Roger Trenton DAVIS, Appellee,
v.
Jack F. DAVIS, Director, Virginia State Department of
Corrections, and R. M. Muncy, Superintendent,
Powhatan Correctional Center, Appellants.
No. 77-1782.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Dec. 15, 1977.
Decided Oct. 30, 1978.
Robert H. Herring, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Richmond, Va. (Anthony F. Troy, Atty. Gen. of Virginia, and K. Marshall Cook, Asst. Atty. Gen., Richmond, Va., on brief), for appellants.
Edward L. Hogshire, Charlottesville, Va. (Paxson, Smith, Boyd, Gilliam & Gouldman, Charlottesville, Va., Charles G. Evans, Anchorage, Alaska, John C. Lowe, Lowe & Gordon, Ltd., Charlottesville, Va., on brief), for appellee.
Before FIELD, Senior Circuit Judge, WIDENER and HALL, Circuit Judges.
WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal from the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus in which case the district court set aside two sentences as being so disproportionately excessive as to constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment.
Roger Trenton Davis was convicted in a trial by jury in Wythe County, Virginia, of the offenses of distribution of marijuana and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. In his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Davis attacked the severity of the sentences he received, as well as making other constitutional claims.1 He contends that in this appeal the offense committed was minor; the facts constituting the case against him reveal a relatively insignificant crime for which the Commonwealth's sanction should be correspondingly slight; and, in view of the claimed relative innocuousness of the act of selling marijuana in the amounts proven, the sentences imposed were disproportionate to the offense. While the district court granted the writ, we do not agree and we reverse.
* Davis was sentenced to two twenty year terms, to be served consecutively, and fined $10,000 for each of the two counts. As is the practice in Virginia, the jury sentenced Davis upon its finding of guilt, and the court entered judgment on that verdict. Va.Code Ann., § 19.2-295.2
The jury awarded the sentence after hearing evidence which revealed Davis to be a dealer in drugs who sold them to a man who had informed Davis that the drugs were being procured for distribution to inmates in a state penal institution. Davis sold not only marijuana but also two other drugs in pill form, all to be taken to the inmates.
The evidence against Davis centered principally in the testimony of Danny Ray Eads. Eads, an inmate at Bland prison farm, approached prison officials with a proposition concerning drug traffic in Pulaski and Wythe Counties. Eads was concerned by his wife's use of drugs (she had become a drug user after his confinement) and the consequent effect on the welfare of his two year old child; he told authorities that he desired a furlough from prison in order to assist in the exposure and arrest of those supplying drugs to his wife and any illicit drug distributor in the area, including Davis who Eads identified as an active drug dealer in Wythe County.
The Commonwealth accepted Ead's offer of assistance and allowed him a furlough for the purpose of apprehending drug traffickers in Pulaski and Wythe Counties. During the time of the investigation, Eads was under strict surveillance. As part of the investigation, for example, he wore a transmitter strapped to his body so that the police could hear and record his conversations with drug dealers.
Eads met Davis on the streets of Wytheville in front of a "head shop," a store specializing in the sale of drug paraphernalia. Eads testified that he and Davis had become acquainted in jail while Davis was in jail, having been arrested on a different drug offense. He told Davis that he wished to purchase some drugs for himself and for some mutual friends at Bland prison farm. Davis responded that he thought he could provide Eads with the contraband he needed, left, and returned ten minutes later. Eads then accompanied Davis to the latter's home.
There, the two men went into Davis' bedroom. Davis removed a portion of marijuana from a large plastic bag, weighed it on a small scale, and gave three ounces of marijuana to Eads in return for $74.00. Also, at that time, Davis gave Eads the drug pills which included L.S.D. and another illicit controlled drug. This conversation between Eads and Davis was transmitted via Ead's hidden transmitter and recorded by the police. That recording, as well as the recording of Ead's initial contact with Davis, was played to the jury. Thus, the jury was intimately familiar with the conversation accompanying the transaction, including the participants' recognition that the purpose of the drug acquisition was for distribution to inmates in one of the Commonwealth's penal institutions, as well as Davis' gratuitous statement that he would like to blow up the state police headquarters in Wytheville.
On October 26, 1973, law enforcement officials raided the Davis residence. In Davis' bedroom they discovered two sets of scales and other drug paraphernalia. A small plastic bag containing 8 grams of marijuana was found in a jacket. About fifteen feet outside of the bedroom window, officers discovered a large plastic bag, similar to the receptacle from which Davis drew the marijuana sold to Eads, containing 168 grams of marijuana. Davis was discovered hiding in a closet and told the officers they could not search anything except his room.
Faced with this evidence, the Wythe County jury was obviously impressed by Davis' complete involvement in the business of selling drugs. While not given all the details, the jury knew from Eads' testimony that this was not Davis' first trouble with the law in a drug related offense. The evidence clearly allowed the jury to see the petitioner as an active drug dealer and not new at the business. He was, instead, an individual fully aware of the nature of his illegal activity, who, aware of the purpose for which the drugs were being procured, was in the business of selling drugs for profit. Accordingly, the jury awarded the petitioner a sentence which it believed was appropriate for such an offender. The trial court, with a more detailed comprehension of Davis' record of prior drug offenses, chose to enter judgment on that verdict, and directed the sentences to be served consecutively. A reasoned decision on whether the sentences were cruel and unusual must do more than to take these facts into account; it must accept the facts as an indication of the nature of the crime committed.3
II
A.
In the petition for a writ of habeas corpus and in argument, Davis has contended that the sentences imposed upon him are so excessive as to be disproportionate to the crime he committed. Although we recognize that the Eighth Amendment "proscribes punishment grossly disproportionate to the severity of the crime," see Ingraham v. Wright,
B.DP We begin our inquiry with the observation that the
Supreme Court has never found a sentence for a term of years
within the limits authorized by statute to be, by itself, a
cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment.
Downey v. Perini,
vacated for reconsideration in the light of an Ohio statute
The Supreme Court decision upon which Davis places primary reliance clearly is not such a case. Weems v. United States,
The presence of the sanction Cardena temporal prevents the Weems opinion from stating a holding on a challenge to the mere length of a prison sentence; it indicates that the decision deals with the conditions accompanying the service of the sentence and the disabilities which followed the convict even after release from confinement.
Cardena temporal was an hispanic sanction, carried over into Fillipino law from the jurisdiction's Spanish antecedents. The punishment involved a sentence of from twelve to twenty years imprisonment, at "hard and painful labor" with "a chain at the ankle, hanging from the wrists." Id., at p. 364,
Thus, the sentence imposed upon Weems constituted more than a prison sentence and a fine. Rather, as the Court observed, after the "prison bar and chains (were) removed," Weems would go, not to freedom, but to "a perpetual limitation of his liberty." Id., at p. 366,
This conclusion is buttressed by the later portion of the Court's opinion in Weems wherein the Court confronts a plea by the United States to sever the prison term from the incidents of Cardena temporal, leaving the former in force while voiding the latter. The Court's response was plain and to the point: the incarceration was inseparable, under Phillipine law, from the incidents of Cardena temporal, Id., at p. 382,
Davis has also placed reliance on Robinson v. California,
C.
Even though the Court has never held an otherwise lawful sentence for a term of years to be cruel and unusual, Davis correctly indicates that there is discussion in some of the cases which sets out a doctrine under which a sentence may be set aside as cruel and unusual if it is "grossly disproportionate to the severity of the crime." See Ingraham v. Wright,
Davis has not attacked the validity of the statute imposing the sentence for his crime; he has instead claimed that, in his particular case, the sentences imposed upon him were cruel and unusual even though they were within statutory limits. While some circuits rule that an attack on a sentence within statutory limits will be considered an attack on the sentencing statute, see e. g., Pependrea v. United States,
Davis' contentions as well as the district court's opinion are based upon an implementation of the analysis followed in Hart v. Coiner. However, the circumstances here, especially the imposition of sentences consisting of terms of years within the periods authorized by statute, make reliance on the Hart analysis misplaced.
The district court borrowed from Hart the guidelines which were used in that decision to determine the constitutionality of the sentence imposed. The guidelines included the nature of the offense committed, the legislative purpose behind the punishment, the punishment imposed in other jurisdictions for the same offense, and the punishment imposed in the same jurisdiction for other offenses. While these factors may be proper to consider in certain cases under the Eighth Amendment, we do not believe that Hart meant them to be mandatory or all inclusive in each such case. Cases contemporaneous with, before, and after Hart make that apparent.
To begin with, we should note that, like the Supreme Court, we have never set aside a sentence for a term of years, as in violation of the Eighth Amendment, because of excessive length. In Ralph v. Warden,
In United States v. Martell,
Hart, previously mentioned, was followed in 1973 by its companion case, Wood v. South Carolina,
After Hart and Wood, in other Eighth Amendment cases we have followed the pattern of Martell, Stevens, and Robinson.
In United States v. Wooten,
Yet other cases have distinguished Hart. In Griffin v. Warden, etc.,
In view of circuit precedent, we are of opinion that the scope of inquiry into the constitutionality of a legal sentence for a term of years need not be as broad as the inquiry used in Hart when a life sentence was imposed. In an attack for excessiveness on a sentence for a number of years, any authorized inquiry of the court should extend only to the consideration of the seriousness of the offense committed and the application of the sanction imposed for that offense. We can give no relief unless the sentence imposed is "grossly disproportionate to the severity of the crime." Ingraham v. Wright,
This rule antedates the Hart opinion and, as we have shown is unaffected by Hart. Nor is the rule peculiar to this circuit, it seems to be generally accepted by various courts of appeals. See United States v. Dawson,
Therefore, assuming we have any power to review the sentence, cf. Stevens, p. 433, we arrive at the same conclusion reached by the Fifth Circuit that a sentence for a term which is within the limits set out by statute will not be considered cruel and unusual unless it is so disproportionate as to " shock (. . .) human sensibilities." Yeager v. Estelle,
Examining this case for extraordinary and special circumstances which would indicate that the sentences given Davis were constitutionally disproportionate to the offenses he committed, we find no indication of such disparity as to shock human sensibilities, if any disparity at all. The evidence shows the defendant to be a drug dealer by vocation who was willing to sell illegal narcotics to inmates of a penal institution, and probably as well to the wife of an inmate left alone with an infant child. The jury therefore had the right to consider the offense a very serious crime. By not attacking the sentencing statute on its face, Davis has accepted the legislature's classification of the sale of marijuana as a serious offense; he must prove that, in his particular case, the offense was not serious or was mitigated in some way which necessarily precluded the imposition of the sentence awarded. But recordings of the transaction between Eads and Davis were played to the jury, as well as other damning evidence admitted. The jury was familiar with the nature of the transaction as well as the defendant's drug selling business. We cannot say that the jury could not have been impressed by what it heard, and it had a right to consider all the evidence in fixing the sentences.
Finally, the trial judge, who could have sentenced concurrently, sentenced consecutively. Not only had he heard the witnesses testify, which we have not; he knew, for example, which the jury did not, that Davis previously had been convicted of selling LSD and that the two offenses for which Davis had just been found guilty were committed while on bail pending appeal from the previous conviction for selling LSD.
Thus, we are unable to say that there is no evidence at all, Williams v. Peyton,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
REVERSED.
Notes
Davis made several additional constitutional claims which were dismissed by the district court. He does not appeal from their dismissal, and the issues are not before this court. The district court's opinion is reported at
See Vines v. Muncy,
Davis does not contend that the sentences authorized by the Virginia statute are on their face cruel and unusual. Rather, he points to the excessiveness, in his particular case, of the sentence awarded by the jury and imposed by the court, relying on Hart v. Coiner,
If the distribution, or the possession for distribution, of the marijuana had not been for profit, or to induce the use thereof or addiction thereto, but merely as an accommodation to another individual, Davis would only have been guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor. § 54-524.101:1. A Class 1 misdemeanor is punishable by confinement in jail not to exceed twelve months, or a one thousand dollar fine, or both. Va.Code Ann. § 18.2-11
In Howard v. Fleming,
Passing a $50.00 check with insufficient funds, transporting forged checks in the amount of $140.00 across the state lines, and perjury. See Hart, p. 138
Roberts was charged both with assault and assault with intent to murder. The maximum sentence for assault with intent to murder was 15 years
Ralph was held to have no application because it involved the death penalty "which occupies a special place in eighth amendment jurisprudence."
