STATE OF MISSOURI, )
)
Respondent, )
)
vs. ) No. SD35656
)
TAMARA D. TIDWELL, ) FILED: April 17, 2019
)
Appellant. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY
Honorable David A. Dolan, Judge
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
(Before Bates, J., Scott, J., and Sheffield, J.)
PER CURIAM. Initially charged with multiple felonies, Tamara Tidwell
agreed to plead guilty to one felony count and receive a suspended imposition of
sentence and probation, with other charges and cases to be dismissed, all of which
occurred in November 2010. 1
In March 2014, the court revoked Tidwell’s probation, sentenced her to five
years in prison concurrent with another sentence and subject to a 120-day callback
per § 559.115, and made a docket entry “Costs Ordered to State.” The county
certified a bill to the state including $920.26 for incarcerating Tidwell during 2010
and 2013.
1 The plea occurred in Case No. 10MI-CR00741-01. Hereafter, we refer only to that case.
In July 2014, the court ordered Tidwell released from prison and placed her
on five years’ probation. A condition of probation was that Tidwell “should pay any
outstanding court costs, Crime Victims Compensation Fund, intervention fees and
restitution balances, as applicable.” Related paperwork showed the court costs
claimed as $920.26, mirroring the county’s March 2014 cost bill to the state.
Four years later, having made only one $60 payment, Tidwell filed a
“Motion to Retax Costs,” asserting that she did not owe jail costs taxed to the state
in 2014 due to her indigent status. After a hearing, the court denied the motion on
August 17, 2018.
Four days later, but over four years after she was sentenced, Tidwell filed
notice of appeal. After we transferred the case to our supreme court pursuant to
Rule 83.02, the supreme court retransferred the case for reconsideration in light
of State v. Richey, No. SC97604 (Mo. banc March 19, 2019).
As we recently did in State v. Banderman, No. SD35501 (Mo. App. S.D.
Apr. 1, 2019), we find that Richey dictates our outcome. Respondent agrees and
asks us to reverse and remand to retax costs by removing the jail-board bill from
Tidwell’s fee report, which is the appropriate Richey disposition and renders an
extended opinion unnecessary. We reverse the circuit court’s ruling and remand
with instructions to retax costs in Case No. 10MI-CR00741-01 by removing the jail-
board bill liability from Tidwell’s fee report. 2
2 Tidwell’s request for a refund “by virtue of 42 U.S.C. § 407(a)” fails for two independently fatal
reasons. First, Tidwell did not assert this claim or theory in the circuit court and thus cannot raise
it for the first time on appeal. Second, as the concurring opinion notes, Tidwell offered no evidence
to support these or any of her other factual assertions on appeal.
2
STATE OF MISSOURI, )
)
Respondent, )
)
vs. ) No. SD35656
)
TAMARA D. TIDWELL, ) FILED: April 17, 2019
)
Appellant. )
OPINION CONCURRING IN RESULT
I fully concur in the result. Yet Richey leaves unclear how that issue could be
appealed when case law generally holds otherwise for post-criminal-judgment rulings
as we noted in transferring this case and as I detailed in my Banderman
concurrence. I won’t repeat what those opinions said, or beat a dead horse by
continuing to write separately on this, but I would treat such “appeals” as writ
applications pending supreme court guidance as I indicated in Banderman. 1
DANIEL E. SCOTT, J. – SEPARATE OPINION AUTHOR
1Indeed, I applaud our high court for expeditiously reaching Richey’s merits. But does skipping
the “deemed writ petition” work-around (see, e.g., State v. Saffaf, 81 S.W.3d 526, 528 (Mo. banc
2002)) invite future litigants, sub silentio, to appeal other post-criminal-judgment rulings despite
contrary case law? Eventually someone will so claim.
To be fair, the root problem throughout this case has been Appellant’s procedural nonchalance
in rushing to reach an appellate court (or as counsel told the trial judge, “I think in the appellate
courts we will get some traction and that is the objective.”) At the motion hearing, for example,
Appellant called no witnesses, identified an exhibit but did not offer it into evidence, and did not
even ask the court to judicially notice its file. Appellant’s motion was not self-proving. St. Louis
Bank v. Kohn, 517 S.W.3d 666, 674 (Mo.App. 2017). Nor were its attachments. Morphis v.
Bass Pro Group, 518 S.W.3d 259, 262 (Mo.App. 2017); Kohn, 517 S.W.3d at 674. Likewise,
counsel’s bare assertions did not prove themselves and were not evidence of facts presented.
Morphis, 518 S.W.3d at 262. Had the trial court not gone outside the hearing record to find flawed
support for its ruling, we would lack any record or basis sufficient to declare error and grant relief
regardless of the Richey decision or the State’s willingness to concede the issue.