STATE of Florida, Petitioner,
v.
Howard Mark SACHS, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*49 Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen. and Joseph R. Bryant, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tampa, for petitioner.
Bruce Rogow, Fort Lauderdale, and Lloyd C. Mosley, of Mosley and Evans, P.A., Clearwater, for respondent.
BARKETT, Justice.
We have for review State v. Sachs,
While operating a motor vehicle, respondent collided with another vehicle on the Courtney Campbell Causeway in Pinellas County. The driver of the second car then left his vehicle, but noticed that his passenger, Kenneth Hill, was mumbling and groaning. A short while later, a pedestrian named Todd Rosenbaum attempted to assist Hill. A third vehicle, however, struck the second car in the passenger side, killing Rosenbaum instantly. This occurred even though several other vehicles successfully had maneuvered around the accident. Hill later was found dead by paramedics. Upon examination, medical examiners were unable to determine whether Hill had died during the initial or subsequent collision.
The drivers of all three vehicles tested positive for blood alcohol in varying degrees, although respondent's was the highest. In two tests, respondent showed a blood alcohol level of.173 and .160, respectively. In Florida, a driver is presumptively intoxicated if his or her blood alcohol exceeds.100. § 316.1934, Fla. Stat. (1985).
Respondent subsequently was charged by information with two counts of manslaughter caused by an intoxicated driver, see § 316.1931(2), Fla. Stat., and two counts of manslaughter caused by culpable negligence. See § 782.07, Fla. Stat. None of the other drivers were charged. On March 10, 1986, respondent pled no contest to the first two charges, was adjudicated guilty, and was sentenced to four years of community control. Respondent also was ordered to make restitution, perform community service work, pay an assessment of $2,000 to the Crimes Compensation Fund, and refrain from consuming any alcoholic beverages during the term of his community control.
This sentence constituted a downward departure from the guidelines recommendation of three to seven years incarceration. As reasons for this departure, the trial court gave the following: (1) that respondent had no prior record; (2) that the facts of the case cast considerable doubt on respondent's responsibility for the death of the two victims; (3) that respondent posed no danger to society; (4) that respondent would continue to suffer a great deal of remorse and shame; and (5) that respondent's use of alcohol was an isolated and not a customary event.
On appeal, the Second District rejected without analysis all of the reasons but the *50 first. However, as respondent concedes, this Court subsequently rejected lack of a prior record as a reason for downward departure. Sanders v. State,
We previously have stated that the trial court lacks discretion to depart based on factors already taken into account by the guidelines. State v. Mischler,
However, the trial court's remaining reasons, under the facts in the present case, are a different matter. We held in Vanover v. State,
Accordingly, we cannot say it is improper also to consider in mitigation the manner of the commission of the crime if it has not been factored. The state does not dispute that this respondent may not have been the immediate cause of the deaths that occurred in this accident. We believe that a judge does in fact have discretion to take into account a factor such as this, especially in the context of a strict-liability criminal statute such as the DUI manslaughter law. Although respondent is held strictly accountable under this statute, the sequence of events that resulted in the deaths in this instance tends to show a lesser degree of moral culpability. The guidelines manifestly do not deal with this consideration, nor do they prohibit a judge from weighing it. If based on clear and convincing evidence, this factor thus could, and in this case does, constitute a reason for a downward departure. See Mischler,
Similarly, we agree that a downward departure may be based on a finding that the defendant poses no future threat to society and that his misconduct was isolated. We noted in Whitehead v. State,
*51 Although constitutional considerations generally mean that lack of remorse cannot constitute a valid reason for an upward departure,[*] we conclude that clear and convincing evidence of actual remorse also may constitute a valid reason for a downward departure. Such a factor is not already figured into the guidelines nor prohibited by them, nor is it an element of the offense. Thus, where established by clear and convincing proof, this factor constitutes a valid reason for downward departure.
In this case clear and convincing evidence exists of the petitioner's remorse, his lesser degree of culpability, his nondangerousness and the isolated nature of the proscribed conduct. These factors are neither taken into account by the guidelines nor prohibited by them and are not elements of the crime itself, and thus are valid factors considered by the trial court. Mischler.
Moreover, we conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the trial court would have imposed the departure sentence even in the absence of the invalid factor. We thus quash the decision of the district court and remand with instructions that the result reached by the trial court shall be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
McDONALD, C.J., and OVERTON, EHRLICH, SHAW, GRIMES and KOGAN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[*] This especially is true where lack of remorse is inferred from a defendant's exercise of constitutionally protected rights or assertions of innocence. See Mischler,
