James E. HEATHCOCK, Appellant, v. STATE of Alaska, Appellee.
No. 6803.
Court of Appeals of Alaska.
Oct. 14, 1983.
670 P.2d 1155
Before BRYNER, C.J., and COATS and SINGLETON, JJ. COATS, Judge.
Finally, sexual assault and kidnapping are sufficiently distinct to warrant separate sentences without violation of double jeopardy, see Whitton v. State, 479 P.2d 302, 312 (Alaska 1970), even when the assault and kidnapping are part of a single continuous transaction. Sexual assault “amounts to a desecration of the victim‘s person which is a vital part of her sanctity and dignity as a human being,” Newsom v. State, 533 P.2d 904, 911 (Alaska 1975), while “kidnapping violates not only the victim‘s safety but also her personal liberty,” State v. Occhipinti, 562 P.2d 348, 351 (Alaska 1977). Consecutive sentences are permissible when, as here, separate crimes are committed even though they are committed during a single continuous sequence of events.
The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
Christine Schleuss and Rich Zahniser, Asst. Public Defenders, and Dana Fabe, Public Defender, Anchorage, for appellant.
Richard W. Maki, Asst. Atty. Gen., Anchorage, and Wilson L. Condon, Atty. Gen., Juneau, for appellee.
OPINION
Before BRYNER, C.J., and COATS and SINGLETON, JJ.
COATS, Judge.
James Heathcock pled guilty to a charge of forgery in the second degree,
Since Heathcock filed no notice of any factors in mitigation, Judge Serdahely concluded that he had no authority to give a sentence of less than the two-year presumptive term.
The three-judge panel heard Heathcock‘s case on March 8, 1982. After hearing argument, the panel concluded that manifest injustice would result if Heathcock did not receive a sentence greater than the two-year presumptive term. The threе-judge panel emphasized Heathcock‘s prior record, the fact that he was on probation at the time that he committed the instant offense and the fact that his probation had formerly been revoked on grounds which were independent from the instant charge. The three judge panel sentenced Heathcock to three years’ imprisonment and made that sentence consecutive to the sentence imposed in Heathcock‘s former felony cases. One year of the three years was suspended on condition that Heathcock pay $550 restitution and that Heathcock abide by other usual conditions of probation.
Heathcock challenges his sentence on numerous grounds. Heathcock first contends that the three-judge panel did not have statutory authority to impose a sentence greater than the two-year presumptive sentence when Judge Serdahely referred the case to the three-judge panel on the ground that the two-year presumptive sentence was manifestly unjust because it was too severe. We agree with Heathcock, and accordingly vacate his sentence and order the case remanded back to the three-judge panel so that it may remand the case to Judge Serdahely.
Under the former criminal code, sentencing authority rested primarily with the sentencing judge who would pass sentence within broad statutory limits. The legislative history of the revised criminal code shows that the legislature was concerned about the sentencing disparity that resulted from this system. Juneby v. State, 641 P.2d 823, 829-30 (Alaska App. 1982), modified on rehearing, 665 P.2d 30 (Alaska App. 1983). A primary purpose of the revised criminal code was to attempt to eliminate unjustified disparity in sentencing by constructing a sentencing framework which provided for stricter statutory guidelines for sentences.
There are only two ways in which a judge may avoid imposing the presumptive sentence. The first way is that the sentencing judge may increase or decrease a presumptive sentence within statutory limits based upon a finding of specific statutory aggravating or mitigating factors.
Extraordinary circumstances. If the defendant is subject to sentencing under [the presumptive sеntencing sections] of this chapter and the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice would result from failure to consider relevant aggravating or mitigating factors not specifically included in
AS 12.55.155 or from imposition of the presumptive term, whether or not adjusted for aggravating or mitigating factors, the court shall enter findings and conclusions and cause a record of the proceedings to be transmitted to a three-judge panel for sentencing underAS 12.55.175 .
(b) Upon receipt of a record of proceedings under
AS 12.55.165 , the three-judge panel shall consider all pertinent files, records, and transcripts, including the findings and conclusions of the judge who originally heard the matter. The panel may hear oral testimony to supplement the record before it. If the panel finds that manifest injustice would result from failure to consider relevant aggravating or mitigating factors not specifically included inAS 12.55.155 or from imposition of the presumptivе term, whether or not adjusted for aggravating or mitigating factors, it shall sentence the defendant in accordance with this section. If the panel does not find that manifest injustice would result, it shall remand the case to the sentencing court, with a written statement of its findings and conclusions, for sentencing underAS 12.55.125 .(c) The three-judge panel may in the interest of justice sentence the defendant to any definite term of imprisonment up to the maximum term provided for the offense or to any sentence authorized under
AS 12.55.015 .
The commentary to
If the three-judge panel agrees with the sentencing court and finds that manifest injustice would result from imposition of the presumptive term, it may sentence the defendant to any term of imprisonment, up to the maximum authorized for the offense, or may impose any other sentence authorized in § 12.55.005.
If the three-judge panel does not agree with the sentencing court‘s finding, it is required to remand the cаse to the sentencing court with a written statement of its findings and conclusions for sentencing under § 12.55.125. The sentencing court must then sentence the defendant to the presumptive term, adjusted for any relevant aggravating or mitigating factors established under § 12.55.155.
(Emphasis added.)
We interpret these provisions of the code and the commentary as still retaining the primary control of the sentencing process in the hands of the individual sentencing judge, with restrictions placed upon him by the statutory sentencing provisions. The original sentencing judge determines whether aggravating and mitigating circumstances exist under
Before the judge may depart from that presumptive sentencing scheme, a panel of three different judges must agree with him that such a departure is necessary. The panel then decides the degree of departure in imposing the sentence.
This analysis appears to explain the language in the commentary, “[i]f the three-judge panel agrees with the sentencing court . . . it may sentence the defendant . . . .” It also explains the language in the commentary, “[i]f the three-judge panel does not agree with the sentencing court‘s finding, it is required to remand the case to the sentencing court . . . .” It also explains why the original sentencing judge sends his findings and conclusions to the sentencing panel. The panel then knows what the conclusions of the original sentencing judge were, and it can either agree or disagree with them. We note that the statute provides that in the event the three-judge panel disagrees with the original sentencing judge, the case is then remanded back to him to impose the presumptive term, adjusted for any aggravating or mitigating circumstances. If the legislature wanted to have sentencing by the three-judge panel, it could have had the three-judge panel impose sentence if the panel disagreed with the original sentencing judge. The fact that the matter is referred back to the original sentencing judge indicates that the legislature wanted the original sentencing judge to maintain control of the sentencing process.
We therefore conclude that when Judge Serdahely referred Heathcock‘s case to the three-judge panel, its authority under
The sentence is VACATED and the case is REMANDED to the superior court for further proceedings.
SINGLETON, Judge, concurring and dissenting.
The court has determined to vacate the sentence imposed on Heathcock by the three-judge panel and remand the case to Judge Serdahely to impose the applicable presumptive sentence. I agree. The conclusion that imposition of the presumptive sentence would result in “manifest injustice” is clearly mistaken. See McClain v. State, 519 P.2d 811 (Alaska 1974) (establishing the clearly mistaken standard to govern appellate review of trial court sentencing). The presumptive sentence adjusted to reflect all permissible and applicable aggravating and mitigating factors is not manifestly unjust because it is too severe,1 nor is
The court, unnecessarily in my opinion, goes beyond this simple disposition and purports to address the proper relationship between the sentencing court and the three-judge panel. I would await an appropriate case before entering this murky thicket. As a majority of this court disagrees and proceeds, I, thereforе, dissent.
In order to clarify our dispute, it is necessary to identify points upon which we apparently agree. I assume general agreement on the following basic propositions. First, that prior to considering an application by either the state or the defendant to refer a sentencing to a three-judge panel, or referring it sua sponte, the trial judge must thoroughly consider all of the facts that normally would enter into the determination of an appropriate sentence. Thus, the presentence report would have been filed and both parties given an opportunity to contradict and supplement the facts contained within it. If the facts were in dispute, the trial court would hold necessary hearings and provisionally resolve the dispute, drawing all inferences necessary to a full understanding of the defendant‘s background, experience, charactеr and the offense which he committed.
Second, the trial court would have considered all aggravating and mitigating factors, again, making necessary fact findings and would provisionally determine the effect of any aggravating and mitigating factors found. See Juneby v. State, 641 P.2d 823 (Alaska App. 1982), modified on rehearing, 665 P.2d 30 (Alaska App. 1983). For it is only after applying all applicable aggravating and mitigating factors and determining their significance that the trial court can determine what presumptive sentence the individual under consideration would receive. See
Third, the trial court would then look at the adjusted presumptive sentence in light of the facts previously found and determine whether it was manifestly unjust, i.e., either unduly depreciates the seriousness of the offense or approximates cruel and unusual punishment. In so doing, the trial judge would compare the adjusted presumptive sentence to other sentences customarily imposed for similar conduct and
Fourth, it seems clear that the three-judge panel is not bound by the trial judge‘s findings of fact since it can grant a hearing de novo and take oral testimony.4 The three-judge panel‘s power to redetermine the facts presents the primary problem of appellate review where trial court and panel disagree.5
Fifth, once the three-judge panel has reevaluated the facts and made its own fact findings, it then proceeds to a determination of whether imposition of the presumptive sentence, adjusted to reflect all applicable aggravating and mitigating factors, would nevertheless result in manifest injustice. It appears that we are all in agreement that the three-judge panel is free to exercise its independent judgment to the extent permitted by Juneby in determining which aggravating and mitigating factors are applicable and what weight should be given the factors found in redetermining the adjusted presumptive sentence in order to determine whether its imposition would work a manifest injustice. Three results are possible. If the three-judge panel agreed with the trial court‘s determination that imposition of the adjusted presumptive sentence would result in a manifestly unjust too lenient sentence or, аlternatively, a manifestly unjust too severe sentence, I believe we all agree that the three-judge panel would then go on to sentence the offender based on its evaluation of the facts governed only by the criteria established in State v. Chaney, 477 P.2d 441 (Alaska 1970). See
It is the third situation that poses the problem addressed by the majority in this case. The three-judge panel agrees with the trial court that imposition of an adjusted presumptive sentence would be manifestly unjust but concludes that a just sentence would operate in a direction opposite from that contemplated by the trial judge. The statutes are ambiguous regarding the respective authority of the trial judge and the three-judge panel under these circumstances. Resolution of the ambiguity requires interpretation of the word “agrees”6 in the legislative commentary to
In Heathcock‘s case, the three-judge panel decided that so long as they agreed with the trial judge that imposition of the adjusted presumptive sentence would work a manifest injustice, they could then go on to sentence Heathcock pursuant to
In contrast, consider the effect of the majority‘s interpretation of the statute. Assume that the trial court determines that the adjusted presumptive term is too lenient and sends the case to the three-judge panel expecting a more severe sentence. The three-judge panel agrees that the adjusted presumptive term would work a manifest injustice but concludes that it would be too severe. Under the majority‘s analysis, the three-judge panel could not at that point go on to impose what it considered an appropriate sentence but must close the case and remand to the trial court. It must, however, make findings of fact and enter conclusions of law fully explaining its position. Alaska R.Crim.P. 32(d)(5). Under the circumstances, on remand the defendant will no doubt ask the trial court to reconsider and accept the three-judge panel‘s determination that the prеsumptive sentence is too severe, and retransfer the case to the three-judge panel. Conceivably, the trial judge, impressed by the three-judge panel‘s reasoning, will agree and transfer the case back to the panel to impose a sentence less than the adjusted presumptive term. More likely, the trial judge will grit his teeth, adhere to his original decision, and with a blast at the three-judge panel, impose the adjusted presumptive term. In either event it is likely that both the state and the defendant will appeal. If this court is satisfied on the facts found, that a finding of manifest injustice in either direction is clearly mistaken, it may affirm imposition of the presumptive term and the case is at an end. But, if the court concludes that the trial judge in the hypothetical was correct, that the adjusted presumptive sentence is too lenient, it must transfer the case back to the three-judge panel for imposition of an appropriate sentence which then could be appealed again. If, alternatively, the court agrees with the three-judge panel that imposition of the adjusted presumptive sentence would be manifestly unjust because too severe, it must remand the case to the trial court with directions to transfer the matter back to the three-judge panel for imposition of an appropriate sentence, and presumably that sentence would also be subject to appeal.
In summary, given the majority‘s interpretation of the statute, I can envision future cases bouncing from court to court like a ping-pong ball, resulting in unnecessary cost and substantial delay. In contrast, adoption of the three-judge panel‘s interpretation of the statute would have the merit of a final decision within sixty days of referral, see Alaska R.Crim.P. 32(d)(5), resulting in а single appeal with a final determination within a reasonable time.8
The majority errs,9 in my view, in seeing the panel as essentially a reviewing court
It appears that the Alaska Supreme Court recognized that the panel is a trial court and not a reviewing court when it gave the parties the right to peremptorily challenge a member of the panel. Alaska R.Crim.P. 32(d)(4). The remand requirement when the panel disagrees with the trial court regarding manifest injustice does not change the analysis since the trial judge‘s function on remand is purely ministerial—to impose the adjusted presumptive sentence which he had previously determined.10
It is clear that the legislative committee viewed the trial judge‘s function on remand as ministerial:
If the three-judge panel does not agree with the sentencing court‘s finding, it is required to remand the case to the sentencing court with a written statement of its findings and conclusions for sentencing under § 12.55.125. The sentencing court must then sentence the defendant to the presumptive term, adjusted for any relevant aggravating or mitigating factors established under § 12.55.155.
Commentary on the Alaska Revised Criminal Code, Senate J. Supp. No. 47, at 163, 1978 Senate J. 1399 (emphasis added).
Finally, regardless of the conclusions reached by the trial court and the panel, the issue of “manifest injustice” is reviewable by this court on appeal. We, not the panel, are the reviewing court. See Alaska Criminal Code Revision Pаrt VI at 78 (Tent. Draft 1978) (denial of a request for extraordinary sentencing is an appealable matter).
It is only in the situation where the trial judge and the three-judge panel could both legitimately find “manifest injustice” resulting from the imposition of the presumptive sentence and yet disagree as to whether that manifest injustice results because the presumptive sentence is too lenient on the one hand or too severe on the other, that problems of statutory interpretation arise. This is so because the legislature failed to make the trial judge‘s findings of fact binding on the three-judge panel and empowered it to conduct a hearing de novo and independently determine the facts.
Recent amendments to the statutes governing sentencing of those convicted of first-degree sexual assault, which impose an eight-year presumptive sentence on first offenders who do not cause serious physical injury or use a dangerous instrumеnt, may frequently present situations where reasonable people could agree that an adjusted presumptive sentence would be manifestly unjust but disagree on whether it was too severe or too lenient. See
Reynolds is another case where different fact finders could review the same record and reach conflicting conclusions regarding whether a four-year sentence was manifestly unjust because toо severe or an eight-year sentence was manifestly unjust because too lenient. In light of Doe and Reynolds, I do not think the concerns raised in this opinion are purely academic and, therefore, appropriately ignored by pragmatic jurists.
The legislature adopted presumptive sentencing to limit disparity and encourage uniformity in sentencing. Wisely, it included a safety valve to deal with situations where the statute rigidly applied would work an injustice. To prevent trial judges from judicially repealing presumptive sentencing, the legislature limited the safety valve by allowing a trial judge to refer a case to a sentencing panel but ensured that no sentence would deviate from the adjusted presumptive sentence unless it was debated by at least three judges and joined in by two. Today‘s decision makes use of the three-judge panel so cumbersome that I fear it will cease to function. This will deprive the statute of a needed safety valve. I therefore dissent.
Notes
The trial judge thought Heathcock‘s $550 forgery was insignificant. It is unclear why he did not find it subject to
[F]orgery will be a felony when the written instrument falls into one of the four categories described in paragraphs (1)-(2) of
AS 11.46.500 or 505, the forging of these instruments merit felony classification since the conduct will usually be preliminary to a large scale fraud.
Commentary on the Alaska Revised Criminal Code, Senate J. Supp. No. 47, at 54, 1978 Senate J. 1399 (emphasis added);
The majority thinks that the trial judge rejected the mitigating factor because Heathcock failed to raise it prior to the hearing. See
A finding of a mitigating factor does not mandate a mitigated sentence, however, the factors established must warrant mitigation in light of the totality of the circumstances. See Linn v. State, 658 P.2d 150, 154 (Alaska App. 1983);
(Emphasis added.) It is the “extraordinary and unanticipated circumstances” which our legislaturе apparently assigned to the three-judge panel.The Task Force recommends that the legislature, or the body it designates, also define specific aggravating or mitigating factors, again based on frequently recurring characteristics of the crime and the criminal. If aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors, the judge could impose a sentence that exceeded the presumptive by a specified percentage. If mitigating factors outweighed aggravating factors, the judge could impose a sentence that fell below the presumptive, again by a specified percentage. The Task Force believes that sentencing hearings should be mandatory to establish any aggravating or mitigating circumstances and to have the sentence pronounced.
In imposing sentences, judges normally consider a wide variety of factors, some of these, such as the defendant‘s race, appearance, or sex, are clearly improper; others, such as whether the defendant pleaded guilty or “cooperated” with the authorities, are debatable. It is the view of the Task Force, based on its own experience and on what it has learned about the system as a whole, that different judges—acting without legislative or appellate court guidance—have different views as to whether a given factor is appropriately considered in sentencing. It is our goal of ensuring uniformity and predictability in sentencing multiple offenders would be defeated if recourse to the three-judge panel became routine.
See
