Scarborough v. State

945 A.2d 1103, 2008 Del. LEXIS 85, 2008 WL 555378
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 26, 2008
Docket328, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 945 A.2d 1103 (Scarborough v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scarborough v. State, 945 A.2d 1103, 2008 Del. LEXIS 85, 2008 WL 555378 (Del. 2008).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice.

This case involves a plea agreement and an agreement to work undercover gone haywire. Police arrested defendant-appellant, Edwin Scarborough, on various drug charges in 2004. Over a year’s time, Scarborough, on several different occasions, promised to help police investigate several different drug dealers in exchange for sentencing leniency. In September 2005, after several earlier attempts to provide information failed, Scarborough wrote a “jail-house” letter to the prosecutor identifying several people about whom he could provide information. This letter prompted the prosecutor to offer a plea agreement— part written and part oral. Yet despite the strictures of Superior Court Rule 11(c), which requires, at least, in camera disclosure of the entire plea agreement, at the time the parties proffered the plea they only presented the written part of the plea agreement to the Superior Court.

*1105 The written plea agreement provided that Scarborough would plead guilty and testify against his two co-defendants. The oral part of the agreement included Scarborough’s promise to work as an informant and the State’s promise to withhold a petition seeking to have Scarborough declared a habitual offender. When Scarborough’s attempts to provide information failed to satisfy the police, the State petitioned to have Scarborough declared a habitual offender. Scarborough then attempted to withdraw his guilty plea. A Superior Court judge denied Scarborough’s motion on the basis of the written plea agreement, Scarborough’s oral representations in court, and the positions counsel for both parties took on the record. The trial judge did not consider the terms of the previously undisclosed oral agreement and his written opinions to date suggest that he refuses to acknowledge that an oral “side” agreement ever existed.

We heard oral argument and remanded this case with instructions to the Superior Court judge to determine “what the exact terms of the oral side agreement were, whether Scarborough fulfilled or could realistically have fulfilled those terms, or whether any factual issue raised by the oral side agreement resulted in Scarborough’s ‘misapprehension’ about the effect of his guilty plea.” 1

Despite our instructions, the judge’s order entered after the hearing on remand never addressed the first question posed to him, ie. “what the exact terms of the oral side agreement were.... ” At oral argument on appeal, the State and Scarborough’s counsel readily admitted that the parties had reached an oral agreement at the time of Scarborough’s plea and that they did not disclose the oral agreement’s existence or its terms at the time Scarborough pleaded. Because neither party questioned the existence of the agreement, the Superior Court judge’s task was to determine its terms and the facts that established either fulfillment or non-fulfillment of the bargain. Rather than addressing that question, the judge determined that Scarborough never entered into an enforceable contract with the State that he could ultimately perform. The Superior Court judge again, on remand, denied Scarborough’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea.

To decide that Scarborough failed to perform an agreement without first determining what Scarborough, in fact, agreed to do defies logic. By failing to adhere to our direction on remand, the Superior Court judge abused his discretion. It now falls to us to attempt, as best we can, to glean the terms of the oral agreement from the testimony at the hearing on remand.

After reviewing the record, we find that the State and Scarborough reached an oral agreement that supplemented the written plea agreement. The oral agreement provided that: (1) Scarborough would “work” 2 and provide information about other drug dealers; and, (2) the State would not seek habitual offender status. In prosecutorial parlance, “work” refers to a defendant cooperating with police to collect information about others engaged in criminal activity, typically in exchange for sentencing leniency. In the nebulous world of Delaware drug enforcement eoop- *1106 eration agreements, what constitutes “work” appears to be whatever the police say it is after the prosecutor, defense counsel, and the defendant have agreed that “working” with the police merits a more favorable plea agreement than that previously proffered. In this case the parties who “drafted” the oral agreement for Scarborough to “work” in exchange for avoiding sentencing as a habitual offender, left defining the critical term “work” to the police who did not participate in crafting the oral agreement. Sadly, neither did the Superior Court judge whom the parties’ counsel kept in the dark either intentionally or carelessly by their failure to adhere to Superior Court Rule 11(e)(2).

We find here that the State, in contradiction to its implied duty to act in good faith, unreasonably rejected the “work” that Scarborough proposed. Accordingly, the State excused Scarborough from performing. Although Scarborough now seeks to withdraw his guilty plea, the more appropriate remedy is to enforce specifically the State’s promise to withhold petitioning for habitual offender status. Therefore, the Superior Court judge’s decision denying Scarborough’s request to withdraw his guilty plea is AFFIRMED, Scarborough’s sentence is VACATED, and the case REMANDED for resentencing.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1. Scarborough’s Guilty Plea 3

In September 2005, Scarborough pleaded guilty to two counts of maintaining a vehicle for keeping controlled substances, one count of tampering with physical evidence, and one misdemeanor count of resisting arrest. He agreed to two conditions in his written plea agreement: first, Scarborough would testify truthfully against two co-defendants; and second, he would submit to substance abuse treatment.

During the plea colloquy between Scarborough and the Superior Court judge taking the plea, the judge explained that Scarborough could potentially face life imprisonment if the State successfully moved for habitual offender status. Scarborough stated that he understood the potential for a life sentence. Based on Superior Court Rule 11(e)(1)(B), the judge asked Scarborough, “Are you aware that the Court is not bound by any agreements that you have made with the prosecutor up to this point or up through sentencing, regarding sentencing?” Scarborough replied, ‘Tes, I do.”

The judge then reviewed the Truth-in-Sentencing Guilty Plea Form with Scarborough. On the Plea Agreement Form, Scarborough marked the “habitual offender” block and a handwritten note on his Truth-in-Sentencing Guilty Plea Form stated “if defendant is habitual, potential 0-life.” Scarborough acknowledged that he waived his constitutional trial rights and confirmed that the written plea agreement contained his entire agreement with the State. Even after hearing Scarborough’s response acknowledging the written agreement to be the “entire” agreement, the prosecutor and Scarborough’s counsel both represented that they knew of no reason not to accept the plea.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
945 A.2d 1103, 2008 Del. LEXIS 85, 2008 WL 555378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarborough-v-state-del-2008.