Lead Opinion
Appellant, Johnny Mack Brown, Jr., appeals the sentence imposed after a jury found him guilty of one second-degree felony and several misdemeanors. Appellant argues that the trial court improperly considered a pending charge at sentencing, without receiving evidence, when the court repeatedly emphasized the charged conduct during the sentencing hearing, indicated that it believed the conduct occurred, and appeared to rely on the conduct, in part, to justify the sentence.
In Norvil v. State, the Florida Supreme Court announced that “a trial court may not consider a subsequent arrest without conviction during sentencing for the primary offense.”
“If portions of the record reflect that the trial court may have relied upon impermissible considerations in imposing sentence, the State bears the burden to show from the record as a whole that the trial court did not rely on such impermissible considerations.” Nusspickel v. State,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
BERGER, J., concurs specially, with opinion, in which EISNAUGLE, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially, with opinion.
I concur in the opinion based solely on the Florida Supreme Court’s recent decision in Norvil v. State,
[Tjhe CPC is unambiguous concerning the factors a trial court may consider in sentencing a defendant. The Legislature included prior arrests as information that is helpful in imposing the appropriate sentence for a defendant. § 921.231(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (2010). However, if the Legislature had intended to include subsequent arrests and their related charges as permissible sentencing factors, it would have done so. See Roster v. Sullivan,160 So.3d 385 , 390 (Fla. 2015) (“Florida courts are ‘without power to construe an unambiguous statute in a way which would extend, modify, or limit, its express terms or its reasonable and obvious implications. To do so would be an abrogation of legislative power.’”) (quoting Holly v. Auld,450 So.2d 217 , 219 (Fla. 1984)).
Id. at 409.
In light of this holding, I would urge the Legislature to amend section 921.231(1), to include subsequent arrests and their related charges as permissible sentencing factors. As Justice Canady aptly noted in his well-reasoned dissent:
[I]t is indeed a remarkable proposition that a defendant who has committed an additional crime while out on bond should not have that subsequent crime held against him when being sentenced for the earlier offense. Due process does not require the adoption of such anakedly unreasonable proposition. The view is unassailable that such a crime committed by a defendant while out on bond reflects unfavorably on the defendant’s character just as much as—if not more than—crimes that were committed previously. The character of the defendant and a concomitant assessment of the likelihood that the defendant will reoffend are unquestionably proper matters for a sentencing judge to consider when imposing sentence within the statutory maximum.
Norvil,
EISNAUGLE, J., concurs.
