Offutt v. Commonwealth

799 S.W.2d 815, 1990 WL 188955
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1990
Docket89-SC-18-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 799 S.W.2d 815 (Offutt v. Commonwealth) 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
Offutt v. Commonwealth, 799 S.W.2d 815, 1990 WL 188955 (Ky. 1990).

Opinions

COMBS, Justice.

Offutt was indicted for murder (KRS 507.020) and as a persistent felony offender (KRS 532.080). He was found guilty of wanton murder, for which his sentence was fixed at thirty years’ imprisonment.. Upon finding the defendant to be a persistent felony offender in the second degree, the jury enhanced the penalty to fifty years. Offutt does not challenge the murder conviction, but seeks dismissal of the PFO count and a new sentencing hearing.

Two issues are presented by this appeal: (1) whether a sentence upon a murder con[816]*816viction may be enhanced under the PFO sentencing statute; and (2) whether the trial court erred to the defendant’s substantial prejudice in declining to instruct the jury, in the sentencing phase, that the defendant would not be eligible for parole until he had served twelve years, pursuant to the violent offenders statute (KRS 439.-3401).

1. We have recently held that a sentence imposed upon conviction for murder is not subject to PFO enhancement. Berry v. Commonwealth, Ky., 782 S.W.2d 625 (1990). The foundation of our conclusion was that KRS 532.080 provides for enhanced penalties only “in lieu of the sentence ... assessed under KRS 532.060,” whereas section .060 assesses no penalty for capital offenses, those being punishable pursuant to KRS 532.030(1). Moreover, KRS 532.080 sub-sections (5) and (6), which specify the enlarged sentences, apply only to convictions of Class A, B, C, or D felonies, whereas murder, albeit a felony, falls within no alphabetical class — it is a capital offense. KRS 507.020(2); KRS 532.010.

We do not retreat from our holding in Berry. Yet we venture to observe the inelegance of the present statutory structure. KRS 532.080 defines a persistent felony offender as “a person ... who stands convicted of a felony after having been convicted of [one or more previous felonies].” A capital offense is a felony. KRS 532.010. Therefore conviction of a capital offense may indeed establish PFO status, and the appellant is not entitled to dismissal of the PFO charge. Enlargement of the sentence, however, is not authorized.

The evolution of the law into this curious state may be traced in legislative history. In 1974, the General Assembly enacted HB 232, the supposedly organic common source of KRS 507.020 and KRS Chapter 532, Sections .010, .030, .060, and .080. In the original scheme, murder was a Class A felony, except in specified aggravating circumstances, when it was a capital offense. 1974 H 232, Sec. 61. For a capital offense, the death penalty was mandatory; however, a crime classified as a capital offense might at the Commonwealth’s discretion be prosecuted as a Class A felony, if the state so elected at the time of indictment. 1974 H 232, Sec. 275. Section 278 of this legislation became KRS 532.060, which has survived as written; and Section 280 created the PFO sentencing statute, sub-sections (1), (5), and (6) of which have also remained intact.

Under the statutes as originally enacted, then, conviction of a capital offense entailed no sentence of imprisonment, but the mandatory death penalty, which, it might be argued, was insusceptible of enhancement. PFO status was of little interest either to the defendant or to the Commonwealth. Non-aggravated murder (and in effect, at the Commonwealth’s option, aggravated murder) was a Class A felony, the sentence for which would derive from KRS 532.060, subject to enhancement pursuant to KRS 532.080.

The cohesion of this structure ended with the enactment of HB 14, during the 1976 extra session of the General Assembly. KRS 507.020 was amended, making murder a capital offense in all cases. 1976 EX S, H 14, Sec. 1. KRS 532.030 was amended to make the death penalty optional, while the state’s authority to prosecute murder as a Class A felony was repealed. 1976 EX S, H 14, Sec. 3. Neither KRS 532.060 nor KRS 532.080 was amended to accommodate these changes; hence the present result, with no provision for PFO enhancement of a sentence of imprisonment for murder.

The Commonwealth notes that the indictment in the present case charged “Murder KRS 507.020 Class A Felony.” As the defendant did not challenge the erroneous classification before trial, he waived the defect. RCr 8.18. The Commonwealth concludes that Offutt’s objection to being sentenced for a Class A felony rather than for a capital offense is therefore unpreserved.

The essential purpose of an indictment is to charge a described act offensive to the law as established by the legislature. The present indictment clearly charged murder under KRS 507.020, and neither the defendant nor the Commonwealth misap[817]*817prehended the charge. The prosecution sought and won conviction of murder. Sentencing based upon that conviction is a matter of statutory prescription.

Felonies are classified, for the purpose of sentencing, into five categories:

(1) Capital offenses;
(2) Class A felonies;
(3) Class B felonies;
(4) Class C felonies; and
(5) Class D felonies.

KRS 532.010. [Emphasis added throughout.]

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Offutt v. Commonwealth
799 S.W.2d 815 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 S.W.2d 815, 1990 WL 188955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/offutt-v-commonwealth-ky-1990.