People v. Sasser

347 P.3d 522, 61 Cal. 4th 1, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 2196
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2015
DocketS217128
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 347 P.3d 522 (People v. Sasser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Sasser, 347 P.3d 522, 61 Cal. 4th 1, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 2196 (Cal. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

LIU, J.

When a defendant with one prior “strike” is convicted of a subsequent felony, the second strike provision of the “Three Strikes” law requires that he be sentenced to “twice the term otherwise provided as punishment for the current felony conviction.” (Pen. Code,- § 667, subd. (e)(1); all subsequent statutory references are to this code.) If the current offense is a serious felony, he is also subject to a five-year prior serious felony enhancement on top of that doubled term. (§ 667, subd. (a)(1).) In cases where the second strike offender has only one current offense, the sentencing arithmetic is simple: The trial court selects the base term, doubles it, and adds five years.

But when a defendant’s second strike sentence includes multiple terms for several offenses, calculating the correct sentence can become more complex. We granted review to determine whether the prior serious felony enhancement may be applied to the term imposed for each current offense or only once to the determinate portion of the overall sentence. Finding our decision *7 in People v. Tassell (1984) 36 Cal.3d 77, 89-92 [201 Cal.Rptr. 567, 679 P.2d 1] (Tassell) applicable in this context, we conclude that the prior serious felony enhancement may be added only once to multiple determinate terms imposed as part of a second strike sentence.

I.

Defendant Darren Derae Sasser was convicted of 11 offenses arising from sexual assaults on two separate victims. His convictions included three counts of oral copulation by force (§ 288a, subd. (c)(2)), three counts of sodomy by force (§ 286, subd. (c)(2)), and five counts of rape by force (§ 261, subd. (a)(2)). Sasser admitted that he had a prior conviction for a lewd act on a child (§ 288, subd. (a)), which qualified for sentencing purposes as a prior sex offense, a prior strike, and a prior serious felony. The trial court imposed a sentence of 458 years four months to life.

Sasser appealed. The Court of Appeal reversed two of the sodomy convictions due to instructional error, reversed the sentence with regard to several of the other counts, and remanded for resentencing. On remand, the prosecutor dismissed charges on the two sodomy counts that the Court of Appeal had reversed. The trial court then resentenced Sasser for the remaining nine convictions. The court began by sentencing him under the habitual sexual offender law (§ 667.71) to 55 years to life on each of the nine counts, resulting in an aggregate sentence of 495 years to life. Each of those nine indeterminate sentences of 55 years to life included a five-year enhancement based on Sasser’s prior serious felony conviction. Sasser does not challenge this sentence, and it is not at issue here.

The trial court also imposed an alternative sentence under the “One Strike” law. (§ 667.61.) It started by sentencing Sasser to 25 years to life for each of two of the rape counts (one count for each victim). The court then doubled the minimum terms for the life sentences pursuant to the Three Strikes law and added five-year prior serious felony enhancements to both. On the remaining counts, the court imposed seven determinate terms of 17 years each, i.e., the sum of the middle term of six years, doubled pursuant to the Three Strikes law, plus a five-year prior serious felony enhancement. Sasser’s alternative sentence thus totaled 229 years to life. The court stayed this sentence in light of the lengthier 495-year-to-life sentence.

Defendant appealed a second time, arguing that the trial court erred by applying a five-year prior serious felony enhancement to each of the seven determinate terms within the stayed 229-year-to-life sentence. Relying on Tassell, Sasser argued that an enhancement based on a prior conviction may be applied only once to multiple determinate terms.

*8 The Court of Appeal affirmed. It distinguished Tassell on the ground that Sasser was not sentenced under the determinate sentencing law “but under the Three Strikes law, which permits multiple enhancements.” In light of the “clear policy and intent behind the Three Strikes law — to increase punishment for prior felony convictions,” the Court of Appeal explained, “a recidivism enhancement under section 667, subdivision (a)(1) may be imposed on each count” of Sasser’s sentence. We granted review.

II.

This case requires us to reconcile four statutory schemes: the determinate sentencing law (§ 1170 et seq.) and, in particular, its rules governing multiple determinate terms (§ 1170.1, subd. (a) (hereafter section 1170.1(a)); enhanced penalty provisions for forcible sex offenses (§ 667.6); the prior serious felony enhancement (§ 667, subd. (a)(1) (hereafter section 667(a)(1)); and the Three Strikes law (§§ 667, subds. (b)-(i), 1170.12).

The Legislature in 1976 enacted the Uniform Determinate Sentencing Act (Stats. 1976, ch. 1139, p. 5061), commonly referred to as the determinate sentencing law (DSL). In passing the law, the Legislature found that “the purpose of imprisonment for crime is punishment” and that “[t]his purpose is best served by terms proportionate to the seriousness of the offense with provision for uniformity in the sentences of offenders committing the same offense under similar circumstances.” (§ 1170, subd. (a)(1).)

The DSL’s emphasis on uniform punishment marked a shift away from a system in which most prisoners were sentenced to an indeterminate range of years, usually with a maximum term of life imprisonment. (Nat. Inst, of Justice, U.S. Dept. of Justice, The Implementation of the California Determinate Sentencing Law (1982) pp. 12-13.) The DSL replaced these indeterminate sentences with three fixed-year, or determinate, sentencing options for nearly all felony offenses. For example, the normal punishment for first degree robbery is “imprisonment in the state prison for three, four, or six years” (§ 213, subd. (a)(1)(B)), and the sentencing court, exercising its “sound discretion” and taking into account any aggravating or mitigating circumstances, must select the term that “best serves the interests of justice” (§ 1170, subd. (b), as amended by Stats. 2014, ch. 612, § 1 [until Jan. 1, 2017]). Today, most sentences are imposed under the DSL, and only death sentences and sentences of life imprisonment fall entirely outside its ambit. (3 Witkin & Epstein, Cal. Criminal Law (4th ed. 2012) Punishment, § 309, p. 480; People v. Felix (2000) 22 Cal.4th 651, 659 [94 Cal.Rptr.2d 54, 995 P.2d 186].)

Section 1170.1, which was enacted as part of the DSL, “generally governs the calculation and imposition of a determinate sentence when a *9 defendant has been convicted of more than one felony offense.” (People v. Williams (2004) 34 Cal.4th 397, 402 [19 Cal.Rptr.3d 619, 98 P.3d 876] (Williams))

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

Related

People v. Shaw
California Supreme Court, 2025
People v. Lusby CA1/3
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Wimberly CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Vance v. City of Riverside CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Salmon CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Altamirano CA2/7
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Jetton CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Padilla CA2/1
California Court of Appeal, 2025
(HC)Lopez v. Hixton
E.D. California, 2025
People v. Ornelas CA4/3
California Court of Appeal, 2025
People v. Simpson CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Washington CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Manzo CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Rangel CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Ayala CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Payne CA5
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Koback CA4/2
California Court of Appeal, 2024
People v. Youngdabney CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2024

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 P.3d 522, 61 Cal. 4th 1, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 540, 2015 Cal. LEXIS 2196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sasser-cal-2015.