                       IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                                   NO. 2003-CT-00487-SCT

JOHNNY LEE JOHNSON

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI


                                 ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI


DATE OF JUDGMENT:                             02/21/2003
TRIAL JUDGE:                                  HON. R. I. PRICHARD, III
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                    JEFFERSON DAVIS COUNTY CIRCUIT
                                              COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                       PRO SE
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                        OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
                                              BY: SCOTT STUART
DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                            CLAIBORNE McDONALD
NATURE OF THE CASE:                           CRIMINAL - FELONY
DISPOSITION:                                  THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
                                              IS AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN
                                              PART AND THE JUDGMENT OF THE TRIAL
                                              COURT IS REINSTATED AND AFFIRMED -
                                              03/23/2006
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:


       EN BANC.

       CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    We granted certiorari in this case because we are again confronted with certain issues which

have for some time caused both this Court and the Court of Appeals to devote considerable time and

energy in an effort to clarify certain sentencing laws. We attempt through this opinion to once and

for all lay to rest the perplexing issues concerning suspended sentences, supervised probation, and

post-release supervision. While we find the Court of Appeals correctly found Johnson’s sentence (1)
was not vindictive or harsh, (2) was not a denial of due process, and (3) was not disproportionate,

on the other hand, in considering the specific issue before us, we find the Court of Appeals erred in

its modification of the circuit court’s sentence imposed on Johnny Lee Johnson. We thus affirm in

part, and reverse in part, the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and reinstate and affirm the final

judgment of the Circuit Court of Jefferson Davis County.

                   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2.    We glean from the opinion of the Court of Appeals the facts which are relevant for today’s

discussion:

       In 1999, Johnny Johnson was arrested for the sale of 0.1 gram of cocaine. He was
       indicted in July 2000. Prior to that indictment, Johnson had been convicted in March
       2000, for a different sale of controlled substances. He had been sentenced to fifteen
       years, four to serve and eleven years suspended, with the suspension subject to the
       rules for post-release supervision.

       In February 2003, Johnson was tried for the 1999 drug sale.1 He was convicted and
       sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment, with eight years suspended and post-release




       1
         The record reveals Johnson entered a guilty plea to this charge; therefore, he was not tried
by a jury. At first blush, it would appear that this Court (and the Court of Appeals) would be without
jurisdiction to consider this case on direct appeal, because a defendant has no right to a direct appeal
upon a plea of guilty. Instead, relief is afforded through the Mississippi Uniform Post-Conviction
Collateral Relief Act, codified as Miss. Code Ann. Sections 99-39-1, et seq. See Berry v. State, 722
So.2d 706, 707 (Miss. 1998). However, it is clear that Johnson seeks relief only from the length of
the sentence imposed by the trial judge, and he in no way attacks the guilty plea itself. Thus, both
the Court of Appeals, and now this Court, have jurisdiction to consider, on direct appeal, the issue
of the length of Johnson’s sentence. Bennett v. State, 865 So.2d 1158, 1159 (Miss. 2004) (citing
and distinguishing Trotter v. State, 554 So.2d 313, 315 (Miss. 1989) and Burns v. State, 344 So.2d
1189, 1190 (Miss. 1977)). Additionally, Johnson’s notice of appeal clearly reveals he is appealing
only the sentence imposed, citing Campbell v. State, 743 So.2d 1050, 1052 (Miss. Ct. App. 1999)
and Trotter, 554 So.2d at 315. Finally, the State, in its brief, repeatedly refers to Johnson’s plea of
guilty and sentence, and yet does not attack the jurisdiction of the appellate courts to consider
Johnson’s direct appeal from his sentence. For all of these reasons, we are convinced that we
unquestionably have authority to consider the issue of sentencing on this appeal.

                                                   2
        supervision for five years. This sentence was consecutive to the one that Johnson
        was already serving. Johnson appeals.

Johnson v. State, 2004 WL 1557913, *1 (Miss. Ct. App. 2004). It is thus clear from the record that

after his arrest for the drug sale which is the subject of today’s appeal, but prior to his indictment on

this charge, Johnson was convicted in March, 2000, on an unrelated drug sale. Therefore, by the

time he stood before the sentencing judge on February 21, 2003, Johnson was indeed a prior

convicted felon based on his March, 2000 conviction.

¶3.     We set out verbatim portions of Johnson’s sentence as imposed by Circuit Judge R. I.

Prichard, III:

        [T]hereupon entering a plea of guilty ... [Johnson] be and he is hereby sentenced to
        serve a term of fifteen (15) years in the custody of the Mississippi State Department
        of Corrections, with said sentence to run consecutive to the sentence [he] is now
        serving.
                                              ************
        [U]pon successful completion of the service of said seven (7) years, the remaining
        eight (8) years of the fifteen (15) year sentence be and the same are hereby suspended
        pursuant and in conformity with the Post-Release Supervision set out and authorized
        in Section 47-7-34 of the Mississippi Code of 1972, Amended and Annotated.
                                              ************
        If [Johnson] meets all of the above conditions, then the remaining eight (8) years of
        the fifteen (15) year sentence be and the same are hereby suspended and [Johnson]
        shall be placed on Post-Release Supervision upon the following terms and conditions
        for a period of five (5) years.
                                              ************
        The violation of any one of the above enumerated conditions shall violate the terms
        and conditions of [Johnson’s] Post-Release Supervision and the Court shall have the
        authority to revoke the defendant from Post-Release Supervision and remand him
        back into the custody of the [MDOC] to serve all of the remaining years left on his
        fifteen (15) year sentence.

The practical effect of the sentence which Judge Prichard imposed upon Johnson was that (1) upon

completion of the sentence Johnson was serving at the time of the imposition of the sentence under

review, Johnson would serve seven years of incarceration; (2) upon release from MDOC custody,


                                                   3
Johnson would serve the remaining eight years of his fifteen-year sentence on post-release

supervision pursuant to the provisions of Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34; (3) five years of

Johnson’s eight-year post-release supervision sentence would be served under MDOC supervision

pursuant to the terms and conditions provided by Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-35; (4) the

remaining three years of Johnson’s eight-year post-release supervision sentence would be served as

“non-reporting,” meaning that while Johnson would not be under MDOC supervision by reporting

to a MDOC probation officer, Johnson would still be required to remain on “good behavior,” such

as not committing another crime, not owning, carrying, or concealing a firearm, and not using or

possessing illegal drugs; and, (5) if Johnson violated any of the terms of his post-release supervision

during this eight-year period, the court would have authority to terminate any part of, or all of, his

eight-year post-release supervision, and sentence Johnson to serve a term of up to eight years in the

custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, pursuant to the provisions of Miss. Code Ann.

Section 47-7-34(2).

                       PROCEEDINGS IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

¶4.    Before the Court of Appeals, Johnson attacked only his sentence, arguing that (1) the

sentence was vindictive and harsh;2 (2) the imposition of a sentence which ran consecutive to his

previously imposed sentence was a denial of due process; and, (3) the sentence was disproportionate

and thus in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and the sentence



       2
         This argument by Johnson is intriguing, inasmuch as Johnson stood before Judge Prichard
at a time when he was indicted for three drug sales, and it is only because the State chose (1) to nolle
prosequi two of the three indictments, and (2) not to charge Johnson as a second or subsequent
offender pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. Section 41-29-147, that Johnson was able to avoid the
possibility of facing sentences totaling one hundred eighty (180) years of incarceration. See also
Miss. Code Ann. § 41-29-139(b)(1).

                                                   4
was also illegal since, as a prior convicted felon, Johnson could not receive a suspended sentence.

The Court of Appeals found Johnson’s assignments of error to be without merit, with one exception.

The Court of Appeals found the circuit judge erred in suspending a portion of Johnson’s sentence

since, at the time of sentencing, Johnson was a convicted felon.

¶5.    In relying on two of its prior cases, Hunt v. State, 874 So.2d 448 (Miss. Ct. App. 2004) and

Gaston v. State, 817 So.2d 613 (Miss. Ct. App. 2002), the Court of Appeals stated:

       A section 47-7-34 sentence requires a “specific term of incarceration, no suspended
       sentence or ‘probation,’ and a specific term of post-release supervision of up to five
       years after incarceration, provided that the total of the two terms does not exceed the
       maximum sentence for the crime.” [Hunt, 874 So.2d] at 456. Post-release
       supervision might be seen as a merger of the purposes of suspension and probation,
       since the term of supervision must come out of the unserved portion of the maximum
       prison term for the offense.

Johnson, 2004 WL 1557913, *2, ¶ 8. The Court of Appeals, after analyzing the provisions of Miss.

Code Ann. Sections 47-7-33, -34, concluded:

       Johnson had eight years of a fifteen year sentence suspended. As noted above, since
       the statute that permits post-release supervision does not contain language
       authorizing suspending sentences, and another statute bars suspension of sentences
       to prior felons, no suspension should be given. However, there is no practical
       difference between what the trial judge did and what he should have done, which
       would have been to sentence Johnson to a seven year term of incarceration and a five
       year term of post-release supervision. We modify the sentence only to the extent that
       we remove as surplusage the giving of a fifteen year sentence with eight years
       suspended. In all other respects the sentence is affirmed, such that Johnson is to serve
       a term of incarceration of seven years in the custody of the Mississippi Department
       of Corrections, and then has a five year term of post-release supervision under the
       provisions of section 47-7-34.

       The Supreme Court has recently even suggested that there may be two different
       modes in which post-release supervision can be served. One is under the supervision
       of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, limited to five years. The statute may
       also permit unsupervised post-release supervision for additional periods so long as
       the total of the term to serve, the term of supervised supervision, and the term of
       unsupervised supervision does not exceed the maximum sentence for the offense.


                                                  5
       Miller v. State, 875 So.2d 194, 199 (Miss. 2004), interpreting Miss. Code Ann. § 47-
       7-34(3) (Supp. 2003). In Miller that conclusion was dicta. Later decisions are
       needed to make the interpretation of post-release supervision more certain.

Id at **2-3, ¶¶ 9-10.

¶6.    In the end, the Court of Appeals modified the circuit court sentence to remove the eight-year

suspended sentence, replacing that portion of the sentence with five years of post-release

supervision.3 Thus, while the net result of the Court of Appeals’ modified sentence was that Johnson

was still required to serve seven years in the custody of the MDOC, Johnson’s term of post-release

supervision was reduced from eight years to five years. The Court of Appeals likewise opined that

our holding in Miller v. State, 875 So.2d 194 (Miss. 2004), would “ultimately require adjustments”

in what the Court of Appeals had “announced in its precedents,” concluding that “[t]he certiorari

process in this case is available.” Id. at *3, ¶ 11. Having granted the State’s petition for writ of

certiorari, we now accept the invitation extended by the Court of Appeals to once again address the

statutory creatures known as suspended sentences, supervised probation, and post-release

supervision.




       3
         Although the Court of Appeals did not have the benefit of our later decision in Sweat v.
State, 912 So.2d 458, 460-61 (Miss. 2005), it still quite appropriately followed the correct procedure
in attempting to modify what it perceived to be an illegal or improper sentence, without the necessity
of remanding the case solely for the purpose of resentencing. Thus, while we agree that the Court
of Appeals followed the correct procedure, that Court, as will be discussed, infra, erroneously
modified a legal sentence imposed by the circuit judge.

                                                  6
                                          DISCUSSION

¶7.    In considering the State’s cert petition, we deem it necessary to address today only one issue.

               WHETHER THE CIRCUIT COURT IMPOSED AN ILLEGAL
               SENTENCE, OR A SENTENCE WHICH REQUIRED
               APPELLATE COURT MODIFICATION.

¶8.    As already aptly noted, we are again confronted with the ever-present sentencing problem

that occurs when a prior convicted felon is given a split sentence of incarceration followed by

MDOC supervision, whether it be classified as post-release supervision, or supervised probation.

Likewise, problems seem to arise when the term “suspended” or “suspended sentence” appears

anywhere in the sentencing order. The difficulty that has arisen from this otherwise typical exercise

of judicial discretion stems from long-standing confusion as to how a “suspended sentence” works

in concert with a statutory period of “supervised probation,” as codified under Miss. Code Ann.

Section 47-7-33, or “post-release supervision,” as codified under Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34.

As will be discussed, this Court has done its part in lending to this confusion. Accordingly, today

we must revisit Sections 47-7-33, -34 and examine the verbiage and vernacular common to these

sections as well as the case law interpreting them. Clearly, there is a need to reconcile this area of

our sentencing laws, and paint a clear picture of how the provisions of Section 47-7-33 were

intended to accomplish the same purpose as the provisions found in Section 47-7-34. Today’s

clarification is important to our appellate review, as many sentences which have been found by their

very “lingo” to be “illegal” are by their application exactly what our sentencing statutes actually

allow. However, today’s clarification of our sentencing statutes are of equal importance to the trial

bench and bar. Thus, it is essential that we harmonize our reading of these two statutes, because

based on the current status of our case law coming from both this Court and the Court of Appeals,


                                                  7
we will otherwise continue to engender unnecessary appellate review of what are otherwise legally

imposed sentences by our circuit and county judges.

        A.      Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-33:

¶9.     We begin our analysis by outlining the confusion that has arisen in our jurisprudence

regarding a judge’s authority to suspend a sentence, or to suspend a sentence and place a defendant

on supervised probation. While our statute intimates that “suspending the imposition or execution

of a sentence” and “placing a defendant on probation” are bred from the same legislative grace, it

is clear that these sentencing mechanisms are distinguishable and serve discrete functions carried out

by different branches of our state government. Importantly, these two sentencing tools can be used

by a trial judge either separately or together.

¶10.    By definition, a “suspended sentence” is a unique mechanism by which the court may

postpone the imposition of a sentence altogether or delay the execution of a sentence once it has been

pronounced. 21A Am. Jur. 2d, Criminal Law § 895 p.163. Suspension is a term which generally

applies to the actions of the state in relation to a prisoner under its supervision and control. Wilson

v. State, 735 So.2d 290, 292 (Miss. 1999) (citing Goss v. State, 721 So.2d 144, 145 (Miss. 1998)).

Simply stated, “suspension” is the restriction placed upon the power of the State to act during that

(the suspended portion of a sentence) period. Id.

¶11.    Quite differently, probation restricts the prisoner’s rights rather than those of the State. Goss,

721 So.2d at 146. If a prisoner is under court imposed probation, that prisoner may be incarcerated

if the conditions of probation are not followed.4 Id. Probation is a matter of grace and a conditional



        4
                In Georgia, ...suspension and probation are twin animals, similar but
                distinct. Both are mechanisms by which a sentencing court may

                                                    8
liberty that is a favor, not a right or entitlement. 21A Am. Jur. 2d, Criminal Law § 904 p.169.

Moreover, probation is a sentence and not part of a quasi-contract wherein the court offers something

which the defendant is free to accept or reject. Id. Probation is to be considered at the time of

sentencing, and it starts with the process of probation or conditional discharge, moving toward

imprisonment only if certain justifications exist to deny probation or conditional discharge. Id. at

168.

¶12.   Generally, the law distinguishes the suspension of a sentence from probation. Moreover,

while both probation and the suspension of sentence involve the trial court’s discretionary and

conditional release of a convict from the service of a sentence within the penal system, a

probationary sentence is served under the supervision of probation officers, whereas a suspended

sentence is served without such supervision, but on such legal terms and conditions as are required

by the sentencing judge.5 Id. at 169. Moreover, a straight suspended sentence is not subject to the


               excuse a defendant from prison time. See O.C.G.A. § 17-10-1(a)(1)
               (Lexis Supp.2000) (“The judge imposing the sentence is granted
               power and authority to suspend or probate all or any part of the entire
               sentence....”) Both may be directly imposed subject to conditions
               whose violation may result in incarceration. See id. § 17-10-1(c)
               (permitting the court, for instance, to require completion of high
               school diploma equivalent as condition of suspension); O.C.G.A. §
               42-8-34.1 (Michie 1997) (procedures for revocation of “probated or
               suspended sentence”). But suspended and probated sentences are
               administered differently; a probation officer monitors compliance
               with probation conditions, while the sentencing court is responsible
               for enforcing conditions of suspension. Williams v. State, 191 Ga.
               App. 217, 381 S.E.2d 399, 400 (1989).

       U.S. v. Ayala-Gomez, 255 F.3d 1314, 1318 (11th Cir. 2001).

       5
        See infra. “Unsupervised probation” is the functional equivalent to “a straight suspended
sentence” to the extent that the sentence is not under the supervision of the Department of

                                                 9
conglomeration of rules that can be attached to a sentencing order granting probation. In expounding

on the reasoning in Goss v. State, 721 So.2d 144 (Miss. 1998), Justice Mills, who was the author of

this Court’s opinion in Goss, made it clear in his dissenting opinion in Carter v. State, 754 So.2d

1207 (Miss. 2000), that suspending a sentence and granting probation are not interchangeable

mechanisms, and he further opined that defining them as such would be in obvious derogation of the

plain meaning of the words:

       Under probation the court releases the defendant into the community under the
       supervision of a probation officer. The defendant’s freedom after conviction is
       subject to the condition that for a stipulated period of time he shall conduct himself
       in a manner approved by a special officer to whom he must make periodic reports.
       Black's Law Dictionary, 1082 (5th ed. 1979). A suspended sentence is one that is
       given formally but not actually served. The defendant is not required, at the time the
       sentence is imposed, to actually serve the sentence. This suspension is contingent
       upon the good behavior of the defendant. Id. at 1223, 1297. Under a suspended
       sentence the defendant is not required to report to an officer as he is while on
       probation. However, the trial court does possess the power to revoke the suspended
       sentence.

       Clearly, the obligations, duties and expectations of the defendant on probation are
       distinct from a defendant's responsibilities while “serving” a suspended sentence.
       Furthermore, a trial court may impose a suspended sentence for a term up to the
       maximum sentence allowed by law. Under Mississippi law, a trial court may only
       impose probation for a maximum of five (5) years. Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-37
       (Supp. 1999).... A suspension of a sentence does not automatically mean that the
       defendant will be on probation and under a duty to report to a probation officer. It
       simply means that part of his entire sentence has been postponed pending the
       defendant’s good behavior or such other conditions as the court may see fit to
       establish.


Corrections, but under the watchful eye of the sentencing judge. Therefore, when we endorse
“unsupervised probation” or “non-reporting post-release supervision” under Miss. Code Ann.
Section 47-7-34, we are merely sanctioning a straight suspended sentence under Miss. Code Ann.
Section 47-7-33(1). In Wilson v. State, 735 So.2d 290 (Miss. 1999), this Court stated that “[t]he
Goss reasoning should not be expanded beyond its facts since other statutes exist which allow for
suspended sentences, lengthy probationary periods, and other sentencing options.” Wilson, 735
So.2d at 292. We agree but now stress that for the sake of the trial bench and bar we should not
endorse a sentencing mechanism under one statute while castigating it under another.

                                                10
Carter, 754 So.2d at 1210-11 (Mills, J., dissenting).

¶13.   One need go no further than the Mississippi Code to clearly see the distinct nature of

probation versus that of a suspended sentence. For example, Miss. Code Ann. Section 99-19-29,

which is entitled “Vacation of suspended sentence and annulment of conditional pardon for violation

of terms,” clearly evinces the distinct nature of a judge’s discretionary power to suspend a sentence:

       Whenever any court granting a suspended sentence, or the governor granting a
       pardon, based on conditions which the offender has violated or failed to observe,
       shall be convinced by proper showing, of such violation of sentence or pardon, then
       the governor or the judge of the court granting such suspension of sentence shall be
       authorized to annul and vacate such suspended sentence or conditional pardon in
       vacation or court time. The convicted offender shall thereafter be subject to arrest
       and court sentence service, as if no suspended sentence or conditional pardon had
       been granted, and shall be required to serve the full term of the original sentence that
       has not been served. The offender shall be subject, after such action by the court or
       the governor, to arrest and return to proper authorities as in the case with ordinary
       escaped prisoner.

Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-29.

¶14.   Additionally, Miss. Code Ann. Section 99-19-21, which is entitled “Sentence; prison terms

to run consecutively or concurrently in discretion of court; sentence for felony committed while on

parole, probation, earned-release or post-release supervision, or suspended sentence,” clearly

indicates our legislature’s intent that a suspended sentence be considered its own statutory creature.

This is further confirmed by simply reading subsection two of the statute:

       When a person is sentenced to imprisonment for a felony committed while the person
       was on parole, probation, earned-release supervision, post-release supervision or
       suspended sentence, the imprisonment shall commence at the termination of the
       imprisonment for the preceding conviction. The term of imprisonment for a felony
       committed during parole, probation, earned-release supervision, post-release
       supervision or suspended sentence shall not run concurrently with any preceding
       term of imprisonment. If the person is not imprisoned in a penitentiary for the
       preceding conviction, he shall be placed immediately in the custody of the


                                                 11
       Department of Corrections to serve the term of imprisonment for the felony
       committed while on parole, probation, earned-release supervision, post-release
       supervision or suspended sentence.

Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-21(2) (emphasis added).

¶15.   While the two sentencing tools must indeed be considered distinct, if a judge chooses to

employ Section 47-7-33 by both suspending a sentence and imposing probation, then the differing

mechanisms work together in concert. Accordingly, they create a unified probationary mechanism

which conditions the judge’s grant of leniency by way of probation on pain of revocation of the

probationer’s suspended or probationary sentence, if the probationer should fail to exhibit conduct

in a manner as directed by the sentencing judge and/or as approved by the probation officer. Under

Mississippi jurisprudence, there also exists a hybrid of a straight suspended sentence and straight

probation, which is specifically contemplated via the conjunctive “and” in the text of Miss. Code

Ann. Section 47-7-33(1), which states in pertinent part:

       [S]uch court, in termtime or in vacation, shall have the power, after conviction or a
       plea of guilty, except in a case where a death sentence or life imprisonment is the
       maximum penalty which may be imposed or where the defendant has been convicted
       of a felony on a previous occasion in any court or courts of the United States and of
       any state or territories thereof, to suspend the imposition or execution of sentence,
       and place the defendant on probation as herein provided, except that the court shall
       not suspend the execution of a sentence of imprisonment after the defendant shall
       have begun to serve such sentence. In placing any defendant on probation, the court,
       or judge, shall direct that such defendant be under the supervision of the Department
       of Corrections.

Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-33(1) (emphasis added).

¶16.   Although somewhat disjointed, our precedent evidences recognition of each of these

sentencing practices. Moreover, our prior decisions on today’s issue, which were notably sparse

before 1991, bear out our sentencing tradition. In Jackson v. Waller, 248 Miss. 166, 160 So.2d 184



                                                12
(1964), this Court’s opinion provides the background to Section 47-7-33 (then Section 4004-23 of

the 1942 Code) by examining the state of sentencing at the time the 1956 Probation Act was passed.

Moreover, our decision in Jackson distinguishes probation, to be governed by the Probation and

Parole Board, from summary suspension, codified in 1950:

       The 1956 Probation Act created a system of adult probation for first offenders only.
       The circuit and county courts were granted the power to suspend the imposition or
       execution of sentences, and place a defendant on probation. In doing so the court is
       required to direct that he be under the supervision of the Probation and Parole Board.
       § 4004-23. The court determines the terms and conditions for probation, some of the
       permissible ones being itemized. § 4004-24. Its period may be extended or
       terminated by the court, but under section 4004-25 it ‘shall not exceed five years.’
       This was the limitation in the Probation Act which our original opinion applied to
       summary suspensions of misdemeanor sentences under Code section 2541.

       After careful consideration, we conclude it was error to hold that the provisions of
       the Probation Act are in pari materia with section 2541, section 4004-25 limits the
       period of probation under section 2541, and convicts under suspension of sentence
       for misdemeanors (§ 2541) come under the supervision of the Probation and Parole
       Board.

       The Probation and Parole Act of 1956 does not evidence any intention, we think, to
       extend the supervisory powers of the board to misdemeanants. §§ 4004-23 to 4004-
       27. It did not repeal or refer in any way to the summary suspension act, section 2541.
       There appears no intent to repeal by implication the old summary suspension
       procedure. The 1950 Parole Act applied only to felonies, and the probation sections
       were added in 1956 as amendments to the 1950 act. Nowhere in the 1956 statute is
       any reference made to misdemeanors. The only descriptive statements are to those
       serving sentences in the state penitentiary, which necessarily pertain to felonies. The
       total number of employees of the Probation and Parole Board is fixed at fifteen. If
       the legislature had any intention to provide supervision by probation officers of all
       misdemeanants whose sentences have been suspended under section 2541, it
       certainly would not have limited the total number of board employees to fifteen.
       Code § 4004-05.

Jackson, 160 So.2d at 185.6



       6
         See also State of Washington v. Davis, 56 Wash.2d 729, 355 P.2d 344 (1960), a case with
a parallel question to the one presented by Jackson. As stated by the Washington Supreme Court:

                                                 13
¶17.    The Probation Act and the code sections included therein are exclusively about probation.

Moreover, it specifically tasks the Probation and Parole Board with the administration of the

Probation Act. Importantly, our decision in Jackson spares the Probation and Parole Board from

responsibility for both probation and summary suspension, and ultimately recognizes a trial judge’s

discretion in regards to the latter. “Power to suspend sentences under section 2541 [Miss. Code Ann.

§ 99-19-25] is restricted to a reasonable time, which is within the sound judicial discretion of the trial

court.” Id. at 186.

¶18.    A coordinate result of the Probation Act was to expand a criminal court’s ability to suspend

sentences (then codified section § 2541, now Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-25) by allowing it to suspend

felony sentences. This result was recognized by this Court in 1978 in McDaniel v. State, 356 So.2d

1151 (Miss. 1978).

        [T]he only statutory authority for suspension of sentences was section 99-19-25
        Mississippi Code Annotated (1972) (then Section 1298 Mississippi Code of 1930)
        which authorized the circuit and county courts to suspend sentences in misdemeanor
        cases only. The “probation and Parole Law” was amended by Chapter 262
        Mississippi General Laws 1956, and in sections 10 and 11 the statutory authority of
        circuit and county courts to suspend sentences was extended to include felonies.


        This appeal highlights the distinction between a suspended sentence under RCW
        9.92.060, which we will refer to as the Suspended Sentence Act, and under the
        provisions made in the Prison Terms, Paroles and Probation Act, which we will refer
        to herein as the Probation Act (RCW 9.95.200 through 9.95.250).

        Generally speaking, our superior courts use the former when they desire to suspend
        the execution of a sentence during the good behavior of a convicted person, and the
        latter when they desire to defer the imposition of a sentence, with a view to an
        ultimate dismissal of the charges if the behavior of the convicted person warrants
        such action. However, the latter is available and is used in many instances for the
        suspension of the execution of a sentence.

Davis, 56 Wash.2d at 730, 355 P.2d at 344-45.


                                                   14
       Before 1956 the circuit and county courts had no statutory authority to suspend
       sentences in felony cases.

McDaniel, 356 So.2d at 1159 (Sugg, J., Special Concurrence). Thus, the language that has become

the subject of today’s appeal, “to suspend the imposition or execution of sentence,” which was

distinguished as language belonging to the Probation Act and as not being “in pari materia” with the

summary suspension act, nonetheless became inextricably bound to the judicial concept of

suspending a sentence.

¶19.   Two years prior to McDaniel, this Court handed down Hamlin v. Barrett, 335 So.2d 898

(Miss. 1976), and reiterated the Court’s reading of the Probation Act as stated in Jackson. In

Hamlin, this Court was introduced for the first time to the counterintuitive (and now ever-present)

argument in which a convicted felon asserts that his probation was illegally granted due to his prior

convicted felon status at the time of sentencing. Hamlin was ordered to serve three years in the

penitentiary for forgery. Id. at 899. The sentence was then suspended, and the court granted

probation; however, later the suspension and probation were revoked, and thus Hamlin presented

the aforementioned argument. Id. In upholding the original sentence of the trial court, this Court

specifically held that the circuit court had jurisdiction even though the grant of probation was on the

other hand “technically inappropriate.” Id. Referencing the circuit court judge’s decision, this Court

reasoned that in effect the circuit court judge found that the prosecutor was not aware of Hamlin’s

prior conviction until after the plea of guilty was made and the probationary sentence meted out.

Id. In sum, we ultimately stated that “[t]his case makes it clear and we stress that before granting

probation to defendants convicted of crimes trial judges, prosecutors, and defense counsel must

exercise care to see that probation is proper under § 47-7-33, supra.” Id. at 900.



                                                  15
¶20.   Fifteen years later this Court considered a case similar to Hamlin. In Robinson v. State, 585

So.2d 757 (Miss. 1991), a prior convicted felon was sentenced to a suspended sentence and

supervised probation, and this Court attributed new meaning to Section 47-7-33 by including the

suspension-of-sentence language into the statute’s restriction on allowing probation to a convicted

felon. In Robinson, the defendant (Robinson), during a regular term of court in Tishomingo County,

was sentenced to three years in the custody of the MDOC. Robinson, 585 So.2d at 758. In

accordance with the provisions of Section 47-7-33, the trial judge suspended the sentence and placed

Robinson on supervised probation. Id. However, within three days of sentencing, Robinson was

arrested a second time on a similar charge, and was brought before the same circuit court judge

during the same term of court in which Robinson received his original sentence, and the judge set

aside the originally imposed suspended sentence and ordered Robinson to serve the three year term

in prison. Id.7 On appeal of the circuit court’s denial of Robinson’s motion for post-conviction



       7
        Although the end result was the same, the circuit judge in Robinson did not “revoke” the
suspended sentence, but instead properly “set aside” the first judgment which provided for a
suspended sentence, and entered a second judgment directing that Robinson serve the three-year
sentence, not under suspension, but by way of incarceration. As this Court noted in Robinson:

       [T]he second sentence was imposed during the same court term as the first sentence.
       Jones v. Index Drilling Co., 251 Miss. 578, 170 So.2d 564, 571 (1965). This Court,
       citing Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U.S. (14 Otto) 410, 26 L.Ed. 797 (1882), stated the
       general rule:

               ... all the judgments, decrees, or other orders of the courts, however
               conclusive in their character, are under the control of the court which
               pronounces them during the term at which they are rendered or
               entered of record, and they may be set aside, vacated, modified or
               annulled by that court. (emphasis supplied).

       Jones, 170 So.2d at 571.


                                                 16
relief, this Court found that unlike the prosecutor and the circuit judge in Hamlin, who had no

knowledge of the defendant’s prior New York conviction, which the defendant had concealed from

the court, the prosecutor and the circuit judge in Robinson were very much aware of Robinson’s

prior conviction, because during the plea colloquy, when asked by the circuit judge if he had any

prior felony convictions, Robinson responded in the affirmative by acknowledging that he had a

grand larceny conviction in Alcorn County. Thus, in Robinson, this Court reversed the circuit

court’s denial of Robinson’s PCR motion, finding that Section 47-7-33 did not provide for a

convicted felon to receive “suspension of sentence and probation,” and that Robinson should

therefore be permitted to withdraw his guilty plea and enter a new plea, and that Robinson should

be given the opportunity for a trial if he chose to offer a not guilty plea. To emphasize our holding

in Robinson:

       Clearly, § 47-7-33 does not permit suspension of sentence and probation to a
       defendant with a prior felony conviction. Robinson’s suspended sentence and
       probation was without authority and, therefore, invalid. Because Robinson plead
       guilty on the improper inducement that he was eligible for a suspended sentence or
       probation, he is therefore permitted to withdraw his guilty plea and he must be
       allowed to enter a new plea and offered the opportunity of a new trial. Vittitoe v.
       State, 556 So.2d 1062, 1065 (Miss. 1990). Accordingly, we reverse the judgment
       below and restore Robinson’s plea of not guilty to the indictment for possession of
       more than one ounce and less than one kilogram of marijuana and remand for such
       further appropriate proceedings.

Robinson, 585 So.2d at 759 (emphasis added). While the end result reached by this Court in

Robinson was correct, the road we traveled to get to our final destination was more than a little

bumpy. Some of the language we used in Robinson in our interpretation of Section 47-7-33 is the

very reason we write today.



Robinson, 585 So.2d at 758.

                                                 17
¶21.    Our holding in Robinson was galvanized by this Court seven years later with our decision

in Goss v. State, 721 So.2d 144 (Miss. 1998), a case responsible for perpetuating the interpretation

accorded to Section 47-7-33 for the last eight years. In Goss, we again dealt with the sentencing of

a prior convicted felon. The trial court imposed a sentence on Goss of “ten years in the Mississippi

Department of Corrections, with seven years to serve and three years suspended for a five-year

period.” Id. at 145. Perhaps the facts in Goss exhibited the truth in the old adage that “bad facts

make bad law.” Goss was sentenced for burglary of an uninhabited dwelling under then-existing

Miss. Code Ann. Section 97-17-27,8 for which the maximum penalty was ten years’ imprisonment.

The major problem created by the trial judge’s sentence in Goss was that the sentence conceivably

created a possibility of Goss serving fifteen years imprisonment, which was beyond the statutory

maximum penalty, especially if his suspended sentence was later revoked. In addressing Goss’s

sentence, this Court stated, inter alia:

        Although the total number of years to which Goss was sentenced does not technically
        exceed the statutory maximum of ten years, and the suspension period does not
        exceed the statutory maximum of five years, we nevertheless find that the trial court
        erred in fashioning a sentence which could result in a fifteen year time span during
        which Goss is under the direct supervision of the State. Therefore, the sentence in
        its totality violates the limits imposed by the statutes and offends the intent of the
        legislature in restricting the duration of punishment imposed by the courts.




        8
         Miss. Code Ann. Section 97-17-23 (Rev. 2000) now provides for penitentiary imprisonment
of not less than three years, nor more than twenty-five years, for burglary of a dwelling, regardless
of whether the burglar is armed with a deadly weapon, whether the dwelling is inhabited or not, and
whether the burglary occurred during the daytime or nighttime. At the time of Goss’s sentence, the
various statutes provided for different penalties for such crimes as burglary of an inhabited dwelling,
burglary of an uninhabited dwelling, and nighttime burglary of an inhabited dwelling with a deadly
weapon. Goss was convicted of burglary of an uninhabited dwelling pursuant to Miss. Code Ann.
Section 97-17-27, which carried a maximum penalty of imprisonment in the penitentiary for a period
not to exceed ten years.

                                                 18
Id.

¶22.   Further, in review of Goss’s sentence, this Court turned to precedent and sought once again

to decipher the meaning of Section 47-7-33, in accordance with our interpretation of Section 47-7-33

in Robinson. In so doing, we focused on Robinson’s incorporation of the “suspended sentence”

language into its holding and for the first time since the promulgation of the Probation Act in 1956,

interpreted Section 47-7-33 in such a way as to forbid our trial courts from imposing a suspended

sentence upon a prior convicted felon.9 In Goss, we relied on Robinson and stated:

       In Robinson, we held the trial court suspended the defendant's sentence in violation
       of § 47-7-33 due to the defendant's prior felony conviction. Robinson, 585 So.2d at
       759. The uncertainty in the instant case stems from the distinguishable fact that only
       part of Goss’s sentence was suspended by the lower court rather than the entire
       sentence as in Robinson. We find that the wording of the statute not only restricts
       the courts’ ability to place defendants with prior felony convictions on probation, but
       it also restricts their ability to wholly or partially suspend the sentence of a
       previously convicted felon. Therefore, the lower court erred in sentencing Goss, a
       convicted felon, to serve seven years in the state penitentiary followed by a
       conditional three year suspended sentence. Goss is simply not entitled to a
       suspended sentence in light of his prior conviction.

Id. at 146 (emphasis added).

¶23.   The unquestionable flaw in Goss is that it expanded the limiting language of Section 47-7-33,

which applies to convicted felons, by replacing the specific language provided for by the Probation

Act, which specifically limits a judges’ ability to suspend a sentence and place a convicted felon on

probation, with language that prevents judges from placing a convicted felon on probation or

suspending the sentence. This new interpretation in Goss changed the landscape of sentencing under




       9
         In Goss, this Court acknowledged the legislative enactment of Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-
7-34, but found the statute to be inapplicable since Goss’s crime was committed prior to the effective
date of Section 47-7-34.

                                                 19
Section 47-7-33 by prohibiting trial judges not only from imposing supervised probation on a

convicted felon, but also from suspending a convicted felon’s sentence, in whole or in part. We now

find that Goss’s interpretation of this statute was error. If the legislature had intended for the prior

felony exception to apply to both instances where a judge is considering imposition of a ‘straight’

suspended sentence versus supervised probation, the legislature would have used the disjunctive ‘or’

to assure that the prior felony exception applied in both sentencing situations. Importantly, the

legislature opted for the conjunctive “and”, as opposed to “or”, which evidences the legislature’s

intent that the prior convicted felon exception apply only when the sentencing judge seeks to suspend

the imposition or execution of a sentence “and” place the defendant on probation under MDOC

supervision.

¶24.   We again state for the sake of emphasis that suspending a sentence and imposing probation

are distinct events; however, since the advent of Goss, appellate review under Section 47-7-33 has

treated suspended sentences and probation as interchangeable sentencing mechanisms born of the

same legislative act. In today’s case, we are faced with a decision rendered by the Court of Appeals

in which that Court has focused on the specific language of Section 47-7-33 and interpreted it to

preclude a trial judge from suspending any part of a convicted felon’s sentence. If today’s case was

outcome determinative solely on Section 47-7-33 and Goss, this Court’s interpretation of Section

47-7-33 might be similarly restricted. However, since the legislature’s enactment of Miss. Code

Ann. Section 47-7-34 in 1995, we have been given the wherewithal to return sentencing discretion

back to our trial judges. Moreover, in its enactment of Section 47-7-34 and the incorporation of a

new section in the Probation Act, the legislature expressly answered any question of statutory




                                                  20
interpretation associated with the wording of Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-33(1).10 Ultimately, by

promulgating Section 47-7-34, the legislature created a mechanism by which it could return the once

clear authority for criminal courts to sentence beyond the strict confines of either incarceration or

supervised probation and thus have returned to those courts, that which had at least been temporarily

taken away from them by Goss.

       B.      Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-34:

¶25.   With the passage of the legislation that created the Post-Release Supervision Program, the

legislature expressly restored the trial court’s sentencing authority. Moreover, the sentencing

mechanism set forth in Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34 provides this Court with the statutory

impetus to uphold substantively proper sentencing, which might otherwise have been struck down

as “illegal” under Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-33(1). Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34 states:

       (1) When a court imposes a sentence upon a conviction for any felony committed
       after June 30, 1995, the court, in addition to any other punishment imposed if the
       other punishment includes a term of incarceration in a state or local correctional
       facility, may impose a term of post-release supervision. However, the total number
       of years of incarceration plus the total number of years of post-release supervision
       shall not exceed the maximum sentence authorized to be imposed by law for the
       felony committed. The defendant shall be placed under post-release supervision
       upon release from the term of incarceration. The period of supervision shall be
       established by the court.

       (2) The period of post-release supervision shall be conducted in the same manner as
       a like period of supervised probation, including a requirement that the defendant
       shall abide by any terms and conditions as the court may establish. Failure to
       successfully abide by the terms and conditions shall be grounds to terminate the
       period of post-release supervision and to recommit the defendant to the correctional



       10
         It is not beyond the realm of possibility that the Legislature’s enactment of Miss. Code Ann.
Section 47-7-34 may have been in direct response to this Court’s treatment of Miss. Code Ann.
Section 47-7-33, although, admittedly, our decision in Goss was still three years in the making at
the time of the enactment of Section 47-7-34.

                                                 21
        facility from which he was previously released. Procedures for termination and
        recommitment shall be conducted in the same manner as procedures for the
        revocation of probation and imposition of a suspended sentence.

        (3) Post-release supervision programs shall be operated through the probation and
        parole unit of the Division of Community Corrections of the department. The
        maximum amount of time that the Mississippi Department of Corrections may
        supervise an offender on the post-release supervision program is five (5) years.

Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-34 (emphasis added).

¶26.    In Miller v. State, 875 So.2d 194 (Miss. 2004), this Court assessed the legislature’s actions

and noted the differences between the post-release supervision program codified under Section 47-7-

34, and supervised probation as delineated under Section 47-7-33. Moreover, we recognized the

legislature’s express intent to return to the trial judges the sentencing discretion they had enjoyed

under Section 47-7-33 in years past. Miller likewise acknowledged the distinct differences between

Section 47-7-33 and 47-7-34. In Miller, the defendant was convicted of arson and sentenced to a

one year term in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections followed by a ten year

term of supervised probation. Miller, 875 So.2d at 196. On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed

the conviction but reversed and remanded for the limited purpose of correcting the sentencing terms.

Id. On writ of certiorari, we affirmed the sentence as imposed by the trial court and held that the trial

court was authorized by the applicable statutes to sentence the defendant to one year in the custody

of MDOC, followed by ten years of probation, but limited by the five year maximum for MDOC

supervision.11 In so holding, we extrapolated the proper sentence from the trial judge’s clear




        11
         The exact sentence imposed by the trial judge was “one (1) year in the [MDOC] followed
by supervised probation under the supervision of the [MDOC] for a period of ten (10) years or until
the court in term time or the Judge in vacation shall alter, extend, terminate or direct the execution
of the above sentence.” Miller, 875 So.2d at 199.

                                                   22
sentencing intentions and the new directives provided by Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34.

Accordingly, we stated:

        Thus it is clear that the trial judge was placing Miller on probation, but only five (5)
        years of which would be served under the supervision of the MDOC with the
        remaining five years being in essence “unsupervised probation.” There is no doubt
        that Miller could not be required to serve more than five years by way of reporting
        to a MDOC probation officer (supervised probation), but upon release from the
        reporting requirements by the MDOC officer and/or the trial court, Miller no doubt
        could serve the remainder of his sentence by way of unsupervised probation. The
        sentence was not violative of Sections 47-7-33, 47-7-34 or 47-7-37.

Id. at 200.

¶27.    Therefore, in reviewing the trial judge’s sentence, we simply recognized the limitations of

Section 47-7-33 as defined by Goss and addressed our sentencing statutes according to the express

statutory directives provided by Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34:

        Supervised probation and post-release supervision are totally different statutory
        creatures. Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-33 provides for supervised probation, while Miss.
        Code Ann. § 47-7-34 provides for post-release supervision. At least two major
        differences in these two statutes are (1) supervised probation may not be imposed on
        a convicted felon while post-release supervision may be imposed on a convicted
        felon; and, (2) supervised probation is limited to five years while post-release
        supervision is not. Section 47-7-34 states inter alia that “the total number of years of
        incarceration plus the total number of years of post-release supervision shall not
        exceed the maximum sentence authorized to be imposed by law for the felony
        committed.” While the statute unquestionably limits to five years the period of time
        that the MDOC may supervise an offender who is on post-release supervision, the
        clear language of the statute does not limit the total number of years of post-release
        supervision to five years.

Id. at 199 (emphasis added).

¶28.    In 2005, we applied Miller’s pronouncement to a case dealing with facts similar to today’s

case. In Sweat v. State, 912 So.2d 458 (Miss. 2005), the defendant, a prior convicted felon, pled

guilty to conspiracy to manufacture methamphetamine and was sentenced to twenty years in the



                                                  23
custody of the MDOC, with twelve years suspended and five years of post-release supervision.

Sweat, 912 So.2d at 459. On appeal, the Court of Appeals found the circuit court had committed

error when it imposed a partially suspended sentence on Sweat. Id. Like Miller, we granted

certiorari and took the opportunity to expound on a trial judge’s sentencing discretion under Miss.

Code Ann. Sections 47-7-33, -34:

        We have held that, while § 47-7-34 limits the term of post-release supervision to five
        years, convicted defendants may be sentenced to a longer term. However, they may
        only be required to report to MDOC officials for the statutory maximum period.
        Miller, 875 So.2d at 199-200 (trial judge may sentence a prior convicted felon to
        more than five years provided that the period of incarceration and post-release
        supervision do not exceed the maximum period of time allowed for the offense). The
        time period that extends beyond the five-year statutory maximum for post-release
        supervision becomes “unsupervised” post-release supervision. Boddie v. State, 875
        So.2d 180, 182 n. 1 (Miss. 2004).

Id. at 460.

¶29.    As with Miller, in Sweat we deciphered the trial judge’s sentencing intent and placed it in

line with the mechanisms provided in Sections 47-7-33, -34 and -37. Importantly, we were not

distracted by the “suspended sentence” language that has been so problematic over the last decade.

Instead, we focused on the substance of the sentence as stated by the trial judge that “the Defendant

be and he/she is hereby sentenced to serve a term of twenty years in custody of the Mississippi

Department of Corrections at a facility to be designated by said department, that twelve years of said

sentence shall be and the same is hereby suspended and that the defendant shall be placed under post-

release supervision upon the release from the term of incarceration for a period of five years pursuant

to Mississippi Code section 47-7-34 and said sentence is based upon the following conditions....”

Sweat, 912 So.2d at 459-60. In the end, we found the trial court’s sentence was not illegal, but we

modified the language of the sentencing order and stated:


                                                  24
        Here, it is clear that the trial court sentenced Sweat under §47-7-34. Therefore, we
        modify the trial court’s sentence so that following his eight years of incarceration,
        Sweat will be released to twelve years of post-release supervision but that he is
        required to report to MDOC officials for only five years and the remaining seven
        years will be “unsupervised” post-release supervision.

Id. at 460.

¶30.    Essential to our modification of the trial court’s sentence, we determined that while Section

47-7-34 limits the term of reporting (MDOC-sanctioned) post-release supervision to five years,

convicted defendants may be sentenced to a longer term. Id. We further noted that “[t]he time

period that extends beyond the five-year statutory maximum for post-release supervision becomes

‘unsupervised’ post-release supervision.”12 Id. (citing Boddie v. State, 875 So.2d 180, 182 n.1

(Miss. 2004)). To reach this result, we simply acknowledged the obvious – that “unsupervised”

merely means that the court would be monitoring Sweat during his term of “unsupervised” post-

release supervision in lieu of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Moreover, while the trial

court is limited to the extent it can burden the Mississippi Department of Corrections with required

supervision within the statutory maximum, the court is not so limited concerning the burden it may

place on itself by way of monitoring a defendant’s behavior while the defendant is serving a

suspended sentence, “unsupervised” probation, or “non-reporting” post-release supervision.

¶31.   Through the legislature’s enactment of Section 47-7-34 and our holdings in Miller and

Sweat, the sentencing discretion formerly accorded to our trial courts has been returned. No longer

can prior convicted felons take advantage of the statutory windfall which temporarily existed in

Section 47-7-33 that allowed for felons to characterize what in effect was a more lenient sentence,



        12
         “Unsupervised” post-release supervision is also known as “non-reporting” post-release
supervision.

                                                 25
as being somehow an “illegal” sentence. See, e.g., Robinson v. State, 836 So.2d 747 (Miss. 2002).

Moreover, our appellate courts should recognize the intentions of our trial judges when they suspend

a sentence and either impose probation under Section 47-7-33, or post-release supervision under

Section 47-7-34. Thus, in reviewing the sentencing orders of our trial courts, we must be hereinafter

cognizant of the fact that while the supervisory role of the MDOC is limited under both Sections 47-

7-33 and -34, the supervisory role of our trial courts is not so limited.

¶32.   For purposes of clarity, consistency and cohesion, we hold today that the circuit and county

courts of this state have the power to suspend, in whole or in part, a convicted felon’s sentence under

Miss. Code Ann. Sentence 47-7-33 inasmuch as this Court and the legislature have empowered them

to do so under Miss. Code Ann. Sentence 47-7-34, and to the extent that the practice has been

historically ingrained in our criminal courts’ sentencing practice. In this way, the appellate courts

of this state should liberally read the Probation Act, as codified in 1956, along with the Post-Release

Supervision Program, as codified in 1995, with an eye on the intentions of the trial courts,

recognizing the trial courts’ ability to monitor or supervise prior convicted felons beyond the five-

year maximum period statutorily assigned to the MDOC.

       C.      Judge Prichard’s Sentencing Order:

¶33.   With all of this having been said, we now turn to the specific facts of today’s case.

The relevant portion of Judge Prichard’s sentencing order in Johnson’s case states:

       [I]t is by the Court ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the said JOHNNY
       JOHNSON be and he is hereby sentenced to serve a term of fifteen (15) years in the
       custody of the Mississippi State Department of Corrections, with said sentence to run
       consecutive to the sentence defendant is now serving, and pay all costs of Court in
       this case and in Case Nos.K2000-68P and K2000-69P, said payments to be made
       while on post-release supervision.



                                                  26
       IT IS FURTHER ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the defendant, Johnny
       Johnson, is to serve seven (7) years of said sentence in the custody of the Mississippi
       Department of Corrections under the provisions of Mississippi Code Section 47-5-
       138, as amended, and upon successful completion of the service of said seven (7)
       years, the remaining eight (8) years of the fifteen (15) year sentence be and the same
       are hereby suspended pursuant and in conformity with the Post-Release Supervision
       set out and authorized in Section 47-7-34 of the Mississippi Code of 1972, Amended
       and Annotated.

¶34.   The Court of Appeals found error in the trial judge’s sentencing order and, as it had done in

Sweat, specifically focused on the trial court’s eight year suspension of Johnson’s fifteen year

sentence. However, we note with deference that the Court of Appeals should have focused on the

trial judge’s invocation of Section 47-7-34 and this Court’s clear interpretation of this statute.

Moreover, the Court of Appeals failed to consider the basic meaning of a “suspended sentence” as

delineated in our decisions in both Sweat and Miller and, instead, applied the strict reading accorded

to Section 47-7-33 based on our opinion in Goss.13 As evidenced by its most recent decisions

concerning Sections 47-7-33, -34, the Court of Appeals has chosen to continue to rely on our holding

in Goss. With all due deference to the Court of Appeals, it erred in modifying Johnson’s sentence

when it failed to adopt our reading of Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34, as expressly revealed in

Miller and Sweat. As such, the Court of Appeals removed the “suspended” portion of Johnson’s

sentence, replaced it with five years of post-release supervision, and considered the three years

beyond the five years of post-release supervision as “surplusage.” The Court of Appeals noted:




       13
         In the time since the Court of Appeals handed down it’s opinion in Johnson’s case, this
Court handed down Sweat. Even though Sweat was not handed down until after the COA opinion
in Johnson, Sweat had been decided by the time the Court of Appeals denied the motion for
rehearing in Johnson on November 1, 2005. Regardless of Sweat, however, the Court of Appeals
misinterpreted Miller.

                                                 27
       Johnson had eight years of a fifteen year sentence suspended. As noted above, since
       the statute [47-7-34] that permits post-release supervision does not contain language
       authorizing suspending sentences, and another statute bars suspension of sentences
       to prior felons, no suspension should be given. However, there is no practical
       difference between what the trial judge did and what he should have done, which
       would have been to sentence Johnson to a seven year term of incarceration and a five
       year term of post-release supervision. We modify the sentence only to the extent that
       we remove as surplusage the giving of a fifteen year sentence with eight years
       suspended. In all other respects the sentence is affirmed, such that Johnson is to serve
       a term of incarceration of seven years in the custody of the Mississippi Department
       of Corrections, and then has a five year term of post-release supervision under the
       provisions of section 47-7-34.

Johnson v. State, 2004 WL 1557913, *2, ¶ 9 (Miss. Ct. App. 2004).

¶35.   In modifying the trial court’s original sentence, the Court of Appeals erroneously changed

what in essence was a fifteen year sentence, with seven years to serve, followed by eight years of

post-release supervision, to a sentence of seven years to serve, followed by five years of post-release

supervision. The Court of Appeals thus ignored the clear intention of the trial judge to order a

fifteen-year sentence, which included a term of incarceration, a maximum term of post-release

supervision and a straight suspended term (“unsupervised” or “non-reporting” post -release

supervision), and modified Johnson’s fifteen year sentence by simply removing three years of the

total sentence, calling it “surplusage.”

¶36.   This modification of the trial court sentence was error and in derogation of the clear

intentions of the trial judge as delineated by Section 47-7-34. Clearly, the trial judge intended to

impose a sentence of fifteen years when he stated in his sentencing order:

       The violation of any one of the above enumerated conditions shall violate the terms
       and conditions of the defendant’s Post-Release Supervision and the Court shall have
       the authority to revoke the defendant from Post-Release Supervision and remand him
       back into the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections to serve all of the
       remaining years left on his fifteen (15) year sentence.



                                                  28
(emphasis added). Moreover, clearly this intention is appropriately accomplished under Section 47-

7-34, as we held in Sweat, 912 So.2d at 460-61.

¶37.    Today, we have accepted the Court of Appeals’ invitation to further explain our decision in

Miller (and Sweat) as applied to Sections 47-7-33, -34. Moreover, in an attempt to clarify and

reconcile Sections 47-7-33, -34, -35 & -37, we have gone to great lengths to explain the puzzle

which was created by our past interpretation of Section 47-7-33, but ultimately remedied by

legislative enactment of Section 47-7-34. While there has been some question as to the various

terms allocated to Sections 47-7-33, -34, such as suspension of sentence, supervised probation and

post-release supervision, the fundamental purpose of these statutes, as well as their terms, are

premised on the same principle – sentencing discretion. It follows that while there are specific

limitations within these statutes, limitations exist because it is the legislature’s duty to insure that

the executive body charged with executing its statutes (specifically, the Mississippi Department of

Corrections) does not become overburdened by the supervisory role conferred upon it. Moreover,

it is important to understand that the legislature, in promulgating Miss. Code Ann. Sections 47-7-33,

-34, -35 & -37 (initially codified under the Probation Act), did not intend to hamstring a trial judge’s

ability to mete out a fair and just sentence. Quite differently, by its enactments, it is obvious that the

legislature recognized a trial judge’s need to possess the discretion to impose sentences based on the

individualized considerations of each case, such as the nature of the case, the history of the

defendant, and the traditional sentencing considerations such as rehabilitation, separation from

society, retribution, and deterrence, both general and specific.

¶38.    For these reasons, we find the circuit court did not impose an illegal sentence, or one which

required appellate court modification; therefore, we are constrained to find that while the Court of


                                                   29
Appeals correctly found that Johnson’s sentence (1) was not vindictive or harsh, (2) was not a denial

of due process, and (3) was not disproportionate, the Court of Appeals, on the other hand, erred in

finding the circuit court had improperly imposed a suspended sentence, thus requiring modification.

                                           CONCLUSION

¶39.    Today, we return the legislatively intended sentencing discretion to our trial courts by

clarifying that (1) Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-33 prohibits the imposition of a suspended sentence

and supervised probation on a prior convicted felon; however, this statute does not prohibit the

imposition of a suspended sentence, in whole or in part, upon a prior convicted felon, so long as the

sentence does not involve a period of supervised probation and does not exceed the maximum

penalty statutorily prescribed for the felony offense committed; (2) when a suspended sentence and

supervised probation are properly imposed upon a first-offender under the provisions of Section 47-

7-33, the period of supervision by the Mississippi Department of Corrections is limited to a

maximum period of five years; (3) Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34 does not prohibit the imposition

of post release supervision upon a prior convicted felon, nor does this statute limit the period of post-

release supervision to a period of five years; but instead, the period of post release supervision is

limited only to the number of years, which when added to the total period of incarceration, would

not exceed the maximum penalty statutorily prescribed for the felony offense committed; and, (4)

importantly, the statutory limitation of five years applies only to that maximum period of post-release

supervision which may be served under the supervision of the Mississippi Department of

Corrections. To the extent that our decision in Goss v. State, 721 So.2d 144 (Miss. 1998), is in

conflict with today’s decision, Goss is expressly overruled.




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¶40.   The practical effect of today’s decision on Johnny Lee Johnson is that Circuit Judge R. I.

Prichard, III imposed a valid and non-modifiable sentence upon Johnson when Judge Prichard

sentenced Johnson, a prior convicted felon, to serve fifteen years in the custody of the Mississippi

Department of Corrections, with seven years to be served by actual incarceration, and the remaining

eight years to be suspended and served by way of post-release supervision pursuant to the provisions

of Miss. Code Ann. Section 47-7-34, with five of the eight years to be served in accordance with

“probation-like” terms under the supervision of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, pursuant

to Miss. Code Ann. Sections 47-7-34, -35.       While the Court of Appeals correctly found that

Johnson’s sentence (1) was not vindictive or harsh, (2) was not a denial of due process, and (3) was

not disproportionate, the Court of Appeals erred when it modified Judge Prichard’s lawful sentence

to a sentence of seven years’ incarceration followed by only five years of post-release supervision.

¶41.   For these reasons, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed, in part, and reversed,

in part, and the final judgment of the Circuit Court of Jefferson Davis County is reinstated and

affirmed.

¶42. THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF APPEALS IS AFFIRMED IN PART AND
REVERSED IN PART, AND THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
JEFFERSON DAVIS COUNTY IS REINSTATED AND AFFIRMED. CONVICTION OF
SALE OF A SCHEDULE II CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE (COCAINE- .1 GRAMS) AND
SENTENCE OF FIFTEEN (15) YEARS, WITH SEVEN (7) YEARS TO SERVE AND EIGHT
(8) YEARS SUSPENDED, WITH CONDITIONS, IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AFFIRMED.             SENTENCE SHALL RUN
CONSECUTIVELY TO THE SENTENCE APPELLANT IS NOW SERVING, AND PAY
ALL COSTS OF COURT IN THIS CASE AND CASE NOS. K2000-68P AND K2000-69P,
WITH PAYMENTS TO BE MADE WHILE ON POST-RELEASE SUPERVISION.

    SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, P.JJ., EASLEY, GRAVES, DICKINSON AND
RANDOLPH, JJ., CONCUR. DIAZ, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.




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