Mills v. Department of Corrections Offender Information Services

438 S.W.3d 328, 2014 Ky. LEXIS 328, 2014 WL 4113007
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 2014
DocketNo. 2011-SC-000755-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 438 S.W.3d 328 (Mills v. Department of Corrections Offender Information Services) 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
Mills v. Department of Corrections Offender Information Services, 438 S.W.3d 328, 2014 Ky. LEXIS 328, 2014 WL 4113007 (Ky. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice MINTON.

Terry Mills pleaded guilty to several offenses, mostly drug-related, the most serious of which were manufacturing methamphetamine while in possession of a firearm and being a first-degree persistent felony offender. In total, Mills received a maximum sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment.

Based on his convictions, the Department of Corrections classified Mills as a violent offender. This meant that Mills must serve at least 85 percent of his sentence — 17 years — before he could be considered eligible for parole. Without the violent offender classification, Mills would have reached parole eligibility after serving 10 years of his sentence.

Mills contested this violentroffender classification and sued the Department in circuit court to block its application to him, arguing that his convictions were all nonviolent drug offenses. The circuit court dismissed Mills’s suit.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s dismissal. In doing so, the court noted that the firearm-enhancement provision of the Controlled Substances Act, Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 218A.992, was clear and served to elevate Mills’s conviction for manufacturing methamphetamine from a Class B to a Class A felony. And a Class A felony conviction, the Court of Appeals observed, qualified Mills for classification as a violent offender under KRS 439.8401 and subjected him to the 85 percent parole eligibility requirement.

We accepted discretionary review to examine the application of the firearm-enhancement provision of the Controlled Substances Act, KRS 218A.992, and address whether the statute enhances the underlying conviction or only enhances the sentence to be imposed on the underlying conviction. We agree with the Court of Appeals and hold the underlying conviction is enhanced. Essentially, as a result of KRS 218A.992’s enhancement provision, a defendant is charged with an enhanced crime.

I. ANALYSIS.

By Mills’s estimation, the Department engaged in the following fallacious syllogism: (1) A defendant convicted of a Class A felony is a violent offender under KRS 439.3401; (2) Mills pleaded guilty to manufacturing methamphetamine while in possession of a firearm, a Class B felony; (3) KRS 218A.992 allows for a drug crime to be enhanced one felony class when the defendant possesses a firearm in furtherance of the crime; therefore, (4) Mills stands convicted of a Class A felony, making him a violent offender.1

[330]*330The thrust of Mills’s attack on the Department’s logic is that there was actually no Class-A-felony conviction for KRS 489.3401 to apply to, and the General Assembly did not intend for any nonviolent drug offense — such as Mills’s manufacturing methamphetamine — to carry the weight of a Class A felony.

The facts of Mills’s underlying conviction are not in dispute before us. As a result, this case presents only issues of statutory interpretation to be reviewed de novo. The analysis of the lower courts is entitled to no deference.2 Generally speaking, when interpreting statutes, this Court focuses on “giv[ing] the words of the statute their literal meaning and effectu-at[ing] the intent of the legislature.”3 But even if the language is clear, we will not promote an absurd result.4 This case presents such an example: the language is clear on its face, yet, the result is patently absurd.

The proper resolution of Mills’s appeal primarily revolves around two statutes:

KRS 218A.992: (1) Other provisions of law notwithstanding, any person who is convicted of any violation of this chapter who, at the time of the commission of the offense and in furtherance of the offense, was in possession of a firearm, shall: .
(a)Be penalized one (1) class more severely than provided in the penalty provision pertaining to that offense if it is a felony; or
(b)Be penalized as a Class D felon if the offense would otherwise be a misdemeanor.

KRS 439.3401: (1) As used in this section, “violent offender” means any person who has been convicted of or pled guilty to the commission of:

(a) A capital offense;
(b) A Class A felony;
(c) A Class B felony involving the death of the victim or serious physical injury to a victim; ....

In reading these statutes, especially KRS 218A.992, it becomes readily apparent that the statutes are confusingly drafted. The choice of the words convicted and penalized in KRS 218A.992 is especially troublesome. The gravamen of Mills’s complaint before this Court essentially rests on these two words and their meaning within the broader statutory criminal framework. As it turns out, we have had little opportunity to interpret the import of convicted and penalized, particularly with relation to violent-offender status and parole eligibility.

The plain reading of KRS 218A.992 seemingly favors Mills’s position. That is to say, the crime of which Mills was actually convicted was a Class B felony5 — not Class A — when convicted is given its common meaning; and, penalized would indicate that Mills should only be punished more severely for the Class B felony conviction, in turn eliminating the possibility of violent-offender status. In fact, there is some support for this reading in our case [331]*331law, which is, admittedly, nearly as confusing as the statutes sought to be applied here. For example, in Kotila v. Commonwealth6 the Court, seemingly in dicta, noted KRS 218A.992 “merely increases the classification of the underlying offense, just as proof of a prior conviction can serve to enhance the penalty for a subsequent offense.”7 Going further, the Kotila Court noted, “it would be entirely proper to reserve the enhancement issue for the penalty phase using instruction forms similar to those recommended for subsequent offense enhancement.” 8 Clearly, the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 S.W.3d 328, 2014 Ky. LEXIS 328, 2014 WL 4113007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-department-of-corrections-offender-information-services-ky-2014.