People v. Guerrero

904 N.E.2d 823, 12 N.Y.3d 45
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 904 N.E.2d 823 (People v. Guerrero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Guerrero, 904 N.E.2d 823, 12 N.Y.3d 45 (N.Y. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Read, J.

On July 20, 2006, defendant Felix Soriano Guerrero pleaded guilty to second-degree intentional murder (Penal Law § 125.25 [1]) in exchange for an indeterminate sentence of 19 years to life imprisonment. At the subsequent sentencing hearing on September 11, 2006, Supreme Court stated that defendant had acknowledged “that he accepts the plea and the Court certainly intends to go ahead and impose the sentence promised at the time we reached that agreement[;] that is[,] an indeterminate term of imprisonment of 19 years to life.” The judge did not mention that defendant was required to pay a mandatory sur *47 charge of $150 and a crime victim assistance fee of $2 as a result of his conviction. These assessments were, however, listed on the “Uniform Sentence and Commitment” sheet, which the clerk signed, and the court worksheet, which the judge signed and stamped.

Defendant appealed, arguing that the mandatory surcharge and crime victim assistance fee should have been pronounced by the judge in open court at sentencing. After the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed his conviction and sentence (45 AD3d 313 [2007]), a Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (10 NY3d 863 [2008]) so that we might review his claim in light of our recent decision in People v Sparber (10 NY3d 457 [2008]). We now hold that the mandatory surcharge and crime victim assistance fee mandated by Penal Law § 60.35 (1) are not a part of a sentence within the meaning of sections 380.20 and 380.40 of the CPL; therefore, a judge need not pronounce them in a defendant’s presence during sentencing.

CPL 380.20 calls upon courts to “pronounce sentence in every case where a conviction is entered”; CPL 380.40 (1) directs that “[t]he defendant must be personally present at the time sentence is pronounced.” CPL 1.20 (13), in turn, defines “conviction” as a plea or verdict of guilty, while CPL 1.20 (14) defines “sentence” as “the imposition and entry of sentence upon a conviction.” Thus, although the CPL commands that a defendant’s “sentence” must be “pronounced” by the court in the defendant’s presence, it gives no guidance as to which consequences of a conviction are covered by this requirement. This is where our decisions in Sparber and People v Nieves (2 NY3d 310 [2004]) come into play.

In Sparber, we concluded that because postrelease supervision (PRS) is a component element of a sentence, CPL 380.20 and 380.40 require a judge to pronounce the terms of PRS at sentencing (10 NY3d at 468-469). In Nieves we found a defendant’s unpreserved claim of error to be unreviewable under the exception to the preservation requirement for an illegal sentence. This was so because “although the orders of protection [in question] were issued at [Nieves’] sentencing proceeding, it [wa]s evident from the statutory scheme that the orders were not a part of defendant’s sentence” (2 NY3d at 316). In both cases, we carefully examined the language of the statute imposing or authorizing the particular consequence of conviction at issue in order to decide whether it inhered in the sentence.

*48 For example, at the time of our decision in Sparber, Penal Law § 70.45, entitled “Determinate sentence; post-release supervision,” deemed PRS to be “a part” of a determinate sentence (see 10 NY3d at 468-469); the provision began as follows: “1. In general. Each determinate sentence also includes, as a part thereof, an additional period of post-release supervision” (emphasis added). Concomitantly, Penal Law § 70.00 (6) specifies that the determinate sentences for which it provides “shall include, as a part thereof, a period of post-release supervision in accordance with section 70.45” (emphasis added). By contrast, the statute construed in Nieves—CPL 530.13 (4)— “[did] not characterize permanent orders of protection as a component of sentencing,” and “[n]o reference [was] made in any . . . provisions [governing sentences for criminal offenses] to an order of protection as a permissible sentence” (Nieves, 2 NY3d at 316).

The statute imposing the mandatory surcharge and crime victim assistance fee, while noting that these assessments are to be “levied at sentencing,” describes them as distinct from “any sentence required or permitted by law” (Penal" Law § 60.35 [1] [a]). Specifically, Penal Law § 60.35 (1) (a) states that “there shall be levied at sentencing a mandatory surcharge, sex offender registration fee, DNA databank fee and a crime victim assistance fee in addition to any sentence required or permitted by law” (emphasis added), rather than as “a part” of the sentence itself, as was the case with the statute we interpreted in Sparber. Unlike the statute we considered in Nieves, section 60.35 (l)’s text clearly indicates that the surcharge and fee are not incorporated into the sentence; it is not merely silent as to this issue. As a result, the fact that this provision is within the Penal Law’s sentencing scheme does not lead to the conclusion that these assessments are component elements of the sentence.

Defendant argues, however, that the language of section 60.35 (1) does not mandate the outcome in this case because Penal Law § 60.35 (2) refers to a “sentence to pay a mandatory surcharge, crime victim assistance fee or supplemental sex offender victim fee” (emphasis added). But it is subdivision (1) of section 60.35—not subdivision (2)—which actually creates the obligation to pay the mandatory surcharge and crime victim assistance fee; subdivision (2) merely tells the court how to calculate the surcharge and the various fees in cases where a person has been convicted of two or more crimes or violations or offenses. Further, section 60.35 (l)’s legislative history strongly supports *49 the proposition that the Legislature did not intend the surcharge or fee to be “an additional punishment component” of a sentence (see Sparber, 10 NY3d at 469).

Section 60.35 was originally enacted as part of a massive revenue-raising bill meant to “avert the loss of an estimated $100 million in State tax revenues” (Legislative Mem in Support, Bill Jacket, L 1982, ch 55, at 6; see also People v Quinones, 95 NY2d 349, 352 [2000] [“The mandatory surcharge/crime victim assistance fee is paid to the State to shift costs of providing services to victims of crime from law abiding taxpayers and toward those who commit crimes” (internal quotations marks omitted)]; People v Barnes, 62 NY2d 702, 703 [1984] [mandatory surcharge levied and collected following every criminal conviction “appear(s) to be related ... to the State’s legitimate interest in raising revenues”]).

Finally, the statute’s nomenclature reinforces its nonpunitive nature: the assessments imposed by section 60.35 (1) are called a “surcharge” or a “fee,” not a “penalty.” Indeed, when first enacted in 1982, Penal Law § 60.35 was entitled “Mandatory penalty assessment required in certain cases” (emphasis added).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
904 N.E.2d 823, 12 N.Y.3d 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-guerrero-ny-2009.