State v. Dowell

75 So. 3d 967, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0171, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1138, 2011 WL 4582460
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 2011
DocketNo. 2011-KA-0171
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 So. 3d 967 (State v. Dowell) 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. Dowell, 75 So. 3d 967, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0171, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1138, 2011 WL 4582460 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

liThe defendant was charged with the distribution of marijuana in violation of La. R.S. 40:966(A), and with distribution of cocaine in violation of La. R.S. 40:967(A). The defendant pleaded not guilty, but was found guilty after a bench trial.

[968]*968The defendant timely filed motions for appeal after sentencing and multiple billing. The defendant’s convictions and multiple bill status were affirmed by this Court, and the matter was remanded for the trial court to designate the conviction for which the sentence was enhanced in the original habitual offender sentencing and to impose an enhanced sentence for the other conviction. The defendant was resentenced and, again, timely appealed. Because we find that the trial court erred in its sentencing of the defendant, we vacate both thirty-year habitual offender sentences and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The dispositive issues of this appeal are procedural. Therefore, the factual background is immaterial.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Sabrina Dowell was charged by bill of information with distribution of cocaine (“Count One”), a violation of La. R.S. 40:967(A), and distribution of | ^marijuana (“Count Two”), a violation of La. R.S. dO^G/A).1 Ms. Dowell pleaded not guilty at her arraignment. The trial court denied Ms. Dowell’s motion to suppress the evidence. Ms. Dowell was tried by a judge and found guilty as charged on both counts. Ms. Dowell was sentenced to five years at hard labor as to Count One, and five years at hard labor as to Count Two, both counts to run concurrently. The trial court adjudicated Ms. Dowell a fourth-felony habitual offender, as to both convictions,2 and sentenced her to twenty years at hard labor as a fourth-felony habitual offender. Ms. Dowell filed a motion for appeal, which was granted.

This Court affirmed Ms. Dowell’s convictions. State v. Dowell, unpub., 09-0260 (La.App. 4 Cir. 9/9/09), 17 So.3d 523. However, as this Court noted in its decision, the trial court failed to sentence Ms. Dowell as a habitual offender on both counts as charged in the habitual offender bill of information, imposing only one enhanced sentence, and failing to designate which conviction the enhanced sentence was imposed upon. This Court also noted that the trial court failed to vacate the original sentence before sentencing Ms. Dowell as a habitual offender, but that this error did not affect Ms. Dowell’s substantive rights. Therefore, this Court concluded that no error required correcting. Accordingly, this Court affirmed the one enhanced sentence, and remanded the case to the trial court to:

|s(l) designate the conviction for which the sentence was enhanced in the original habitual offender proceeding; and (2) impose an enhanced sentence for the other conviction.

[969]*969Dowell, unpub., 09-0260, p. 22, 17 So.3d 523.

Ms. Dowell filed a pro se writ application alleging that the trial court failed to comply with this Court’s order on remand, seeking, inter alia, to have this Court vacate the habitual offender adjudication. In response thereto, this Court ordered the trial court to comply within sixty (60) days “with this court’s order to designate which sentence was enhanced in the original habitual offender proceeding and to impose an enhanced sentence for the other conviction.” State v. Dowell, unpub., 10-0604, p. 1 (La.App. 4 Cir. 5/19/10).

Ms. Dowell then filed a pro se writ application complaining that the trial court had not complied with this Court’s order on remand from her appeal or this Court’s May 19, 2010 order from Writ No. 2010-K-0604. Subsequently, this Court issued an order directing the trial court to furnish proof that the “resentencing” was scheduled. State v. Dowell, unpub., 10-1069 (La.App. 4 Cir. 8/2/10).

The trial court vacated “all previous sentences imposed,” and resentenced Ms. Do-well as a fourth-felony habitual offender to thirty years at hard labor on Count One and thirty years at hard labor on Count Two, both sentences to run concurrently. The trial court also denied Ms. Dowell’s motion for a downward departure from the minimum sentence under the Habitual Offender Law, denied Ms. Dowell’s motion to reconsider the sentences, and granted Ms. Dowell’s motion for appeal. The trial court forwarded this Court a per curiam with | ¿attachments as proof that it complied with this Court’s order. Consequently, this Court denied Ms. Dowell’s writ application as moot. State v. Dowell, unpub., 10-1069 (La.App. 4 Cir. 9/23/10).

ERROR ON REMAND

Ms. Dowell asserts that the trial court erred in not following the remand order set forth by this Court in its disposition of Ms. Dowell’s original appeal, in which this Court affirmed both of Ms. Dowell’s convictions and the single enhanced sentence of twenty-years at hard labor as a fourth-felony habitual offender. Given that the trial court imposed only one habitual offender sentence, when the habitual offender bill of information charged that Ms. Dowell was a fourth-felony habitual offender as to both instant convictions (which was permissible3), this Court remanded the case and expressly directed the trial court to: “(1) designate the conviction for which the sentence was enhanced in the original habitual offender proceeding; and (2) impose an enhanced sentence for the other conviction.” Dowell, unpub., 09-0260, p. 22, 17 So.3d 523.

On remand, the trial court vacated the single enhanced habitual offender sentence that this Court affirmed, and sentenced Ms. Dowell as a habitual offender on both convictions. In vacating the one enhanced sentence that this Court affirmed, the trial court stated: “[Pjursuant to the order directed to this Court by the Fourth Circuit Court of appeal I will vacate all previous sentences imposed in this case.... ” The trial court erroneously vacated the habitual offender sentence |fithis Court affirmed on appeal instead of following this Court’s order on remand to designate which con-[970]*970vietion the habitual offender sentence was imposed upon.

The State argues that the trial court had the authority to “correct” the twenty-year habitual offender sentence affirmed by this Court on appeal because it was illegally lenient, citing La.C.Cr.P. art. 882(A)(“An illegal sentence may be corrected at any time by the court that imposed the sentence or by an appellate court on review.”) The State also cites State v. Johnson, 97-1906 (La.3/4/98), 709 So.2d 672, for the proposition that “at any time” as used in La.C.Cr.P. art. 882(A) “means just that.”

In Johnson, the Louisiana Supreme Court granted the State’s application for writ of certiorari and vacated a sentence of thirty-months at hard labor imposed on the defendant as a fourth-felony habitual offender, when the statutory minimum sentence under the Habitual Offender Law was twenty-years at hard labor. Johnson, 97-1906, p. 11, 709 So.2d at 678. The court vacated the defendant’s sentence and remanded the case “with instructions to obtain the defendant’s presence in court and sentence him for a determinate term of incarceration of no less than the minimum required under the Habitual Offender Law.” Id. In a footnote, the Court noted that, although the defendant was released from his thirty-month sentence, it could, under the authority of La.C.Cr.P. art.

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Related

State v. Dowell
198 So. 3d 243 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 3d 967, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0171, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1138, 2011 WL 4582460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dowell-lactapp-2011.