Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Joshua Deante Jackson

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 2017
Docket2016 SC 000530
StatusUnknown

This text of Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Joshua Deante Jackson (Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Joshua Deante Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Joshua Deante Jackson, (Ky. 2017).

Opinion

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 28, 2017 TO BE PUBLISHED

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20 l 6-SC-000530-TG (2016-CA-OO 1399-MR)

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM WARREN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE JOHN GRISE, JUDGE NO. 16-CR-00635 I

JOSHUA DEANTE JACKSON . APPELLEE

AND

2016-SC-000531-TG (2016-CA-OO 1400-MR)

ON APPEAL FROM WARREN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE JOHN GRISE, JUDGE NO. 16-CR-00645

TELLY SAVALAS DENSON ) APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VENTERS

REVERSING

In April 2016, the Governor signed l.nto law SB 56, which amended KRS

189A.010, Kentucky's principal driving under the influence o(alcohol (DUI),. ./ statute. Subsection (5) of KRS 189A.010 provides substantially enhanced

penalties for subsequent DUI offenses committed within a specified time frame,

which we refer to as the "look-back" period. Subsequent offenses committed

after the look-back period are not subject to enhancement.

The 2016·amendment increased the look-back period from five years to

ten years. By the terms of the bill, the new ten-year look-back period went into

effect immediately. Obviously, the expanded ten-year look-back period will

capture more prior DUI offenses than the former five-year period.

Correspondingly, the additional five years during which DUI offenses can serve

as penalty-enhancing prior offenses means that more DUI offenders.with prior

DUI convictions will be subject to enhanced sentences ..

A unique issue, created by-the 2016 amendment of the look-back period,

arises in the cases now before this Court. ·In separate prosecutions in the

Warren Circuit Court, Joshua Deante Jackson and Telly Sayalas Denson were

charged with DUI, Fourth Offense, for offenses that occurred after the newly-

amended version of KRS 189A.010 .became effective. Both defendants had

prior convictions for,DUI offenses including one committed more than five

years but less than ten years· prior to his current, and thus beyond the five-

year· look-back period of the former law, but within the ten-year look-bacl~

period of the current law.

The circuit court held that the convictions exceeding the former five-year

/ look-back period could not be used to elevate the current DUI charges to DUI, / Fourth Offense. The Commonwealth appealed to the Court of Appeals.

2 R~cognizing the matter as one of "great and immediate public import~nce,"

pursuant to CR 74.02, we accepted transfer of the appeal.

For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the trial court erred

by excluding Jackson's 2009 and Denson's 2011 offenses from use as

enhancing prior DUI convktions.

I

I. FACTUAL AND' PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND . ' . As noted above, the Commonwealth charged each defendant with DUI,

Fourth Offense, and the offense was committed after the 2016 revision of KRS

189A.010. As predicates for the DUI, Fourth Offense, charges, Jackson and

Denson each had at least three prior DUI convictions, two of which were

committed within five years of the current charge, but one of which preceded

the current offense by more than five years, but less.than ten years. Jackson's

applicable charge was incurred October 9, 2008, in Warren County and he

entered his guilty plea on March 3, 2009; Denson's applicable charge was

incurred August 26, ~010, in Bullitt County and he pled guilty to the char~e on

March 2, 2011. ·

As pertinent here, Jackson's 2009 DUI conviction and Denson's 2011

DUI conviction were each based upon a written pfoa agreement that included

the following standardized language:

5 . . . . Should I be convicted of additional DUI offenses or operating on a suspended license offenses, penalties will be increased with each conviction. 6. I understand if I plead GUILTY, the Court may impose any punishment within the range.provided by law .... The legal DUI penalty ranges are: (a) First Offense Within 5 Years [penalties stated] . . . . (b) 3 Second Offense Wjthin 5 Years [penalties stated] .... (c) Third Offense Within 5 Years [penalties stated] .... (d) Fourth or Subsequent Offense 1 Within 5 Years [penalties stated].1 ·

The plea agreements correctly stated the sentencing scheme applicable - /

when each DUI charge was incurred, including the -then-current five-year look-

back peri~d provided in the pre-2016 version of KRS 189A.010. r Just after the effective change of the look-back period, Jackson and

Denson were each charged with DUI, Fourth Offense, based in part upon their

respective 2009 and 2011 convictions. Under the former version of KRS

18.9A.010, these offenses could not be used to enhance a DUI committed in I , .

2016 because the five-year look-back limitation had expired. But, under the

· 2016 version of KRS 189A.010, they each fit easily within the ten-year)ook-

back period.

Jackson and Derison, represented by the same attorney, each filed a

motion in the circuit court challenging their prosecutions as fourth-time

offenders. They presented three grounds for relief: 1) the app~ication of the

2016 amendment to their pre-2016 conviction violates expostfacto principles;·

2) the amendment was "entrapment by estoppel";2 and 3) respectively, the use

of the 2009 and 2011 DUI convictions violates due process under Boykin

because each defendant was informed at the time of his guilty plea that his

1Denson's Bullitt County plea agreement had the additional relevant paragraph: "I understand that because of my conviction here today, I may be subjected to greater/ enhanced penalties if found guilty and/ or convicted of any future criminal offenses ... ~,, The defendants abandoned their "entrapment by estoppel" argument and so 2 we do not further address ·that theory of reµef. '-

4 crime exposed him to penalty enhancements only for future DUis committed

within five years.

The trial court was not persuaded by these arguments, and instead

concluded sua spohte that the provisions of the 2009 and 2011 plea

agreements quoted above created enforceable contractual provisions which

assured Jackson and Denson that their convictions could not enhance

subsequent DUI offenses committed after five years. The circuit court therefore

ruled that, d,espite the 2016 amendment allowing a ten-year retrospective

period for prior DUis, using prior offenses more than five years old to enhance

the penalty for 2016 offenses wo~ld violate contractual rights established in ) the defendants' plea agreements.

The Commonwealth appealed both rulings to the Court of Appeals. We

accepted transfer pursuant to CR 74.02.

II. PLEA AGREEMENT CONTRACT PRINCIPLES DO NOT BAR APPLICATION OF THE NEW RULES

The Commonwealth challenges on appeal the trial court's contract

rationale for barring 'the use of the 2009 and 20 ~ 1 convictions to enhance the

penalty applicable to the 2016 offenses. The Commonwealth acknowledges,

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Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Joshua Deante Jackson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-kentucky-v-joshua-deante-jackson-ky-2017.