State v. King

750 N.W.2d 674, 275 Neb. 899
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 2008
DocketS-07-458
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 750 N.W.2d 674 (State v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. King, 750 N.W.2d 674, 275 Neb. 899 (Neb. 2008).

Opinion

750 N.W.2d 674 (2008)
275 Neb. 899

STATE of Nebraska, appellee,
v.
Donell KING, appellant.

No. S-07-458.

Supreme Court of Nebraska.

June 13, 2008.

*675 James J. Regan for appellant.

*676 Jon Bruning, Attorney General, and George R. Love for appellee.

WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, GERRARD, STEPHAN, McCORMACK, and MILLER-LERMAN, JJ.

CONNOLLY, J.

SUMMARY

In North Carolina v. Pearce,[1] the U.S. Supreme Court held that due process imposes a presumption of vindictiveness when, following a defendant's successful appeal, a sentencing judge orders a more severe sentence that is not justified by objective evidence in the record since the original sentencing. Appellant, Donell King, contends that because he had successfully appealed his habitual criminal status in a previous appeal, the district court was presumptively vindictive when it resentenced him on remand to a greater aggregate minimum term.

King's three felony sentences were originally subject to 10-year mandatory minimum terms under the habitual criminal statutes. Because the district court imposed consecutive sentences, King's aggregate mandatory minimum term was 30 years. On remand, the district court resentenced King to consecutive terms of 20 to 25 years' imprisonment. It reasoned that without the mandatory minimum requirement, King would still be eligible for parole in 30 years and would serve the same time in prison.

We affirm because the Pearce presumption does not apply. The district court's sentences on remand reflect a calculated effort to craft sentences functionally equivalent to its original sentencing intent. The sentences do not increase King's prison time. The enlarged minimum term is neither more severe in effect nor a sentencing circumstance that raises a reasonable likelihood of vindictiveness.

BACKGROUND

This is King's third appeal from the district court's original sentences for first degree sexual assault, kidnapping, and robbery. The district court originally sentenced King to three consecutive sentences of 10 to 25 years' imprisonment. In both King's first and second appeals, we held that the State had failed to prove King's habitual criminal status.[2] In each appeal, we vacated the enhanced sentences and remanded for resentencing.

At King's third enhancement hearing, the district court concluded that the State had again failed to prove King's habitual criminal status. Commenting on why the sentences it was about to impose did not increase King's original sentences, the court stated:

The [e]ffect on the actual time that... King is going to serve is going to be non-existent. [King] was sentenced ... for the harm that was caused and the danger that he posed to public safety.... [T]he habitual criminal designation simply shifted the range of possible sentences that could be imposed. And because all three of the convictions here were already Class III felonies, it doesn't have an impact on the time that he would be required to serve, as it might have in a Class IV or a Class III(a) felony.

The court then proceeded to sentencing and stated that it intended "to impose the *677 same amount of actual prison time." King objected to any increase in his three consecutive terms because there was no new evidence to justify an increase in his sentences. The prosecutor argued that King's offenses had been extremely violent and that to impose the same consecutive terms without the mandatory minimum terms under the habitual criminal statutes would give King an earlier parole eligibility date.

In response to these arguments, the court calculated that under King's original three consecutive terms of 10 to 25 years, he would have served at least 30 years' imprisonment. The court based its calculation on the habitual criminal statutes, which mandate a minimum sentence of 10 years for each felony conviction. The court further calculated that under the original sentences, if King did not lose good time credit, he would have reached his mandatory release date in 37½ years, or one-half of his 75-year aggregate maximum term. The court concluded that King's original sentences imposed 30 to 37½ years in actual prison time.

The court then stated: "So my task then is to replicate the sentence. And I've done that by signing a sentencing order on each of the three counts that ... King be incarcerated for an indeterminate period of 20 to 25 years." The court reasoned that without the mandatory minimum sentences, King would still be eligible for parole in 30 years. Under the new consecutive terms, the court also concluded that he would still reach his mandatory release date in 37½ years, assuming he did not lose good time credit. The court stated that "the consecutive sentences of 20 to 25 years replicate the earlier sentence[s] in real time."

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

[1] King assigns that the district court denied him due process when it imposed greater sentences after his successful appeal of the court's earlier sentences.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[2,3] Whether the district court's resentencing of a defendant following a successful appeal violates the defendant's due process rights presents a question of law.[3] When we review questions of law, we resolve the questions independently of the lower court's conclusions.[4]

ANALYSIS

King contends that the sentences he received after he successfully appealed his habitual criminal enhancement were effectively harsher sentences. He claims these sentences triggered the presumption of vindictiveness under the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Pearce.[5]

PRESUMPTION OF VINDICTIVENESS UNDER PEARCE

[4] In Pearce, the U.S. Supreme Court held that due process prohibits imposing a more severe sentence at retrial if it is motivated by vindictiveness toward a defendant for having successfully attacked his conviction.[6] The U.S. Supreme Court has characterized its decision in Pearce as applying "a presumption of vindictiveness, which may be overcome only by objective *678 information in the record justifying the increased sentence."[7] Yet Pearce is not an absolute bar against a trial judge's imposing an increased sentence following a successful appeal; a sentencing judge has wide discretion in determining an appropriate sentence.[8] But the Pearce Court held that a judge who had originally sentenced a defendant could not impose a more severe punishment upon resentencing unless certain conditions were present: (1) The new sentence must be based upon objective information concerning the defendant's identifiable conduct occurring after the time of the original sentencing proceeding, and (2) the factual basis establishing such conduct must be included in the record.[9]

[5] The presumption of vindictiveness under Pearce can also apply to a remand for resentencing after a defendant has successfully challenged the sentence itself and not the conviction.[10] It does not apply if a different judge resentences the defendant after the defendant successfully appeals the first sentence.[11] But here the same judge resentenced King.

[6-9] The Pearce presumption is directed at the "vindictiveness of a sentencing judge," not simply enlarged sentences.[12]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
750 N.W.2d 674, 275 Neb. 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-king-neb-2008.