 2929.01(BB), (FF). Similarly, the term “sentence”
includes the “combination of sanctions imposed by the sentencing court on an
offender who is convicted of or pleads guilty to an offense.” R.C. 2929.01(EE)
(emphasis added). Possible “sanction[s]” include terms of imprisonment imposed
under 2929.14. R.C. 2929.01(DD). Moreover, R.C. 2929.14(C)(6) provides that
“[w]hen consecutive prison terms are imposed pursuant to * * * [R.C. 2929.14],
the term to be served is the aggregate of all of the terms so imposed.” See also
Ohio Adm. Code § 5120-2-03.1 (“When consecutive stated prison terms are
imposed, the term to be served is the aggregate of all of the stated prison terms so
imposed.”). Consequently, throughout Chapter 2929, the words “prison term” and
-20-
Case No. 16-10-13
“sentence” can refer to multiple terms of imprisonment (sanctions under R.C.
2929.14) imposed by the sentencing court, i.e. the aggregate sentence.
{¶34} Interpreting the words “prison term” and “sentence” used in the
aforementioned cases as the aggregate sentence imposed on all convictions
(Counts) in the case is also consistent with R.C. 2929.191. In response to Jordan
and Hernandez, the General Assembly enacted H.B. 137, which provided, in
relevant part:
(A)(1) If, prior to the effective date of this section, a court
imposed a sentence including a prison term of a type described in
division (B)(3)(c) of section 2929.19 of the Revised Code and
failed to notify the offender pursuant to that division that the
offender will be supervised under section 2967.28 of the Revised
Code after the offender leaves prison or to include a statement to
that effect in the judgment of conviction entered on the journal
or in the sentence pursuant to division (F)(1) of section 2929.14
of the Revised Code, at any time before the offender is released
from imprisonment under that term * * *
(2) If a court prepares and issues a correction to a judgment of
conviction as described in division (A)(1) of this section before
the offender is released from imprisonment under the prison term
the court imposed prior to the effective date of this section, the
court shall place upon the journal of the court an entry nunc pro
tunc to record the correction to the judgment of conviction and
shall provide a copy of the entry to the offender or, if the
offender is not physically present at the hearing, shall send a
copy of the entry to the department of rehabilitation and
correction for delivery to the offender. * * *
-21-
Case No. 16-10-13
R.C. 2929.191(A)(1), (2) (emphasis added) (eff. 7-11-06).4 As we alluded to
above, the words “prison term” and “sentence” in R.C. 2929.191 have been
expressly defined in R.C. 2929.01 to include the combination of prison terms, i.e.
the aggregate sentence, imposed upon an offender by the sentencing court.
{¶35} Moreover, R.C. 2929.191’s language must be interpreted in light of
the history in which it was enacted, the General Assembly’s response to Jordan
and Hernandez, and in light of its remedial purpose. Singleton, 2009-Ohio-6434,
at ¶ 48 (Pfeifer, J., dissenting) (R.C. 2929.191 was enacted in response to Jordan
and Hernandez); Id. at ¶ 65 (Lanzinger and Stratton, J.J., concurring in part,
dissenting in part) (same); Id. at ¶ 23 (describing R.C. 2929.191 as remedial);
(H.B. 137 Final Bill Analysis) (“amendments made in the act concerning post-
release control are non-substantive and merely clarify the prior law and thus are
remedial in nature”). Remedial laws are to be liberally construed to give effect to
their legislative purpose and to promote justice. R.C. 1.11. See also Clark v.
Scarpelli, 91 Ohio St.3d 271, 275 (2001), citing Curran v. State Auto. Mut. Ins.
Co., 25 Ohio St.2d 33, 38 (1971). The General Assembly’s purpose in enacting
R.C. 2929.191 was, in part, “to reaffirm that, prior to [the statute’s] effective date,
an offender subject to post-release control sanctions was always subject to the
post-release control sanctions after the offender’s release from imprisonment
4
R.C. 2929.191 was recently amended by H.B. 86 (eff. 9-30-11) to reflect changes in the sentencing
statutes, however, the changes to R.C. 2929.191 were not substantive and do not affect the analysis herein.
-22-
Case No. 16-10-13
without the need for any prior notification or warning * * *.” (H.B. 137 Final Bill
Analysis). The General Assembly also declared that it intended R.C. 2929.191 to
apply “regardless of whether [the offenders] were sentenced prior to, or are
sentenced on or after, the act’s effective date * * *.” (Id.). See also Singleton,
2009-Ohio-6434, at ¶ 65 (Lanzinger and Stratton, J.J., concurring in part,
dissenting in part). In light of the foregoing, we conclude that interpreting the
words “prison term” and “sentence” as the aggregate sentence for all convictions
(Counts) in the case better effectuates the legislative purpose of R.C. 2929.191 by
ensuring that offenders are serving post-release control upon their release from
prison as required under R.C. 2967.28(B).
{¶36} The Court of Appeals, for its part, has taken different positions on
this precise issue. The Eighth District has held that it is the expiration of the
sentence on the specific conviction (Count) for which post-release control is
applicable, and not the offender’s ultimate release from prison, that determines
whether a court may correct a sentencing error and impose post-release control at
resentencing. State v. Dresser, 8th Dist. No. 92105, 2009-Ohio-2888, ¶ 11,
reversed on other grounds in State ex rel. Carnail v. McCormick, 126 Ohio St.3d
124, 2010-Ohio-2671. The defendant in Dresser pled guilty to two counts of rape
and two counts of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor in 2000.
2009-Ohio-2888, at ¶ 3. The trial court imposed an indefinite concurrent sentence
-23-
Case No. 16-10-13
of ten years to life on the rape charges and a concurrent sentence of five years on
the pandering charges. Id. The trial court further ordered that the concurrent rape
sentence was to run consecutive to the five-year concurrent sentence for
pandering; however, the trial court failed to impose post-release control on the
pandering counts. Id. In July 2007, the trial court held a hearing and advised the
defendant of his mandatory five-year term of PRC on the pandering convictions.
Id. at ¶ 4. The defendant appealed and argued that he could not be given PRC on
the pandering convictions since he had already served his five year concurrent
terms on those convictions by the time of the hearing. Id. at ¶ 5. The Eighth
District determined that, because the defendant had failed to file the original
sentencing transcript, there was no evidence as to which order the offenses were to
be served, and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the sentence for the rape
charges was to be served first. Id., citing State v. Dresser, 8th Dist. No. 90305,
2008-Ohio-3541 (Dresser I). Nevertheless, the Eighth District concluded the trial
court erred by failing to conduct a de novo hearing and remanded the matter for a
new sentencing hearing. Id.
{¶37} On remand, the trial court conducted a de novo sentencing hearing
and ordered the concurrent five-year sentence on the pandering charges be served
prior to the indefinite rape sentences. Id. at ¶ 6. The trial court then concluded
that post-release control could not be imposed on the pandering convictions,
-24-
Case No. 16-10-13
because the defendant had already served the five-year sentence on those
convictions. Id. Thereafter, the State appealed and argued that the trial court erred
by failing to impose the mandatory term of PRC. Id. at ¶ 7. The Eighth District
rejected the State’s argument, however, and concluded that the trial court could
not retroactively impose the mandatory PRC upon the defendant for his pandering
convictions since he had already served the sentence for those convictions by the
time of the resentencing hearing. Id. at ¶ 8.
{¶38} In reaching its decision in Dresser, the Eighth District stated that
“other districts have also considered this issue and have concluded that it is the
expiration of the prisoner’s journalized sentence, rather than the offender’s
ultimate release from prison that is determinative of the trial court’s authority to
resentence.” Id. at ¶ 11, citing State v. Bristow, 6th Dist. No. L-06-1230, 2007-
Ohio-1864; State v. Turner, 10th Dist. No. 06AP-491, 2007-Ohio-2187; and State
v. Ferrell, 1st Dist. No. C-070799, 2008-Ohio-5280. Although the Eighth District
correctly stated the general proposition of law from those cases, the appellate court
failed to apply the proposition of law correctly in Dresser. The facts of Dresser
are easily distinguishable from the facts in Bristow, Turner, and Ferrell. All of the
defendants in those cases, unlike Dresser, were sentenced to consecutive sentences
for convictions in separate cases stemming from separate indictments. Bristow,
2007-Ohio-1863, at ¶ 2; Turner, 2007-Ohio-2187, at ¶ 4; Ferrell, 2008-Ohio-
-25-
Case No. 16-10-13
5280, at ¶ 1. In fact, the defendants’ convictions in Turner and Ferrell were from
different counties. 2007-Ohio-2187, at ¶ 4; 2008-Ohio-5280, at ¶ 1.
Consequently, the “journalized sentence” to which the Courts in Bristow, Turner,
and Ferrell were referring to was the journalized sentence for an entire case—not
the sentence for a single conviction (Count) in a single case. Therefore, the
specific rule of law from Bristow, Turner, and Ferrell was that a trial court lacks
jurisdiction to impose PRC upon an offender when the sentence for the entire case
has been already served, even though the offender is still incarcerated on a
different case and the sentence in the second case was ordered to be served
consecutive to the first (now finished) case. This rule has been followed by
several other districts besides the first, sixth,5 and tenth, including this district.
State v. Arnold, 189 Ohio App.3d 238, 2009-Ohio-3636 (2nd Dist.); State v. Ables,
3d Dist. No. 10-11-03, 2011-Ohio-5873; State v. Henry, 5th Dist. No. 2006-CA-
00245, 2007-Ohio-5702; State v. Rollins, 5th Dist. No. 10CA74, 2011-Ohio-2652.
Despite the obvious differences between the facts and procedural history in
Bristow, Turner, Ferrell, and the facts and procedural history in Dresser, the
Eighth District still follows Dresser and continues to examine sentences on
5
The Sixth District does have one case not following this rule. State v. Lathan, 6th Dist. No. L-10-1359,
2011-Ohio-4136. This appears to be the only case that has held that consecutive sentences in separate
cases constitute one aggregate sentence for purposes of resentencing for proper imposition of PRC. The
Sixth District has other cases following the rule it previously set forth in Bristow, supra. State v. Larkins,
6th Dist. No. H-10-010, 2011-Ohio-2573; State v. Helms, 6th Dist. No. L-10-1079, 2010-Ohio-6520.
-26-
Case No. 16-10-13
specific convictions (Counts) for purposes of determining whether a trial court has
jurisdiction to impose PRC at a resentencing hearing. State v. Cobb, 8th Dist. No.
93404, 2010-Ohio-5118; State v. O’Hara, 8th Dist. No. 95575, 2011-Ohio-3060.
{¶39} The Ninth District, on the other hand, has concluded that, for
purposes of determining whether a trial court has jurisdiction to resentence an
offender to properly impose PRC under Hernandez and its progeny, a “journalized
sentence that includes consecutive sentences does not expire until the aggregate
time of the consecutive sentences expires.” State v. Deskins, 9th Dist. No.
10CA009875, 2011-Ohio-2605, ¶ 19. The defendant in that case pled guilty to
five counts of rape, and, in September 2003, the trial court sentenced him to serve
five years imprisonment on each count and further order that the terms be served
consecutively for an aggregate term of twenty-five years. Id. at ¶ 2-3.6 In April
2010, the trial court held a resentencing hearing and resentenced the defendant to
the same twenty-five-year aggregate prison term, but this time properly imposed
the mandatory five-year term of PRC. Id. at ¶ 4. Like Holdcroft herein, the
defendant in Deskins argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to impose PRC
on at least one of his convictions since he had already served seven years by the
6
It is not clear from the appellate court’s decision whether or not the trial court specified the order in which
the defendant was to serve the consecutive prison terms, i.e. count one first, count two second, etc. Deskins,
2011-Ohio-2605, at ¶ 2-3.
-27-
Case No. 16-10-13
time of the resentencing hearing, but the Ninth District rejected this argument and
found that the defendant’s journalized sentence had not expired. Id. at ¶ 19.
{¶40} To reach its decision, the Ninth District relied upon the Fifth
District’s decision in State v. Tharp, 5th Dist. No. 07-CA-9, 2008-Ohio-3995. The
defendant in Tharp pled no contest and was found guilty of two counts of
burglary, second degree felonies; one count of theft of a motor vehicle, a fourth
degree felony; two counts of theft of a firearm, fourth degree felonies; one count
of breaking and entering, a fifth degree felony; and two counts of theft in
violation, fifth degree felonies. Id. at ¶ 2. On November 1, 2000, the trial court
sentenced the defendant to two years on each of the two burglary convictions, one
year on the theft of a motor vehicle conviction, one year on the breaking and
entering conviction, six months on each of the two theft of a firearm convictions,
and six months on each of the two theft convictions. Id. at ¶ 3. The trial court
ordered that the terms of imprisonment be served consecutively for an aggregate
eight years imprisonment, but the trial court did not specify which term of
imprisonment was to be served first. Id. at ¶ 3, 11. On October 16, 2006, the trial
court held a resentencing hearing to properly impose PRC. Id. at ¶ 4. On appeal,
the defendant argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to impose PRC upon
his burglary convictions (Counts One and Two) since the termination judgment
entry listed the burglary convictions first, and he had already served the four years
-28-
Case No. 16-10-13
for those convictions by the time of the resentencing hearing. Id. at ¶ 12. The
Fifth District rejected the defendant’s argument, reasoning as follows:
The charges for which Appellant was found guilty and sentenced
to arise from a single indictment issued on February 24, 2000.
The trial court’s sentencing entry stated that each term was to
be served consecutively, but the trial court generally stated as to
each count that, “said period of incarceration to be served
consecutive to the time herein imposed.” The trial court did not
specify that certain counts were to be served consecutively to
another. Accordingly, we find Appellant’s journalized sentence
for an aggregate term of eight years does not expire until
November 2008. The trial court did not lack jurisdiction to
correct Appellant’s invalid sentence to include post release
control because Appellant’s journalized sentence had not yet
expired when he was resentenced.
Id. at ¶ 14.
{¶41} While the trial court sub judice did specify that Holdcroft’s ten-year
aggravated arson sentence be served first, we do not think this fact, alone,
sufficiently distinguishes our case from Deskins and Tharp, supra. Although the
Fifth District did rely upon this fact, in part, when it reached its decision, it also
specifically noted that the defendant’s sentence arose from a single indictment. Id.
Since its decision in Tharp, the Fifth District has distinguished Turner, Ferrell,
and Arnold, at least in part, on the basis that the defendants in those cases were
sentenced in separate cases. State v. Booth, 5th Dist. No. 2010CA00155, 2011-
Ohio-2557, ¶ 12-13. The Fifth District has also more recently clarified the
applicable rule to be gleaned from Bristow, Turner, Ferrell, and Arnold as
-29-
Case No. 16-10-13
follows: “where an offender has completed his sentence on the case for which the
court has resentenced him under R.C. 2929.191, the resentencing entry is void for
lack of jurisdiction even if the offender remains incarcerated on another case at the
time of the resentencing.” Id., at ¶ 12, citing State v. Henry, 5th Dist. No. 2006-
CA-00245, 2007-Ohio-5702. See also Rollins, 2011-Ohio-2652, at ¶ 10 (“the
language of R.C. 2929.191(A)(1) which permits resentencing “at any time before
the offender is released from prison on that term” refers to the Richland County
sentence. The sentence from Paulding County is a completely separate term of
imprisonment, imposed by a different court under a separate indictment and case,
and imposed roughly ten months after appellant began to serve his term of
imprisonment from Richland County.”).
{¶42} After reviewing the aforementioned cases, we agree with the Fifth
District that the rule in Bristow, Turner, Ferrell, and Arnold applies where the
offender has been sentenced in separate cases and the separate cases have been
ordered to be served consecutively. We do not agree with the Eighth District’s
expansion of this rule to include convictions (Counts) in a single case arising from
a single indictment like the case herein. Therefore, we hold that, for purposes of
determining whether a trial court has jurisdiction to resentence a defendant to
properly include PRC, a journalized sentence for a single case that includes
consecutive sentences on separate convictions (Counts) does not expire until the
-30-
Case No. 16-10-13
aggregate time of the consecutive sentences for all the convictions (Counts)
expires. Deskins, 2011-Ohio-2605, at ¶ 19.
{¶43} Our holding here is not only consistent with the Ohio Revised Code
and the applicable case law but is also consistent with public policy. As we
previously mentioned, our conclusion here is consistent with the policy of
notifying the offender of his PRC prior to a possible violation of the same.
Moreover, our conclusion here ensures that offenders are actually serving their
PRC—PRC, which was determined to be appropriate as a matter of public policy
as evidenced in R.C. 2967.28. This strong public policy of ensuring that offenders
are serving post-release control was further expressed when the General Assembly
promptly passed of H.B. 137 (enacting R.C. 2929.191) in response to the Ohio
Supreme Court’s decisions in Jordan and Hernandez. The Ohio Supreme Court
has also recognized this same public policy in its post-release control cases. See
Simpkins, 2010-Ohio-1197, at ¶ 26 (“Although res judicata is an important
doctrine, it is not so vital that it can override ‘society’s interest in enforcing the
law, and in meting out the punishment the legislature has deemed just.’”) (quoting
State v. Beasley, 14 Ohio St.3d 74, 75 (1984)); Fischer, 2010-Ohio-6238, at ¶ 21-
23. Finally, our decision encourages multi-count indictments (a single case) rather
than separate indictments (separate cases), which enhances judicial economy,
diminishes inconvenience to witnesses, and minimizes the possibility of
-31-
Case No. 16-10-13
incongruous results for the defendant. See State v. Schaim, 65 Ohio St.3d 51, 58
(1992) (joinder under Crim.R. 8(A)).
{¶44} Since Holdcroft had not yet completed his aggregate fifteen-year
sentence before the resentencing hearing was held, the trial court had jurisdiction
to sentence him to five years of mandatory PRC on his aggravated arson
conviction (Count One).
{¶45} Holdcroft’s first assignment of error is, therefore, overruled.
{¶46} Having found no error prejudicial to the appellant herein in the
particulars assigned and argued, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Judgment Affirmed
ROGERS, P.J. concurs.
/jlr
SHAW, P.J., Concurs in Part and Dissents in Part.
{¶47} In its decision to overrule the first assignment of error, the majority
acknowledges that the Supreme Court of Ohio has not resolved the issue presented
of whether a trial court has the authority to impose postrelease control on a
defendant who has already completed his or her prison term for a particular
offense, but remains imprisoned on another offense arising from the same case. In
proposing its resolution of this issue, the majority sets forth a statutory and case
-32-
Case No. 16-10-13
analysis that the majority believes precludes the reviewing court from considering
the specific sentence ordered by the trial court directed to each individual offense
charged within an indictment. Instead the majority would require the reviewing
court to base its decision only upon a "lump-sum," aggregate analysis which
essentially forges the entire "indictment," or "indictments" and the aggregate
"sentence" or "sentences" into a single, overall "prison term."
{¶48} According to the majority, the multiple or consecutive sentences
contained within this single "prison term" are then always capable of later being
parsed and interpreted in favor of the state, for purposes of interpreting prison time
served and cleaning up PRC errors, (or perhaps even for interpreting double
jeopardy implications), without regard to how many different individual offenses
are involved, without regard to the specific terms of any individual sentencing
orders contained within each judgment entry and without regard to how many of
these individual sentences, according to the specific terms of the judgment entry,
have in fact been completely served at the time any of these other issues are raised.
As a consequence, the majority effectively rules in the case before us that where
there are multiple sentences within a single case, the trial court does not have the
authority to specify which individual sentence is to be served first, regardless of
what it states in the judgment entry.
-33-
Case No. 16-10-13
{¶49} Because I believe the majority's proposal to shift our analysis of
these cases from the specific sentence imposed by the trial court pertaining to each
individual offense in any given indictment, toward an analysis based only upon the
overall aggregate sentence and aggregate prison term is problematic in general and
unwarranted in this particular case, I respectfully dissent from the disposition of
the first assignment of error. I concur in the disposition of the remaining
assignments of error.
{¶50} My first concern is that the majority decision disregards the specific
terms of the judgment entry of sentence in this case, which, as even the majority
concedes, clearly indicates that the ten year prison term for count one would be
served prior to the remaining prison terms, and hence the sentence for count one
would have been completed at the time the PRC issue regarding count one arose. I
see no sound reason for disregarding the specific language of a trial court's own
judgment entry of sentence in interpreting matters pertaining to that sentence.
{¶51} Thus, even if the majority rationale were to be considered as a viable
"default" alternative employed to determine the order of sentences in those cases
where the sentencing entry is silent on the nature of the consecutive sentences,
there is no reason to apply it in the present case where the trial court itself has
given us all the information we need to decide the question. And as noted above, it
seems to me that by disregarding the trial court's specific sentencing language in
-34-
Case No. 16-10-13
this case, we are effectively ruling that trial courts in general do not have the
authority to specify the order of consecutive sentences in a judgment entry of
sentence; something that I question whether we have the authority to do.
{¶52} Second, and perhaps more importantly, beyond merely deviating
from what I believe to be the sounder appellate approach of addressing each
specific offense, conviction and sentence for each count in the indictment, I
believe the position taken by the majority runs counter to fundamental sentencing
principles in Ohio jurisprudence which require courts to separately analyze the
specific sentence imposed for each offense. The Supreme Court of Ohio has stated
the following with regard to the purpose underpinning Ohio felony-sentencing
statutes.
Ohio’s felony-sentencing scheme is clearly designed to focus the
judge’s attention on one offense at a time. Under R.C.
2929.14(A), the range of available penalties depends on the degree
of each offense. For instance, R.C. 2929.14(A)(1) provides that
“[f]or a felony of the first degree, the prison term shall be three,
four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, or ten years.”7 (Emphasis
added.) R.C. 2929.14(A)(2) provides a different range for
second-degree felonies. In a case in which a defendant is
convicted of two first-degree felonies and one second-degree
felony, the statute leaves the sentencing judge no option but to
assign a particular sentence to each of the three offenses,
separately. The statute makes no provision for grouping offenses
7
We note that the legislature has since amended the felony-sentencing statutes to include new ranges of
available penalties for some offenses. For example, R.C. 2929.14(A)(1) now provides, “[f]or a felony of
the first degree, the prison term shall be three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, or eleven years.”
However, the overriding offense-specific approach to the felony-sentencing scheme remains the same.
-35-
Case No. 16-10-13
together and imposing a single, “lump” sentence for multiple
felonies.
Although imposition of concurrent sentences in Ohio may
appear to involve a “lump” sentence approach, the opposite is
actually true. Instead of considering multiple offenses as a
whole and imposing one, overarching sentence to encompass the
entirety of the offenses as in the federal sentencing regime, a
judge sentencing a defendant pursuant to Ohio law must consider
each offense individually and impose a separate sentence for each
offense. See R.C. 2929.11 through 2929.19. * * * Only after the
judge has imposed a separate prison term for each offense may
the judge then consider in his discretion whether the offender
should serve those terms concurrently or consecutively. * * *
Under the Ohio sentencing statutes, the judge lacks the authority
to consider the offenses as a group and to impose only an omnibus
sentence for the group of offenses.
State v. Saxon, 109 Ohio St.3d 176, 2006-Ohio-1245, ¶¶ 8-9. (Internal Citations
Omitted) (Emphasis added).
{¶53} In addition, the Supreme Court in Saxon specifically addressed the
term “sentence” as defined in R.C. 2929.01(E)(E), the former R.C. 2929.01(F)(F),
and reached a conclusion that appears to be inconsistent with majority’s regarding
how the term “sentence” is applicable to Ohio’s felony-sentencing scheme.
[Revised Code Section] 2929.01(FF) defines a sentence as “the
sanction or combination of sanctions imposed by the sentencing
court on an offender who is convicted of or pleads guilty to an
offense.”8 [The State] in the case at bar points to the
“combination of sanctions” language in this definition and urges
us to find that that [sic] language necessarily indicates that a
“sentence” includes all sanctions given for all offenses and is not
8
The term sentence is now codified under R.C. 2929.01(FF) which provides the same definition stated
above.
-36-
Case No. 16-10-13
limited to the sanction given for just one offense. But a trial
court may impose a combination of sanctions on a single offense,
for example, a fine and incarceration. See R.C. 2929.15 to
2929.18 * * *. Therefore, [the State’s] insistence that the
“combination of sanctions” language supports [it’s] contentions
is misplaced. This language merely recognizes the availability of
multiple sanctions for a single offense.
Further, the statute explicitly defines “a sentence” as those
sanctions imposed for “an offense.” The use of the articles “a”
and “an” modifying “sentence” and “offense” denotes the
singular and does not allow for the position urged by [the State].
A finding that the statute intended to package the sanctions for
all sentences into one, appealable bundle would ignore the plain
meaning of the statutory language: a sentence is the sanction or
combination of sanctions imposed on each separate offense. If the
legislature had intended to package sentencing together, it easily
could have defined “sentence” as the sanction or combination of
sanctions imposed for all offenses.
Saxon at ¶¶ 12-13. (Emphasis in original).
{¶54} Notably, the Supreme Court also appears to apply this offense-
specific approach to sentencing in the context of postrelease control. In Bezak¸ the
Supreme Court expressly stated in its syllabus that “[w]hen a defendant is
convicted of or pleads guilty to one or more offenses and postrelease control is not
properly included in a sentence for a particular offense, the sentence is void. The
offender is entitled to a new sentencing hearing for that particular offense.”
Bezak, 114 Ohio St.3d 94, 2007-Ohio-3250, syllabus.
{¶55} It is also notable that the Supreme Court in Fischer limited its
decision to only overrule a specific portion of Bezak. The Supreme Court made it
-37-
Case No. 16-10-13
clear that it revisited “only one component of the holding in Bezak, and we
overrule only that portion of the syllabus that requires a complete resentencing
hearing rather than a hearing restricted to the void portion of the sentence.”
Fischer, 128 Ohio St.3d 92, 2010-Ohio-6238, ¶ 36. Thus, the Supreme Court left
intact its approach to analyze a sentence for a particular offense when reviewing
whether a defendant is entitled to be resentenced for purposes of the trial court
properly imposing postrelease control.
{¶56} In addition, the statutory scheme for imposing postrelease control in
R.C. 2967.28 appears to mimic the felony-sentencing statute analyzed by the
Supreme Court in Saxon. In particular, the terms “sentence” and “prison term” are
used to refer to the individual sanction imposed by the trial court for a particular
offense. Like the felony-sentencing scheme, the statute governing postrelease
control assigns specific terms of postrelease control according to the degree of
felony or category of offense—i.e., felony sex offense. For instance, R.C.
2967.28(B) provides that
Each sentence to a prison term for a felony of the first degree,
for a felony of the second degree, for a felony sex offense, or for
a felony of the third degree that is not a felony sex offense and in
the commission of which the offender caused or threatened to
cause physical harm to a person shall include a requirement that
the offender be subject to a period of post-release control
imposed by the parole board after the offender’s release from
imprisonment. * * * Unless reduced by the parole board
pursuant to division (D) of this section when authorized under
-38-
Case No. 16-10-13
that division, a period of post-release control required by this
division for an offender shall be of one of the following periods:
(1) For a felony of the first degree or for a felony sex offense,
five years;
(2) For a felony of the second degree that is not a felony sex
offense, three years;
(3) For a felony of the third degree that is not a felony sex
offense and in the commission of which the offender caused or
threatened physical harm to a person, three years.
(C) Any sentence to a prison term for a felony of the third,
fourth, or fifth degree that is not subject to division (B)(1) or (3)
of this section shall include a requirement that the offender be
subject to a period of post-release control of up to three years
after the offender’s release from imprisonment, if the parole
board, in accordance with division (D) of this section, determines
that a period of post-release control is necessary for that
offender * * *.
{¶57} Nowhere in R.C. 2967.28 does the legislature direct a court to treat a
“sentence” or a “prison term” as the aggregate sentence arising from the case for
purposes of imposing postrelease control. In fact, the statute makes no provisions
for grouping offenses together and imposing a single aggregate term of postrelease
control for multiple felonies, despite the fact that one or more periods of
postrelease control are to be served concurrently. See R.C. 2967.28(F)(4)(c).9
Rather, the legislature in R.C. 2967.28 chose to consistently use the terms
9
Revised Code Section R.C. 2967.28(F)(4)(c) states, “[i]f an offender is subject to more than one period of
post-release control, the period of post-release control for all of the sentences shall be the period of post-
release control that expires last, as determined by the parole board or court. Periods of post-release control
shall be served concurrently and shall not be imposed consecutively to each other.”
-39-
Case No. 16-10-13
“sentence” and “prison term” to refer to a sentence for a particular offense for
purposes of imposing postrelease control.
{¶58} Finally, as noted earlier, I find it significant in this case that the trial
court specifically ordered Holdcroft to serve the ten-year sentence for the
aggravated arson conviction first, with the five-year sentence for the arson
conviction to be served consecutive to the aggravated arson sentence. The Eighth
District in State v. Dresser also found this fact persuasive in resolving the precise
issue before us. See State v. Dresser, 8th Dist. No. 92105, 2009-Ohio-2888, ¶ 11,
reversed on other grounds in State ex re. Carnail v. McCormick, 126 Ohio St.3d
124-2010-Ohio-2671. The court in Dresser found dispositive the fact that the trial
court had ordered the defendant to serve his five-year sentence for pandering prior
to his indefinite ten-year to life sentence for rape. Id. The court relied on Bezak
and concluded the following:
Once an offender has served the prison term ordered by the trial
court, he or she cannot be subject to resentencing in order to
correct the trial court’s failure to impose postrelease control at
the original hearing. State v. Bezak, 114 Ohio St.3d 420, 2008-
Ohio-3250. Here, Dresser had completed his [five-year
pandering] sentence; consequently, the trial court could not
impose postrelease control, after the fact, on the pandering
charges.
Dresser at ¶ 8.
-40-
Case No. 16-10-13
{¶59} The majority cites decisions from two other appellate districts in
support of its position that the “aggregate sentence,” and not the sentence imposed
for a particular offense, is to be considered when a defendant is resentenced to
properly impose postrelease control. Supra at ¶¶ 39-42. However, as noted by the
majority, the trial courts in both of those cases did not specify the order in which
the consecutive sentences were to be served.
{¶60} For all of these reasons, I would sustain the first assignment of error
and find that the trial court was without the authority to impose the mandatory
five-year term of postrelease control required for the aggravated arson conviction
due to the fact that Holdcroft had already served his sentence for that offense.
/jlr
-41-