State v. Bajoie

899 So. 2d 78, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1843, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 1035, 2005 WL 896437
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 2005
DocketNo. 2004-KA-1843
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 899 So. 2d 78 (State v. Bajoie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bajoie, 899 So. 2d 78, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1843, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 1035, 2005 WL 896437 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JACHARLES R. JONES, Judge.

This appeal concerns a resentencing only. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS'

On March 21, 2001, Tomika Johnson, and her boyfriend, the defendant, Nolan J. Bajoie, Jr., returned to her home after an outing. As they entered Ms. Johnson’s apartment, the telephone began to ring. Ms. Johnson answered the phone and conversed with her insurance salesman. Ms. Johnson testified at trial that Bajoie did not believe that she was speaking to her insurance salesman and took the telephone from her. After speaking to the insurance salesman, Bajoie hung up the telephone and a verbal argument ensued. Following this brief verbal argument, Bajoie left the residence.

Ms. Johnson further testified that Bajoie returned to the residence several hours later, at approximately 12:30 a.m. He knocked on the door and Ms. Johnson permitted him to enter the residence. The two sat on the sofa where Ms. Johnson’s youngest son was sleeping. She testified that soon thereafter Bajoie again accused her of having an affair with the insurance salesman. Ms. Johnson testified that she refused to argue with pBajoie, as her youngest son was asleep on the sofa, and her seven-year-old son was asleep in her bed. Ms. Johnson then laid down on the sofa with her four-year-old son.

[80]*80Ms. Johnson testified that Bajoie then got up and went into the kitchen. When he returned, he struck her in the side of the face one time with a sharp object believed to be a large kitchen knife. She testified that she did not see what Bajoie used to slash her face, but her mother later realized that an eighteen-inch knife was missing from the kitchen. Bajoie then fled the residence and Ms. Johnson called 911.

Paramedics arrived and transported Ms. Johnson to Charity Hospital where she underwent emergency surgery to close the wound. Approximately nine months later, Ms. Johnson underwent a second, reconstructive surgery; however, she is left with a large facial scar, and continues to experience numbness on the left side of her face and ear, and chronic headaches.

The parties stipulated that Dr. Jennifer Smullen was an expert in the treatment of facial trauma (otolaryngology), as well as in head and neck surgery. Dr. Smullen testified that she was the chief ear, nose, and throat resident at Charity Hospital when Ms. Johnson arrived at the emergency room on March 22, 2001. Ms. Johnson was stabilized and immediately taken to surgery because of the profuse bleeding caused by her injury. Dr. Smullen testified that Ms. Johnson had lost approximately half of her blood volume by the time she arrived at the hospital. She described Ms. Johnson’s injury as a large, deep laceration that began at the corner of her mouth, moved along her jaw and sliced into her jawbone, severed her ear in half, and continued along the base of her skull.

|3Pr. Smullen compared Ms. Johnson’s wound to one she had seen in the past that had been inflicted with a machete. She opined that the weapon used to injure Ms. Johnson was a long, sharp object, and she noted that the perpetrator would have needed to use a lot of force to penetrate the bone. Dr. Smullen estimated that if the injury had occurred a little bit higher on Ms. Johnson’s face, her brain would have been affected, while if it had occurred a little bit lower, her carotid artery and her jugular vein would have been severed. She further noted that even where the wound was positioned, Ms. Johnson could have died if her blood loss had not been quickly stopped due to prompt medical attention.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Bajoie was charged and convicted by a jury of aggravated second degree battery. Accordingly, the district court ordered a pre-sentence investigation. The State then filed a multiple bill, alleging Bajoie was a second felony offender. After hearing testimony from the victim and the defendant, and after reviewing a pre-sen-tence investigation report, the district court judge sentenced Bajoie to serve fifteen years at hard labor and suspended a $10,000 fine. Bajoie objected to the sentence and made an oral Motion to Reconsider the Sentence which was denied by the district court. He also made an oral Motion for Appeal.

Bajoie admitted to being a second offender; thus, the district court judge (sitting ad hoc) adjudicated him a second offender, vacated the original sentence, and again imposed a fifteen-year sentence at hard labor as a second offender. The previous sentence was vacated, but the identical sentence was imposed. Another oral Motion for Appeal was made, and the written Motion for Appeal was granted; however, Bajoie made no oral or written motion to reconsider the sentence when the court imposed the ^current second offender sentence. Although the State did object to the sentence and answers the defendant’s appeal, they do not brief any issues other than those raised Bajoie and [81]*81we therefore consider the State’s answer to this appeal abandoned.

DISCUSSION

By his sole assignment of error, Bajoie contends that the district court imposed an excessive sentence. The district court sentenced him to serve fifteen years at hard labor as a second offender for his aggravated second degree battery conviction, the same sentence imposed before he had been adjudicated a second felony offender.

We find that Bajoie did not preserve this error for review. Pursuant to article La. C.Cr.P. article 881.1, a defendant may make a motion to reconsider sentence orally or in writing within thirty days following the imposition of sentence. La.C.Cr.P. article 881.1 states in pertinent part:

A (1) Within thirty days following the imposition of sentence or within such longer period as the trial court may set at sentence, the state or the defendant may make or file a motion to reconsider sentence.
(2) The motion shall be oral at the time of sentencing or in writing thereafter and shall set forth the specific grounds on which the motion is based.
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D Failure to make or file a motion to reconsider sentence or to include a specific ground upon which a motion to reconsider sentence may be based, including a claim of excessiveness, shall preclude the state or defendant from raising an objection to the sentence or from urging any ground not raised in the motion on appeal or review.

This Court has held that a defendant must file a motion to reconsider sentence in connection with, or object to, a multiple bill sentence in order to | ^preserve a claim of excessive sentence, even if the defendant previously filed a motion to reconsider the original sentence. State v. Chisolm, 99-1055 (La.App. 4 Cir. 9/27/00), 771 So.2d 205; State v. Lewis, 98-2575 (La.App. 4 Cir. 3/1/00), 755 So.2d 1025.

Although Bajoie filed a Motion to Reconsider his original sentence, the record indicates that no oral or written motion to reconsider the sentence was filed, nor any objection made, when the court vacated that sentence and imposed the current second offender sentence. Indeed, at sentencing on the multiple bill, defense counsel stated that a fifteen-year sentence would be sufficient for Bajoie after the State requested that the court impose the maximum sentence of thirty years. While defense counsel noted that he would appeal “the underlying conviction,” the minute entry reflects that no oral objection was made to the sentence at the multiple bill hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
899 So. 2d 78, 2004 La.App. 4 Cir. 1843, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 1035, 2005 WL 896437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bajoie-lactapp-2005.