IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 36631
STATE OF IDAHO, )
) 2010 Opinion No. 62
Plaintiff-Respondent, )
) Filed: September 2, 2010
v. )
) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
JOSHUA LEE BOSIER, )
)
Defendant-Appellant. )
)
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Ada
County. Hon. Michael R. McLaughlin, District Judge.
Third amended judgment of conviction, vacated, and original judgment,
reinstated.
Molly J. Huskey, State Appellate Public Defender; Sarah E. Tompkins, Deputy
Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Nicole L. Schafer, Deputy
Attorney General, Boise, for respondent.
________________________________________________
LANSING, Chief Judge
Joshua Lee Bosier appeals from the entry of his third amended judgment of conviction
for possession of a controlled substance and argues that the district court erred by amending his
formerly concurrent sentence to convert it to a consecutive sentence. We vacate the district
court’s third amended judgment of conviction and reinstate the original judgment.
I.
BACKGROUND
Bosier pleaded guilty to felony possession of a controlled substance, Idaho Code § 37-
2732(c), and the district court imposed a unified seven-year term of imprisonment with three
years fixed. The court specified that the sentence would be concurrent with another Ada County
case but was silent concerning the sentence’s relation to Bosier’s sentences in some Canyon
County cases. The court suspended Bosier’s sentence and placed him on probation for seven
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years. A month after sentencing, however, the district court summoned Bosier for another
hearing. The court explained that it did so because at the time of Bosier’s original sentencing, it
had been under the mistaken belief that Bosier had an opportunity for retained jurisdiction, and
ultimately probation, in one of his other cases, but jurisdiction had in fact been relinquished in
that case. At this second sentencing hearing, the district court amended Bosier’s judgment of
conviction to give him the same sentence but without the order of suspension and probation.
That is, the court effectively revoked Bosier’s probation. The court also ordered that the
sentence was to run “concurrent with the other cases that have him in the penitentiary,” which
upon further discussion, included an Ada County case and one of three Canyon County cases of
which the court was aware.1 Subsequently, acting upon a letter written by Bosier that the court
treated as an Idaho Criminal Rule 35 motion to reduce his sentence, the court entered a second
amended judgment of conviction reducing Bosier’s fixed term to two years.
Bosier appealed. In an unpublished opinion, State v. Bosier, Docket No. 34745 (Ct. App.
Apr. 29, 2009), this Court held that the district court had violated Bosier’s right to due process by
revoking his probation without notice and an adequate opportunity to be heard. We therefore
vacated the first and second amended judgments of conviction and remanded the case for
“reinstatement of the original probation.” Id.2
After a hearing on remand, the district court entered a third amended judgment of
conviction that restored Bosier’s probation but also once again redefined his underlying sentence
by directing that it run concurrent with the Ada County sentence but consecutive to the Canyon
County sentences. The district court also directed that the probation period would commence
when Bosier was released from prison.
Although Bosier did not object to these modifications in the district court, he again
appeals. He argues that the district court was without jurisdiction to amend his sentence to run
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In the other two Canyon County cases, Bosier was serving periods of retained jurisdiction
(“riders”) that had not been completed at the time of the second sentencing hearing. The court
did not further address the relationship between Bosier’s sentence in this case and those other
two Canyon County cases at the sentencing hearing.
2
In that opinion, this Court did not address whether Bosier’s probation properly could
have been revoked in the circumstances presented if the requisite procedural safeguards had been
afforded.
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consecutively to the Canyon County sentences and to commence upon Bosier’s release from
prison, rather than on October 3, 2007 as originally ordered, because this Court had reinstated the
original suspended sentence, which ran concurrently with probation commencing immediately.
He also contends that the district court’s sentence on remand was vindictive and therefore
constituted a violation of due process. The State concedes that it was error for the court to alter
the original judgment by delaying commencement of the probationary term, but contends that it
was permissible for the court to order that any term of imprisonment that might be served in the
present case in the event of revocation of Bosier’s probation would be served consecutive to the
Canyon County sentences.
II.
ANALYSIS
We conclude that the district court on remand lacked jurisdiction to make the
modifications of the original judgment, and we therefore vacate the district court’s third amended
judgment of conviction.
A. The Question of Subject Matter Jurisdiction Was Not Waived by Failure to Raise it
Below
The State first argues that Bosier may not assert on appeal that the district court lacked
jurisdiction to amend Bosier’s sentence on remand because Bosier did not object to the
amendment below. The State’s argument fails, however, because a challenge to a court’s subject
matter jurisdiction may be brought at any time. State v. Lundquist, 134 Idaho 831, 835, 11 P.3d
27, 31 (2000); State v. Diggie, 140 Idaho 238, 240, 91 P.3d 1142, 1144 (Ct. App. 2004). A
court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived by a party, and the parties cannot
consent to the court’s assumption of jurisdiction through conduct or acquiescence, nor be
estopped from asserting its absence. State v. Armstrong, 146 Idaho 372, 374, 195 P.3d 731, 733
(Ct. App. 2008). A claim that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to modify a
judgment presents a question of law over which we exercise free review. State v. Savage, 145
Idaho 756, 758, 185 P.3d 268, 270 (Ct. App. 2008); State v. Parvin, 137 Idaho 783, 785, 53 P.3d
834, 836 (Ct. App. 2002).
B. The District Court Lacked Jurisdiction to Alter Bosier’s Sentence on Remand
A trial court has only limited authority to modify a judgment once it becomes final. As
stated in State v. Jakoski, 139 Idaho 352, 355, 79 P.3d 711, 714 (2003), “Absent a statute or rule
extending its jurisdiction, the trial court’s jurisdiction to amend or set aside a judgment expires
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once the judgment becomes final, either by expiration of the time for appeal or affirmance of the
judgment on appeal.” Such rules include Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), which permits a
civil judgment to be set aside for several specified reasons, and Idaho Criminal Rule 35, which
permits a motion to correct an illegal sentence. Jakoski, 139 Idaho at 355 n.5, 79 P.3d at 714 n.5.
Neither rule is implicated here.
Idaho Appellate Rule 38 can also confer on a trial court authority to amend a judgment
after an appeal. Rule 38(c) authorizes the district court to “forthwith comply with the directive
of the opinion” of the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals. Thus, if such directive is to amend a
judgment on remand, I.A.R. 38(c) extends to the trial court the authority to do so. No such
authority was conferred in this case, however, because this Court’s decision in Bosier’s first
appeal only vacated the first and second amended judgments of conviction and remanded the
case “for reinstatement of the original probation.” Nothing in that decision called upon the
district court to make any changes in the original judgment. Indeed, because the trial court’s
original judgment is automatically reinstated if an appellate court vacates the trial court’s
amended judgment, see State v. Allen, 144 Idaho 875, 878, 172 P.3d 1150, 1153 (Ct. App. 2007),
the effect of this Court’s decision was to reinstate Bosier’s original judgment of conviction and
sentence without the necessity of further action from the trial court. We acknowledge that the
district court after remand still possessed jurisdiction to take some actions in the case because
Bosier was on probation. The court had continuing jurisdiction to consider matters attendant to
the probation, including motions to modify or revoke probation. See I.C. §§ 19-2602 to 19-2607;
I.C.R. 5.3, 33(e). However, in Jakoski the Supreme Court held that after a judgment of
conviction has become final, a court retains subject matter jurisdiction to take only such actions
as are authorized by specific statutes or rules. Here, the court’s continued possession of
jurisdiction to take actions pertaining to Bosier’s probation did not extend its jurisdiction to take
other actions, such as enlarging the sentence after the original judgment of conviction and
sentence had become final.
We first consider the State’s argument that because Bosier’s original judgment of
conviction did not specify whether his sentence was concurrent or consecutive to his Canyon
County sentences, the district court was not “changing” Bosier’s sentence. This contention is
without merit. If a court does not specify whether a sentence is to be served concurrently with or
consecutive to another sentence, the sentence will be concurrent because, in the absence of a
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specification that it is to be consecutive, the defendant’s service of the sentence will begin
immediately. This is dictated by the directive in I.C. § 19-2703 that when a sentence of
imprisonment has been imposed, “the defendant must forthwith be committed to the custody of
the proper officer, and by him detained until the judgment is complied with.” A similar issue
was addressed by this Court in State v. West, 105 Idaho 505, 670 P.2d 912 (Ct. App. 1983),
where, upon revoking the defendant’s probation, the trial court ordered that the sentence would
be served consecutively to a later sentence imposed for a crime that occurred during the
probationary period. We held that this action amounted to increasing the defendant’s sentence
and was impermissible. Id. at 507, 670 P.2d at 914.
The State’s next argument is predicated upon the general rule that “on remand, a trial
court has authority to take actions it is specifically directed to take, or those which are subsidiary
to the actions directed by the appellate court.” State v. Hosey, 134 Idaho 883, 886, 11 P.3d 1101,
1104 (2000). According to the State, the district court’s modification of the sentence to provide
that it would run consecutive to the Canyon County sentences was a subsidiary matter to this
Court’s directive to reinstate Bosier’s probation, because the district court was simply addressing
a matter that it had previously overlooked. The State’s argument is refuted, however, by our
decision in Allen. In that case, instead of giving the defendant credit for all time previously
served upon revocation of probation, the district court commuted his sentence proportionately
such that the defendant could serve the remainder of his sentence at the county jail instead of the
state penitentiary. However, the district court did not express its intent at the original sentencing
hearing that the sentence commutation would act as a substitute for credit for time served. The
defendant appealed, contending that he was entitled to credit for all time previously served. We
held that the defendant was correct. We said that “once sentence has been pronounced,” the
court cannot increase it “by issuing a subsequent judgment or amended judgment” to give effect
to the court’s original intent regarding some aspect of sentencing, “if that intent is not expressed
at the sentencing hearing.” Allen, 144 Idaho at 878, 172 P.3d at 1153. We determined that
I.C.R. 36 does not extend authority for a court to make this type of amendment to a sentence.
That rule allows a court to correct clerical mistakes in judgments, which arise from oversight or
omission, at any time. We held that it did not, however, “provide a vehicle by which a trial court
may amend a sentence to give effect to the court’s previously unstated intent that alters the
sentence.” Id. Here, the conversion of Bosier’s sentence from one that was to be served
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concurrently to one that will run consecutive to other sentences increases the aggregate term.
See State v. Mendenhall, 106 Idaho 388, 394, 679 P.2d 665, 671 (Ct. App. 1984). Just as the trial
court in Allen was powerless to increase the defendant’s sentence to conform to the court’s
unexpressed intent, so was the district court here.3
The State also argues that this was a matter subsidiary to the action to be taken on remand
because this Court had addressed only the question of whether Bosier was entitled to
reinstatement of his probation, not a question of whether his sentence would run consecutive to
others if that probation was violated. We are not persuaded. If on remand a trial court is tasked
with only the ministerial act of entering an amended judgment to comply with an appellate
decision, that court does not have the power to “revisit discretionary issues of the case,” and such
remand does “not open the door for the [court] to address substantive issues in the case” as those
issues are not subsidiary to such ministerial act. Hummer v. Evans, 132 Idaho 830, 833, 979
P.2d 1188, 1191 (1999). Ordering the reinstatement of Bosier’s original probation--a specific
direction that placed the parties in precisely the same position that they occupied before Bosier’s
probation was revoked--called for only a ministerial act. Altering the concurrent nature of the
sentence was not subsidiary to that task. Whether a sentence runs concurrently with or
consecutive to another sentence is a discretionary decision for the trial court, see I.C. § 18-308,
and is a substantive sentencing issue. See Mendenhall, 106 Idaho at 393, 679 P.2d at 670.
Therefore, as the district court had only ministerial authority to act, and changing Bosier’s
sentence from running concurrent with the Canyon County sentences to running consecutive was
a discretionary and substantive change, the district court had no subsidiary authority to order that
Bosier’s sentence be served consecutive to the Canyon County sentences.
The court exceeded its jurisdiction on remand by ordering that Bosier’s sentence be
served consecutive to other sentences. Consequently we must vacate its third amended judgment
of conviction.
3
We also observe that the State’s argument that running the sentences consecutively was
the court’s intent at the original sentencing is not supported by the record. In fact, the second
amended judgment, which was vacated in the first appeal, expressly provided that Bosier’s
sentence would be served concurrently with his sentences in the Ada County case and a Canyon
County case.
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Because we hold that the district court did not have jurisdiction to make Bosier’s
sentence consecutive to the Canyon County sentences, we do not reach Bosier’s alternative
argument that this modification of his sentence was invalid because it was vindictive.
III.
CONCLUSION
The district court’s third amended judgment of conviction is vacated, and the original
judgment of conviction is reinstated in all aspects.
Judge GUTIERREZ and Judge GRATTON CONCUR.
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