Gregory Kyle MALONE, Appellant, v. STATE of Oklahoma, Appellee.
No. F-2000-1585
Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
Oct. 14, 2002
As Corrected Oct. 22, 2002
2002 OK CR 34
Julie O‘Connell, Office of the Public Defender, Tulsa, OK, for Appellant at Trial.
Larry Edwards, Assistant District Attorney, Tulsa, OK, for the State at Trial.
Paula J. Alfred, Stephen J. Greubel, Stuart W. Southerland, Assistant Public Defenders, Tulsa, OK, for Appellant on Appeal.
W.A. Drew Edmondson, Attorney General of Oklahoma, Kellye Bates, Assistant Attorney General, Oklahoma City, OK, for the State on Appeal.
Robert A. Ravitz, Oklahoma County Public Defender, Oklahoma City, OK, James D. Bednar, Executive Director, Oklahoma Indigent Defense System, Norman, OK, Amicus.
OPINION ON REHEARING
LUMPKIN, Presiding Judge:
¶ 1 Appellant, Gregory Kyle Malone, was tried by jury and convicted of First Degree Burglary (Count I), in violation of
¶ 2 Malone appealed to this Court, and raised one proposition of error. He was denied a fair sentencing proceeding when the trial court precluded the admission of mitigating evidence relevant to the jury‘s exercise of discretion. We rejected this claim in our Summary Opinion of March 18, 2002, and affirmed Appellant‘s convictions and sentences. The Summary Opinion adopted a new approach to the concept of allocution and the ability of a non-capital defendant to present mitigating and aggravating evidence in the sentencing stage of a bifurcated jury trial, after the jury‘s verdict. It also found that a trial court “has the power and is authorized to reject a jury‘s recommended sentence and modify the sentence upwards or downwards....” The Summary Opinion was thereafter published. See Malone v. State, 2002 OK CR 14.
¶ 3 Malone filed a Petition for Rehearing on April 8, 2002, pursuant to Rule 3.14(B)(2), Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2002). Therein, he claimed we had overlooked a decisive question in the case. The Office of the Oklahoma County Public Defender simultaneously filed a “Motion to File Amicus Brief in Support of Rehearing.” This Court granted rehearing in its order of June 5, 2002. In so doing, we granted the Public Defender‘s motion to file an amicus brief and invited the State to file one as well.1
¶ 4 Having further reviewed the issue at hand, the applicable authorities, and the additional briefs filed by Appellant, the State Attorney General, and the Oklahoma County Public Defender, we hereby order that our Summary Opinion of March 18, 2002 is stricken, removed from publication, and superceded by this Opinion on Rehearing in its entirety, including all matters pertinent to the issue Appellant raised in his original appeal.
¶ 5 Defendants in criminal trials deserve to have their day in court, to require the State to meet its burden of proof through evidence presented in open court, to tell their stories, and to defend themselves against the crimes of which they have been charged. The Oklahoma Legislature defines how and when defendants accomplish those purposes. In the instant case, Appellant was not denied a fair sentencing hearing by the trial judge‘s decision to preclude Appellant from presenting mitigating evidence to the jury at his non-capital sentencing proceeding.
¶ 6 Oklahoma‘s criminal statutes allow non-capital defendants, at the time of formal sentencing, to explain to the trial judge “any legal cause” they have why judgment should not be pronounced against them.
¶ 7
¶ 8 Certain evidence that may be in fact “mitigating” or “aggravating” will inevitably be introduced throughout any trial, although that evidence is admitted to prove the elements of the crime, to support a legal defense, or to impeach a witness. A criminal defendant‘s story will in fact be told, by the witnesses he or she chooses and through his or her own testimony. But a criminal trial is not to be based upon so-called “character” evidence, and the same principle applies to sentencing proceedings.
DECISION
¶ 9 The judgments and sentences are hereby AFFIRMED.
STRUBHAR and LILE, JJ.: concur.
JOHNSON, V.P.J.: concur in part/dissent in part.
CHAPEL, J.: dissent.
JOHNSON, V.P.J.: concurs in part/dissents in part.
¶ 1 I concur in the Court‘s Opinion on Rehearing as it relates to the affirmance of the conviction and the sentences imposed by the trial court. I respectfully dissent to the Opinion on Rehearing and the changes that have been made since the original summary opinion.
¶ 2 Some years ago, Judge James Lane, a former member of this Court, proposed that all trials be two-stage trials. His reasoning had to do with the fact that aggravating evidence could come in during a one-stage trial. A defendant could be found guilty based upon the aggravation and not for the charged crime. He pointed out that in a bench trial after the judgment of the court, the defendant has the right of allocution and can present mitigating evidence to the court that the court can consider in the sentencing. This now seems reasonable. In the original summary opinion, as Judge Chapel points out in his dissent, Oklahoma law does not allow a trial judge to modify the jury‘s sentence. He notes this modification can only come in a bench trial.
¶ 3 After a jury sentence, justice demands that a defendant have a right to present mitigating evidence to the court. The State should also have the right to present any aggravating evidence. The court could get a pre-sentence report, and the judge has the right to modify the sentence or even increase the sentence. It is my hope that the legislature would enact a statute that would allow this procedure. If this were done, you would not need the two-stage trial as set forth in our original summary opinion. You would truly have allocution.
¶ 4 I am a great believer in the judicial system and the wisdom of judges who have been on the bench and heard numerous cases. With very few exceptions, their judgments are wise and the sentences given may be fairer than those of a jury who may be mad at the defendant or his or her attorney or something that has occurred in the case that makes the jury‘s sentence excessive. Hopefully the Legislature will cure this ill. This state should have a system where the jury finds guilt; the judges give the sentence after allocution.
CHAPEL, J., dissenting:
¶ 1 Malone filed an appeal raising one proposition of error-that the trial court precluded the admission of mitigating circumstances relevant to the jury‘s exercise of discretion. The issue presented is whether mitigating evidence should be presented, in non-capital felony trials, as a part of a criminal defendant‘s right to individualized jury sentencing. The majority opinion substituted here for this Court‘s original published opinion fails to answer that question. The opinion merely concludes that character evidence is not admissible in either guilt or
¶ 2 As the State admits, the traditional practice of individualized sentencing in non-capital criminal cases is “conceptually favorable and well-grounded in notions of fairness and justice.”2 There is of course a qualitative difference between sentencing in non-capital and capital cases, where the constitution requires individual consideration of the characteristics of the defendant and the circumstances of the offense.3 The United States Supreme Court discussed the historical use of individualized sentencing:
“[B]oth before and since the American colonies became a nation, courts in this country and in England practiced a policy under which a sentencing judge could exercise a wide discretion in the sources and types of evidence used to assist him in determining the kind the extent of punishment to be imposed within limits fixed by law. Out-of-court affidavits have been used frequently, and of course in the smaller communities sentencing judges naturally have in mind their knowledge of the personalities and backgrounds of convicted offenders.”4
In Harmelin v. Michigan the Supreme Court reaffirmed the existence of the right to individualized sentencing in non-capital cases.6
¶ 3 Congress recognized the importance of individualized sentencing in adopting the federal sentencing guidelines.7 One of Congress‘s goals in enacting the guidelines was to “provide certainty and fairness in meeting the purposes of sentencing, avoiding unwarranted sentencing disparities
¶ 4 This Court has not held there is no right to individualized sentencing in non-capital cases. We have noted that the determination of an appropriate individual sentence is a goal of the criminal justice system in capital and non-capital cases.11 We have recognized the importance of individually tailoring sentences in the youthful offender context12. In Applegate v. State, 1995 OK CR 49, 904 P.2d 130, 137 this Court found the defendant had waived his claim that he could not introduce mitigating evidence during the sentencing stage of a non-capital trial; however, we noted that there was no constitutional violation because the defendant had the opportunity to introduce mitigating evidence and did not. Applegate did not address the issue of a right to individualized sentencing not based in the constitution. However, the opinion impliedly recognizes such a right.
¶ 5 Contrary to the majority‘s claim, Oklahoma‘s current statutory scheme does not preclude recognition of a right to individualized sentencing, or prevent this Court from implementing a procedure to protect that right. In fact, the statutes read as a whole support the use of individualized sentencing in determining an appropriate sentence. There are three categories in which the Legislature has commented on second stages in criminal trials (or aggravating and mitigating evidence): (1) the capital murder statutes; (2)
¶ 6 The death penalty statutes, and this Court‘s rulings interpreting those statutes, neither circumscribe nor prohibit a general recognition of the right to individualized sentencing, and an attempt to procedurally ad
¶ 7 Section 860.1 was enacted as a direct response to Harris v. State, 1962 OK CR 15, 369 P.2d 187, in which this Court set forth the two-stage procedure later adopted by the Legislature. The Legislature enacted the statute allowing enhancement with prior convictions,
¶ 8 Three statutes govern judge sentencing procedures.20 These statutes also address a narrow and unusual situation. Jury sentencing is the norm in Oklahoma. The Oklahoma constitution provides for unanimous jury sentencing in criminal felony cases. The statutes set forth various procedures for deliberations, verdict, etc., but provide no guidance regarding evidence to be presented in jury sentencing procedures beyond those generally governing the admissibility of evidence. Sections 973-975 were necessary to address the relatively rare instances where jurors do not recommend punishment. As the normal procedures could not apply under these circumstances, the Legislature had to specify procedures. These statutes carve out a judicial sentencing exception to the general rule of jury sentencing. The Legislature had to specifically delineate an entire process. In keeping with traditional statutory interpretation, I presume that the Legislature created this process by reflecting its understanding of common law jury practice, governed by the general statutes, and adapting it to judge sentencing situations.
¶ 9 The parties before this Court have argued that adoption of a second stage to allow for individualized sentencing usurps the legislative function. It does not. These arguments seem to assume that, as a matter of policy, unless the Legislature has explicitly required or promulgated a procedure, this Court has no ability to act. Understandably, no party offers a coherent explanation of this assumption. Rather, they appear to assume that courts cannot act unless a legislature has already commented on an issue by statute; that is, the legislature is the only legitimate source of law. This is not only incorrect, it is absurd. The state and federal
