Com. of Ky. v. Moore

545 S.W.3d 848
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 2018
Docket2016-SC-000275-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 545 S.W.3d 848 (Com. of Ky. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. of Ky. v. Moore, 545 S.W.3d 848 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

(a) For a Class A misdemeanor, five hundred dollars ($500); or
(b) For a Class B misdemeanor, two hundred fifty dollars ($250); or
(c) For a violation, two hundred fifty dollars ($250).
...
(4) Fines required by this section shall not be imposed upon any person determined by the court to be indigent pursuant to KRS Chapter 31.

KRS 534.040 generally establishes the fines that can be imposed for misdemeanors and violations, but subsection (2) expressly excepts from its provisions any "offense defined outside this code" where the fine has been "otherwise provided." "This code" means the Kentucky Penal Code, KRS Chapters 500 through 534.

By its plain language, the fines that KRS 534.040 requires for misdemeanor offenses do not apply to crimes that are defined outside the penal code. By its own clear language, the indigency exemption of subsection (4) applies only to "fines required by" KRS 534.040. In other words, the plain language of the statute grants an indigency exemption only for misdemeanors defined within the penal code and for which KRS 534.040 establishes the applicable fines. We find no ambiguity, and so, there is no alternate reading of the statute that would lead us to a different construction.

KRS Chapter 189A, rather than the Kentucky Penal Code, provides the body *851of law that primarily governs the offense of driving under the influence. KRS 189A.010(1) defines the conduct that constitutes the crime of DUI. KRS 189A.010(5) states with particularity the fines that may be imposed for DUI, as a first, second, and third offense. Specifically, KRS 189A.010(5)(a) provides that for a first DUI offense within a ten-year period, the offender shall be fined not less than $200 nor more than $500.3 In like fashion, subsections (b) and (c) of KRS 189A.010(5) provide, respectively, the fines applicable to second and third offense DUIs.

We find no ambiguity in the statutes under review insofar as they relate to availability of the indigency exemption for fines imposed under KRS 189A.010(5)(a), first offense DUI. As we recently summarized in University of Louisville v. Rothstein :

In interpreting a statute, we have a duty to accord to words of a statute their literal meaning unless to do so would lead to an absurd or wholly unreasonable conclusion. As such, we must look first to the plain language of a statute and, if the language is clear, our inquiry ends. We hold fast to the rule of construction that the plain meaning of the statutory language is presumed to be what the legislature intended, and if the meaning is plain, then the court cannot base its interpretation on any other method or source. In other words, we assume that the Legislature meant exactly what it said, and said exactly what it meant.

532 S.W.3d 644, 648 (Ky. 2017) (internal alterations, citations, and quotation marks omitted). Bound by those time-proven standards, we cannot re-write the plain language of the statutes. Instead, we can only acknowledge their plain meaning. Moore's $200 fine for a first offense DUI simply falls outside the parameters that KRS 534.040(4) sets for the indigency exemption. Consequently, the exception is unavailable to him and the trial court correctly declined to waive the fine.

Our rules of statutory construction, however, do not constrain us from commenting upon plainly-written statutes when oddities within them are exposed by the litigation before us. As noted above, subsections (a), (b), and (c) of KRS 189A.010(5) respectively prescribe the fines that can be imposed for the misdemeanors of first, second, and third offense DUI. Because DUI is defined outside the penal code and because the fines for DUI as a first, second, or third offense are not "fines required by KRS 534.040," the indigency exemption of KRS 534.040(4) is not available to an indigent person convicted of those misdemeanors.

In marked contrast with the fines specifically detailed in 189A.010(5)(a), (b), and (c) for first, second, and third time DUI offenders, KRS 189A.010(5)(d), pertaining to fourth and subsequent DUI offenses, specifies no fines. Instead, the statute simply designates DUI, fourth or subsequent offense, as a Class D felony.4 Thus, for fines that can be imposed for a felony DUI offense, one must refer to fines genetically provided in the penal code for any Class D felony. That statute is KRS 534.030, which sets the fines for felony offenses and, as relevant to our inquiry, is perfectly analogous to its misdemeanor counterpart, *852KRS 534.040, including the exemption for indigent persons provided by KRS 534.030(4). But because the fine for a felony DUI (fourth or subsequent offense) is not set forth in KRS Chapter 189A, but is instead found in the penal code provision, KRS 534.030, which sets fines for felony offenses generally, a DUI felon (fourth or subsequent offense) who is indigent may be exempted from the payment of their fines while DUI misdemeanants like Moore, who are indigent, are allotted no such relief.

Our recognition of that anomaly does not afford us the authority or opportunity to change it. As noted above, we presume the legislature intended what it plainly states in the statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
545 S.W.3d 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-of-ky-v-moore-moctapp-2018.