State v. Bazar
This text of 758 So. 2d 844 (State v. Bazar) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana.
v.
Kevin W. BAZAR.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
Jason W. Robideaux, Lafayette, LA, Counsel for Kevin W. Bazar, Appellant.
Earl Taylor, District Attorney's Office, Opelousas, LA, Counsel for State of Louisiana, Appellee.
Before DOUCET, C.J., THIBODEAUX and DECUIR, Judges.
DECUIR, Judge.
The Defendant, Kevin W. Bazar, was charged with aggravated arson, in violation of La.R.S. 14:51. After a one-day jury trial, the Defendant was found guilty as charged and sentenced to eight years at hard labor, three years of which were suspended for the purpose of restitution and mental health treatment.
After the Defendant's motion to reconsider sentence was denied, he filed this appeal of his conviction and sentence.
FACTS:
On the evening of April 16, 1998, victim Vickie Martin Keys was outside of his mobile home visiting with the Defendant, a friend of the victim's family. The Defendant borrowed two dollars from Keys, and *845 asked for a ride to the store to buy beer. Keys declined, so the Defendant asked to borrow one of the Keys' bicycles. Keys also declined to lend him a bicycle. The Defendant became upset; he appeared intoxicated, but lucid.
Keys then went inside to go to bed, leaving the Defendant outside the door. Barely ten minutes later, Mrs. Keys noticed that it was "mighty bright outside." She opened the blinds and saw flames rising near the window. When firemen arrived, the Defendant remained at the scene, and helped string out the fire hose. Police later took him into custody, and he gave a confession to an investigator from the Louisiana State Fire Marshal's Office.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR NOS. 1 & 2:
In his first two assignments of error, the Defendant alleges that his trial counsel was ineffective 1) by failing to move for a mistrial when she learned the jury had been exposed to "other crimes evidence" previously ruled inadmissible, and 2) by failing to object or move for mistrial when the court sought to remedy the "other crimes" error by providing jurors with the Defendant's admissable written statement.
At trial, the State attempted to introduce evidence that the Defendant had set a fire at the local post office. The Defendant had made two oral statements which the fire marshal's investigator rendered in writing. One statement included the Defendant's admission that he had lit a trash-can fire at the post office. After a Prieur hearing, the district court ruled that evidence of the post office fire was inadmissible but that the other statement was admissable.
During jury deliberations, the court discovered that when the Defendant's admissable statement was published to the jury, one juror received a copy that included the statement concerning the post office fire. The trial court tried to remedy the situation by admonishing the jury that it should only consider Exhibit S-3, which would then be provided to the juror who had seen Exhibit S-2. The court asked if there was any objection and the Defendant's trial counsel indicated she had none.
Claims based upon ineffective assistance of counsel are properly raised in applications for post-conviction relief. State v. Burkhalter, 428 So.2d 449 (La.1983). Post-conviction procedures enable the district court to order a full evidentiary hearing on the matter. State v. Seiss, 428 So.2d 444 (La.1983).
We find that the record contains insufficient information for this Court to determine whether the Defendant's trial counsel was ineffective. The record does not contain counsel's testimony concerning the reasons for her actions and the strategy she had undertaken. An evidentiary hearing, conducted as part of post-conviction relief, would allow the lower court to develop a full record on this matter. Without such a record, any attempt to analyze trial counsel's performance would rest upon mere speculation. Professional counsel should not be branded "ineffective" based upon mere speculation, nor should a duly tried defendant obtain relief on such a basis. Counsel's trial strategy is more properly addressed in a post-conviction proceeding. State v. Guillory, 95-383 (La. App. 3 Cir. 1/31/96); 670 So.2d 301.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 3:
The Defendant complains that the sentence imposed by the trial judge is indeterminate, and thus, illegal. The judge imposed an eight-year sentence, with three years suspended for the purpose of mental health treatment (there was some evidence that the Defendant has alcoholic tendencies) and restitution, which was set at $4000. He also ordered five years supervised probation. He mentioned as an alternative sentence, six years at hard labor.
The trial judge was concerned about imposing a partially suspended sentence because of the provisions of La.Code Crim.P. Art. 893 A and La.R.S. 14:2(13)(t), which together prohibit a suspended sentence *846 for the crime of aggravated arson, a specified crime of violence. The arson statute itself, however, provides for a sentence of not less than six nor more than twenty years and states that "[t]wo years of such imprisonment at hard labor shall be without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence." La.R.S.14:51. The trial judge was of the opinion that these statutes were in direct conflict with one another; however, he chose to follow the provisions of R.S. 14:51 which seem to allow for a partially suspended sentence. In an effort to streamline further proceedings, the judge stated for the record that he would impose a six-year sentence in the event that the original sentence would be declared illegal:
THE COURT: Well, I'll tell you what I'm going to do. Those statutes conflict, and it's more important to this court that restitution and mental health treatment be made, and the presentence investigation does not prohibit it, and I'm sentencing him the way I'm sentencing him. And if they wish to change it, they may change it. But restitution to this victim for out-of-pocket expense is something that outweighs Article 893A as far as this court is concerned. If they want to change it, they can change it; I'm giving him the sentence that I think he deserves according to the statute. And it's more important for this victim to be recompensed, and I can't give restitution without the suspension, and ... In a conflictual situation with Article 893 and the crime of violence statute coming later on, they did not see fit to put that in the body of the other statutes, and there's some question as an overlapping or possible conflict. As a result thereby, I see no reason, I see no legal justification for punishing a victim of a crime by not being able to at least have some form of suspended sentence to require restitution. And I think that would prime in this particular case, and I'm going to sentence him as such. And if the sentence is determined to be not appropriate insofar as there cannot be any suspension of sentence, then I will come back and resentence him. But at present, I'm going to sentence him the way I have here.
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As an alternate, to make sure that there's no problem, this is what the court wants. The original sentence is given. In the event it is determined that a suspension of sentence is not allowed for purposes of requiring restitution and mental health treatment for this defendant, if that is determined, then the court will sentence the defendant to six years at hard labor.
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758 So. 2d 844, 2000 WL 156147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bazar-lactapp-2000.