Case Information
*1 #25865-a-LSW
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v. CHRIS L. JONES, Defendant and Appellant.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT BROOKINGS COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA * * * *
THE HONORABLE DAVID R. GIENAPP
Judge
* * * *
MARTY J. JACKLEY
Attorney General
DONALD E. TINKLEPAUGH
Assistant Attorney General
Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff
and appellee.
RICK A. RIBSTEIN of
McCann, Ribstein, & McCarty, PC
Brookings, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant
and appellant. * * * *
ARGUED OCTOBER 4, 2011 OPINION FILED 02/01/12 *2 WILBUR, Justice
[¶1.] Chris Jоnes entered into a plea agreement with the State. Under the terms of the plea agreement, Jones agreed to plead guilty to three counts of second- degree rape and one count of kidnapping. After sentencing, Jones filed a motion to reconsider the sentence based upon an alleged violation of the plea agreement by the State. The trial court granted the motion and held a resentencing hearing. At the hearing, the trial court denied Jones’s oral motion for a different sentencing judge. Jones appeals, arguing that he was entitled to resentencing before a different judge and that his sentence is cruel and unusual punishment. We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
[¶2.] Jones confessed to raping three women during a two-month period in Brookings County, Sоuth Dakota. Following his confession, the State charged Jones in a nine-count indictment. Before trial, the State wrote Jones’s counsel a letter containing a proposed plea agreement. Under the proposed plea agreement, the State would dismiss five of the charges against Jones in exchange for Jones’s guilty plea to the four remaining counts. Specifically, the letter provided:
In order to avoid the trial and further emotional trauma to the three victims, on behalf of the Stаte I would propose that Jones enter pleas of guilty to Counts 2, 4, 5, and 7 with the remaining 5 Counts being dismissed. Additionally, the State would recommend a cap of seventy (70) years maximum . That is not to exceed seventy (70) years of unsuspended penitentiary time. Of course this wоuld be only a recommendation, but I do not believe [the trial court judge] has ever gone beyond that which the State has recommended as a cap and it certainly could be less.
(Emphasis added.)
[¶3.] Jones accepted the plea agreement and entеred guilty pleas. The State placed the final plea agreement on the record at the change of plea hearing. However, approximately six weeks later at sentencing, the State failed to verbalize the plea agreеment. Jones did not object to the State’s failure to verbalize the agreement.
[¶4.] Three weeks after sentencing, Jones filed a motion to reconsider the sentence. In reviewing the motion, the trial court found that the State’s failure to verbalize the plea agreement to the court at the time of sentencing was a material breach of the plea agreement and granted Jones’s motion. At resentencing, Jones made an oral motion for a new sentencing judge. Jones cited three deсisions by this Court for the proposition that the remedy for a breach of a plea agreement is resentencing before a different judge. The trial court denied the motion. At resentencing, Jones received a sentence totaling 15 years less than his first sеntence, but still in excess of the 70 years the State recommended pursuant to the plea agreement.
ANALYSIS
[¶5.] 1. According to Puckett v. United States , we review for plain
error a forfeited claim that the State has violated the terms of a plea agreement.
[¶6.] Before determining the merits of Jones’s argument, wе must first
determine the appropriate standard of review. Both parties assert that this is a
constitutional issue which this Court should review de novo. Despite the parties’
agreement, “[o]nce appellate jurisdiction is established . . .
the court has to decide
. .
. under what framework, scrutiny, or division of labor it will review [the issues].”
*4
Oldham-Ramona Sch. Dist. No. 39-5 v. Ust
,
[¶7.] In
Puckett
, the Supreme Court held that the automatiс reversal rule
described in
Santobello v. New York
,
[¶8.]
South Dakota has adopted Rule 52(b), and this Court, like the United
States Supreme Court, has applied plain error review to issues “not preserved for
appellate review.”
State v. Thomas
,
[¶9.] 2. Because Jones did not contemporaneously object to the
State’s violation of the plea agreement, he forfeited his claim. To preserve a breach of plea agreement claim for appeal, the Supreme
Court in
Puckett
required a “contemporaneous objection” to the prosecutorial breach
at the trial level.
See Puckett,
The Supreme Court in Puckett made clear that in order to obtain a de novo review on appeal оf a breach of plea agreement claim, a defendant must raise such an objection at the time of sentencing to allow the district court the opportunity to correct the alleged error. . . . Applying a de novo review to [the defendаnt’s] claim absent a contemporaneous objection at the time of sentencing would also undermine the concern expressed by the Supreme Court in Puckett that litigants in this situation would be encouraged to “sandbag” and raise the error only if the result is not in their fаvor.
Id. at 577. Here, as in Smith , Jones did not object at sentencing and give the trial
court the opportunity to correct the alleged error before imposing a sentence.
Moreover, if we treated Jones’s motion to reconsider as timely and reviewed his
appeal de novo, we would ratify Jones’s decision tо “wait[] to see if the sentence . . .
strikes him as satisfactory” before raising his objection.
See Puckett,
556 U.S. at
___,
[¶13.] 3. Jоnes has not demonstrated that the violation of the plea
agreement resulted in plain error.
“We invoke our discretion under the plain error rule cautiously and
only in ‘exceptional circumstances.’”
State v. Bowker
,
that the State’s failure to verbalize the plea agreement to the trial court at the time
of sentencing constituted a material breach of the plea agreement.* We agrеe. If
the State enters into a plea agreement to recommend a particular sentence, the
State must make the recommendation at sentencing.
Vanden Hoek v. Weber
, 2006
S.D. 102, ¶ 24,
rights. As we have previously noted, “[o]nce an accused agrees to plead guilty in
reliance upon a prosecutor’s promise to perform a future act, the accused’s due
process rights demand fulfillment of the bargain.”
Id.
¶ 14 (quoting
State v.
Waldner
,
Nelson
,
[¶17.]
Specifically, Jones has not shown that the State’s error affected the
outcome of the proceedings where, as in this case, the trial court, after finding that
there had been a material breach of the plea agreement used its discretion to grant
Jones’s motion to reconsidеr. At resentencing, the State fulfilled the terms of the
plea agreement by explicitly setting forth the terms of the plea agreement including
its recommendation of a 70-year cap. Without prejudice, the error does not “affect
substantial rights” under the third prong of plain error review and “[an appellate
court] ha[s] no authority to correct it.”
Olano,
the United States Constitution or the South Dakotas Constitution’s prohibition of
cruel and unusual punishment. “[W]hen a sentence is challenged on constitutional
grounds as being cruel and unusual, we аpply the proportionality standard from
State v. Bonner
,
[¶21.] Moreover, the sentence is not grossly disproportionate given Jones’s conduct. In arriving at Jones’s sentence, the trial court balanced Jones’s poor upbringing with his crimes. The trial court noted that Jones subjected three young women to violеnt sexual crimes. A psychosexual analysis of Jones determined that Jones was at a high risk for reoffending. Given Jones’s conduct, and that the sentence is well within the statutory maximums for his crimes, the sentence is not grossly disproportionate. Affirmed. GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and KONENKAMP, ZINTER, and
SEVERSON, Justices, concur.
