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| A void sentence can be challenged at any time. If a judge, for example, sentences a defendant to 50 years in prison for a misdemeanor, then it is void and can be challenged by direct appeal or writ of habeas corpus, regardless whether anyone objected at any time.
Probation is not even a sentence, much less a void sentence. The Court of Criminal Appeals has held that a defendant waives any defect by failing to object at the time the allegedly defective probation is ordered.
I take it from your example that the mistake from the state jail felony probation is the length of the probation (10 years, when the initial maximum length is 5 years). However, in the absence of an objection and appeal from the original sentencing event, there is no basis for the defendant to complain.
As a practical matter, you can ask the judge to shorten the term of probation to 5 years, but it still could be extended later to 10 years.
As for your motion to revoke, it sounds like you should just proceed to prosecute it. |
| Posts: 7860 | Location: Georgetown, Texas | Registered: January 25, 2001 |
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| Have the court read Nix, 65 S.W.3d at 667-8 and Williams, 65 S.W.3d 656. Habeas corpus is available only where the restraint is illegal, i.e., the judgment is void. art. 11.23 CCP. While the voidness of the community supervision order might be a defense to revocation/adjudication, the fact that too long of a term of supervision was ordered is not anything from which the defendant could benefit (during the first five years). |
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