COMMONWEALTH оf Kentucky, Appellant, v. Sophal PHON, Appellee.
No. 1998-SC-0836-CL.
Supreme Court of Kentucky.
March 23, 2000.
As Corrected April 20, 2000.
106 S.W.3d 106
Thomas M. Ransdell, Assistant Public Advocate, Department of Public Advocacy, Frankfort, for appellee.
LAMBERT, Chief Justice.
The issue here is whether а sentence of life without parole may be imposed for a capital offense even though that penalty did not exist at the time the crime was committed.1 To decide this matter, it is first necessary to resolve the apparent conflict between two statutes: 1)
The underlying facts giving rise to this issue are as follows. Sophal Phon and his co-defendants, Phannachay, Pok, Sananikone, and Choeung, wеre jointly indicted for the 1996 burglary, robbery, and execution-style murder of a Warren County couple. The Commonwealth filed notice of its intent to seek the death penalty against four of the five defendants, including Phon, then a seventeen year old juvenile.
Before Phon‘s trial, the Commonwealth filed a motion seeking to prеvent the retroactive application of newly authorized sentences contained in HB 455, “the new crime bill,” which added life without parole to the cаpital sentencing scheme. In support of its request, the Commonwealth argued that Phon had committed the crimes in 1996, more than two years before the July 15, 1998 effective date of HB 455. The Commonwealth further argued that Phon‘s trial was scheduled for July 6, 1998, nine days before the effective date of HB 455. The Commonwealth‘s motion was deniеd by order entered July 2, 1998.
On July 5, 1998, the day before his trial was scheduled to begin, Phon pled guilty in Warren Circuit Court to two counts of murder, first degree assault, first degree robbery, and first degree burglary. After a sentencing hearing held before a jury, Phon was sentenced to Life Without Parole. Final judgment, from which Phon has not appealed and from which the time to appeal has expired, was entered on September 4, 1998.
Pursuant to CR 76.37(10), the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of
Do the newly authorized sentences contained in HB 455, “the new crime bill,” apply retroactively to capital crimes сommitted before July 15, 1998?
As aforementioned, section 71 of HB 455 added life without parole to Kentucky‘s capital sentencing range. Section 71 also changеd existing law by placing a fifty year limit on the term of years provision, which had previously had no limit. Section 71 is silent, however, as to whether it applies to caрital crimes committed before July 15, 1998, its effective date, but not tried or retried until thereafter.
The Commonwealth argues that retroactive applicatiоn of sentences contained in the new crime bill is prohibited by
If any penalty, forfeiture or punishment is mitigated by any provision of the new law, such provision may, by the consent of the party affected, be applied to any judgment pronounced after the new lаw takes effect.
According to this provision, the penalty of life without parole could be applied, with the defendant‘s consent, if life without parole indeed mitigates the death penalty.
When there appears to be a conflict between two statutes, as here, a general rule of statutory construction mandates that the specific provision take precedence over the general.3 Moreover,
The Commonwealth further contends, however, that
Yеt the Commonwealth argues that life without parole is not “certainly” or “definitely” mitigating so as to fall within the statutory meaning of mitigating9 because the new penalty lowers neither the maximum nor the minimum possible punishment. We disagree. Life without parole is a lesser penalty than death because it allows a convicted dеfendant continued survival, albeit with severely limited individual liberties, rather than the termination of his life.
Accordingly, upon the unqualified consent of the defendant, a sentеnce of life without parole may be lawfully imposed for capital crimes committed before July 15, 1998. The law of Kentucky is so certified to the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
GRAVES, KELLER, JOHNSTONE, STUMBO, and WINTERSHEIMER, JJ., concur.
COOPER, J., files a separate concurring opinion.
COOPER, Justice, concurring.
Although life without parole is certainly less onerous than death, Hudson v. Commonwealth, Ky., 597 S.W.2d 610 (1980), it is substantially more onerous than life without pаrole for twenty-five years. Since the new penalty is more onerous than one of the two penalties previously authorized by
However, Appellee Phon obviously believed the new penalty was “definitely mitigating,” for otherwise he would not have requested an instruction authorizing its imposition. If he is correct, then the instruction in this case was properly given pursuant to
