On May 17, 2006, this Court issued its opinion in Taylor v. State,
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Section 893.13 prohibits the unauthorized possession, purchase, sale, manufacture, or delivery of a controlled substance; and the possession with intent to purchase, sell, manufacture, or deliver a controlled substance. In 2002, in response to the Florida Supreme Court’s interpretation of the statute in Chicane v. State,
893.101 Legislative findings and intent.—
(1) The Legislature finds that the cases of Scott v. State, Slip Opinion No. SC94701 [808 So.2d 166 ] (Fla.2002) and Chicane v. State,684 So.2d 736 (Fla.1996), holding that the state must prove that the defendant knew of the illicit nature of a controlled substance found in his or her actual or constructive possession, were contrary to legislative intent.
(2) The Legislature finds that knowledgе of the illicit nature of a controlled substance is not an element of any offense under this chapter. Lack of knowledge of the illicit nature of a controlled substance is an affirmative defense to the offenses of this chapter.
(3) In those instances in which a defendant asserts the affirmative defense described in this section, the possession of a controlled substаnce, whether actual or constructive, shall give rise to a permissive presumption that the possessor knew of the illicit nature of the substance. It. is the intent of the Legislature that, in those cases where such an affirmative defense is raised, the jury shall be instructed on the permissive presumption provided in this subsection.
After the legislature’s clarification of its legislative intent, that knowledge of the nature of the substance is not an element of the offense, but rather an affirmative defense that may be raised by the defendant, constitutional due process challenges were raised and ultimately rejected by the appellate courts across the state. See e.g., Williams v. State,
On July 27, 2011, a federal trial court judge issued a ruling in Shelton v. Department of Corrections,
Although the challenges raised by the thirty-nine defendants below were raised in Taylor and other cases decided across the state, the trial judge, who “presumed”
THE TRIAL COURT’S ORDER
A. The trial court’s failure to follow the law
Counsel for the defendants candidly concedes on appeal that the trial court’s presumptions, analysis, and conclusions were completely erroneous, but he agrees with the result. The result, however, wаs a dismissal of the charges based on the defendants’ facial constitutional challenge despite binding precedent from this Court and other district courts of appeal. That result can never be “the correct result.” The correct result would have been to deny the motions to dismiss on the authority of Taylor. The trial court was then free to express its disagreement with Taylor and to request reconsideration of the holding in Taylor en banc. While a lower court is free to disagree and to express its disagreement with an appellate court ruling, it is duty-bound to follow it. As the Florida Supreme Court has repeatedly articulated, “[t]he decision of the district courts of appeal represent the law of Florida unless and until they are overruled by this Court.” Stanfill v. State,
The purpose of this rule was explained by the Fourth District in State v. Hayes:
The District Courts of Appeal are required to follow Supreme Court decisions. As an adjunct to this rule it is logical and necessary in order to preserve stability and predictability in the law that, likewise, trial courts be required to follow the holdings of higher courts — District Courts of Appeal ... if the district court of the district in which the triаl court is located has decided the issue, the trial court is bound to follow it.
Pardo,
B. The trial court’s justification for failing to follow binding precedent
Perhaps recognizing its mandate to follow the law, the trial court justified its failure to do so based on a false “presumption” that, even if true, would not have provided the justification sought. The “presumption” relied on by the trial court was that although this Court in Taylor and the other district courts, such as the First District in Johnson and Harris, the Second District in Burnette, and the Fourth District in Wright, rejected facial challenges to the constitutionality of section 893.13, as amended by section .893.101, on due process grounds, none of these cases “particularizes the source of due process upon which it relies.”
Thus, the trial court reasoned: -
In the absence of such particularization I am obligated as a Florida trial court to presume that Florida appellate courts relied upon a Florida-law-based guarantee of due process.... No Florida case has decided the issue presently before me: whether § 893.13 is unconstitutional by operation of the Hth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.
(first emphasis added).
First, the relied on presumption was erroneous. Although the Taylor opinion makes no specific reference as to whether the analysis was performed under Florida or federal constitutional due process, a review of the briefs provided in the appellate record reflect that the claims and due process analysis were predicated on both the state and federal constitutions. Taylor, in his initial brief, prefaced his due process claim on the fundamental right under both federal and Florida law that no person shall be deprived of life or liberty without full due process of law; relied on a number of United States Supreme Court opinions addressing federal due process law; and argued these cases were controlling. The State’s response specifically addressed Taylor’s due process arguments, arguing that “the statute does not violate the due process clauses of the Florida and United States Constitutions.”
Second, the First District specifically relied on both Florida and United States Supreme Court cаses in addressing the substantive due process claim raised by the defendant in Johnson,
More importantly, whether this Court or the other district courts of appeal examined the facial constitutional due process challenges to this statute only under Florida law, or additionally considered federal law, is irrelevant. First, the due process provision of Florida’s constitution is patterned after the due process provision of the federal constitution. D.P. v. State,
[O]ur system of constitutional government in Florida is grounded on a principle of “robust individualism” and that our state constitutional rights thus provide greater freedom from governmental intrusion into the lives of citizens than do their federal counterparts:
Federal and state bills of rights thus serve distinct but complementary purposes. The federal Bill of Rights facilitates political and philosophical homogeneity among the basically heterogeneous states by securing, as a uniform minimum, the highest common denominator of freedom that can prudently be administered throughout all fifty states. The state bill of rights, on the other hand, express the ultimatе breadth of the common yearnings for freedom of each insular state population within our nation.... [T]he federal Constitution ... represents the floor for basic freedoms; the state constitution, the ceiling.
Armstrong v. Harris,
Thus, if this Court concluded in Taylor that section 893.13, as amended by section 893.101, did not violate Florida constitutional due process guarantees, then it necessarily follows that the amended statute also рassed federal constitutional due process muster.
C. The trial court relied on Shelton, a flawed federal trial court order
Rather than apply Florida decisional law, the trial court, instead, incorrectly concluded it was bound by an order issued by a federal trial court, and even if not bound, found the federal order persuasive. Specifically, the trial court found persuasive the Shelton court’s findings that: (1) section 893.13, as amended, creates strict liability crimes; (2) the due process challenge to section 893.13 must be analyzed under Staples; and (3) the statute fails under the Staples test. As was the federal trial court’s order, the circuit court trial judge’s analysis and conclusions are similarly flawed.
1. Section 893.13, as amended, does not create strict liability crimes.
In its order, the trial court boldly states: “[T]hat § 893.13 defines strict liability сrimes is really not open to discussion.” The trial court is incorrect. A strict liability statute imposes criminal liability regardless of fault. For example, statutory rape is a strict liability crime. See §§ 794.05, .021, Florida Statutes (2012); Hodge v. State,
Section 893.13 does not create strict liability crimes because, although scienter, or “mens rea,” is not an element of these offenses, the statute provides that the defendant’s lack of knowledge may be raised as an affirmative defense. See Flagg v. State,
Section 893.13, instead, creates general intent crimes. See Wright,
2. The analysis performed in Staples and the trial court are inapplicable to section 893.13.
As counsel for the defendants candidly concedes on appeal, the Staples analysis applied by the Shelton court and relied on by the trial court has no applicability in analyzing section 893.13 under thе defendants’ constitutional due process challenge. Unlike section 893.13, the Staples Court was tasked with the responsibility of construing a statute that was silent concerning the mens rea required to violate the statute. Staples,
After performing its analysis, the Staples Court examined the severity of the punishment, the attendant social stigma, and whether the statute punishes inherently legal activity, and concluded Congress did not intend to dispense with mens rea as an element to the statute at issue. The Court also noted that its “holding is a narrow one ... [and its] reasoning [was based] upon a commonsense evaluation of the nature of the particular device or substance Congress has subjected to regulation and the expectations that individuals may legitimately have in dealing with the regulated items.” Id. at 619,
The Staples “test” was crafted to assist courts in interpreting legislative intent when a statute is unclear as to whether mens rea is an element of the offense, not to analyze the constitutionality of a statute. Because the legislative intent in section 893.13 is clear, the Staples test is inapplicable, and the trial court’s lengthy analysis of the statute under Staples was erroneous.
THE DEFENDANTS’ DUE PROCESS CHALLENGE
In Taylor, this Court previously upheld the constitutionality of section 893.13, as amended, in a facial challenge brought under due process concerns identical to those raised in the thirty-nine motions filed in the trial court below and raised here on appeal. This panel is not free to disregard, or recede from, that
For examрle, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of sections 794.05 and 794.021, imposing strict liability for statutory rape where mens rea is not an element of the offense, and lack of knowledge or mistake may not be raised as an affirmative defense. Similarly in D.P.,
The United States Supreme Court simultaneously dealt with similar due process challenges to a federal statute prohibiting the sale or delivery of opium and cocaine where the statute did not require intent or knowledge as an element of the offense in United States v. Behrman,
Additionally, a party challenging the facial constitutionality of a statute must establish that there is “nо set of circumstances” under which the statute would be valid. United States v. Salerno,
CONCLUSION
The due process facial challenge raised in the instant cases was previously raised and decided by this Court in Taylor and by the other district courts of appeal in this state in Williams, Johnson, Harris, Tolbert, Wright, Smith, and Burnette. The trial court was therefore duty-bound to follow binding precedent, not ignore it.
Reversed.
Notes
. Nat'l Paint & Coatings Ass’n v. City of Chicago,
