James Michael HUGHES, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*838 Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender and P. Douglas Brinkmeyer, Assistant Public Defender, Second Judicial Circuit, Tallahassee, FL, for Petitioner.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, James W. Rogers, Bureau Chief, Criminal Appeals and Trisha Meggs Pate, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, FL, for Respondent.
CANTERO, J.
In this case, we consider whether a decision of the United States Supreme Court applies to defendants whose convictions already were final when that case was decided. In Apprendi v. New Jersey,
I. FACTS
Sections 921.001(5) and 921.0014(2), Florida Statutes (1997), (part of the 1994 sentencing guidelines) require that, when the recommended sentence computed on the sentencing scoresheet exceeds the maximum sentence provided in section 775.082, Florida Statutes (1997), the guidelines sentence must be imposed.[2] In this case, a jury convicted the petitioner of battery by a jail detainee on a jail detainee. The crime constituted a third-degree felony, for which the maximum sentence under section 775.082 is 60 months' imprisonment.
After the petitioner's conviction and sentence became final, he filed a motion under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(a) (used to correct an illegal sentence), contending that the points assessed on his scoresheet for severe victim injury and a legal status violation caused his sentence to exceed the statutory maximum, in *839 violation of Apprendi. The trial court denied relief, and the district court affirmed. Hughes,
II. COMPREHENDING APPRENDI
The defendant in Apprendi was charged with possession of a firearm for an unlawful purpose, which under New Jersey law carried a maximum sentence of ten years' imprisonment.
III. THE WITT RETROACTIVITY ANALYSIS
When the United States Supreme Court or this Court renders a decision favorable to criminal defendants, the question becomes: who may benefit from the decision? We have held that such decisions apply in all cases to convictions that are not yet finalthat is convictions for which an appellate court mandate has not yet issued. Smith v. State,
Once a conviction is final, however, the State acquires an interest in the finality of the convictions. As we have previously stated,
[t]he importance of finality in any justice system, including the criminal justice system, cannot be understated. It has long been recognized that, for several reasons, litigation must, at some point, come to an end. In terms of the availability of judicial resources, cases must *840 eventually become final simply to allow effective appellate review of other cases. There is no evidence that subsequent collateral review is generally better than contemporaneous appellate review for ensuring that a conviction or sentence is just. Moreover, an absence of finality casts a cloud of tentativeness over the criminal justice system, benefitting neither the person convicted nor society as a whole.
Witt v. State,
We analyze whether a change in decisional law should be applied retroactively under the framework outlined in Witt. There, we held that a change of law would not be deemed retroactive "unless the change: (a) emanates from this Court or the United States Supreme Court, (b) is constitutional in nature, and (c) constitutes a development of fundamental significance." Id. at 931. In this case, it is clear, and the parties agree, that the first two prongs are met. Accordingly, the question is whether Apprendi constitutes a "development of fundamental significance." In Witt, we stated that most major constitutional changes fall within one of two categories: changes "which place beyond the authority of the state the power to regulate certain conduct or impose certain penalties" and those "which are of sufficient magnitude to necessitate retroactive application as ascertained by the three-fold test of Stovall and Linkletter."
In contrast to these jurisprudential upheavals are evolutionary refinements in the criminal law, affording new or different standards for the admissibility of evidence, for procedural fairness, for proportionality review of capital cases, and for other like matters. Emergent rights in these categories, or the retraction of former rights of this genre, do not compel an abridgement of the finality of judgments. To allow them that impact would, we are convinced, destroy the stability of the law, render punishments uncertain and therefore ineffectual, and burden the judicial machinery of our state, fiscally and intellectually, beyond any tolerable limit.
Id. at 929-30 (emphasis added). We address each of the Stovall/Linkletter factors in turn.
A. The Purpose To Be Served by the New Rule
The first factor we must consider under the Stovall/Linkletter test is the purpose to be served by the new rule. Witt,
Moreover, Apprendi permits a judge to continue to make these same factual determinations as long as the resulting sentence does not exceed the statutory maximum. See Harris v. United States,
Apprendi does not affect the determination of guilt or innocence; it only requires that sometimes the jury, not the judge, must decide factual aspects of the sentencing decision. See Sepulveda, 330 F.3d at *842 60 (stating that "Apprendi's new rule not only fails to impugn the accuracy of convictions that became final beforehand but also falls short of rendering sentences imposed under the pre-Apprendi regime seriously inaccurate"); United States v. Brown,
Further supporting our analysis are cases from the United States Supreme Court and this Court. We begin with a pair of cases that closely parallel the situation here. In Duncan v. Louisiana,
By comparison, the rule in Apprendi, imposing a requirement that a jury, rather than the judge, must decide the facts affecting sentencing, is clearly of lesser stature than the decision in Duncan, which extended to the States the constitutional right to a jury trial. See State v. Towery,
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Summerlin,
Nor does the failure to submit an element of a crime to the jury always require a remedy. In Neder v. United States,
Chief Justice Pariente contends that Apprendi must be applied retroactively because of its extension of the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard of proof to findings of fact authorizing a sentence greater than that stemming directly from the jury verdict. Dissenting op. at 852. She relies on the Supreme Court's statement in In re Winship,
Analytically, the impact of failing to apply the reasonable doubt standard to a sentencing factor is certainly no more serious than the impact of omitting an element of a crime from the jury's consideration. Yet the Supreme Court has held that the latter is subject to harmless error analysis. See Neder,
Finally, concerning Apprendi, we held in McGregor v. State,
In Witt we rejected the retroactive application of changes of law "in the absence of fundamental and constitutional changes which cast serious doubt on the veracity or the integrity of the original proceeding."
*845 B. The Extent of Reliance on the Old Rule
The second factor under the Stovall/Linkletter test is the extent of reliance on the old rule. Witt,
C. Effect of Retroactive Application on the Administration of Justice
The third and final factor is the effect of retroactive application on the administration of justice. Witt,
virtually every sentence involving a crime of violence that has been handed down in Florida for almost two decades has included a judicially-determined victim injury component to the guidelines score. Justice O'Connor's observation that the effect of Apprendi to guidelines sentencing would be "colossal" barely describes the cataclysm in Florida if such sentences are invalidated because the jury did not make the "victim injury" finding.
McCloud v. State,
Also, as previously stated, an Apprendi error must be preserved for review and does not constitute fundamental error. McGregor,
To apply Apprendi retroactively would require review of the record and sentencing proceedings in many cases simply to identify cases where Apprendi may apply. In every case Apprendi affects, a new jury would have to be empaneled to determine, at least, the issue causing the sentence enhancement. In most cases, issues such as whether the defendant possessed a firearm during the commission of a crime, the extent of victim injury or sexual contact, and whether a child was present (to support use of the domestic violence multiplier) cannot be considered in isolation.[7] Many, if not all, of the surrounding facts *846 would have to be presented. In others, a jury would have to determine factors unrelated to the case (e.g., whether legal status points may be assessed).
In the numerous cases we have decided under Witt, we have "rarely f[ound] a change in decisional law to require retroactive application." Mitchell v. Moore,
IV. DECISIONS OF OTHER JURISDICTIONS
We also find it persuasive that all but one of the federal courts of appeals have expressly considered the issue, albeit under a different retroactivity analysis, and not one has held Apprendi to apply retroactively.[8] Several state courts also have considered the issue, and again not one has held Apprendi to apply retroactively.[9] Finally, *847 the United States Supreme Court has held that Ring, which applied Apprendi in the death penalty context, does not apply retroactively. See Summerlin,
Justice Anstead criticizes our reliance on these cases because they employ a different standard for determining retroactivity. See infra at 857 (Anstead, J., dissenting). Federal courts, and the majority of state courts, now use the standard articulated in Teague v. Lane,
Regardless of the standard used, we find it persuasive that courts unanimously consider Apprendi to be a rule of procedure *848 that simply changes who decides certain sentencing issues. Moreover, we have not, as the dissent suggests, relied only on cases that have analyzed retroactivity under Teague. As we explained earlier, the Supreme Court used the same standard we adopted in Witt in holding that the right to a jury trial itself is not so fundamental as to require retroactive application. See DeStefano,
V. CONCLUSION
In its decision below, the First District Court of Appeal considered other issues that are rendered moot in light of our decision that Apprendi does not apply retroactively. See McCoy v. United States,
It is so ordered.
WELLS, QUINCE, and BELL, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, J., concurs in result only with an opinion.
PARIENTE, C.J., and ANSTEAD, J., dissent with opinions.
LEWIS, J., concurring in result only.
In the present noncapital case, I agree that Apprendi is inapplicable. The United States Supreme Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Two years later, the United States Supreme Court in Ring v. Arizona,
The right to trial by jury guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment would be senselessly diminished if it encompassed the factfinding necessary to increase a defendant's sentence by two years, but not the factfinding necessary to put him to death.
Id. at 609,
When asked to decide the retroactivity of Ring, the United States Supreme Court in Schriro v. Summerlin,
If under DeStefano a trial held entirely without a jury was not impermissibly inaccurate, it is hard to see how a trial in which a judge finds only aggravating factors could be.
Summerlin,
Based on Summerlin as surprising as that decision may be[13] in light of the Supreme Court's own prior language in Apprendi and Ring I can only conclude that Apprendi simply cannot be applied retroactively in Florida upon application of our Witt[14] analysis. The United States Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter of the federal constitution, and the decision in Ring is that Court's own Sixth Amendment interpretation and application as it extended the Apprendi principles into the capital context. If the United States Supreme Court has held and stated that Apprendi principles as applied in the capital context in Ring is not a "watershed rule of criminal procedure" but merely a "new procedural rule that does not apply retroactively," then I am precluded from determining that these decisions have fundamental significance, are of significant magnitude or constitute a "jurisprudential upheaval" under Florida law, even though if writing upon a clean slate I would certainly do so. Further, the purpose served by a new rule of law is a key factor in determining retroactivity in Florida,[15] and the United States Supreme Court in DeStefano held that the purpose served by the jury-trial guarantee ("to prevent arbitrariness and repression") "favor[s] only prospective application" of that guarantee to the states.[16] Therefore, I cannot logically say that the purpose served by the jury fact-finding requirement of Apprendi favors a different treatment in this regard.
Based on the foregoing, I must agree that Apprendi is inapplicable in this postconviction case.
PARIENTE, C.J., dissenting.
I conclude that the constitutional requirement of proof beyond a reasonable *850 doubt of sentence-enhancing facts under Apprendi v. New Jersey,
NARROWING THE ISSUE
Although the First District certified to us the question of Apprendi's retroactivity in general, the validity of Hughes' sentence in this case depends on the answer to two narrower questions: Does Apprendi render the guidelines scheme under which Hughes was sentenced unconstitutional as applied, and if so, does this determination retroactively render his sentence illegal? As the First District recognized, the first question requires us to assess the continuing validity of our decision in Mays. Deciding an issue of statutory interpretation, this Court in Mays held that under section 921.0015(5), Florida Statutes (1995), trial courts were authorized to impose any sentence within a range twenty-five percent above and below the median recommended sentence if any portion of that range exceeded the statutory maximum. Unlike Apprendi, Mays did not concern who judge or jury finds sentence-enhancing facts, or whether such facts must be found beyond a reasonable doubt.
As noted by Justice Anstead in his separate dissenting opinion, the sentence in this case was imposed during the four-year period in which guidelines sentences could exceed the statutory maximum as authorized by Mays. See dissenting op. (Anstead, J.) at 866. The trial court, using a guidelines scoresheet that included 40 points for severe victim injury, imposed a sentence of 80.4 months, which exceeded the five-year statutory maximum for battery on a jail detainee, a crime that necessarily includes victim contact but not victim injury. If 18 points for moderate injury had been assessed, Hughes' maximum guidelines sentence would have been 73 months, and if 4 points for slight injury had been scored, the top guidelines sentence would have been 55.5 months.
In affirming the denial of Hughes' motion to correct his sentence, the First District stated:
Because the addition of these victim injury points caused the appellant's sentence to exceed the statutory maximum, the addition of these points by the judge violates the rule announced in Apprendi. Contrary to the trial court's ruling that the appellant's sentence is authorized under Mays v. State, we conclude that the United States Supreme Court effectively overruled Mays as to scoring factors that are neither alleged in the information nor found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, the only remaining question is whether the rule in Apprendi applies retroactively to the appellant's sentence, which became final prior to the date Apprendi was decided.
Hughes v. State,
The First District's holding that Apprendi "overruled Mays as to scoring factors that are neither alleged in the information nor found by a jury beyond a *851 reasonable doubt," Hughes,
THE REASONABLE DOUBT STANDARD
Two aspects of Apprendi are relevant to a determination of retroactivity. The first concerns the identity of the decisionmaker, and is a function of the Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury. The second concerns the burden of proof, and is governed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments' guarantee of due process of law. Although the Apprendi majority characterized both constitutional protections as being of "surpassing importance,"
My conclusions on the retroactivity of the two prongs of the holding in Apprendi are informed by the recent United States Supreme Court decision in Schriro v. Summerlin,
We noted that, although "the right to jury trial generally tends to prevent arbitrariness *852 and repression[,] ... `[w]e would not assert ... that every criminal trial or any particular trial held before a judge alone is unfair or that a defendant may never be as fairly treated by a judge as he would be by a jury.'"392 U.S., at 633-634 ,88 S.Ct. 2093 ,20 L.Ed.2d 1308 (quoting Duncan, supra, at 158,391 U.S. 145 ,88 S.Ct. 1444 ,20 L.Ed.2d 491 ). We concluded that "[t]he values implemented by the right to jury trial would not measurably be served by requiring retrial of all persons convicted in the past by procedures not consistent with the Sixth Amendment right to jury trial."392 U.S., at 634 ,88 S.Ct. 2093 ,20 L.Ed.2d 1308 . If under DeStefano a trial held entirely without a jury was not impermissibly inaccurate, it is hard to see how a trial in which a judge finds only aggravating factors could be.
Summerlin,
In contrast, the fundamental due process requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt increases the accuracy of criminal proceedings. The United States Supreme Court has made clear that for purposes of criminal punishment, an accurate proceeding is one in which the evidence of guilt overcomes the presumption of innocence through proof beyond a reasonable doubt:
The reasonable-doubt standard plays a vital role in the American scheme of criminal procedure. It is a prime instrument for reducing the risk of convictions resting on factual error. The standard provides concrete substance for the presumption of innocence that bedrock "axiomatic and elementary" principle whose "enforcement lies at the foundation of the administration of our criminal law." Coffin v. United States, [156 U.S. 432 , 453,15 S.Ct. 394 ,39 L.Ed. 481 (1895)].... "[A] person accused of a crime ... would be at a severe disadvantage, a disadvantage amounting to a lack of fundamental fairness, if he could be adjudged guilty and imprisoned for years on the strength of the same evidence as would suffice in a civil case."
The requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt has this vital role in our criminal procedure for cogent reasons. The accused during a criminal prosecution has at stake interests of immense importance, both because of the possibility that he may lose his liberty upon conviction and because of the certainty that he would be stigmatized by the conviction. Accordingly, a society that values the good name and freedom of every individual should not condemn a man for commission of a crime when there is reasonable doubt about his guilt.
In re Winship,
In Apprendi, the Court stated that in decisions relying on Winship, it had "made clear beyond peradventure that Winship's due process and associated jury protections extend, to some degree, `to determinations that [go] not to a defendant's guilt or innocence, but simply to the length of his sentence.'"
As to Apprendi's determination that facts authorizing a sentence beyond that authorized by a jury verdict or guilty plea must be found beyond a reasonable doubt, I agree with Justice Anstead that Apprendi is a decision of fundamental significance warranting retroactive application under the test of Witt. In this respect, the significance of Apprendi's holding as to the reasonable doubt standard places it at least on a par with the decisions identified by Justice Anstead which we have held retroactive. See dissenting op. (Anstead, J.) at 855-57 note 21. Moreover, I agree with Justice Anstead that the courts did not heavily rely on the old rule permitting judicial fact-finding that led to sentences exceeding the statutory maximum during the period from 1994 to 1998.
Regarding the final Witt criterion, the effect on the administration of justice, because relatively few sentences will be affected by our recognition of Apprendi's limitation of Mays, I disagree with the conclusion of the First District and the majority here that the effect of retroactivity on the administration of justice would be "monumental." Majority op. at 845 (quoting Hughes,
I further agree with Justice Anstead that we should adhere to the Witt test rather than adopt the federal test enunciated in Teague, whose purpose is to limit federal habeas review of final state court judgments.
In response to the majority's reliance on precedent characterizing Apprendi as concerning "nothing but procedure," majority op. at 841 (quoting Curtis v. United States,
The assessment of victim injury points under Florida's sentencing guidelines does not satisfy the reasonable doubt standard that Apprendi imposes upon fact-finding that increases the authorized sentence. In fact, no particular burden of proof is set out in the guidelines rules, the corresponding statutes, or judicial precedent. The absence of a burden of proof comports with the United States Supreme Court's observation in McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
THIS CASE
The sentence in this case clearly violates Apprendi's requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt of facts increasing the authorized sentence. Hughes was convicted of battery on a fellow jail detainee. As noted above, Hughes' 80.4-month sentence, which exceeded the 60-month statutory maximum, rested in large part on the assessment of 40 victim injury points for severe victim injury. In effect, Hughes was convicted of a lesser offense on proof of each element beyond a reasonable doubt, then punished for a greater offense containing an additional element under a lower burden of proof. The failure to find severe victim injury beyond a reasonable doubt has resulted in a sentence exceeding the sentence authorized by the jury verdict, contrary to Apprendi.[18]
For the reasons I have stated, I would vacate the sentence in this case, direct the district court to remand for the trial court to determine victim injury under the reasonable doubt standard extended in Apprendi to facts increasing the maximum authorized sentence, and, if necessary, resentence Hughes accordingly.
*855 ANSTEAD, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
In essence, with the decisions rendered today in this case and in Johnson v. State, No. SC03-1042,
In doing so, it appears that the majority has failed to properly apply the test this Court long ago established for determining retroactivity in Witt v. State,
Witt
Although the majority purports to examine the question of Apprendi's retroactivity pursuant to Witt, it ignores our precedent and those Florida cases where this retroactivity analysis was actually applied. In fact, if it had examined precedent, it would have found that we have applied numerous decisions retroactively; and many of these decisions, while important in their own right, were of far less significance than the United States Supreme Court's landmark holding in Apprendi.[21] There is simply no *856 *857 way that our holding today can be squared with our own prior retroactivity decisions applying Witt.
In addition to ignoring our own cases, the majority's conclusions are further flawed by the fact that they rely almost exclusively on federal decisions that evaluate retroactivity under the irrelevant and considerably more restrictive federal standard announced in the plurality opinion in Teague v. Lane,
Witt vs. Teague
Obviously, there are fundamental and critical differences between the federal retroactivity rule and the rule for retroactivity we adopted in Witt. Tellingly, as in Teague, the majority analysis appears to singularly rely upon the value of finality in its analysis and conclusion, while wholly disregarding the fundamental importance of the constitutional right to a jury trial to the American justice system. Although I agree that "the importance of finality in any justice system, including the criminal justice system, cannot be understated," see Witt,
The doctrine of finality should be abridged only when a more compelling objective appears, such as ensuring fairness and uniformity in individual adjudications. Thus, society recognizes that a sweeping change of law can so drastically alter the substantive or procedural underpinnings of a final conviction and sentence that the machinery of post-conviction relief is necessary to avoid individual instances of obvious injustice. Considerations of fairness and uniformity make it very "difficult to justify depriving a person of his liberty or his life, under process no longer considered acceptable and no longer applied to indistinguishable cases."
Witt,
*858 Today, contrary to our admonitions in Witt and Callaway, the majority has indeed rendered a decision "depriving a person of his liberty or his life, under process no longer considered acceptable and no longer applied to indistinguishable cases." The majority has simply turned a blind eye to the most important and unique feature of the American justice system upon which we have relied for centuries to ensure fairness and justice for our citizens: the right to trial by jury. No other right in our system has been so jealously guarded, until today.
Apprendi is a Decision of Fundamental Significance
The majority acknowledges that the Witt test is comprised of three elements: (1) a change of law that emanates either from this Court or the United States Supreme Court; (2) is constitutional in nature; and (3) has fundamental significance. See Witt,
Fundamental Significance
It is difficult to comprehend the majority's conclusion that the Apprendi decision is not one of fundamental significance. That it is such a decision is apparent on both the face of the Apprendi opinion and upon any fair appraisal of its significance to the American justice system. In fact, its fundamental significance has just recently been emphatically affirmed by the United States Supreme Court in its decision in Blakely v. Washington,
For starters, the majority's conclusion directly conflicts with the clear and unambiguous characterization of the significance of the decision set out in the United States Supreme Court opinion in Apprendi itself:
At stake in this case are constitutional protections of surpassing importance: the proscription of any deprivation of liberty without "due process of law," Amdt. 14, and the guarantee that "[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury," Amdt. 6. Taken together, these rights indisputably entitle a criminal defendant to "a jury determination that [he] is guilty of every element of the crime with which he is charged, beyond a reasonable doubt."
Apprendi,
Moreover, the Supreme Court's opinion described New Jersey's statutory scheme that allowed a judge to find the facts necessary to increase a defendant's sentence beyond the statutory maximum as "an unacceptable departure from the jury tradition that is an indispensable part of our criminal justice system." Id. at 497,
As if the Court's words in Apprendi were not enough, let us consider the words most recently used by the Court in Blakely in assessing the fundamental significance of the Apprendi decision:
Our commitment to Apprendi in this context reflects not just respect for longstanding precedent, but the need to give intelligible content to the right of jury trial. That right is no mere procedural formality, but a fundamental reservation of power in our constitutional structure. Just as suffrage ensures the people's ultimate control in the legislative and executive branches, jury trial is meant to ensure their control in the judiciary. See Letter XV by the Federal Farmer (Jan. 18, 1788), reprinted in 2 The Complete Anti-Federalist 315, 320 (H. Storing ed.1981) (describing the jury as "secur[ing] to the people at large, their just and rightful control in the judicial department"); John Adams, Diary Entry (Feb. 12, 1771), reprinted in 2 Works of John Adams 252, 253 (C. Adams ed. 1850) ("[T]he common people, should have as complete a control ... in every judgment of a court of judicature" as in the legislature); Letter from Thomas Jefferson to the Abbe Arnoux (July 19, 1789), reprinted in 15 Papers of Thomas Jefferson 282, 283 (J. Boyd ed. 1958) ("Were I called upon to decide whether the people had best be omitted in the Legislative or Judiciary department, I would say it is better to leave them out of the Legislative"); Jones v. United States,526 U.S. 227 , 244-248,119 S.Ct. 1215 ,143 L.Ed.2d 311 (1999). Apprendi carries out this design by ensuring that the judge's authority to sentence derives wholly from the jury's verdict. Without that restriction, the jury would not exercise the control that the Framers intended.
....
Ultimately, our decision cannot turn on whether or to what degree trial by jury impairs the efficiency or fairness of criminal justice. One can certainly argue that both these values would be better served by leaving justice entirely in the hands of professionals; many nations of the world, particularly those following civil-law traditions, take just that course. There is not one shred of doubt, however, about the Framers' paradigm for criminal justice: not the civil-law *860 ideal of administrative perfection, but the common-law ideal of limited state power accomplished by strict division of authority between judge and jury. As Apprendi held, every defendant has the right to insist that the prosecutor prove to a jury all facts legally essential to the punishment. Under the dissenters' alternative, he has no such right. That should be the end of the matter.
Blakely,
In essence, the majority has ignored the plain meaning of the words "fundamental significance" as well as the plain meaning of the actual words used by the United States Supreme Court in Apprendi and Blakely describing the nature and importance of its decision upholding the right of an American citizen to due process and a trial by jury. When the Supreme Court's characterization of its decision is considered, the conclusion that Apprendi is a decision of fundamental significance should be a "no-brainer," a "slam dunk."[25]
*861 Further, when the holding of Apprendi is objectively examined through the Witt lens, without the muddying effect of federal decisions employing the irrelevant retroactivity analysis from Teague, it becomes apparent that Apprendi is a judicial decision of fundamental significance that should be applied retroactively. Whether you do the math quickly by examining the United States Supreme Court's own description of the significance of its decision, or do a detailed analysis, the answer under Witt is the same.
Federal Review Policy and Teague
Of course, as noted above, Florida has never adopted the federal Teague standard, which was fashioned upon considerations wholly inapplicable to state law systems. Instead, Florida has adopted its own standard for evaluating the critical issue of whether an important judicial decision should be applied retroactively based upon considerations of fairness and justice and has found retroactivity appropriate in numerous cases, many of obviously less significance than Apprendi.[26] As noted above, the majority has essentially chosen to ignore those cases decided under Witt, and to rely upon federal decisions controlled by Teague.
There are, of course, good reasons why this Court and other state courts have chosen not to embrace Teague. As the Missouri Supreme Court accurately and pointedly noted in a recent opinion rejecting the adoption of the Teague standard, "it has been suggested that `[t]he Teague test essentially prevents state courts from achieving their goal [of correcting injustice], for through its focus on the impropriety of disturbing a final conviction, it diverts attention from constitutional violations and prohibits relief except in the very rare case.'" State v. Whitfield,
In the article cited approvingly by the Missouri high court, Hutton joins a host of other legal commentators in urging states to exercise their prerogative to develop alternative methods of determining retroactivity because many of the policy reasons behind Teague are not applicable to state postconviction procedures. In fact, the plurality opinion in Teague has been universally criticized by legal commentators "as being fundamentally unfair, internally inconsistent, and unreasonably harsh." Tung Yin, A Better Mousetrap: Procedural Default as a Retroactivity Alternative to Teague v. Lane and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, 25 Am. J.Crim. L. 203, 206 (1998); see also Christopher S. Strauss, Comment, Collateral Damage: How the Supreme Court's Retroactivity Affects Federal Drug Prisoners' Apprendi Claims on Collateral Review, 81 N.C. L.Rev. 1220, 1222 (March 2003) (noting with regard to retroactivity that the Supreme Court "has crafted a theoretically incoherent doctrine that has proven difficult to apply"); Linda Meyer, "Nothing We Say Matters": Teague and New Rules, 61 U. Chi. L.Rev. 423, 423 (1994) (stating that Teague rules "wear[] away the power of precedent itself, stripping prior cases of all persuasive force beyond their particular factual contexts"); Susan Bandes, Taking Justice to Its Logical Extreme: A Comment on Teague v. Lane, 66 S. Cal. L.Rev. 2453, 2466 (1993) ("For a case whose articulated purpose was to promote fairness and evenhanded justice, Teague has served neither goal."); Marc M. Arkin, The Prisoner's Dilemma: Life in the Lower Federal Courts After Teague v. Lane, 69 N.C. L.Rev. 371, 418 (1991) ("There is much concern that Teague will eviscerate federal habeas corpus and rob the lower federal courts of their proper function of providing as of right review for all federal constitutional issues in criminal cases, substituting discretionary Supreme Court review, and, in the process, retarding the articulation of federal rights."); David R. Row, Teague and Death: The Impact of Current Retroactivity Doctrine on Capital Defendants, 19 Hastings Const. L.Q. 23 (1991) (commenting on general problems with Teague, as well as how these problems are of particular concern in the capital context); Eliot F. Krieger, The Court Declines in Fairness Teague v. Lane,
Federal Habeas Review
Virtually all of these commentators focus on the important differences between habeas corpus proceedings in state courts compared to the very different role played by the additional and limited habeas review of state court convictions conducted in federal proceedings. Importantly, any examination of the Teague standard should begin with the obvious: that the Teague plurality's main focus and concern in adopting a more restrictive view of retroactivity was to limit the scope of federal habeas review of state convictions, an issue supportive of our adoption of a distinct retroactivity analysis in Witt. While there is ongoing debate about the wisdom and *863 fairness of this limitation, the major focus of this concern with the proper scope of federal habeas is associated with an understandable reluctance of the federal courts to interfere with a state's own review of its cases, and the proper scope of rules of collateral attack in federal courts on claims by state prisoners who have already litigated their claims in state courts.
Teague and Cumulative Federal Review
In short, issues of the availability of cumulative federal review of issues already resolved in state proceedings should not determine this Court's substantive standard for retroactivity to be applied in state postconviction proceedings. It would make little sense for state courts to adopt the Teague analysis when a substantial part of Teague's rationale is deference to a state's substantive law and review. If anything, the more restrictive standards of federal review place increased and heightened importance upon the quality and reliability of the state proceedings. In other words, if the state proceedings become the only real venue for relief, as they in fact have become, it is critically important that the state courts provide that venue and "get it right" since those proceedings will usually be the final and only opportunity to litigate collateral claims. In fact, it is the presumed heightened quality of state proceedings that allows the federal courts to defer to the state proceedings as adequate safeguards to the rights of state prisoners. To then further restrict the state proceedings would undermine the entire rationale for restricting federal proceedings because of the reliability of state proceedings. Yet, this is essentially what the majority opinion has done here in its reliance on federal authority to elevate the federal concern with finality over the state's concern with fairness and justice as the controlling value in its analysis.
Fundamental Significance under Witt
When all is said and done, however, as even the majority is forced to acknowledge, it is clear that we are bound to apply the Witt standard here. But while the majority appears to go through this exercise, its analysis is flawed because of its implicit reliance upon the Teague rationale and federal cases applying that rationale, rather than an examination of the numerous instances this Court has found retroactivity under Witt.
As the majority does not dispute, when analyzing a change in the law under the development of fundamental significance prong of the Witt test, this Court has ruled that it will also consider the three so-called Stovall/Linkletter factors to determine whether a change in the law constitutes a development of fundamental significance. Witt,
Purpose of New Rule
The first factor requires us to examine the purpose to be served by the new rule. The majority states that the rule to be taken from Apprendi is "[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt." Apprendi,
As discussed above, and contrary to the majority's assessment and valuation of the constitutional right to due process and trial by jury, the purpose of the rule announced in Apprendi was expressly characterized in the United States Supreme Court's majority opinion as providing "constitutional protections of surpassing importance." Apprendi,
In its appraisal, and contrary to the United States Supreme Court's appraisal, the majority "fundamentally" misperceives the values this country was founded upon and ignores hundreds of years of our unique legal traditions. In discussing the decision as one only involving procedural rights, the majority clearly misses the point that we have adopted a procedural system of justice in this country (often referred to as an adversarial system), that relies upon procedural safeguards to ensure just results. The majority opinion in Blakely explains:
Ultimately, our decision cannot turn on whether or to what degree trial by jury impairs the efficiency or fairness of criminal justice. One can certainly argue that both these values would be better served by leaving justice entirely in the hands of professionals; many nations of the world, particularly those following civil-law traditions, take just that course. There is not one shred of doubt, however, about the Framers' paradigm for criminal justice: not the civil-law ideal of administrative perfection, but the common-law ideal of limited state power accomplished by strict division of authority between judge and jury. As Apprendi held, every defendant has the right to insist that the prosecutor prove to a jury all facts legally essential to the punishment. Under the dissenters' alternative, he has no such right. That should be the end of the matter.
Notably, the United States Supreme Court has declared even before Apprendi and Blakely:
The reasonable-doubt standard plays a vital role in the American scheme of criminal procedure. It is a prime instrument for reducing the risk of convictions resting on factual error. The standard provides concrete substance for the presumption of innocence that bedrock "axiomatic and elementary" principle whose "enforcement lies at the foundation of the administration of our criminal law."
In re Winship,
I also agree with Chief Justice Pariente's analysis, and disagree with the majority's implication that a finding of facts by the preponderance of the evidence by a professional judge is the equivalent of a jury finding facts beyond a reasonable doubt. Blakely makes this clear in noting that this characterization would fit much better in legal systems we have long ago rejected as alien to our vision of justice. Indeed, it demeans the unique chemistry inherent in the constitutional guarantee of a right to trial by jury provided by our founding fathers in the first amendments to our constitution. That right includes the requirement that a jury composed of a citizen's peers apply the reasonable doubt standard.
Extent of Reliance on Old Rule
The second factor under the Stovall/Linkletter test requires that the Court examine the extent of reliance on the old rule. Witt,
First, and most importantly, this discussion ignores the fact that reliance on the practice of judicial fact-finding has already been sharply limited by this Court's own long-standing decisions limiting a judge's authority to determine facts which might have a significant impact on a criminal sentence. To its credit, this Court long ago gave notice of the same concerns subsequently addressed by the United States Supreme Court in Apprendi and Blakely. *866 In other words, well before Apprendi, we have required explicit jury findings on such issues as possession of a firearm, the quantity of drugs, and other factors that might authorize a greater punishment for the underlying crime. See, e.g., State v. Estevez,
Further, it is important to note that the rule in question today is limited to a situation that has allowed judges to find facts that would increase a sentence above the maximum set out in the Florida statute for the particular crime. Hence, we are only dealing with exceptional circumstances. Imposing a sentence above the statutory maximum is clearly an exception to the ordinary practice where a sentence is imposed within the statutory range. Hence, a retroactive application of Apprendi would not affect cases where the judge assigned victim injury points, but still sentenced the defendant at or below the statutory maximum. As the majority notes, this type of judicial fact-finding is still permissible, because it does not involve the judge exceeding the sentence allowed by the jury verdict alone. See Harris v. United States,
Further, while the majority states that trial courts have long practiced this type of fact-finding, the statutory guidelines in question in this case that allowed the judge to exceed the statutory maximum only existed from 1994 until 1998. See § 921.001(5), Fla. Stat. (1993) (requiring sentences imposed under the revised 1994 sentencing guidelines sentences to be imposed even when the guidelines sentence exceeded the statutory maximum). Of *867 course, regardless of the effect of Apprendi, any judge fact-finding would have been subject to our pre-Apprendi case law in Overfelt, Estevez, and similar cases.[31]
Although section 921.001(5) was repealed with the passage of the Criminal Punishment Code, see ch. 97-194, § 1, Laws of Fla., the code also gave trial courts the power to find facts resulting in sentences that could exceed the statutory maximum. See § 921.0024(2), Fla. Stat. (Supp.1998) (requiring sentence calculated under the code to be imposed, even where it was above statutory maximum). However, since Apprendi was decided in 2000, this statutory rule could only have been relied on for a maximum of six years.
Importantly, under our Witt retroactivity analysis, we have already determined that six years is minimal for purposes of determining the extent of reliance on the old rule. See State v. Stevens,
Effect of Retroactive Application on the Administration of Justice
Under the third prong of the Stovall/Linkletter test, we must consider the *868 effect that retroactivity would have on the administration of justice in Florida. As noted above, the application of Apprendi is consistent with and not disruptive of our own case law on the same issue. See supra note 31, and accompanying text.
Again, I disagree with the majority opinion's conclusion that there would be a profound and unsettling effect on the administration of justice, as this determination is unsupported by any factual evidence in the record and is contrary to other cases where we have determined there was a profound impact. See, e.g., State v. Stevens,
The majority quotes language from the Fifth District's decision on remand from the Supreme Court in McCloud v. State,
In determining the effect on the administration of justice in sentencing under the now repealed section 921.005(5), the Court should look at such factors as the potential number of individuals who might be entitled to relief, the ease with which those individuals can be identified from those who would file but would not be entitled to relief, and in the cases where relief was warranted, what such relief would entail. Each of these considerations weighs in favor of retroactivity in the situation at hand.
First, before any postconviction claimant would be entitled to any collateral relief, there would have to be a determination (1) that victim injury sentencing points, other than those associated with prior convictions, were assigned based solely on a judge's findings;[32] (2) that these sentencing points caused the sentence imposed to exceed the statutory maximum allowed by the jury's conviction alone;[33] and (3) that the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because the defendant stipulated to the enhanced circumstances or sentence or the jury clearly would have made the same finding as the judge. It is apparent that the great bulk of collateral claims could not overcome these hurdles.
For example, initially, the State would have to make the determination as to whether a sentence within the statutory *869 maximum would be adequate, or whether it would demand the enhanced punishment that requires an additional jury proceeding. This review itself would eliminate a substantial number of cases. Further, in many cases, these claims could be resolved simply by looking at the sentencing documents. For example, if the collateral litigant's sentence did not exceed the statutory maximum, no relief would be available.
In those cases where the Apprendi violation was harmful, the defendant could be resentenced within the range allowed by the jury's verdict. Only in the extraordinary case would an additional jury trial be necessary to establish the facts necessary to impose the enhanced sentence. The majority wholly fails to cite any empirical data to the contrary. Accordingly, I do not agree that the impact of a holding of retroactivity on the administration of justice will be as profound as alleged by the majority.
The majority has also overlooked the fact that retroactivity does not necessarily mean that no conditions may be placed on the retroactive application of an important decision. See James v. State,
CONCLUSION
We must remember that the key question under Witt is whether Apprendi constitutes a decision of "fundamental significance." Despite the United States Supreme Court's characterization of its decision in Apprendi as one requiring "constitutional protections of surpassing importance," and its recent reaffirmation of Apprendi's importance in Blakely, the majority has found the decision not one of fundamental significance. In its fixation on finality, the majority has written off the Apprendi decision as one of minor procedural error. The United States Supreme Court's own characterization of the significance of Apprendi directly refutes this conclusion.
Ultimately, however, the overriding interests of fairness and uniformity make it impossible to justify a decision that deprives individuals of their life or liberty based on a fact-finding process that has been determined to be violative of fundamental constitutional rights. See Witt,
The doctrine of finality should be abridged only when a more compelling objective appears, such as ensuring fairness and uniformity in individual adjudications. Thus, society recognizes that a sweeping change of law can so drastically alter the substantive or procedural underpinnings of a final conviction and sentence that the machinery of postconviction relief is necessary to avoid individual instances of obvious injustice. Considerations of fairness and uniformity make it very "difficult to justify depriving a person of his liberty or his life, under process no longer considered acceptable and no longer applied to indistinguishable cases."
Witt,
NOTES
Notes
[1] The precise question was:
DOES THE RULING ANNOUNCED IN APPRENDI v. NEW JERSEY,
[2] Section 921.001(5), Florida Statutes (1997), provides in relevant part that "[i]f a recommended sentence under the guidelines exceeds the maximum sentence otherwise authorized by s. 775.082, the sentence under the guidelines must be imposed, absent a departure." The identical sentence appears in section 921.0014(2), Florida Statutes (1997).
[3] Figarola also certified the question of whether Apprendi is retroactive. See
[4] The references are to Stovall v. Denno,
[5] Notwithstanding the fundamental nature of the right to a jury trial, the Court in Summerlin concluded that "it does not follow that, when a criminal defendant has had a full trial and one round of appeals in which the State faithfully applied the Constitution as we understood it at the time, he may nevertheless continue to litigate his claims indefinitely in hope that we will one day have a change of heart."
[6] As Justice Anstead notes in his dissent, "the underlying conviction is not at issue here." See dissenting op. at 868.
[7] We already require a jury finding of firearm possession where the trial court imposes the mandatory minimum sentence for use of a firearm. State v. Overfelt,
[8] See Sepulveda v. United States,
[9] See, e.g., Sanders v. State,
[10] In a separate opinion, this Court holds, employing a Witt analysis, that Ring does not apply retroactively. Johnson v. State, No. SC03-1042,
[11] Justice Anstead is correct to state that this Court "has never adopted" Teague. Dissenting op. at 861. In fact, Florida courts have never considered whether to adopt it. See Windom v. State,
[12] Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850, which governs postconviction relief, was promulgated to provide "a method of reviewing a conviction based on a major change of law, where unfairness was so fundamental in either process or substance that the doctrine of finality had to be set aside." Witt,
[13] Cf. Apprendi,
[14] Witt v. State,
[15] See id. at 926 (holding that the retroactivity of a new rule of law may be determined by assessing (a) the purpose served by the new rule; (b) the extent of reliance on the old rule; and (c) the effect on the administration of justice of retroactive application of the new rule).
[16] DeStefano,
[17] One indicator of the number of challenges that can be anticipated from retroactive application of Apprendi's limitation of Mays is the fact that Hughes' case is one of what appears to be only four pending in this Court involving guidelines sentences that exceed the statutory maximum. See Brown v. State,
[18] I disagree with the majority's reliance on our statement in McGregor v. State,
[19] I agree with Chief Justice Pariente's conclusion that the reasonable doubt standard mandated by Apprendi must be retroactively applied under Witt.
[20] The United States Supreme Court has recently decided in Schriro v. Summerlin,
Initially, I would note the obvious: Schriro was applying Teague and therefore does not control the question of retroactivity in Florida. In fact, Schriro is a textbook example for why the states should be wary of embracing Teague. Its application with regard to Ring has yielded a result that is fundamentally unfair, internally inconsistent, and unreasonably harsh. The Supreme Court notes that "[t]he right to jury trial is fundamental to our system of criminal procedure," Schriro,
[21] See, e.g., State v. Klayman,
[22] As the majority concedes, this Court has long utilized the Witt test for determining when important changes in decisional law should be applied retroactively. See State v. Glenn,
[23] Stovall v. Denno,
[24] In fact, the majority relies on an out-of-context quote from Ring to bolster its analysis. The quote states: "The Sixth Amendment jury trial right ... does not turn on the relative rationality, fairness, or efficiency of potential factfinders." Ring,
Arizona suggests that judicial authority over the finding of aggravating factors "may ... be a better way to guarantee against the arbitrary imposition of the death penalty." Tr. of Oral Arg. 32. The Sixth Amendment jury trial right, however, does not turn on the relative rationality, fairness, or efficiency of potential factfinders. Entrusting to a judge the finding of facts necessary to support a death sentence might be
"an admirably fair and efficient scheme of criminal justice designed for a society that is prepared to leave criminal justice to the State.... The founders of the American Republic were not prepared to leave it to the State, which is why the jury-trial guarantee was one of the least controversial provisions of the Bill of Rights. It has never been efficient; but it has always been free." Apprendi,
Ring,
[25] The majority's cite to Duncan v. Louisiana,
[N]othing prevents a defendant from waiving his Apprendi rights. When a defendant pleads guilty, the State is free to seek judicial sentence enhancements so long as the defendant either stipulates to the relevant facts or consents to judicial factfinding. See Apprendi,
....
... [T]he Sixth Amendment was not written for the benefit of those who choose to forgo its protection. It guarantees the right to jury trial. It does not guarantee that a particular number of jury trials will actually take place. That more defendants elect to waive that right (because, for example, government at the moment is not particularly oppressive) does not prove that a constitutional provision guaranteeing availability of that option is disserved.
Blakely,
Second, the majority notes that the Court rejected the retroactive application of Duncan in DeStefano v. Woods,
[T]he effect of a holding of general retroactivity on law enforcement and the administration of justice would be significant, because the denial of jury trial has occurred in a very great number of cases in those States not until now accepting the Sixth Amendment guarantee. For example, in Louisiana all those convicted of noncapital serious crimes could make a Sixth Amendment argument. And, depending on the Court's decisions about unanimous and 12-man juries, all convictions for serious crimes in certain other States would be in jeopardy.
Id. at 634,
Indeed, the conclusion in this case under Witt and the Stovall/Linkletter second and third prongs is entirely different than it would be for DeStefano. Here, the prior rule was only relied on in those limited instances when the sentence exceeded the statutory maximum and then only for a period of six years. Moreover, there would not need to be a number of new trials in the instant case.
[26] See supra note 21.
[27] The majority cites to a statement from Apprendi where the Court noted that New Jersey's substantive basis for enhancement of a sentence was not at issue. See Apprendi,
[28] Therefore, the majority's statement that Apprendi does not affect the determination of guilt or innocence is not accurate. See majority op. at 841. As Justice Scalia explained in Apprendi, where the existence of an additional fact would allow a sentence that exceeds the statutory maximum, this fact would be an element of an enhanced crime. Hence, it would need to be found by the jury beyond a reasonable doubt before the defendant could be sentenced for, or be found guilty of, the enhanced crime.
[29] The majority asserts that retroactive application of Apprendi will require juries to be empanelled to decide issues such as whether the defendant possessed a firearm during the commission of a crime. Of course, under our established law, and regardless of Apprendi, this type of fact must be decided by the jury. Moreover, the majority's claim that a jury will need to be empanelled to determine the issue causing the sentence enhancement would apply only to a limited number of cases. In most instances, the cause for the sentence enhancement would be clear from the sentencing scoresheet and most questions regarding whether Apprendi error had occurred could be answered simply by reviewing the scoresheet and other sentencing documents. The majority is focusing only on those cases where relief is granted and the State insists upon a punishment greater than the statutory maximum and the defendant insists upon upholding his right to a jury trial.
[30] The instant case may be an anomaly, because the defendant was only found guilty of a third-degree felony allowing for a five-year maximum sentence. In other cases with severe injuries, the conviction would be more likely to be a higher degree felony with an increased maximum sentence.
[31] In this regard, the majority leaves as unstated a key point: namely, the operation of the statutory scheme in the instant case violates the constitution under circumstances where a judge finds facts related to a victim's injury and that causes the sentence to exceed the statutory maximum allowed. The United States Supreme Court has already mandated that the very statutory scheme at issue in the instant case must be re-examined under Apprendi. See McCloud v. State,
Part of the problem with the instant case is that the limited record prevents us from knowing the specific facts of the case. Nevertheless, the maximum sentence for conviction for the crime Hughes was convicted of, a third-degree felony of battery by a detainee, is five years in prison, § 775.082(3)(d), Fla. Stat. (1997). However, if Hughes was indeed convicted only of simple "battery" by a detainee described in section 784.082(3), Florida Statutes (1997), but there were severe victim injuries, it raises the question of why he was not convicted of the more serious first-degree felony of "aggravated battery" by a detainee described in section 784.082(1). The difference between the two crimes, in part, can be based on the degree of victim injury. See § 784.045(1)(a)1., Fla. Stat. (1997) (defining aggravated battery in pertinent part as "[i]ntentionally or knowingly caus[ing] great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement").
[32] Hence, where there was an indication that the jury actually found the facts associated with the victim's injury such as by finding guilt of an injury related crime, no relief would be available. See, e.g., State v. Overfelt,
[33] Id.
