Derrick Dortch v. State of Mississippi
2015-CA-01650-COA
Miss. Ct. App. Hist.Apr 18, 2017Background
- Derrick Dortch pled guilty to shooting into an occupied dwelling and aggravated assault in Madison County; the circuit court accepted his pleas and imposed two concurrent 10-year sentences with five years suspended and a mandatory 5-year firearm enhancement on each count, resulting in ten years to serve.
- Dortch filed a petition for post-conviction relief (PCR) arguing he lacked fair notice that the State would seek firearm enhancements under Miss. Code Ann. § 97-37-37 because the indictments did not reference the enhancement and the State did not include them in its plea offer.
- The initial plea hearing occurred on November 17, 2014 (off-the-record notice may have occurred then); the plea was continued and on December 8, 2014 the trial court expressly informed Dortch on the record that each conviction carried a mandatory five-year firearm enhancement and asked whether he still wished to plead guilty; Dortch affirmed.
- Dortch’s counsel stated on the record that the enhancement was not in the original recommendation or indictments and reserved argument at sentencing; after accepting the pleas, the court applied the enhancements.
- The circuit court denied PCR relief, finding Dortch received adequate pre-plea notice; Dortch appealed and this Court affirmed, distinguishing the present facts from Sallie v. State based on the timing of notice.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether Dortch received fair, pretrial notice of firearm sentence enhancements | Dortch: no fair notice because indictments and initial plea negotiations did not include enhancements; learned of enhancements only at plea | State/Court: Dortch was informed on the record before plea acceptance (Dec. 8) and indictments contained facts supporting enhancement (use of a firearm) | Court held Dortch received timely, adequate notice prior to entering his guilty pleas; no due-process violation |
| Whether an indictment must expressly cite the enhancement statute | Dortch: indictment omission means lack of notice | State/Court: indictment need only allege facts supporting the enhancement; statutory citation unnecessary | Court held no requirement that indictment recite enhancement statute when underlying facts are alleged |
| Whether Sallie v. State controls | Dortch: relies on Sallie for unfair-surprise due-process rule | State/Court: distinguishable because in Sallie notice came only after conviction; here notice occurred before plea acceptance | Court distinguished Sallie and found it inapplicable |
| Whether pleading guilty waives Apprendi jury factfinding for enhancements | Dortch: did not raise as primary claim | State/Court: guilty plea waives right to jury factfinding on sentencing facts | Court noted Apprendi requirement waived by guilty plea |
Key Cases Cited
- Sallie v. State, 155 So. 3d 760 (Miss. 2015) (due-process requires timely notice of sentence enhancement; lack of pre-conviction notice can cause unfair surprise)
- Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000) (facts increasing punishment beyond statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury unless waived)
