Richardson, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Hervey, Alcala, Newell, Keel, and Walker, JJ., joined.
In 2008, Applicant Jeremy Wade Pue was convicted by a jury of the third degree felony offense of evading arrest or detention with a vehicle.
I.
Overview
An illegal sentence is one that is not authorized by law; therefore, a sentence that is outside the range of punishment authorized by law is considered illegal.
In 2008, when Applicant was sentenced in this case, the State sought to enhance his punishment with two prior felony convictions. One was a 2007 California felony conviction for possessing a "useable quantity" of a controlled substance under California Health and Safety Code § 11377(a). Applicant pled guilty to that 2007 possession charge before the Superior Court of Orange County, California, on May 21, 2007. Imposition of sentence was suspended, and Applicant was placed on probation for three years.
We filed and set this writ application to decide whether Applicant's sentence in this case was improperly enhanced. The first issue we specifically agreed to address was
whether Applicant's prior 2007 probated conviction from California, which was alleged in one of the habitual enhancement paragraphs, could have been used as a punishment enhancement in California and was therefore available for use as a punishment enhancement in this Texas prosecution.
We ordered briefing on this issue and have reviewed the parties' briefs and considered their arguments. By order dated November 1, 2017, we noted that further briefing would be useful and invited both parties to provide this Court with legal and policy arguments as to whether the "finality" of an out-of-state conviction, for purposes of punishment enhancement in a Texas prosecution, should be determined in accordance with the law of the foreign jurisdiction or in accordance with Texas law.
We now hold that, whether the 2007 California conviction could have been used as a punishment enhancement in California does not control whether such prior conviction was available for use as a punishment enhancement in this Texas prosecution . More importantly, we hold that, whether a prior conviction-in-state or out-of-state-is "final" under Texas Penal Code § 12.42 is to be determined in accordance with Texas law. This means that the law of another state does not control whether a defendant's conviction is properly enhanced under Texas law.
Punishment Enhancement Involving Out-of-State Prior Convictions
Punishment enhancement for habitual offenders falls generally under Texas Penal Code § 12.42(d), which provides as follows:
Except as provided by Subsection (c)(2) or (c)(4), if it is shown on the trial of a felony offense other than a state jail felony punishable under Section 12.35(a) that the defendant has previously been finally convicted of two felony offenses, and the second previous felony conviction is for an offense that occurred subsequent to the first previous conviction having become final, on conviction the defendant shall be punished by imprisonment in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for life, or for any term of not more than 99 years or less than 25 years. A previous conviction for a state jail felony punishable under Section 12.35(a) may not be used for enhancement purposes under this section.11
Section 12.42(c)(2) and 12.42(c)(4) address enhancement when the charged offense and previous felony offenses were sexual assault or human trafficking related offenses. Neither section applies in this case. Moreover, since this offense was a third degree felony under section 12.35(c)(1),
It is well established that under Texas law only convictions that are "final" can be used for enhancement purposes.
An out-of-state prior final felony conviction can be used to enhance a sentence imposed in Texas. Under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution, the various states must recognize "public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State."
The record reveals that in the burglary conviction appellant's sentence was suspended. There is no showing that this suspended sentence was ever revoked. Accordingly, there is no proof that the burglary conviction was a final conviction. Absent such proof such conviction cannot be used for enhancement.20
The question, however, is whether the finality of the out-of-state conviction is to be determined under the other state's law or Texas law. There are several Texas appellate court opinions (many of them unpublished) that have held that a conviction from another state is considered "final" under Texas law for enhancement purposes if it is considered "final" under the other state's law.
In Ex parte Blume , the defendant brought an action for post conviction writ of habeas corpus, asserting that his federal felony conviction was improperly used for enhancement because the prior federal felony conviction would not have been a felony under our state penal code. The "sole question presented" in Blume was whether a federal felony conviction for an offense which does not constitute a felony under the Texas Penal Code could still be used to enhance punishment under section 12.42.
The State maintains that under the rule of Diremiggio v. State , an out-of-state conviction is final in Texas if it is final under the law of the convicting state. We recognize that Diremiggio has been cited to support that position.
In Diremiggio , the appellant had a prior conviction in Virginia for uttering a forged check with intent to defraud, and he was sentenced to the penitentiary for five years, with four years suspended on condition of good behavior for ten years. The State argued that only four out of the five years was suspended, so the appellant necessarily received a final conviction as to the one year actually served. This Court held that such "partial" imposition/suspension of a sentence was insufficient to make a prima facie showing that the prior conviction was a "final" conviction. This Court did not specifically hold that we must interpret whether a conviction from another state is available for enhancement purposes under that other state's law. Rather, in Diremiggio this Court held that the State had not met its burden to prove that there was a prior "final" conviction available to enhance the appellant's sentence. In so holding, this Court noted that, "while the method of partial imposition and partial suspension of execution of a sentence
Diremiggio and Blume have been stretched to stand for the proposition that if it is good enough for them, it is good enough for us. Today, we dispel such "rule" and clarify that the "finality" of an out-of-state conviction for purposes of enhancement must be determined in accordance with Texas law.
Our decision today is consistent with previous cases we have decided. In Jordan v. State ,
It is clear that the Texas Legislature has enacted specific statutory provisions allowing for enhancement for non-final convictions. But there is no specific Texas statutory provision allowing for enhancement in this case using the 2007 California non-final conviction. More importantly, there is no statutory authority allowing for out-of-state law to control punishment enhancement in Texas. The State argues that the absence of a post- Diremiggio amendment to section 12.42 addressing this issue illustrates the Legislature's intent that the law of the convicting state will determine the finality of an out-of-state conviction. In light of our interpretation of Diremiggio , and for the reasons discussed herein, we are not persuaded by this argument.
Because Applicant was on probation for his 2007 California conviction at the time he was sentenced in this case, it would not have been considered a "final" conviction under Texas law. We hold, therefore, that since the 2007 California conviction was not available for enhancement under Texas law, it could not properly enhance Applicant's 2008 Texas sentence.
In arguing that we should abide by California law to determine conviction finality, the State urges us to follow the California case of People v. Laino.
Moreover, the complexity of California's various enhancement laws further illustrates why it would be impractical for us to decide whether another state's law dictates whether a conviction is "final" under Texas law. First, contrary to the State's argument that the 2007 conviction was final under California law, we have found California case law to support the conclusion that Applicant's 2007 felony conviction-where the imposition (rather than the execution) of the sentence was suspended-was not "final," even under California law.
III.
Conclusion
Unless a more specific Texas statute applies, Texas courts should follow Texas Penal Code § 12.42, requiring that a defendant be "finally convicted" of the alleged prior offense before punishment can be enhanced. And the determination of whether a defendant has been "finally convicted" for enhancement purposes under section 12.42 is to be made in accordance with Texas law.
We grant relief based upon Applicant's first ground and hold that Applicant was improperly sentenced as a habitual offender.
Keller, P.J., filed a concurring opinion in which Keasler, J., joined.
Keel, J., filed a concurring opinion in which Hervey and Newell, JJ., joined.
Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
Keller, P.J., filed a concurring opinion in which Keasler, J. joined.
I agree with the Court, for the reasons stated in its opinion, that Texas law should control when determining the finality of a foreign conviction.
Applicant was punished as a habitual offender under the 2008 version of Penal Code § 12.42(d). That statute explicitly required that the prior felony convictions be final:
Except as provided by Subsection (c)(2), if it is shown on the trial of a felony offense other than a state jail felony punishable under Section 12.35(a) that the defendant has previously been finally convicted of two felony offenses, and the second previous felony conviction is for an offense that occurred subsequent to the first previous conviction having become final, on conviction he shall be punished by imprisonment in the institutional division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for life, or for any term of not more than 99 years or less than 25 years.3
The State's contention that California law did not require a conviction to be final to be usable for enhancement purposes is beside the point. Finality still had to be determined because § 12.42(d) demanded it.
Counsel did not need to try to determine whether Murchison or Howard controlled because under either case-and therefore under either Texas or California law-Applicant's second prior California conviction was not final.
I therefore concur in the Court's judgment.
CONCURRING OPINION
Keel, J., filed a concurring opinion in which Hervey and Newell, JJ., joined.
I join the majority opinion but write separately to offer the following observations in response to the dissenting opinion.
First, Hill v. State ,
Second, the dissenting opinion argues inconsistently. On the one hand, it purportedly would grant relief from a sentence that is outside the non-enhanced range of punishment even if raised for the first time on habeas. Ex parte Pue , No. WR-85,447-01 op. at 239 (Tex. Crim. App., Feb. 28, 2018)
Even assuming that the dissent would grant relief to the non-enhanced third degree felon sentenced to life, it would not grant relief to a third degree felon sentenced to life because of an improper enhancement. Id. at 238-39. It is inconsistent to grant relief in one circumstance but not the other. If a non-enhanced sentence that is outside the applicable range is intolerable, then so is an improperly enhanced sentence that is outside the applicable range.
Finally, the dissent misreads Mizell v. State ,
Applicant was convicted of a third degree felony. He had only one eligible enhancement. The applicable range was two to 20 years. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 12.42(a) (third degree felony enhanced once is punishable as a second degree felony). His sentence of 30 years was outside that range and for that reason was illegal. Therefore, he is entitled to relief.
DISSENTING OPINION
Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
Today the Court grants habeas relief to a defendant on the basis of his claim that one of two paragraphs in his indictment relied upon by the State to enhance his punishment should have been unavailable for enhancement purposes because it was not a "final" conviction. Majority Opinion at 234-35. He argues that, because the conviction was not-he claims-a "final" conviction, it should not have been relied upon as a reason to enhance his punishment. Because it was relied upon as an enhancement, he has suffered an "illegal sentence," which this Court has held can be challenged at any time. See Mizell v. State ,
I have no quarrel with the notion that an "illegal sentence"-that is to say, a sentence that on its face falls outside the range of punishment authorized by law-should be regarded as cognizable even if complained of for the first time in post-conviction habeas proceedings. A trial court judge who sentences a third degree felon to a term of life in the penitentiary, for example, has imposed a sentence that far exceeds that which is authorized by law. Quite apart from the wishes of the parties themselves, society simply will not tolerate the imposition of any punishment beyond the legal maximum. See Gutierrez v. State ,
The Court today cites
Moreover, there is other case law that seems to conflict with the Court's reading of Rich . In 1982, this Court handed down its opinion on rehearing in a case called Hill v. State ,
It thus appears that the Mizell principle that an "illegal sentence" may be raised "at any time," regardless of whether there was a contemporaneous objection lodged at trial, does not apply with respect to improper-enhancement claims-or at least not all (and maybe not even most ) improper-enhancement claims. See George E. Dix & John M. Schmolesky, 43B TEXAS PRACTICE: CRIMINAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 59:55, at 886-87 (3d ed. 2011) (" Hill and Cashman thus bar habeas attack-if no proper trial demand for relief was made-when a habeas applicant asserts that a prior conviction used for enhancement was tainted by denial of his constitutional right to counsel or by permitting the same jury that found him competent to also determine guilt or innocence. An applicant relying upon the State's use of such a prior conviction must most likely both plead and prove both the invalidity of the prior conviction and a trial request for appropriate trial relief.").
Since the Court decided Hill , Ridley , and Cashman , it has qualified their holdings. Even in Hill itself, the Court acknowledged
But the Court has not laid out what other types of defects in prior convictions-making them unfit for use to enhance subsequent sentences-may serve to obviate Hill 's contemporaneous objection requirement. And, specifically, so far as I can tell, since Hill was decided, the Court has never addressed whether the error of using a prior conviction that was not final to enhance a punishment falls under the Hill rule requiring a contemporaneous objection, or the Hill exception for "fundamental" defects. Until we do, the Court should not grant relief based upon such a claim.
What is more, even if the Hill exception should apply, rather than the rule, that would mean that Applicant could have raised his improper enhancement claim for the first time on direct appeal. He did not.
The Court today acknowledges that not all purported claims of "illegal sentence" will necessarily prove to be "automatically ... cognizable" in post-conviction habeas corpus proceedings. Majority Opinion at 228 n.7. I am glad for that. But the Court offers neither a limiting principle nor any explanation why it deems Applicant's particular claim of improper enhancement to fall within the Hill exception instead of the Hill rule. Indeed, the Court does not recognize or discuss our holding in Hill at all. In my view, resolution of the issue that the Court addresses today-which forum's law will control the question of whether an out-of-state conviction is "final" for habitual-enhancement
There is good reason to think that the Hill rule, not the Hill exception, ought to apply. The Court's recent opinion in Proenza v. State ,
But we have never identified a comparable duty on a trial court's part to police the legitimacy of the State's allegations and proof when it comes to punishment enhancement counts. The system does not expect the trial court to monitor the adequacy or finality of the prior convictions alleged to enhance in order to ensure its own authority to impose a sentence within an enhanced range. The onus is instead placed on the defense to investigate the legitimacy of the State's enhancement counts, and to call any apparent deficiencies to the trial court's attention. In the absence of an objection, the trial court has no particular reason to doubt its authority to assess an enhanced sentence. The goal of preventing potentially unauthorized enhancements is not so critical to the proper functioning of the criminal justice system as to outweigh the State's legitimate interest in the repose of its final convictions.
In an improper-enhancement claim, the "illegality" of the sentence is what I would call derivative. The enhanced sentence is not illegal on its face; the illegality is dependent upon some ancillary finding of fact that renders a sentence, which appeared to be authorized at the time it was imposed, ultimately improper.
I respectfully dissent.
Notes
Tex. Penal Code § 38.04 (West 2008). In 2008, the offense of evading arrest or detention with a vehicle was a state jail felony so long as the defendant had not been previously convicted under that section. Tex. Penal Code § 38.04(b)(1) (West 2008). However, in this case, because the State charged, and the jury found, that Applicant's vehicle was a deadly weapon, his punishment range before any further enhancement, was elevated to a third degree felony under Tex. Penal Code § 12.35(c)(1) (West 2008).
Pue v. State , No. 07-09-0020-CR,
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 11.07 (West 2008).
Applicant's 2002 California felony conviction is not at issue.
See , e.g. , Ex parte Parrott ,
Mizell v. State ,
In this case, Applicant has claimed that his sentence was improperly enhanced to thirty years (which is ten years more than the statutory maximum for a second degree felony) by a prior California conviction that does not qualify as an enhancing conviction as a matter of law. We have previously held that that type of a claim is cognizable on habeas, even if not raised on direct appeal. Ex parte Rich ,
Ex parte Rich ,
Applicant's probation on his 2007 California conviction was revoked on November 21, 2007, but then it was reinstated on December 11, 2007. On November 30, 2015, the 2007 California conviction was reduced to a misdemeanor "for all purposes" under section 1170.18 of the California Penal Code.
The concurring opinion would grant relief based instead on Applicant's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, which was a ground for relief he raised in addition to his claim that his sentence was improperly enhanced. Specifically, the concurring opinion states that Applicant's "counsel was deficient for failing to challenge the use of this conviction for enhancement purposes." (Keller, P.J., concurring opinion, page 236).
However, the record reflects that trial counsel did argue that under both Texas and California law this 2007 conviction is not available for enhancement:
COUNSEL: [California] did not contemplate their laws determining the nature of Texas enhancement and habitual offender statutes. This is clearly the purview of the Texas Legislature and the courts.... California has made statutory through Section 667.5(e) of the California Penal Code what Texas has done through case law, that is, an actual sentence in prison is required, not simply a probated sentence, for that sentence to be used for enhancement purposes.... Jeremy Pue is a repeat offender, not a habitual offender. Texas law must be applied in cases wherein Texas courts have exclusive jurisdiction to try and sentence a defendant.
This was an insightful argument-definitely not deficient-considering that the law on this issue was not clear. And, because there were existing intermediate Texas appellate court decisions to the contrary, see note 21, infra , and the California enhancement statutes and related cases could be considered quite complicated, see notes 40-41, infra , we are hesitant to label appellate counsel as ineffective, particularly since he has disputed such claim by sworn affidavit. The issue of ineffective assistance of counsel was neither filed and set by us nor briefed by the parties, and we need not address it. Rather, we resolve Applicant's claim by squarely addressing the issue that, after two briefing orders, was thoroughly argued by the parties-does Texas law or out-of-state law control whether a prior out-of-state conviction is final for purposes of enhancement under Texas Penal Code § 12.42(d). By clarifying that Texas law controls whether a prior out-of-state conviction is final under Section 12.42(d), our opinion serves a useful purpose to the bench and the legal profession and benefits the future jurisprudence of the state. See Morris v. State ,
Tex. Penal Code § 12.42(d) (West 2008) (emphasis added).
Texas Penal Code § 12.35(c)(1), elevated Applicant's punishment to a third degree felony due to the jury's finding that he used his vehicle as a deadly weapon.
Section 12.42(d) requires that, in order for a defendant's felony sentence to be enhanced into the "habitual" range of 25 to 99 years or life, the State must show that the defendant was "finally convicted" of two prior felony offenses, the second previous felony conviction occurring after the first previous offense becomes final. See also Ex parte Murchison ,
Ex parte Murchison ,
Ex parte Langley ,
Martinez v. State ,
Ex parte Murchison ,
Spiers v. State ,
U.S. Const. Art. IV, § 1.
Spiers v. State ,
See Ramos v. State,
Blume ,
See e.g. , cases cited in note 21.
Diremiggio v. State ,
Almand ,
Jordan ,
White ,
White ,
Under California law, "[f]inality in probation cases turns on whether the trial court suspended imposition of the sentence or merely suspended execution of the sentence." People v. Penilla , No. E06445,
California's Three Strikes laws consist of a statutory scheme "designed to increase the prison terms of repeat felons." Ewing v. California ,
We are not ignoring the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution. U.S. Const. art. IV, § 1. "Full faith and credit does not automatically compel a forum state to subordinate its own statutory policy to a conflicting public act of another state." Hughes v. Fetter ,
Our decision today does not affect the admissibility of an out-of-state conviction as evidence being offered by the State as to any matter the court deems relevant to sentencing pursuant to Texas Code of Criminal Procedure art. 37.07, Sec. 3(a)(1).
Because we grant relief based upon Applicant's first ground, it is not necessary for us to address his other grounds for relief.
The foreign conviction at issue is from California, and the irony is not lost on me that California uses its own law to determine the status of a foreign conviction for enhancement purposes. See People v. Laino ,
Given the circumstances, I would hold that there is no conceivable strategy for failing to challenge the prior conviction, and so, there is no need to remand for factual development.
Tex. Penal Code § 12.42(d) (West 2008) (emphasis added).
If § 12.42(d) did not explicitly require finality, the State's argument might be tenable. For enhancement purposes, the word "conviction" has, by caselaw, different meanings in Texas and California. Under California caselaw, "conviction" means any finding of guilt. Laino ,
Ex parte Murchison ,
At this juncture, I need not resolve whether the ineffectiveness was the fault of trial counsel or appellate counsel (or both). A challenge to the usability of the second California conviction was not raised on appeal, so appellate counsel was ineffective unless excused by a default by trial counsel, in which case trial counsel would be ineffective. And while the Court suggests that California law is complicated, a finding of deficient performance can be made on the basis of the plain language of a statute. Ex parte Welch ,
Judge Keel's concurring opinion accuses me of inconsistency. See Concurring Opinion at 237-38 ("On the one hand, [my dissenting opinion] would grant relief from a sentence that is outside the non-enhanced range of punishment even if raised for the first time on habeas. * * * On the other hand, however, the dissent advocates limiting habeas relief to cases in which the sentencing error was not apparent from the direct appeal record.") (emphasis added). That is indeed my position (more or less), but there is no inconsistency inherent in it. A sentence that, on its face, exceeds the maximum sentence authorized for the grade of offense for which a defendant is convicted would, in my estimation, fall within Marin 's first category-systemic requirements or prohibitions so vital to the proper functioning of the criminal justice system that their violation is subject to correction even when raised for the first time in a post-conviction writ application, as we recognized in Moss . But a sentence that appears on the face of the record to be authorized, but which may be subject to challenge, does not necessarily rise to that level. There is nothing inconsistent about accepting the proposition that a sentence that blatantly exceeds the statutory maximum may be collaterally attacked while at the same time accepting that a sentence that has apparently been enhanced, but that may be subject to challenge based upon some aspect of the prior conviction used to enhance, should likewise be subject to vindication when challenged for the first time in a collateral attack only if for some reason it could not have been raised on direct appeal or if it was not raised on direct appeal because of the ineffectiveness of counsel.
In several pre-Hill cases, the Court had granted relief in post-conviction habeas corpus cases on claims of improper enhancement because one of the prior convictions used to enhance had been based upon a fundamentally faulty charging instrument. Ex parte Sanford ,
Of course, since the 1985 amendment that added Subsection (b) to Article 1.14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, there are precious few defects in a charging instrument that will render it "fundamentally defective" in the sense that would justify habeas corpus relief. See Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 577, § 1, p. 2197, eff. Dec. 1, 1985 (requiring a trial level objection to defects of form or substance in a charging instrument before a defendant may raise any such complaint on appeal or in post-conviction proceedings); George E. Dix & John M. Schmolesky, 42 Texas Practice: Criminal Practice and Procedure § 25:18, at 32-33 (3d ed. 2011) ("The 1985 changes appeared for all practical purposes to abolish the category of 'fundamental' defects, at least insofar as a matter constitutes 'a defect, error, or irregularity of form or substance in an indictment or information.' Such matters must be raised before trial under Article 1.14(b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure and therefore are by statute 'nonfundamental' in the traditional sense."); Studer v. State ,
In his writ application, Applicant also alleges ineffective assistance of both trial and appellate counsel for failing to fully investigate the finality of the California conviction. The scope of our file and set seems to have extended to Applicant's ineffective counsel claims. As I advocated in Clay , the Court should remand the present application to the convicting court for factual development of this issue. See Ex parte Clay ,
Another example of this principle of forfeiture-on-direct-appeal is legal sufficiency of the evidence. We have said that a claim of legally insufficient evidence need not be preserved in the trial court in order to raise it on appeal. Rankin v. State ,
Judge Keel says I have read too much into Mizell , because in that case the jury assessed the unauthorized punishment, not the judge. Concurring Opinion at 237-38. But a jury may only assess punishment within the range authorized by law, as reflected in the jury charge the trial court has given it. When a jury purports to assess a punishment that is, on its face, more harsh than either the law or the jury charge authorized, a trial judge still has a duty to refrain from actually imposing that unauthorized sentence.
By contrast, and notwithstanding the Mizell principle, the system will sometimes tolerate a sentence that is less than the statutory minimum under certain circumstances. In Deen v. State ,
See Ex parte Pointer ,
In Rich , the finding of fact that rendered the enhancement illegal was not readily apparent on the appellate record, and the improper-enhancement claim was arguably deemed cognizable in post-conviction habeas corpus proceedings only because the facts rendering the enhancement illegal could not have been developed in time to raise the claim on direct appeal, despite trial and appellate counsels' best efforts.
