Jonathan McDaniel v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

495 S.W.3d 115
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 2016
Docket2014 SC 000241
StatusUnknown
Cited by6 cases

This text of 495 S.W.3d 115 (Jonathan McDaniel v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) 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
Jonathan McDaniel v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 495 S.W.3d 115 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

AFFIRMING ON OTHER GROUNDS AND VACATING IN PART

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE HUGHES

Prior to an,amendment in 2011, Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 532.043 provided in part that in addition to the other penalties authorized by law, any person convicted of certain offenses, including any felony offense under KRS Chapter 510, the Penal Code chapter addressed to sex offenses, “shall be subject to a period of conditional discharge” following the “expiration of sentence.” KRS 532.043(1) (2006). In May and July of 2012, Jonathan McDaniel, David DeShields, and John Martin,' all inmates at the State 'Reformatory in LaGrange, Kentucky, and all serving sentences for felony sex offenses, filed very similar pro se motions' in their respective trial courts challenging the legality of the conditional discharge requirement and seeking to have the discharge period délet-ed from their' sentences. All three trial courts denied the motion, and all three defendants appealed! In each case, the trial court, although having denied the defendant’s request for Department of Public Advocacy (DPA) assistance in the trial court with the motion itself, granted his request for DPA assistance on appeal. The Court of Appeals consolidated the three cases; denied DPA’s request to be allowed to withdraw; and ultimately, although for reasons having little to do with the issues raised in the trial courts, affirmed the trial *118 court’s ruling in each case. We granted the defendants' joint motion for discretionary review to address their concern that the Court of Appeals inappropriately characterized their trial court motions as having been brought pursuant to Kentucky Rule of Criminal .Procedure (RCr) 11.42, and to address our own concern that the Court of Appeals, perhaps in its eagerness to try to calm the waters after the 2011 amendment to KRS 532.043, inappropriately ruled on a question not properly before it. Our review strengthening rather than allaying these concerns, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ ultimate affirmance of the trial court rulings denying relief, but “vacate” the Court of Appeals’ opinion except as to the issue of whether Martin’s and McDaniel’s guilty pleas were subject to appellate review.

RELEVANT FACTS

Although the procedural, history of this case, particularly the effect of appointed counsel’s involvement once DPA was belatedly enlisted in.the cause, is most germane to the issues before us,. we necessarily begin with brief accounts of the three defendants’ cases. In March 2010, Jonathan McDaniel pled guilty in the Calloway Circuit Court to one count of first-degree sex abuse, victim under twelve (KRS 510.110), a class C felony that McDaniel committed on or about May 19, 2009. In its May 2010 Final Judgment, after previously accepting McDaniel’s plea bargain, the trial court sentenced McDaniel to six years’ imprisonment, subject to the mandatory five-year conditional discharge period in KRS 532.043.

David DeShields pled, guilty in the McCracken Circuit Court in September 2010 to two counts of first-degree sex abuse, victim under twelve, for crimes committed in June and October of 2009. The trial court’s November 2010 Final Judgment reflected DeShields’s plea bargain and sentenced DeShields to two six-year terms of imprisonment, the two terms to run concurrently. Among other consequences of a sex offense, such as'treatment and registration requirements, the Judgment also noted the five-year conditional discharge requirement.

In January 2011, John Martin pled guilty in the Anderson Circuit Court to six counts of first-degree sex abuse, to two counts of second-degree sodomy (KRS 510.080, a class C felony), and to one count each of second and third-degree rape (KRS 510.050, Class C felony, and 510.060, Class D felony). The crimes were committed against a single victim and spanned the years 2001 to 2007, with at least two of the crimes having been committed after' July 2006, when the General Assembly increased the conditional discharge period from three years to five.' The trial court’s April 2011 Final Judgment incorporates Martin’s plea bargain for concurrent sex-abuse and sodomy sentences together with consecutive rape sentences for a total sentence of twenty-three years’ imprisonment. As do the others, Martin’s Final Judgment also notes the five-year conditional discharge requirement.

As noted above, the defendants all were incarcerated at the LaGrange Reformatory, and the motions they each file d seeking to have the conditional discharge portion of their sentences removed' are similar enough to suggest that they all worked from the same template or had the assistance of the same “legal aide.” They challenged the conditional discharge requirement on a number of grounds (not all of which are stated with the utmost clarity), but principally (1) as a sentence “enhancement” imposed on the basis of judicial factfinding in violation of Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530-U.S. 466, 120 S.Ct. 2348, 147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000), which generally requires the jury to find any fact that will *119 allow an “enhanced” or “aggravated” sentence; 1 (2) as a judicially imposed harsher sentence than the sentence bargained for with the Commonwealth, contrary to Bailey v. Commonwealth, 70 S.W.3d 414 (Ky.2002) (construing KRS 532.070, which allows trial court amelioration of jury-imposed sentences the court believes too harsh); 2 and (3) as a “second” sentence for the given crime, in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States’Constitution, which clause generally forbids that crimes be punished more than once. 3

When their respective trial courts rejected these challenges and denied their motions to amend their sentences, the defendants filed notices of appeal, and each, as noted, was granted DPA assistance. DPA’s motion in the Court of Appeals to be relieved of that responsibility can fairly be interpreted as DPA’s assertion that the ■appeals, and the trial court motions underlying them, were meritless. 4 The Court of Appeals, however, hopeful that DPA briefing would shed light on an “issue of first impression” before the Court — “a legal challenge to the conditional discharge provision of KRS 532.043” — denied DPA’s request to’withdraw. 5 Order, Ño. 2012-CA-001172-MR (Oct. 24, 2012).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John Martin v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2026
Jeremy Bell v. Cookie Crews
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2026
Glenn A. Peeler, Jr. v. John D. Simcoe
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2025
Darrie Rushin v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2024
Darrie Rushin v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2023
Scot E. Gaither v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2021
Colby Arnold v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2020
Sidney Williams v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2020

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
495 S.W.3d 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-mcdaniel-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-ky-2016.