No. 91CA2012Colorado Court of Appeals.
Decided October 22, 1992. Rehearing Denied December 31, 1992.
Appeal from the District Court of Lake County Honorable Richard H. Hart, Judge
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Gale A. Norton, Attorney General, Raymond T. Slaughter, Chief Deputy Attorney General, Timothy M. Tymkovich, Solicitor General, Clement P. Engle, Assistant Attorney General, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
D. Wayne Patton, for Defendant-Appellant.
Division III.
Opinion by JUDGE CRISWELL.
[1] Defendant, David C. Gould, appeals the eight-year sentence imposed following his guilty plea to second degree assault. We affirm. [2] Defendant pleaded guilty to second degree assault on July 12, 1990. At that time, he was on probation for a felony conviction in the State of Iowa. Later, he voluntarily returned to Iowa where he was arrested and incarcerated for probation violation on August 21, 1990, based on his guilty plea in this case. As a result, defendant failed to appear at the sentencing hearing set for October 5, 1990. Sentencing was, therefore, continued until the defendant could be returned to Colorado. [3] Defendant was released from the Iowa Department of Corrections on August 7, 1991, returned to Colorado, was appointed counsel, and his sentencing hearing was scheduled for October 18, 1991. However, on October 10, 1991, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charge against him, claiming that the trial court lacked jurisdiction because a term of court had expired after he had entered his guilty plea and that the delay in his sentencing was unreasonable. [4] The trial court concluded that it had jurisdiction to sentence the defendant because there had been no indefinite continuance from term to term, and under the circumstances of this case, the delay in sentencing was not unreasonable. The court then sentenced the defendant to be incarcerated for eight years, awarding him credit for the time served in Iowa. I.
[5] Relying on Grundel v. People, 33 Colo. 191, 79 P. 1022 (1905), the defendant argues that the trial court lacked jurisdiction because he was sentenced in a term of court other than the one in which he pleaded guilty. We disagree.
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that there be at least one term of court each year. And, we shall also assume, solely for purposes of the issue here presented, that that term commences on the first business day after January 1.
[14] In either instance, therefore, whether the district court here had two terms as provided by its local rules, or only one, as required by constitution and statute, defendant pleaded guilty during one term of court, but was not sentenced until the following term. Nevertheless, we conclude that such sentencing was not improper. [15] In Grundel v. People, supra, the delay in sentencing was unexplained, was not initially caused by the defendants, and resulted in an indefinite postponement of sentencing. It was only after the passage of some three years after defendants entered their pleas that the prosecutor in GrundelII.
[17] We also reject defendant’s contention that the delay in sentencing was unreasonable under Crim. P. 32(b).
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