Lead Opinion
Anthony Dye was convicted of unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (“SVF”) and found to be a habitual offender. We hold that this constituted an impermissible double enhancement and therefore vacate the habitual-offender enhancement. We affirm his conviction of unlawful possession of a firearm by an SVF and his sentence for that offense.
Background
Anthony H. Dye’s conviction in the present case arose out of the same underlying facts as Coleman v. State,
On May 1, 2007, the State charged Dye in Elkhart Superior Court with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (“SVF”),
Dye pled guilty to unlawful possession of a firearm by an SVF. At the same time, he filed a motion to dismiss the habitual-offender allegation, contending that enhancing his sentence under the habitual offender statute would constitute an impermissible “double enhancement.” The trial court denied the motion and scheduled a jury trial on the habitual-offender allegation.
On October 5, 2010, Dye’s two-day jury trial commenced. During voir dire, Dye raised an objection under Batson v. Kentucky,
Dye raised four issues on appeal, all of which were rejected by the Court of Appeals in a 2-1 opinion. Dye v. State,
Dye sought, and we granted, transfer, Dye v. State,
Discussion
I
Dye maintains that tacking the habitual-offender enhancement on to the sentence for unlawful possession of a firearm by an SVF constitutes an impermissible double enhancement. This case is yet another chapter in the ongoing dialogue among this Court, the Court of Appeals, and the Legislature concerning multiple sentencing enhancements for recidivist offenders. A brief review of this dialogue is helpful in resolving Dye’s claim.
It has long been established that double enhancements are not permissible unless there is explicit legislative direction authorizing them. E.g., Beldon v. State,
There are three types of statutes authorizing enhanced sentences for recidivist offenders: the general habitual offender statute, specialized habitual offender statutes, and progressive-penalty statutes. Downey,
The general rule is that, “absent explicit legislative direction, a sentence imposed following conviction under a progressive penalty statute may not be increased further under either the general habitual offender statute or a specialized habitual offender statute.” Id. at 796 (emphasis in original). Compare Ross,
Applying this analysis here, Dye’s habitual-offender enhancement violated the rule against double enhancements. First, the SVF statute under which Dye was convicted is a progressive-penalty statute. Mills, 868 N.E.2d at 449
Second, the general habitual offender statute does not include explicit legislative direction indicating that a double enhancement is proper here. Mills held that the general rule against double enhancements remains intact and that a double enhancement is improper where the underlying conviction is for unlawful possession of a firearm by an SVF.
We conclude that the trial court erred in denying Dye’s motion to dismiss the habitual-offender allegation. We thus vacate the 30-year enhancement that the trial court imposed under the general habitual offender statute.
II
Dye also claims that the trial court erred in denying his Batson challenge. But, because he pled guilty to unlawful possession of a firearm by an SVF and because the only issue tried to the jury was the habitual-offender allegation, our conclusion that he was subject to an impermissible double enhancement renders his Batson claim moot. Similarly, his claim that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial is also moot. The opinion of the Court of Appeals on these issues is vacated. App. R. 58(A).
III
Not content with having his sentence reduced by 30 years, Dye contends that the statutory maximum 20-year sentence that the trial court imposed for his underlying conviction is inappropriate. The Court of Appeals held that Dye’s original sentence of 35 years executed with 15 years of probation was appropriate in light of the nature of the crime and Dye’s character. Dye,
Conclusion
We vacate Dye’s habitual-offender enhancement. We also summarily affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals that an executed term of 20 years’ imprisonment is not inappropriate. We remand to the trial court with instructions to enter an order sentencing Dye to an executed term of 20 years.
Notes
. Tyrus Coleman was acquitted of murder with respect to Jermaine Jackson, and, after a second trial, we affirmed his conviction for attempted murder with respect to Dye. Coleman,
. While Mills analyzes in some detail the predicate offenses supporting the defendant’s statuses as an SVF and a habitual offender,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
As I read it, the serious violent felon statute is not a progressive penalty statute and therefore is not subject to the general prohibition against double enhancement. Even assuming it was, though, I believe Indiana’s General Assembly has provided sufficient guidance that a habitual offender sentencing enhancement is permissible.
These reasons are explained in greater detail below, and lead me to respectfully dissent.
I. The Serious Violent Felon Statute Is Not a Progressive Penalty Statute
First, I disagree with this Court’s prior determination that Indiana Code § 35-47-4-5 (the “SVF statute”), which makes it a B felony for a serious violent felon to knowingly or intentionally possess a firearm, is a progressive penalty statute. Mills v. State,
It is true that there is a different statute, Indiana Code § 35-47-2-23 (the “handgun statute”), which is a progressive penalty statute. That provision establishes criminal penalties for persons who violate the laws regulating the carrying of handguns and elevates those penalties from misdemeanor to felony status under certain conditions, including when the offender has a prior conviction under those handgun regulations or has been convicted of any felony within the preceding fifteen years. Ind.Code § 35-47-2-23(c)(2), (d). A conviction that is enhanced through the operation of the handgun statute, this Court has said, may not be the basis for additional enhancement under the general habitual offender statute. See Ross v. State,
In contrast, the SVF statute says “[a] serious violent felon who knowingly or intentionally possesses a firearm commits unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, a Class B felony.” Ind. Code § 35-47-4-5(c). It therefore has only two elements: that the offender was a serious violent felon, and that the offender knowingly or intentionally possessed a firearm. Most significantly, it contains only one penalty range: a B felony. There is no entry-level misdemeanor charge that is elevated to a felony by the prior status. Thus, the Ross rationale, that the “more detailed and specific” na
Notwithstanding this clear distinction, in Conrad v. State,
With no further analysis, this Court agreed with Conrad. Mills,
I would point, though, to a different opinion of the Court of Appeals. In Lewis v. State,
We acknowledge the practical effect of the handgun statutes, all of which have at their core the possession of a handgun as the criminal act. Possession of a handgun may be no crime at all if the defendant can prove that he has a license to carry it. In the absence of a license, possessing a handgun can be a Class A misdemeanor. If the defendant has a previous conviction for a handgun offense, a previous felony conviction, or carried the handgun under certain circumstances, the crime is elevated to a Class C felony. And if the previous felony has been designated a “serious violent felony,” the crime is a Class B felony. Thus, in practical application, the handgun statutes do collectively impose increasingly severe punishments.
The organization of the statutes, however, leads us to believe that the two handgun statutes are separate and distinct schemes. The general handgun statute could have been amended to include the unlawful possession by a SVF provisions as a further step in its already progressive punishment scheme, but instead, the unlawful possession by a SVF statute stands alone. The general handgun statute prohibits only the possession of handguns, which, as we have noted, is a subset of the more general class of “firearms” to which the unlawful possession by a SVF statute applies. And the general handgun statute imposes a fifteen-*861 year time limitation on the use of a previous felony conviction (other than for a handgun offense), whereas there is no time limitation on use of a previous felony to classify a defendant as a serious violent felon for purposes of the unlawful possession by a SVF statute. A prior felony conviction more than fifteen years old could not support a felony charge for carrying a handgun but could nonetheless classify the defendant as a serious violent felon.
Id. at 248 — 49 (internal citations omitted); accord Hatchett v. State,
I could not agree more. The statutes draw temporal distinctions (a non-handgun related serious violent felony more than fifteen years old would have no impact under the handgun statute, whereas it would still qualify under the SVF statute); geographic distinctions (the handgun statute expressly elevates the charge when the offense occurs near schools, whereas the SVF statute does no such thing); and distinctions between predicate felonies (the handgun statute applies to any felonies, whereas the SVF statute applies only to those felonies specifically enumerated). Also, as the Lewis court noted, the SVF statute is drafted to apply to the entire realm of firearms, whereas the handgun statute is specifically aimed only at a subset of that class.
Furthermore, I also point to the habitual offender statute. Subsection (b) of that statute prohibits habitual offender sentencing for felonies where “the offense is a misdemeanor that is enhanced to a felony in the same proceeding as the habitual offender proceeding solely because the person has a prior unrelated conviction.” Ind.Code § 35-50-2-8(b)(l). We have said that this is a codification of our general rule prohibiting double enhancement of progressive penalty statutes. Mills,
Plainly, the SVF statute does not fit our legislature’s definition of a progressive penalty statute. The SVF statute is not a misdemeanor enhanced to a felony in the same proceeding solely because the person has a prior unrelated conviction. It is a felony from start to finish.
Yet the Mills adoption of the Conrad analysis sweeps away all these clear legislative lines in favor of a simplified view of
For example, imagine if Dye went to Coleman’s studio armed not with a handgun, but with a shotgun or rifle. Dye could have literally dozens of prior felony convictions, but the prosecutor would be unable to charge him under the SVF statute and seek a habitual offender enhancement because of this Court’s blanket analogy of the stand-alone SVF statute to the operation of the handgun statute. And this would be the case even though Dye was guilty of absolutely no crime under the handgun statute.
As another example, imagine if Dye went to Coleman’s studio still armed with his handgun and with the same three prior felony convictions. But in this instance, imagine if all three prior felonies occurred in 1990 rather than in 1993 and 1998. Again, no prosecutor in this state would be able to charge Dye under the SVF statute and seek a habitual offender enhancement — even though none of those prior felonies could enhance his sentence under the handgun statute.
Finally, imagine that instead of Dye going to Coleman’s studio, Coleman went to Dye’s home. Dye has his handgun and his record reflects the 1993 and 1998 prior felonies. Once again, he would be free and clear of habitual offender enhancement to his SVF charge because, even though his felonies could theoretically enhance a charge under the handgun statute, he is under no obligation to have a handgun license when carrying on his own property and therefore committed no crime under the handgun statute.
These situations cannot be what our General Assembly envisioned when it drafted these statutes, but they are very real possibilities because this Court has mistakenly labeled the SVF statute as a “progressive penalty statute.”
II. Explicit Legislative Direction Exists
Under our rule, “absent explicit legislative direction, a sentence imposed following conviction under a progressive penalty statute may not be increased further under either the general habitual offender statute or a specialized habitual offender statute.” Op. at 857 (quoting Downey,
But even if we accept that there remains a class of statutes — at this point containing only the SVF statute — that are “judicially defined progressive penalty statutes,” and that fall under the general rule prohibiting double enhancement even though they are not misdemeanors elevated to felonies, I struggle with the Mills determination that the habitual offender statute does not provide sufficiently explicit legislative direction to permit enhancement of those statutes under its provisions. Because of this, I dissent.
Cases analyzing the interplay between progressive penalty statutes and the general and specialized habitual offender statutes mention a “dialogue” between the courts and the General Assembly. See Mills,
In Mills, this Court noted that the general habitual offender statute was amended in 2001 as part of this ongoing back- and-forth, and highlighted two significant
But Mills said this was not sufficient. It acknowledged that the 2001 amendment was a legislative response to this Court’s jurisprudence regarding double enhancement. Mills,
In contrast, an example of sufficient legislative direction is found in Downey, where this Court was faced with a defendant whose misdemeanor marijuana possession charge was increased to a D felony as a result of a prior marijuana conviction. Downey,
However, this Court found such explicit legislative direction because the habitual substance offender statute allowed “a habitual substance offender enhancement to be imposed on a person convicted of three unrelated ‘substance offense[s],’ ” Id. (quoting Ind.Code § 35-50-2-10), and defined “substance offense” as including “a Class A misdemeanor or a felony in which the possession ... of ... drugs is a material element of the crime.” Id. (quoting Ind.Code § 35-50-2-10(a)(2)).
As I read it, subsection (a) of the habitual offender statute says, in effect, that a habitual offender enhancement to a felony charge may be sought anytime the defendant has two prior unrelated felony convictions — unless a separate subsection of the statute prohibits it. Subsection (b) then articulates the three instances in which the habitual offender enhancement is prohibited. In essence, it tells prosecutors and courts: “You may do this, except where we say you cannot. And here are the times we say you cannot.”
I think this was the most reasonable approach for the General Assembly to take while still responding to Ross ⅛ articulation of our general rule, and I am not sure what else it could have done. Given the broad and general scope of the habitual offender statute, the starting presumption would be that it applies to all felonies; it was far easier to list those felonies to which it does not apply than to attempt to draft a list enumerating all of the ones to which it does apply (particularly if this Court continues to expand its class of judicially created progressive penalty statutes). The statute already prohibits habitual offender enhancement of misdemeanors that are elevated to felonies because of prior felony convictions in accordance with our jurisprudence — is the Court also requiring the General Assembly to comb the criminal code for standalone felonies that we might later judicially define as de facto progressive penalty statutes? This seems needlessly demanding.
The courts of this state communicated to the General Assembly what was, and was not, permissible with respect to double enhancements. Several times, the General Assembly has responded. I believe their 2001 response amending the habitual offender statute shows first that the SVF statute is not a progressive penalty statute, and second that, even if the SVF statute were still subject to the general rule against double enhancement, there is explicit legislative direction permitting an adjudicated serious violent felon to be subject to additional enhancement under the general habitual offender statute.
Accordingly, I dissent.
. Nor is it unique to enhance from crime to non-crime based solely on the "status” of the offender. For example, Indiana's age of consent is sixteen. However, if a person is classified under a number of particular statuses, such as “child care worker,” Indiana Code § 35-42-4-7 makes it a class D felony to have any sexual relationship with a sixteen — or seventeen-year-old who might, say, attend that child care worker’s school. To paraphrase Conrad, it increases the potential punishment for ‘legal consensual sex’ from nothing at all to six months to three years imprisonment and a fine of up to $10,000. And yet I doubt this Court would label the child seduction statute a "progressive penalty statute.”
. Why this particular distinction? This Court has said that "[t]he Legislature has the power, in the interest of public safety and welfare, to provide reasonable regulations for the use of firearms which may be readily concealed, such as pistols.” Matthews v. State,
. In full, "substance offense" is defined as "a Class A misdemeanor or a felony in which the possession, use, abuse, delivery, transportation, or manufacture of alcohol or drugs is a material element of the crime. The term includes an offense under IC 9-30-5 and an offense under IC 9-11-2 (before its repeal).” Ind.Code § 35-50-2-10(a)(2).
. The Court also noted that the habitual substance offender statute had been amended in 1996 in response to decisions in Freeman v. State,
Concurrence Opinion
concurs, noting that, notwithstanding Justice MASSA’S informative and persuasive dissent, I prefer to adhere to our existing controlling precedent of Mills v. State,
