Case Information
*2 Before: FISHER, CHAGARES and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges . (Filed:May 20, 2009)
Robert L. Eberhardt [Argued]
Office of the United States Attorney
700 Grant Street
Suite 4000
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Attorney for Appellant
Thomas W. Patton [Argued]
Office of Federal Public Defender
1001 State Street
1111 Renaissance Centre
Erie, PA 16501-0000
Attorney for Appellee
____________ OPINION OF THE COURT ____________
HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge .
In this appeal we consider whether a burglary conviction under an Ohio statute in effect in 1991 constitutes a violent felony under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA).
I. Barry Wayne Lewis, a convicted felon, was indicted under 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(e), after he was found carrying a rifle in Warren, Pennsylvania. At the time of his arrest, Lewis had three prior felony convictions, including assault with a deadly weapon in California, and abduction and burglary in Ohio. After Lewis pleaded guilty to the firearm charge, the parties disagreed regarding the appropriate sentence. The Government sought a mandatory minimum of 15 years imprisonment, arguing that Lewis’s Ohio burglary conviction was his third “violent felony” under ACCA, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). Lewis argued otherwise and the District Court agreed with him, holding that the Ohio burglary conviction was not a qualifying offense under ACCA. The Government filed this timely appeal and we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b).
II.
*4
At issue is ACCA’s “residual clause,” which has been the subject of Supreme
Court review each of the past three years.
See James v. United States
,
A.
We analyze the Ohio statute using a categorical approach,
see United States v.
Taylor
,
B. This case presents a convoluted factual scenario that complicates our categorical assessment. Lewis initially was charged with aggravated burglary under O HIO R EV . C ODE A NN . § 2911.11 (1993) (Section 11), which stated in pertinent part:
(A) No person, by force, stealth, or deception, shall trespass in an occupied structure . . . or in a separately secured or separately occupied portion thereof, with purpose to commit therein any theft offense . . . or any felony, when any of the following apply:
. . .
(3) The occupied structure involved is the permanent or temporary habitation of any person, in which at the time any person is present or likely to be present.
*6 Lewis did not plead guilty to the original indictment; instead, he pleaded guilty to the lesser offense of burglary under O HIO R EV . C ODE A NN . § 2911.12 (1993) (Section 12), which stated in pertinent part:
(A) No person, by force, stealth, or deception, shall do any of the following: (1) Trespass in an occupied structure or in a separately secured or separately occupied portion thereof, with purpose to commit therein any theft offense or any felony.
Lewis’s guilty plea to burglary under Section 12(A)(1) was not made pursuant to a superseding indictment; rather, the original indictment for aggravated burglary was altered to reflect the plea deal. Consequently, the plea reflected all of the averments in the original indictment, along with the amendment to the indictment, which substituted burglary under Section 12 for aggravated burglary under Section 11. This created an anomaly because the averments in the indictment sufficed for aggravated burglary, but Lewis pleaded guilty only to burglary.
Both Sections 11 and 12 rely on the definition of “occupied structure” found in O HIO R EV . C ODE A NN . § 2901.01 (1993):
(C) “Occupied structure” means any house, building, outbuilding, watercraft, aircraft, railroad, railroad car, truck, trailer, tent, or other structure, vehicle, or shelter, or any portion thereof, to which any of the following applies: (1) It is maintained as a permanent or temporary dwelling, even though it is temporarily unoccupied and whether or not any person is actually present.
(2) At the time, it is occupied as the permanent or temporary habitation of any person, whether or not any person is actually present.
(3) At the time, it is specially adapted for the overnight accommodation of any person, whether or not any person is actually present.
(4) At the time, any person is present or likely to be present in it. “Occupied structure” is defined partly in terms of “dwellings” and “habitations,” a distinction which is significant in our evaluation of the risk of injury posed by Lewis’s offense. Under Ohio law, dwellings and habitations are residential in nature, and a dwelling is a temporarily vacant habitation: “[a] structure which is dedicated and intended for residential use, and which is not presently occupied as a person’s habitation, but which has neither been permanently abandoned nor vacant for a prolonged period of time, can be regarded as a structure ‘maintained’ as a dwelling.” State v. Davis , No.
90050,
Relying on Ohio caselaw interpreting the two burglary statutes, Lewis argues that
his conviction cannot be classified as a crime of violence because there was little chance
that another person would be present at the time of his burglary. The Government
counters by arguing that our categorical assessment of burglary must ignore the
aggravated burglary statute. The Government cites
United States v. Lane
,
C.
To categorically assess the risk of physical injury posed by Lewis’s offense, we
must first determine how broadly to read the statute.
See Chambers
,
In
Chambers
, the Supreme Court applied the categorical approach to a similarly
disjunctive statute involving “escape” under Illinois law. Although the charging
document identified the particular subsection under which Chambers was convicted, the
Supreme Court grouped together four subsections of the statute in its categorical
assessment, focusing on “the statutory phrases setting forth various kinds of failure to
report (or to return) [to prison],” which “describe[d] roughly similar forms of behavior
. . . [and] amount[ed] to variations on a single theme.”
Chambers
,
Lewis was convicted under Section 12(A)(1), it is proper to focus exclusively on that
subsection. Therefore, we will categorically assess the “conduct encompassed by the
elements of [Section 12(A)(1)], in the ordinary case.”
James
,
D. Having constrained our categorical inquiry to Section 12(A)(1), we next consider the particular elements of the offense. Lewis argues that our categorical assessment of Section 12(A)(1) must be limited to a certain type of “occupied structure.” The District Court agreed, finding that Lewis’s conduct involved intrusion into a habitation as opposed to a dwelling or other edifice that would qualify as an occupied structure under § 2909.01(C). This assumption is crucial to Lewis’s argument that the language of Ohio’s two burglary statutes, along with Ohio precedent interpreting them, dictate that there was little chance of anyone being present at the time of his offense. Because it was highly *10 unlikely that anyone would be present, Lewis argues, the risk of physical injury arising from his conduct was greatly diminished and his offense does not qualify under ACCA’s residual clause.
To determine whether Lewis’s burglary necessarily involved intrusion into a habitation, we first consider the Addendum to the Presentence Investigation Report (PSR), which states: “[s]ince no amended indictment is available, the only charging documents available to the Court to determine if the defendant’s burglary offense constitutes a predicate offense for ACCA purposes is the original indictment and the February 12, 1991 journal entry” recording Lewis’s plea. PSR Addendum 4. That journal entry refers to the original indictment, which charged Lewis with aggravated burglary as follows:
the defendant, by force, stealth, or deception, trespassed in an occupied structure . . . or in a separately secured or separately occupied portion thereof, with the purpose to commit therein a theft offense . . . or a felony, and the occupied structure involved is [a] permanent or temporary habitation . . . in which, at the time, any person was present or likely to be present.
Appellee’s Supp. App. 14.
The journal entry also states that “the prosecution’s motion to amend indictment to read ‘burglary’ is granted.” Id. at 15. The record demonstrates that the only change made in the amended indictment was replacing aggravated burglary (Section 11) with burglary (Section 12). Finally, the journal entry states that “defendant retracts his/her former plea *11 of not guilty . . . and for plea to said indictment says he/she is guilty of burglary, RC 2911.12, as charged in the amended indictment .” Id. (emphasis added).
Though not a charging document itself, we find that the journal entry is a
“comparable judicial record,”
Shepard
,
If we were to take the journal entry and indictment at face value, Lewis would be
held accountable for both intrusion into a habitation
and
the actual or likely presence of
another person in the habitation. This would violate Ohio law, which provides that when
both habitation and physical presence are involved, the crime is aggravated burglary
under Section 11, not burglary under Section 12.
State v. Wilson
,
In
Wilson
, the Ohio Supreme Court explained that Section 11 required both
intrusion into a habitation
and
the likely presence of another person, while either fact
*12
alone was sufficient under Section 12(A)(1). To avoid the equal protection problem
inherent in punishing identical conduct differently under separate statutes,
Wilson
held
that a conviction under Section 12(A)(1) must involve only a habitation or the likely
presence of another, not both.
Id.
at 747-50 (reading § 2909.01 disjunctively). The court
[5]
also avoided a potential due process problem by explicitly rejecting a presumption that
intrusion into a habitation necessarily involves the likelihood of presence, stating that “a
structure can be one that was occupied as a permanent or temporary habitation without
being one . . . where at the time anyone is present or likely to be present.”
Id.
at 750.
Regardless of the persuasive force of this distinction, we are bound to follow Ohio law on
this point.
See James
,
The District Court noted that since
Wilson
, Ohio courts have interpreted “likely
presence” to be “virtually coterminous with the concept of ‘potential presence.’” App. 93.
See, e.g., State v. Lockhart
,
67238,
Lewis’s argument would hold water if the record made clear that his conduct
involved intrusion into a habitation, but it does not. As we have noted, the indictment
charges Lewis with trespass into an occupied structure that is a permanent or temporary
habitation in which one was present, or likely to be present. Because Lewis did not plead
guilty to aggravated burglary under Section 11, however, we cannot hold him liable for
both charges in the indictment. Rather, we will proceed to consider the other documents
permissible under
Shepard
, and “any explicit factual finding by the trial judge to which
the defendant assented.”
Shepard
,
At Lewis’s two sentencing hearings, the District Court presumed that Lewis broke into a habitation. This assumption was apparently based on the PSR, which described the facts of Lewis’s offense as follows:
Upon arriving on the scene, the police found Allen Kvatt in the apartment which belonged to Edelbert Cross. A neighbor of Mr. Cross informed the police that Mr. Cross had been taken to the hospital a day previously for a leg and foot infection, and shortly thereafter, Mr. Kvatt, who was in the apartment at that time, and another male, later identified as [Lewis], had illegally entered the apartment and had been there ever since. Mr. Kvatt informed the police that he and [Lewis] had broken into the apartment the previous day
PSR at ¶ 34.
The foregoing averments are relevant to our categorical inquiry because we have
held that the PSR is a permissible
Shepard
document to the extent that the defendant
concedes facts stated therein.
Siegel
,
Ohio precedent on the distinction between habitation and dwelling is sparse. We have not found, and the parties do not cite, any cases defining precisely how long an occupant must be gone to transform a habitation into a dwelling. Nor is it apparent whether the distinction is based on the expected or actual length of the absence, or if Mr. Cross’s hospitalization was the type of absence that qualifies. Given this ambiguity, the Shepard documents are insufficient for us to draw a conclusion on this point. We would have to dig well beneath the available documents and engage in judicial factfinding *15 contrary to S hepard and Siegel , to determine whether the circumstances of Mr. Cross’s hospitalization rendered the apartment a dwelling.
In sum, Lewis’s amended indictment avers element A and element B for an offense that by its terms encompasses only one element or the other. We must assume that Lewis’s conduct involved either intrusion into a habitation or the likely presence of another person (and not both), but the categorical approach requires that we make no assumption about which it was at this point.
E. Although we decline to narrow the scope of our inquiry strictly to violations of Section 12(A)(1) involving habitations, the foregoing Shepard documents and Ohio precedent do allow us to narrow the inquiry somewhat. On its face, Section 12(A)(1) encompasses intrusions into any occupied structure. By definition, this includes: (1) habitations, whether or not there is a likelihood of presence; (2) dwellings, whether or not there is a likelihood of presence; (3) structures specially adapted for overnight accommodation, whether or not there is a likelihood of presence; and (4) any other structure, only if there is a likelihood of presence. § 2909.01(C). Excluding certain of these instances from the scope of our inquiry may affect our categorical assessment, because likelihood of presence bears on the risk of physical injury posed by the offense. We find it proper to narrow the scope of our inquiry under Section 12(A)(1) in two respects.
First,
Wilson
makes clear that an intrusion into a habitation must be
aggravated
burglary if it involves the likelihood of presence. Therefore, Section 12(A)(1) only
encompasses intrusions into habitations that do
not
involve presence. The Government
objects that
Wilson
is irrelevant insofar as it relies on Section 11, and any consideration
thereof is an impermissible excursion beyond the categorical approach. This argument
misconstrues
Taylor’s
categorical mandate. Statutory provisions do not exist in a
vacuum, divorced from their overarching legislative schemes; they must be read as a
whole and in context.
See FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co.
,
Second, the PSR makes clear that Lewis’s offense involved either a habitation or a dwelling, so the categorical inquiry must exclude other structures. Therefore, our inquiry *17 is limited to violations of Section 12(A)(1) involving: (1) habitations, only if there is no likelihood of presence; and (2) dwellings, whether or not there is a likelihood of presence.
III.
Having defined the scope of our inquiry, we must assess the risk of physical injury
posed by the foregoing conduct in the “ordinary case.” The categorical approach requires
us to make a highly abstract, somewhat speculative determination in this regard. In
United States v. Chambers
,
Whatever the merits of the aforementioned observations, ACCA nevertheless requires us to make such judgments given the limited tools at our disposal. In *18 categorically assessing the risk of physical injury posed by Section 12(A)(1), our judgments and assumptions are similar to those made by the Supreme Court in James :
Indeed, the risk posed by an attempted burglary that can serve as the basis for an ACCA enhancement may be even greater than that posed by a typical completed burglary. All burglaries begin as attempted burglaries. But ACCA only concerns that subset of attempted burglaries where the offender has been apprehended, prosecuted, and convicted. This will typically occur when the attempt is thwarted by some outside intervenor – be it a property owner or law enforcement officer. Many completed burglaries do not involve such confrontations. But attempted burglaries often do; indeed, it is often just such outside intervention that prevents the attempt from ripening into completion.
We turn, finally, to this analysis.
*19
A.
It is important to note at the outset that the “ordinary case” of Lewis’s conduct
must involve habitations as opposed to dwellings. Of the 110 Ohio cases during the
relevant time frame (1991-1995) that reference Section 12 burglary, only one involves a
dwelling. In that case, the defendant broke into the vacant portion of a duplex while the
occupant was in jail.
State v. McLemore
, No. 95CA006037, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS
3815 (Ohio Ct. App. Aug. 30, 1995). The overwhelming majority of cases involve
intrusions into habitations.
Cf. United States v. Mayer
,
2009) (assessing ordinary case of Oregon burglary offense based on review of state court decisions applying the statute). This is intuitive, given that Ohio law defines dwellings as an extremely narrow subset of habitations. See Section II.B, supra . Because the ordinary case involves habitations, and intrusions into habitations involving likelihood of presence are excluded from our inquiry by Wilson , the ultimate issue becomes whether trespass by force, stealth, or deception into a habitation with purpose to commit a felony or theft ordinarily poses a serious potential risk of physical injury to another, when there is no likelihood of presence .
B.
By definition, crimes involving no chance of another person being present seem to
pose no risk of physical injury. However, the Supreme Court has stated that the risk of
injury associated with burglary arises not necessarily from confrontation by an occupant,
but also from confrontation by “a police officer, or a bystander who comes to investigate.
That is, the risk arises not from the completion of the burglary, but from the possibility
that an innocent person might appear while the crime is in progress.”
James
,
But contrary to the Government’s reading of “presence in a structure,” Ohio courts
have read this element broadly.
See
Section II.D,
supra
.
See also State v. Green
, 480
N.E.2d 1128, 1132 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984) (“A person is likely to be present when a
consideration of all the circumstances would seem to justify a logical expectation that a
person
could
be present.”) (emphasis added);
State v. Kilby
,
LEXIS 2781, at *12 (Ohio Ct. App. Jun. 30, 2008); State v. Blackmon , No. 15099, 1992 WL 2945, at *5 (Ohio Ct. App. Jan. 2, 1992). Although the Government challenges this characterization of Ohio law, it does not refute the reasoning behind these cases or offer any authority to the contrary. See Appellant’s Br. 23 (stating without support that “the likely presence concept of [Ohio’s] aggravated burglary offense . . . is limited to occupants”). Because the offense is narrowly defined to exclude situations with the *21 greatest potential for confrontation, Ohio burglary involving no likelihood of presence poses less risk of physical injury than typical burglary.
In sum, Lewis’s offense by definition involves very little chance of confrontation
by occupants, neighbors, or relatives. The possibility of being confronted by the police
still creates some minute risk of physical injury, but the risk is greatly diminished
compared to the risk posed by the conduct at issue in
James
, and to Ohio burglary
involving likelihood of presence.
Cf. Mayer
,
Under the categorical approach, the ordinary case of Lewis’s offense involves intrusion into a habitation with no likelihood of presence. Absent the likely presence of another, we hold that the risk of physical injury posed by conduct violative of Section 12(A)(1) is too diminished to satisfy ACCA’s residual clause. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment of the District Court.
Notes
[1] Although burglary is a specifically enumerated violent felony under ACCA
§ 924(e)(2)(B), the Government does not argue that Lewis’s offense falls under this
provision because the Ohio statute implicated here is broader than the “generic” definition
of burglary established by
United States v. Taylor
,
[2] In cases involving disjunctive statutes, such as the Ohio statute at issue here, we
have recharacterized
Taylor’s
categorical approach as a “modified” categorical approach,
which signals some degree of factual inquiry into the underlying crime.
See Singh v.
Ashcroft
,
[3] The Government places much weight on Lane , but the Ohio Supreme Court is the final arbiter of Ohio law, and we agree with Lewis that Lane misinterpreted the statute’s requirements.
[4] Unlike subsection (A)(1), subsections (A)(2) and (A)(3) necessarily involve both intrusion into a habitation and the likely presence of another person. Moreover, each subsection is classified as a felony of a different degree.
[5] We clarify that Wilson’s holding is legal, not factual. “The Equal Protection Clause is not violated when, based upon prosecutorial discretion, a person may be charged under more than one statute and thereby receive different penalties.” 388 N.E.2d at 55. Neither equal protection nor Wilson prohibits a prosecutor from charging a defendant under the lesser burglary statute simply because the prosecutor believes intrusion into a habitation and likelihood of presence can both be established. Therefore, a burglary offense which as a matter of fact involves both elements may be charged under the lesser statute. Nevertheless, Wilson illustrates that the statutes at issue define aggravated burglary as a more severe crime than burglary on the basis of a single additional element, and that a defendant convicted only under the lesser offense cannot as a matter of law be held responsible for both elements.
[6] A few cases involve intrusions into other structures such as businesses or motel rooms, but these structures are excluded from our inquiry for the reasons we explained in Section II.E, supra .
