Lead Opinion
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI
for the Court:
¶ 1. Eriс Foster was sentenced to forty years after his conviction of armed robbery. Foster appeals his sentence. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
¶ 2. Foster was indicted for "... wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously tak[ing] ... the personal property of the Bank of Franklin, against [the victims’] will by violence to [the victims] or by putting [the victims] in fear of immediate injury ... by the exhibition of a deadly weapon....” The jury found the defendant guilty of armed robbery and was not instructed to recommend a sentence.
¶ 3. At sentencing, the trial judge heard and considered testimony of one victim’s harrowing experience and the traumatic effect the crime had on her life.
¶ 4. In open court, petitioner’s response declaring his innocence (for the crime for which he had just been convicted) exhibited no remorse. After the victim finished her impact statement, Foster verbally and profanely told the victim, “you f* * *ed your own life up.”
¶ 5. The trial judge sentenced Foster to forty years, absent objection, taking into account “the seriousness of the crime, the impact on the victims, and the defendant’s prior conviction for aggravated assault and his age of thirty-five.” No actuarial, mortality, or life-exрectancy tables were offered by Foster.
¶ 6. Foster filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and a motion for a new trial, neither of which challenged his sentence. Once again, Fos
¶ 7. On appeal to the Court of Appeals,
ANALYSIS
¶8. Despite making no objection before the trial court and presenting no tables of estimates, publications, or argument related to life expectancy, Foster belatedly argues that his sentence should be vacated because his sentence equates to a life sentence. Foster asks this Court to consider life-expectancy estimates and argument never presented at the trial level. Foster urges this Court to consider matters outside the record.
¶ 9. This Court declines to consider matters which were never presented or argued in the trial court and are not part of the record before us todаy.
This Court will not consider matters that do not appear in the record, and it must confine its review to what appears in the record. Robinson v. State,662 So.2d 1100 , 1104 (Miss.1995) (citing Dillon v. State,641 So.2d 1223 , 1225 (Miss.1994)). Issues cannot be decided based on assertions from the briefs alone. The issues must be supported and proved by the record. Robinson,662 So.2d at 1104 (citing Ross v. State,603 So.2d 857 , 861 (Miss.1992)).
Pulphus v. State,
¶ 10. “A contemporaneous objection must be made at trial in order to preserve an issue for appeal.” Cox v.
¶ 11. The trial judge was never afforded the opportunity to consider the merits vel non of that issue. Faithful application of our precedent mandates that Foster’s claim of error be denied, not having been preserved for appeal.
¶ 12. This Court does recognize that there are exceptions to a procedural bar for errors affecting certain constitutional rights. Rowland v. State,
¶ 13. This Court consistently has held that “[s]entencing is within the complete discretion of the trial court and not subject to appellate review if it is within the limits prescribed by statute.” Cox,
¶ 14. Foster cites Stewart v. State (Stewart I),
¶ 15. We have addressed the use of life-expectancy tables numerous times and have consistently held these tables can be used as aids in determining sentences, if presented to the trial court. As early as 1937, this Court held that mortality tables can be used as aids to assist the trier of fact. See Tucker v. Gurley,
[AJttempts to define precisely at what point a term of years becomes a life sentence ... [are] of limited utility. Estimated life expectancy is just that — an estimate. The reality is that some persons live beyond their life expectancies while others do not. To hold that a defendant’s sentence must be a certain number of years or months less than his life expectancy would place unwarranted emphasis on a number that is itself only a rough approximation.
Johnson,
¶ 16. Where Foster’s argument fails is that none of the cases he cites stands for the proposition that a defendant may stand mute, present no evidence to the trial court, and then claim error on appeal that the trial court did not consider what he did not offer as evidence. Foster offers no excuse for the failure to present such evidence and argument to the trial court to support a claim of error.
¶ 17. In Rogers v. State,
As a general rule, this Court cannot disturb a sentence on appeal if that sentence is within the boundaries allowed by the statute. Hoops v. State,681 So.2d 521 , 537 (Miss.1996). Here, the sentence imposed by the trial court was acceptable as it did not exceed the statu*1018 tory limits provided in Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-65(2). See Wilkerson v. State,731 So.2d 1173 , 1183 (Miss.1999); see also Freshwater v. State,794 So.2d 274 , 277 (Miss.Ct.App.2001); Shabazz v. State,729 So.2d 813 , 822 (Miss.Ct.App.1998). Therefore, Rogers’[s] argument that he was sentenced to more time than was applicable at the time of his offense is without merit.
Rogers,
¶ 18. This case is akin to Lindsay v. State,
¶ 19. This Court repeatedly has upheld sentences that likely “amount to” life sentences. In Tate v. State,
¶ 20. “This Court employs the plain-error rule only “when a defendant’s substantive or fundamental rights are affected.’ ” Grayer v. State,
¶ 21. After receiving all evidence, the trial court found that forty years was a proper and legal term based on the “seri
¶22. The trial court articulated and followed the correct standard. The learned trial judge weighed evidence before him and meted out a fair and reasonable term (not life) sentence. Drawing on the wealth of his experience as a trial judge, Judge Johnson utilized his discretion and imposed a forty-year sentence. After receiving all evidence offered at the sentencing hearing, the trial court found that forty years was a proper and legal sentence. The trial court’s holding does not reveal a “manifest miscarriage of justice.”
¶ 23. The forty-year sentence received by petitioner, a twice-convicted felon of armed robbery and aggravated assault, is not constitutionally infirm, nor does it exceed the trial court’s sentencing authority provided by Section 97-3-79 of the Mississippi Code. Given that the sentence is permissible under the Code and our state and federal Constitutions, there exists no basis to declare it illegal post-factum. A trial judge has the discretion to consider all relevant and pertinent factors when fixing a sentence. It is incumbent on the defendant to introduce evidence of mitigating factors or circumstances to seek reduction of the term within the statutory scheme.
CONCLUSION
¶ 24. “Our law has long provided that the imposition of sentence following a criminal conviction is a matter within the discretion of the Circuit Court, subject only to statutory and constitutional limitations.” Jackson v. State,
¶ 25. CONVICTION OF ARMED ROBBERY AND SENTENCE OF FORTY (40) YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AFFIRMED. APPELLANT SHALL RECEIVE FULL CREDIT FOR TIME ALREADY SERVED. APPELLANT SHALL PAY ALL COURT COSTS AND FEES.
Notes
. At sentencing, one of the victims provided the following impact statement:
... Mr. Foster, you have been a every present nightmare in my life since December 2 at 2:26 when you sailed over that cubby and knocked me out of my chair. Never in a million years would I think that anybody in as evil of a world that we live in could be so callous as to do what you did with no concern.... You didn't have to bully us and knock me out of my chair and give me nightmares since December the 2nd. Because of you, I locked myself up in my house for two weeks. I quit a job that I absolutely loved.... You didn't just hurt me. You hurt my family. You hurt my friends. You hurt our belief in people, and I am not going to let you do that anymore. ...
. Foster v. State,
. The BCing dissent attempts to distinguish the case sub judice from Cox because the defendant in Cox provided no evidence of life expectancy. (BCing Dis. Op. ¶ 44). This is a distinction without a difference, since this petitioner provided no evidence of life expectancy to the trial court at any stage of the proceeding. As stated supra, the proper avenue ior submitting evidence to this Court is to first submit the evidence to a trial court, where it becomes part of the record reviewed by this Court. Merely providing a website address in an appellate brief can hardly be considered "evidence” (BCing Dis. Op. ¶ 44) and is viola-tive of the appeals process.
. The table used in Stewart II is attached as Appendix A.
. Petitioner’s thirty-one-year-old accomplice received a forty-year term sentence which was unanimously affirmed. See Wilson v. State,
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
¶ 26. I concur with the majority, but I write separately because, in my opinion, the Mississippi Supreme Court exceeded the boundaries of its constitutional authority when, in Stewart v. State,
¶ 27. We many times have noted, but perhaps fewer times followed, the principle that our role in the constitutional frame
¶ 28. Section 97-3-79 provides as follows:
Every person who shall feloniously take or attempt to take from the person or from the presence the personal property of another and against his will by violence to his person or by putting such person in fear of immediate injury to his рerson by the exhibition of a deadly weapon shall be guilty of robbery and, upon conviction, shall be imprisoned for life in the state penitentiary if the penalty is so fixed by the jury; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary the court shall fix the penalty at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for any term not less than three (3) years.
The statute as enacted by the Legislature provides two, and only two, sentencing possibilities. First, a jury may choose to sentence the offender to a life sentence. If not, the judge may impose a penalty of imprisonment “for any term not less than three (3) years.” Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-79 (Rev. 2014) (emphasis added). The requirement that the latter option, a judicially imposed sentence, be for less than the life expectancy of the defendant is not in the statute. It was created by the Court.
¶29. The Stewart Court explained its creation of the requirement by comparing Section 97-3-79 to the death penalty statute, which places the death sentence “within the sole province of the jury.” Stewart,
¶ 30. Even if the Stewart Court was correct, that, in its wisdom, Section 97-3-79 made better sense and better policy with the added requirement, under our State’s Constitution and the strict separation of powers it explicitly imposes in Article 1, Section 2, we lack the power to substitute our judgment for that of the Legislature and to judicially amend its statutes. The prohibition exists for good reason. As we elsewhere noted,
The objectives desired to be accomplished and the evils sought to be prevented by separation of governmental powers were articulated by the authors of The Federalist. In that work James Madison stated:
... It is agreed on all sides, that the powers properly belonging to one of the departments ought not to be directly and completely administered by either of the other departments. It is equally evident, that none of them ought to possess, directly or indirectly, an overruling influence over the others in the administration of their respective powers. It will not be denied, that power is of an encroaching nature, and that it ought to be effectually restrained from passing the limits assigned to it.
The Federalist, No. 48 (J. Madison) (J. Cooke ed. 1961).
Thomas Jefferson also wrote of the necessity of internal restraints on the powers of government:
... An elective despotism was not the government we fought for, but one which should not only be founded on free principles, but in which the powers of government should be so divided and balanced among several bodies of magistry, as that no one could transcend their legal limits, withоut being effectually checked and restrained by the others. For this reason that convention which passed the ordinance of government, laid its foundation on this basis, that the legislative, executive, and judiciary departments should be separate and distinct, so that no person should exercise the powers of more than one of them at the same time. Jefferson, “Notes on the State of Virginia”, 1781-1785, ch. 13, as reprinted in “the Complete Jefferson” by Padover, Ch. XIV, pp. 648, 649.
Book v. State Office Building Commission,
In his farewell address George Washington observed,
The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form of government, a real despotism. A just estimate of the love of power, and proneness to abuse it, which predominates in the human heart, is sufficient to satisfy us of the truth of this position.
Book v. State Office Building Commission,
¶ 31. Our trial courts are perfectly capable of enforcing Section 97-3-79 as written and without the extra requirement added by the Stewart Court. See Franklin Collection Serv., Inc. v. Kyle,
¶ 32. The Stewart requirement is nothing but the unconstitutional imposition of judicial power over a" political question. See Monaghan v. Reliance Mfg. Co.,
¶ 33. Cries of stare decisis are the inevitable effect caused by a call to overturn a decades-old case such as Stewart, and the Court should take care to adhere to the doctrine where appropriate. However, I discern no reason to dogmatically cling to it here. As an initial matter, we apply stare decisis when the Legislature ratifies our holding by re-enacting or amending the statute without directly addressing or contradicting a holding of ours from an earlier case. See Caves v. Yarbrough,
¶ 34. More generally, we have written as follows:
In stare decisis generally, we look for error, but, finding that, we look for more and we look largely in the area of public or widespread disadvantage. Ordinarily, we do not overrule erroneous precedent unless it is “pernicious,” Stone v. Reichman-Crosby Co.,43 So.2d 184 , 190 (Miss.1949); “impractical,” Robinson v. State,434 So.2d 206 , 210 (Miss.1983) (Hawkins, J., concurring); or is “mischievous in its effect, and resulting in detriment to the public.” Childress v. State,188 Miss. 573 , 577,195 So. 583 , 584 (1940). We look for “evils attendant upon a continuation of the old rule.”*1024 Tideway Oil Programs, Inc. v. Serio,431 So.2d 454 , 467 (Miss.1983).
Caves,
¶ 35. On a final stare decisis note, I acknowledge that Mississippi Codе Section 97-3-65(4)(a), which sets the penalty for forcible rape, provides as follows:
Every person who shall have forcible sexual intercourse with any person, or who shall have sexual intercourse not constituting forcible sexual intercourse or statutory rape with any person without that person’s consent by administering to such person any substance or liquid which shall produce such stupor or such imbecility of mind or weakness of body as to prevent effectual resistance, upon conviction, shall be imprisoned for life in the State Penitentiary if the jury by its verdict so prescribes; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at life imprisonment, the court shall fix the penalty at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for any term as the court, in its discretion, may determine.
Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-65(4)(a) (Rev. 2014). Without question, the above-quoted sentencing directive mirrors that of the armed robbery sentencing statute at issue, and in Lee v. State,
¶ 36. Even if the Legislature had amended Section 97-3-79, I would not agree that stare decisis saves the Stewart Court’s amendment of it. I simply cannot agree that our assumption that the Legislature reads our opinions and ratifies our holdings by their silence is enough to confirm an unconstitutional encroachment upon its authority. While, as I concede above, we have held that the Legislature ratifies via its silence our interpretation of a statute by re-enacting or amending the statute without directly addressing or contradicting a holding of ours from an earlier case, see Caves,
*1025 The last string to respondents’ and the Government’s bow is their argument that two amendments to Title VI “ratified” this Court’s decisions finding an implied private right of action to enforce the disparate-impact regulations.... Respondents point to Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran, 456 U.S., [353] at 381-382,102 S.Ct. 1825 [72 L.Ed.2d 182 (1982) ], which inferred congressional intent to ratify lower court decisions regarding a particular statutory provision when Congress comprehensively revised the statutory scheme but did not amend that provision. But we recently criticized Cur-ran’s reliance on congressional inaction, saying that “[a]s a general matter ... [the] argumenft] deserve[s] little weight in the interpretive process.” Central Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A., 511 U.S., [164] at 187,114 S.Ct. 1439 [128 L.Ed.2d 119 (1994) ]. And when, as here, Congress has not comprehensively revised a statutory scheme but has made only isolated amendments, we have spoken more bluntly: “It is ‘impossible to assert with any degree of assurance that congressional failure to act represents’ affirmative congressional approval of the Court’s statutory interpretation.” Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,491 U.S. 164 , 175, n. 1,109 S.Ct. 2363 ,105 L.Ed.2d 132 (1989) (quoting Johnson v. Transportation Agency, Santa Clara Cty.,480 U.S. 616 , 671-672,107 S.Ct. 1442 ,94 L.Ed.2d 615 (1987) (Scalia, J., dissenting)).
Alexander v. Sandoval,
¶ 37. The position I take further raises concerns about the retroactive application of any holding overruling Stewart to Foster. See Rogers v. Tennessee,
Deprivation of the right to fair warning, we continued, can result both from vague statutory language and from an unforeseeable and retroactive judicial expansion of statutory language that appears narrow and precise on its face. For that reason, we concluded that if a judicial construction of a criminal statute is unexpected and indefensible by reference to the law which had been expressed prior to the conduct in issue, the construction must not be given retroactive effect.
Rogers,
¶ 38. For the foregoing reasons, I would overrule Stewart.
DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., AND PIERCE, J., JOIN THIS OPINION IN PART.
. The statute provided as follows:
In any case in which the penalty prescribed by law upon the conviction of the accused is death, except in cases otherwise provided, the jury finding a verdict of guilty may fix the punishment at imprisonment for the natural life of the party; and thereupon the court shall sentence him accordingly; but if*1022 the jury shall not thus prescribe the punishment, the court shall sentence the party found guilty to suffer death, unless the jury by its verdict certify that it was unable to agree upon the punishment, in which case the court shall sentence the accused to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life.
Bullock,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
¶39. For the reasons stated in his scholarly and well-reasoned concurrence, I
CHANDLER, J„ JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
. Stewart v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
¶ 40. Because I believe that Foster’s sentence is illegal, as it is not reasonably less than his life, I dissent. Because I believe that the majority’s rendition of the facts is incomplete, I begin with a recitation of those facts.
¶ 41. On December 2, 2009, the Bank of Franklin was robbed. The police eventually arrested Donald Wilson, Tyrone Butler, and Eric Foster for the robbery. Foster was indicted for armed robbery and tried on October 18, 2011. That same day, the jury found him guilty, and the trial court held a sentencing hearing.
¶ 42. On February 21, 2014, on its own motion, this Court found supplemental briefing to be necessary, and ordered the parties to brief the following issues:
1)Does Mississippi Code Section 97-8-79 preclude a trial judge from imposing a sentence of a term of years in excess of a defendаnt’s life expectancy when the jury has not imposed a sentence of life?
2) If Mississippi Code Section 97-3-79 allows a trial judge to impose a sentence in excess of a defendant’s life expectancy where the jury has not imposed a life sentence, was Stewart v. State therefore wrongly decided?
3) If Stewart v. State was wrongly decided, does the doctrine of stare deci-sis nonetheless bind this Court to the interpretation of Mississippi Code Section 97-3-79 made by the Court in Stewart?
¶43. The parties timely filed supplemental briefs addressing these issues, as requested by the Court.
ANALYSIS
¶ 44. “If no contemporaneous objection is made at trial, a party must rely on the plain error rule to raise the assignment of error on appeal.” Flora v. State,
¶ 45. Once convicted of armed robbery, the statute provides that a defendant “shall be imprisoned for life in the state penitentiary if the penalty is so fixed by the jury; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at imprisonment for life
¶ 46. In such cases in which the court fixes the sentence, the court may not sentence the defendant to a life term, but must sentence the defendant to a term reasonably expected to be less than life. Stewart v. State,
¶ 47. In determining an appropriate sentence, the trial court should “make a record of and consider all relevant facts necessary to fix a sentence for a definite term reasonably expected to be less than life.” Stewart,
¶ 48. The trial court in this case utterly failed to consider Foster’s life expectancy, as Stewart requires it to do. The majority indicates that the trial court’s consideration of Foster’s age alone was sufficient. Maj. Op. ¶ 21. The trial court’s consideration of Foster’s age, but not his life expectancy, is simply not sufficient under our caselaw.
¶ 49. While it is certainly advisable that a defendant put some evidence of his life expectancy before the trial court,
¶ 50. Trial courts must examine the evidence to determine a reasonable, educated estimate as to a defendant’s life expectancy. Moreover, a trial court must do so to follow the Legislature’s dictates that the sentence be less than life. The trial court in this case did absolutely nothing to estimate Foster’s life-expectancy — it failed to consult actuarial tables, evidence of Foster’s health, or anything else at all as relates to Foster’s life expectancy, a factor that it is required to consider in determining an armed robbery sentence.
¶ 51. After its complete failure to consider Foster’s life expectancy, the trial court sentenced Foster to forty years in prison.
¶ 52. Life expectancy, or actuarial, tables are commonly used in courts in sentencing. See, e.g., People v. Taylor,
¶ 53. The Court of Appeals determined that Foster’s sentence was not illegal because it did not exceed the life expectancy for a thirty-five-year-old “American citizen,” without reference to age or gender. This Court and the Court of Appeals have traditionally used individual characteristics such as age, gender, and race, as well as other appropriate particularized considerations such as health and height, when considering life expectancy. See Arrington v. State,
¶ 54. The majority relies on cases that have no bearing on the case at hand to claim that this Court has upheld sentences that “amount to” life sentences. In Lindsay, this Court noted that Lindsay failed to present any evidence of life expectancy аt any stage, not just at sentencing, as claimed by the majority. Maj. Op. ¶ 18; Lindsay v. State,
¶ 55. The majority then cites several cases that are completely inapposite, as they involve a proportionality review, and have nothing whatsoever to do with a sentence that is statutorily limited to being less than life. Indeed, the majority cites Cannon v. State for its position that a sentence may exceed the life expectancy of a defendant, despite this Court specifically distinguishing the case from the line of cases under the armed robbery statute. Cannon v. State,
We find that the inherent problem with reliance upon Handford is that its holding is based upon Stewart, an armed robbery case. The crime of armed robbery has specific sentencing requirements separate and distinct from drug*1033 cases. The armed robbery statute, Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-79 (Rev. 2000), provides:
Every person who shall feloniously take or attempt to take from the person or from the presence the personal property of another and against his will by violence to his person or by putting such person in fear of immediate injury guilty of robbery and, upon conviction, shall be imprisoned for life in the state penitentiary if the penalty is so fixed by the jury; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary the court shall fix the penalty at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for any term not less than three (3) years.
(emphasis added). Therefore, a jury may impose a penalty of life imprisonment for the crime of armed robbery pursuant to the statute. If a jury does not fix a sentence of life imprisonment, then a trial judge may determine a sentence within certain limits. This Court has held that a trial judge’s sentencing in armed robbery cases is limited to a definite term reasonably expected to be less than life. Stewart v. State,372 So.2d 257 , 259 (Miss.1979); see also Lindsay v. State,720 So.2d 182 , 185 (Miss.1998). However, this rule does not apply in a drug case such as the one before the Court today.
Cannon v. State,
¶ 56. Not only did the trial court fail to consider and make a record of life expectancy when fixing Foster’s sentence, but Foster presented us with objective, reliable evidence that his sentence is illegal, as it is not reasonably expected to be less than life. Foster’s illegal sentence violates his fundamental rights and thus amounts to plain error. I would therefore affirm Foster’s conviction and vacate his sentence for armed robbery.
¶ 57. I also respectfully disagree with the Special Concurrence in its determination that the notion that the Court created the standard that a judicially imposed sentence pursuant to the armed robbery statute be less than the life expectancy of the defendant. This Court is vested with the power to interpret the law. If every statute were plain and unambiguous and could be read literally, we would not have much need for the courts. The duty of this Court “is to carefully review statutory language and apply its most reasonable interpretation and meaning to the facts of a particular case. Whether the Legislature intended that interpretation, we can only hope, but we will never know.” Pope v. Brock,
¶ 58. The armed robbery statute provides that a defendant, once convicted, “shall be imprisoned for life in the state penitentiary if the penalty is so fixed by the jury; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary the court shall fix the penalty at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for any term not less than three (3) years.” Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-79 (Rev. 2014). Therefore, the Legislature determined that only the jury may fix a life sentence.
¶ 59. In such cases in which the court fixes the sentence, the court may not sentence the defendant to a life term, but must sentence the defendant to a term reasonably expected to be less than life. Stewart v. State,
upon conviction shall be imprisoned for life in the state penitentiary if the jury by its verdict so prescribes; and in cases where the jury fails to fix the penalty at life imprisonment the court shall fix the penalty in the state penitentiary for any term as the court, in its discretion, may determine.
Lee,
The statute before us places the imposition of a life sentence within the sole province of the jury and, in our opinion, no such sentence can be imposed by a judge unless he has the authority from the jury so to do. The statute presupposes, absent a jury recommendation of life imprisonment, that the judge will sentence the defendant to a definite term reasonably expected to be less than life.
Id. McAdory, on the other hand, examined the armed robbery statute and found that “[i]n the event the jury failed to impose sentence, as was done in this case, the lower court had the discretion under the statute to impose a life sentence.” McAdory,
¶ 60. Stewart noted the conflicting decisions on the question of whether a sentence exceeding the defendant’s life expectancy under the armed robbery statute is excessive as being for a longer time period than permitted by statute. Stewart,
¶ 61. However, even assuming the Court’s interpretation in Stewart of Section 97-3-79 was incorrect, I disagree with the Special Concurrence’s position that this Court should overrule the Court’s unanimous decision in Stewart, a decision that has stood for thirty-five years. The doctrine of stare decisis “proceeds from that first principle of justice, that, absent powerful countervailing considerations, like cases ought to be decided alike.” State ex rel. Moore v. Molpus,
The doctrine of stare decisis is the bedrock of our system of jurisprudence. It*1036 has given direction and stability to the common law whose precepts constitute the larger part of the rules by which we live and are governed. It demands definiteness in the law, and that its rules be consistent so that they may be known. It has been said to be the most fundamental characteristic of the common law as distinguished from other systems.
Id. (quoting Laurel Daily Leader, Inc. v. James,
¶ 62. Furthermore, a weighty factor in a challenge to precedent is whether people have “justifiably placed their faith” in the prior precedent, and the fact that there exists a “the need to have [the] law settled so that [the people] may rely upon it.” Id. at 637. “[P]ublic confidence in the law requires substantial stability in the face of’ changes with the times and judicial personnel.
¶ 63. Moreover, since the decision in Lee, the Legislature has amended Section 97-3-65 five times. Laws 1977, Ch. 458, § 7; Laws 1985, Ch. 389, § 3; Laws 1993, Ch. 497, § 1; Laws 1998, Ch. 549, § 2; Laws 2007, Ch. 335, § 1. None of the five amendments that have occurred in the thirty-nine years since Lee was decided has changed the sentence for forcible rape. When this Court finds that a statute was incorrectly interpreted in a previous case, it
will nevertheless continue to apply the previous interpretation, pursuant to the doctrine of stare decisis, upon finding the Legislature amended or reenacted the statute without correcting the prior interpretation. In our view, such action on the part of the Legislature amounts to incorporation of our previous interpretation into the reenacted or amended statute. The Legislature is, of course, free to preclude our incorrect interpretation by specific provision, failing which, we must conclude that the legislative silence amounts to acquiescence. Stated another way, the incorrect interpretation becomes a correct interpretation because of the Legislature’s tacit adoption of the prior interpretation into the amended or reenacted statute.
Porter v. Porter,
It would be a great evil if questions once settled on full argument and mature deliberation were subject to be reopened and decided differently upon every change in the members of this court, and consequent changes in the temper and mental organism of the judges.... It is safe ... to say that the rule of stare decisis, so far as it relates to decisions of this court, should not be disregarded, except on the fullest conviction that the law has been settled wrong; and even then it is better to leave the correction to the legislature in all cases where a departure from it would have the effect to disturb vested rights.... In such cases, a departure from former rulings should never take place except upon the clearest necessity and the most assured conviction that the former ruling was erroneous.
Lombard v. Lombard,
¶ 64. Even if Stewart was wrongly decided, which it was not, any alleged error was certainly not pernicious, impracticable, or mischievous in its effect. Nor has any alleged error cause any harm or detriment to the public, much less any significant harm. Furthermore, the bench, bar, and defendants have come to rely on the interpretation of Section 97-3-79 as provided by Stewart. Last, the legislative silence for several decades on this issue renders the Stewart and Lee interpretations tacitly adopted, and thus incorporated into thе statute. For these reasons, Stewart should not be disturbed even upon a find
KITCHENS AND CHANDLER, JJ„ JOIN THIS OPINION. DICKINSON, P.J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
. The State chose not to pursue a life sentence fixed by the jury. Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-79 (Rev. 2014).
. The majority implies that the trial court considered Foster’s "lack of remorse,” despite the fact that the trial court never indicated it considered such. Maj. Op. ¶ 4. The majority, in either overzealous exaggeration or an apparent attempt to inflame readers, suggests that Foster exhibited no remorse because he "verbally and profanely” attacked the victim during the sentencing hearing. Maj. Op. ¶ 4. The majority’s suggestion mischaracterizes the exchange. We note that the victim admitted she did not see the robbers’ faces or really look at them closely during the less than two minutes they spent robbing the bank, and, while we certainly do not minimize her trauma, her physical injuries were not serious, consisting of some bruising and carpet burns, as well as "mental hurt” and "hurt feelings.” While Foster’s statements were certainly inadvisable, he was not attacking the victim, but making a protestation of innocence. The entire exchange, as opposed to the "modified” version presented by the majority, is as follows:
BY [THE VICTIM]: Your Honor, Mr. Foster, you have been a[sic] every [sic] present nightmare in my life since December 2 at 2:26 when you sailed over that cubby and knocked me out of my chair. Never in a million years would I think that anybody in as evil of a world that we live in could be so callous as to do what you did with no concern. You know, get your money. Get your money аnd leave. We’d have give [sic] you the money. You didn’t have to bully us and knock me out of my chair and give me nightmares since December the 2nd. Because of you, I locked myself up in my house for two weeks. I quit a job that I absolutely loved. I left people over there in Roxie that I absolutely loved because of you, but now I don’t have to worry about you anymore. I don’t have to look over my shoulder and wonder if this young man walking up with a hoodie on is you because I know where you’re going to be. I know where the other man that was with you is going to be for about 40 years, and I hope that's as long as you go with him. You got a lot of time to think about what you did. You didn't just hurt me. You hurt my family. You hurt my friends. You hurt our belief in people, and I am not going to let you do that anymore. You're done. As far*1027 as I am concerned, you’re done. I won’t ever have to worry about you again for as long as I live. Thank you.
BY THE COURT: Does the State have anything further?
BY MS. BLACKWELL: No, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT: Does the defendant have anything that ... he cares to say? Mr. Foster, you can make any statement to the Court you care to before sentencing, either yourself or through counsel, Mr. Beesley, or anyone else on your behalf.
BY THE DEFENDANT: Man, that lady don’t even know me from the man in the moon, and as far as Tyrone, I felt like he was baiting me in by calling me up there while I was serving him. Man, ain’t none of this is right. That lady don’t know me, and she’s sitting there placing all this on me, but she don’t even know me. She ain’t seen me nary a day of her life but today. Y’all convicting an innocent man. Y’all, I got three children out there, bro. I ain’t nеver done nary a robbery. I maybe done hurt somebody before, but, now, I ain’t never done naiy a robbery. Y'all sitting here convicting me over what a habitual offender say. That man is known to be robbery [sic]. I ain't got no robbery on me. Why you sit there, I done f* * *ed your life up. You f* * *ed your own life up.
BAILIFF ASHLEY: Hey, hey.
BY THE COURT: Just a second, sir—
BY A SPECTATOR: Twelve jurors convicted you.
BY THE COURT: Just a second—
BY A SPECTATOR: Twelve jurors convicted you.
BY THE DEFENDANT: She was talking to me.
BY THE COURT: Mr. Foster, you can continue with any statement you have to the Court.
BY THE DEFENDANT: Y’all get me on up out of here. Y’all convicting an innocent man.
. My colleagues in the majority, Justices Waller, Randolph, Lamar, and Pierce, publicly credit me and one of my Court of Appeals opinions, Long v. State, with supporting their application of a procedural bar in this case. That is inaccurate. Long is inapposite and inapplicable. I am concerned that my colleagues in the majority have either not fully read Long, or have conveniently misstated and misapplied Long. The same goes for the public credit they give to me for my opinion in Shumake v. Shumake,
. Long is inapplicable on the merits, despite the majority’s intimation otherwise, as it noted that “this Court has held that when the Legislature has affixed a set term of years as the maximum sentence and has allowed that sentence to be imposed by a trial judge, as is the case here, the trial judge is not required to apply a term less than life in accordance with actuarial tables." Long v. State,
. Neither side offered any evidence as to Foster's life expectancy at the trial court level; however, the trial court found "no need to order a presentence investigation,” and proceeded with sentencing mere minutes after the jury returned its verdict.
. The Court of Appeals and the majority note that Foster’s codefendant, Donald Wilson, was likewise sentenced to forty years in prison, and that sentence was affirmed. Wilson was thirty-one at the time of his sentencing, and the life-span of a thirty-one year old non-Hispanic black male is 41.5 years. National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 59, No. 9, September 28, 2011, located at http://www.cdc.gov/ nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr5 9Aivsr59_09.pdf (last visited October 14, 2014). Wilson’s forty-year sentence was 1.5 years less than his life expectancy, and was thus ostensibly legal. Moreover, Wilson's sentence is neither relevant to Foster's life expectancy, nor beforе this Court. While certainly a trial court may consider the codefendant’s sentence in its analysis, it is not the only factor to consider, and the trial court must also consider a defendant’s life expectancy, something it failed to do in this case. Moreover, while the majority uses Wilson's sentence as a comparison, the record reveals that the trial court did not even consider it when sentencing Foster, which may only compound the trial court’s errors in sentencing.
. A thirty-five-year-old non-Hispanic black male has a life expectancy of 37.9 years. A thirty-five-year-old black male, including the black Hispanic population, has a life expectancy of 38.2 years. National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 59, No. 9, September 28, 2011, located at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/ nvsr59/nvsr59_09.pdf (last visited October 14, 2014).
. This is especially true when consulting an objective, reliable source for life expectancy, such as a government actuarial table, because
. As an example, in Foster’s age bracket of thirty-five to thirty-six years, if the average American’s life expectancy of 44.6 years was used, white females, Hispanic females, and Hispanic males would experience a boon, often of several years. National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 9, No. 9, September 28, 2011, located at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/ nvsr59/ nvsr59_09.pdf (last visited October 14, 2014) (Thirty-five-year-old non-Hispanic white females have a 46.8 year life expectancy; thirty-five-year-old Hispanic females have a 49.4 year life expectancy; and thirty-five-year-old Hispanic males have a 45.1 year life expectancy). Meanwhile, non-Hispanic white males and all non-Hispanic African Americans would be disparately impacted, often by several years. National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 9, No. 9, September 28, 2011, located at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr 59/nvsr59_09.pdf (last visited October 14, 2014) (Thirty-five-year-old non-Hispanic white males have a life expectancy of 42.7 years; thirty-five-year-old non-Hispanic black males have a life expectancy of 37.9 years; and thirty-five year old non-Hispanic black females have a life expectancy of 43.5 years). In addition, using such non-particularized, hugely sweeping averages such as the "average American” is likely to disproportionately harm Mississippians. See Death in the United States, 2010, NCHS Data Brief No. 99, July 2012, located at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ data/databriefs/db99.pdf (last visited October 14, 2014) ("Mississippi had the highest age-adjusted death rate in 2010 (961.9), 28.9 percent higher than the U.S. rate.”).
. Where is the line drawn? One hundred years? Three hundred? Five hundred? This argument creates a slippery slope and gives trial courts no upper sentencing limit, because this Court has held that "a sentence which does not exceed statutory limits is not cruel or unusual punishment.” Baker v. State,
is. On December 8, 1975, a Court composed of Justices Gillespie, Patterson, Rodgers, In-zer, Smith, Robertson, Sugg, Walker, and Broom unanimously decided that the proper interpretation of the rape statute, which provided that if a jury did not provide a life sentence, the court could fix the sentence for any term, was that only a jury may sentence a defendant to life, and in the absence of such a sentence, a judge has only the authority to sentence a defendant "to a definite term reasonably expected to be less than life.” Lee,
On January 25, 1978, a Court composed of Justices Patterson, Inzer, Smith, Robertson, Sugg, Walker, Broom, Bowling, and Lee unanimously decided that the proper interpretation of the armed robbery statute, which provided that if a jury did not provide a life sentence, the court could fix the sentence for any term not less than three years, was that the court had the discretion to impose a life sentence even when the jury does not do so. McAdory,
On May 2, 1979, a Court composed of Justices Patterson, Smith, Robertson, Sugg, Walker, Broom, Bowling, Lee, and Cofer unanimously decided that the proper interpretation of the armed robbery statute was that only a jury can sentence a defendant to life, and that, absent such a jury sentence, a judge has only the authority to sentence a defendant to a "definite term reasonably expected to be less than life,” overruling McA-dory. Stewart,
Today, a Court composed of Justices Waller, Dickinson, Randolph, Lamar, Kitchens, Chandler, Pierce, King, and Coleman should not overrule Stewart and find that the proper interpretation of the armed robbery statute is that a judge has the authority to sentence a defendant to a term of years reasonably expected to be longer than that defendant’s life expectancy, effectively sentencing the defendant to life. If we abandon stare decisis today, nothing will stop the Court from again abandoning this new interpretation in a few years, once the composition of the Court has changed, or the current composition has changed its mind. This issue has already received much back and forth, and thus a thorough analysis of all sides of the issue, before it was settled thirty-five years ago. Subjecting it to more back and forth today, merely because of a change in the Court’s composition, is not prudent.
