STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JONATHAN DAVID PATTERSON
No. M2016-01716-SC-R11-CD
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE
December 10, 2018
September 19, 2018 Session Heard at Chattanooga¹
Appeal by Permission from the Court of Criminal Appeals
Criminal Court for Putnam County
Nos. 15-CR-730, 15-CR-731, 15-CR-672, 15-CR-821
David A. Patterson, Judge
CORNELIA A. CLARK, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JEFFREY S. BIVINS, C.J., and SHARON G. LEE, HOLLY KIRBY, and ROGER A. PAGE, JJ., joined.
Seth Clayton Crabtree, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jonathan David Patterson.
Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andree S. Blumstein, Solicitor General; Alexander C. Vey, Assistant Attorney General; Bryant C. Dunaway, District Attorney General; Bret Gunn, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The relevant facts are not disputed. In July 2015, the defendant, Jonathan David Patterson, broke into several cars and a building in Putnam County. He stole two vehicles and also stole property from insidе the vehicles and the building. When the police apprehended the defendant with some of the stolen property in his possession, he led them to more of the stolen property and to several locations where the crimes were committed. He also made statements to the police implicating himself in the crimes.
Thereafter, the Putnam County Grand Jury returned four indictments charging the defendant with a total of forty-two offenses.2 On May 10, 2016, the defendant pleaded guilty to twenty of the charged offenses, including two counts of theft over $10,000, both Class C felonies;3 one count of theft over $1,000, and one count of burglary of a building other than a habitation, both Class D felonies;4 and sixteen counts of automobile
At the July 19, 2016 sentencing hearing, the State introduced a presentence report and certified copies of judgments showing the defendant‘s nine prior felony convictions. Five of the defendant‘s prior felony convictions—a conviction for theft of property between $1,000 and $10,000, three forgery convictions, and a conviction for passing a forged instrument—were based on conduct that oсcurred in 2007. The remaining four prior felony convictions—burglary, two convictions of theft of property over $1,000, and aggravated burglary—were based on conduct that occurred in 2010. The presentence report also reflected a number of misdemeanor convictions and multiple probation revocations. The State offered no additional evidence.
The defendant‘s sister testified on his behalf. She said that the defendant had a drug problem, had been using drugs when he committed these crimes, and had “made bad decisions.” She asked the trial court to exercise leniency in sentencing. She emphasized that, although the defendant had committed crimes in the past, the defendant had never hurt anyone, and she declared that he “would never hurt anyone.” She believed that if the trial court granted the defendant “leniency,” he would “make a change and move forward.”
The thirty-four-year-old defendant exercised his right of allocution.7 The defendant apologized to the victims and to his own family for his “acts of stupidity.” He admitted being “on drugs” and expressed his deep regret for the “very irresponsible
As for the appropriate sentences, the State and the defendant agreed that the defendant should be classified as a Career Offender on the two Class D felonies and on the sixteen Class E felonies to which he had pleaded guilty.8 They also agreed that his classification as a Career Offender mandated the maximum Range III sentencе of twelve years for each Class D felony and six years for each Class E felony with sixty percent release eligibility applicable to these felonies.9 As for the two Class C felonies, the State and the defendant agreed that the defendant should be classified as a Range III Persistent Offender based on his prior convictions and that this classification carried a ten-to-fifteen-year sentencing range with forty-five percent release eligibility.10 Concerning the appropriate sentence within that applicable sentencing range, the State asked the trial court to apply two enhancement factors, specifically: (1) the defendant‘s рrevious history of criminal convictions or criminal behavior, and (2) the defendant‘s failure to comply with the conditions of a sentence involving release into the community.11 The State also
The defendant agreed that he had numerous prior convictions but also emphasized that none were for “violent crimes.” The defendant urged the trial court to consider favorably his cooperation with and assistance to the police and the fact that it had resulted in almost all of the stolen property being restored to the victims. He pointed out that not a single victim had appeared to testify at the sentencing hearing and that none had submitted an impact statement to the court. The defendant asked the trial court to consider three mitigating factors, specifically: (1) that he had not threatened or caused any serious bodily injury, (2) that he had assisted the authorities, and (3) that he had expressed remorse for his actions.12
As required by the defendant‘s classification as a Career Offender, the trial court imposed six-year sentences for each of the Class E felonies and twelve-year sentences for each of the Class D felonies, all with sixty percent release eligibility. As for the Class C felonies, the trial court considered the two enhancement factors the State identified, attributing “great weight” to the defendant‘s history of criminal convictions. It also considered the mitigating factors the defendant identified. Ultimately, the trial court imposed a thirteen-year sentence with forty-five percent release eligibility for each Class C felony.
As to the manner of service of the sentences, the trial court agreed with the State that the defendant‘s extensive record of criminal activity warranted consecutive service of at least some of the sentences. The trial court ordered the sentences in each felony
The defendant timely filed a notice of appeal. See
The defendant alleged in his
The triаl court held a hearing, but the defense offered no proof in support of the motion. The trial court described
The Court of Criminal Appeals consolidated thе defendant‘s appeal as of right with the State‘s appeal on the
II. Standard of Review
The standard of review in an appeal from a trial court‘s decision on a
III. Analysis
The trial court may deny a
“The intent of
The first Tennessee Supreme Court decision to interpret
Occasions inеvitably will occur when a conscientious judge, after reflection or upon receipt of new probationary reports or other information, will feel that he has been too harsh or has failed to give weight to mitigating factors which properly should have been taken into account. In such cases the interest of justice and sound judicial administration will be served by permitting the trial judge to reduce the sentence within a reasonable time.
Id. at 154 (quoting Dist. Attorney for N. Dist. v. Superior Court, 172 N.E.2d 245, 250–51 (Mass. 1961)).
One justice dissented in Hodges from the majority‘s broad statement that
Two years after Hodges, this Court decided State v. Hargrove, 1993 WL 300759, Nos. 01S01-9203-CC-00035, 01S01-9203-CC-00036, 03S01-9203-CC-00026 (Tenn. Aug. 9, 1993).20 Hargrove involved three cases consolidated for appeal, and this Court аgain divided four-to-one, with the justice who dissented in Hodges authoring Hargrove and the justice who authored Hodges dissenting in Hargrove. The issue in Hargrove concerned “the scope of authority of an appellate court to alter the terms of a sentence that was imposed as the result of an agreed guilty plea in the trial court.” Id. at *1. The State suggested that in sua sponte reducing the sentences in Hargrove the intermediate
Like the dissenting justice, the Court of Criminal Appeals soon also described Hargrove as a retreat from the broad language of Hodges concerning the relationship between Rules 11 and 35. State v. McDonald, 893 S.W.2d 945, 947 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994) (observing that, in Hargrove, “our Supreme Court retreated from its language in Hodges“). In McDonald, the defendant pleaded guilty in exchange for a specific sentence. Id. at 946. Thereafter, the defendant timely filed a
Unfortunately, the standard derived from the dissenting opinion in Hodges and applied by the Court of Criminal Appeals in McDonald has not been limited, as it should have been, to
Because the dicta in Ruiz has contributed significantly to the erroneous extension of the McDonald standard to all
The defendant pleaded guilty without an agreement as to sentence, and therefore, had no obligation to comply with the McDonald standard. The plea did not limit the trial court‘s discretion under
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is reinstated. Costs of this appeal are taxеd to the State of Tennessee, for which execution may issue if necessary.
CORNELIA A. CLARK, JUSTICE
Notes
If the defendant pleads guilty . . . to a charged offense . . . the plea agreement may specify that the district attorney general will . . . recommend, or agree not to oppose the defendant‘s request for, a particular sentence, with the understanding that such recommendation or request is not binding on the court . . . .
The length of sentence that [the defendant] is presently to serve is 16.65 years. That‘s the effective sentence. A thirty[-]one year sentence, sixty percent, sixty percent and forty[-]five percent, as I said. When we add those together, it‘s 16.65. The court believes that is excessive. And the court is going to change its ruling and its judgment to show that the defendant will receive an eighteen[-]year sentence and those will be at sixty percent. And how the court is going to come to that decision is to run the D felony, which is the burglary, concurrent with the C felonies. The two C felonies are running concurrently with each other and the D felony will run concurrent with it. The [sixteen] auto burglaries, which are the six[-]year sentences at sixty percent will run consecutively then. So we have a sixty percent sentence with all of them and what we have then is an effective twelve[-]year sentence at sixty-percent. Because the thirteen[-]year sentence at forty[-]five is swallowed up by the twelve[-]year sentence at sixty and then the auto burglaries a six[-]year sentence is again a sixty percent sentence and so we have an eighteen[-]year sentence, all of those yeаrs to be run at sixty[-] percent for an effective 10.8 prior to release eligibility. That is a reduction of almost six years, 5.85 years, reduction of thirteen years from the thirty[-]one, but effectively a reduction of almost six years . . . .
