Joshua T. Hammond v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket2017-SC-0629
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joshua T. Hammond v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Joshua T. Hammond 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
Joshua T. Hammond v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2019).

Opinion

RENDERED: MARCH 14, 2019 TO BE PUBLISHED

2017-SC-000629-MR ,

JOSHUA T. HAMMOND APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE PHILLIP J. SHEPHERD, JUDGE NO. 12-CR-00099-002

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES

AFFIRMING

In 2014, Joshua T. Hammond first appealed to this Court from a

Franklin Circuit Court judgment sentencing him to twenty-five years for first-

degree robbery, first-degree assault, reckless homicide, and tampering with

evidence. Following the guilt phase of a jury trial, Hammond waived jury

sentencing and entered a plea agreement with the Commonwealth as to

sentencing, while reserving his right to appeal his conviction. The trial court

sentenced Hammond to twenty-five years in accordance with the agreement.

On Hammond’s appeal from the judgment, this Court reversed the first-degree

assault conviction and remanded the case to the trial court to enter a new

judgment. Hammond v. Commonwealth, 504 S.W.3d 44 (Ky. 2016). On

remand, the trial court again sentenced Hammond to twenty-five years

consistent with this Court’s opinion. Hammond now appeals from that second judgment, raising a new issue that could not have been included in the first

appeal.

FACTS

To briefly reiterate the underlying facts, Hammond and two other men

drove to Lexington to purchase drugs. After making the purchase, Hammond

devised a plan to rob Charles Monroe, a Frankfort drug dealer. Hammond set

up a meeting with Monroe and the four men drove to a local Wal-Mart. After

Hammond and Monroe spent some time in the store, they returned to

Hammond’s truck but instead of going toward Monroe’s home, Hammond drove

in a different direction. When Monroe stated that they were going the wrong

way$ Hammond stopped the truck on the side of an interstate ramp and

demanded that Monroe hand over his money and drugs. Hammond then

began hitting Monroe in the head with a police baton. Monroe attempted to

defend himself, but Hammond walked around to the passenger side while one

of the other men held Monroe in a chokehold. Hammond continued striking

Monroe on the head with the baton and searched for drugs and money,

ultimately collecting $160 and some pills. Hammond pulled Monroe from the

truck and left him on the side of the highway. Monroe died as a result of the

assault, and the medical examiner stated the death was likely a result of an

injury to Monroe’s throat, caused by the chokehold.1

1 A full recitation of the facts can be found in Hammond v. Commonwealth, 504 S.W.3d 44 (Ky. 2016).

2 In 2014, a Franklin Circuit Court jury found Hammond guilty of first-

degree robbery, first-degree assault, reckless homicide and tampering with

evidence. After the guilt phase, Hammond entered into a plea agreement with

the Commonwealth to avoid the jury sentencing phase, and the trial court

sentenced Hammond to twenty years for first-degree robbery and twenty years

for first-degree assault (to be served concurrently), and five years each for

reckless homicide and tampering with evidence (to be served concurrently) for a

total sentence of twenty-five years.

After entry of the judgment, Hammond appealed as a matter of right, and

this Court rendered an opinion on December 15, 2016, affirming in part,

reversing in part, and remanding. Hammond, 504 S.W.3d at 44. Hammond

raised five issues on appeal, and this Court reversed and remanded the case

solely as to the first-degree assault conviction.

In that earlier appeal, Hammond challenged his first-degree assault

conviction on three different grounds. He contended that the assault charge

merged into the robbery charge, that the assault charge merged into the

homicide charge, and that he should have received a directed verdict on the

assault charge due to insufficient evidence that he inflicted a serious physical

injury on Monroe. Hammond argued that the only physical injury to Monroe

serious enough to support an assault charge was the throat injury, and this

Court agreed. According to the medical testimony, the head wounds Hammond

inflicted on Monroe with the baton were superficial and did not cause Monroe’s

death. Since the head injury could not serve as the basis for the assault

3 charge, the only other viable injury was the throat injury. Justice Venters,

writing for a unanimous Court, concluded that a “single injuiy which proves to

be fatal cannot simultaneously serve as the injury in an underlying assault

conviction and. the fatal wound resulting in the death underlying the homicide

conviction.” Hammond, 504 S.W.3d at 52. Since Monroe ultimately died

because of the throat injury, the injuiy should have only supported the

reckless homicide charge and not the assault charge.

This Court also agreed with Hammond that the first-degree assault

charge merged into the reckless homicide charge. The Court determined that

“either the trial court erred by submitting to the jury a first degree assault

charge based upon evidence insufficient to establish that the head wound was

a ‘serious physical injury’; or, the jury was improperly permitted to find

Appellant guilty of both first degree assault and reckless homicide based upon

the serious injury to Monroe's throat.” Id. at 53. Regardless of which specific

error occurred, Hammond’s first-degree assault conviction was reversed, and

the case was remanded to the trial court for re-sentencing, removing the first-

degree assault conviction but leaving the other convictions intact. This Court

noted that since Hammond was sentenced to twenty years on both the assault

and robbery charges, the reversal of the assault conviction did not affect

Hammond’s total twenty-five year sentence or parole eligibility. Id.

On October 12, 2017, the trial court conducted a re-sentencing hearing

where Hammond moved to withdraw the sentencing plea agreement and to

have a juiy impaneled for the penalty phase. The trial court denied his motion,

4 stating that the Kentucky Supreme Court ruling contemplated re-sentencing

only to clarify that the assault conviction was set aside, and reversal of the

assault conviction did not affect Hammond’s final sentence. Hammond was re­

sentenced to twenty-five years, and now appeals from the trial court’s second

judgment.

ANALYSIS

Hammond argues that our holding in Hammond v. Commonwealth

changed the terms of his plea agreement and because of this change, he should

be permitted the right to proceed with a new jury empaneled for the penalty

phase. Specifically, he argues that he now faces a new set of circumstances,

i.e., he was originally facing a fifty-year sentence for all his charges while the

assault charge was still viable, but since the assault conviction has been

reversed, the longest sentence he could have received was thirty years.

I. Hammond waived his right to jury sentencing.

After the guilt phase of trial, Hammond entered a guilty plea pursuant to

a deal with the Commonwealth and waived his right to have a jury sentence

him. To be valid, a guilty plea must be entered “intelligently and voluntarily.”

Bronk v.

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