State v. Rachuy
This text of 502 N.W.2d 51 (State v. Rachuy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
The court of appeals affirmed defendant's conviction of and sentence for a number of counts of theft by swindle, 495 N.W.2d 6. We granted defendant’s petition for review for the limited purpose of modifying his sentence.
Defendant was charged with a series of thefts by swindle in Washington County in 1990. Following his release on bail in August of that year, he continued his criminal wrongdoing, which resulted in the filing of 12 counts of theft by swindle in Pine County-
Defendant was convicted in Washington County and sentenced to 146 months in prison. In this case we are concerned not with that sentence but with the sentence imposed for the five counts of which he was convicted in Pine County, an aggregate consecutive sentence of 20 years, giving defendant a total of approximately 32 years in prison for the Washington County and Pine County offenses.
Without departing, the trial court in Pine County was free to impose five executed terms of 48 months, the maximum presumptive sentence, but those sentences would have been concurrent with each other and with the previously-imposed Washington County sentence.
Using a double durational departure would not result in a longer period of time actually served in prison because the sentences would still be concurrent. If departing as to consecutive service, however, and using the presumptive sentences appropriately used when sentencing consecutively, the trial court could have imposed five 1-year terms, with each consecutive to each other and to the previously-imposed Washington County sentence. This would have given defendant 60 months or 5 years in addition to the Washington County sentence, a sentence of approximately 17 years for the Washington County and Pine County offenses.
The trial court went far beyond this, imposing the statutory maximum terms of 10 years each for three of the counts and 5 years each for two of the counts and made [52]*52two of the 10-year terms consecutive to each other and to the previously-imposed Washington County sentence. This gave defendant an aggregate Washington County-Pine County sentence of approximately 32 years.
The trial court clearly could have departed durationally and imposed the sentences it imposed if the trial court had made the sentences concurrent. That is because the career offender statute, Minn.Stat. § 609.-152, subd. 3, gives the trial court a legislatively-created ground for doing so. The statute provides:
Whenever a person is convicted of a felony, and the judge is imposing an executed sentence based on a sentencing guidelines presumptive imprisonment sentence, the judge may impose an aggravated durational departure from the presumptive sentence up to the statutory maximum sentence if the judge finds and specifies on the record that the offender has more than four prior felony convictions and that the present offense is a felony that was committed as part of a pattern of criminal conduct * * *.
However, if the trial court wanted to make these terms run consecutively, it had to also depart as to consecutive service. This is because under Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines II.F. consecutive sentencing is not “permissive” in the circumstances of this case but requires the articulation by the trial court of aggravating circumstances.
The trial court and the court of appeals tried to justify the additional departure by saying that the departure as to consecutive service was allowed because defendant’s offense was a “major economic offense,” Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines II.D.2. Defendant’s attorney bases defendant’s argument against this not on any disagreement with the conclusion that defendant’s offense was a “major economic offense.” Rather, defendant’s attorney, relying on the wording of section 609.152, subd. 3, argues that the career-offender ground for departure applies, according to the terms of the statute, only when the sentence imposed is otherwise a presumptive sentence according to the Sentencing Guidelines, something that is not the case here because consecutive sentencing is not presumed in this case. Thus, defendant argues, since a departure as to consecutive service was used, the trial court was not free to rely on the career-offender statute.
In State v. Wellman, 341 N.W.2d 561, 566 (Minn.1983), we said that under the logic of the so-called Evans doubling rule1 generally “it would be a violation of the [Evans rule] to * * * use the aggravating circumstances in * * * a case to justify an additional departure, with respect to consecutive sentence, over and above the double departure as to duration.” The only exception is when “severe aggravating circumstances” are present, as in Wellman, in which case the trial court may use both a durational departure and a departure as to consecutive service to obtain a sentence longer than two times the presumptive sentence duration.
While we believe that the trial court was free to depart durationally or with respect to consecutive service, we conclude that it was not free to do both in this case. Accordingly, we modify defendant’s Pine County sentence to five consecutive 1-year terms,2 with the time running consecutively to the Washington County sentence.
Affirmed as modified.
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502 N.W.2d 51, 1993 WL 177956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rachuy-minn-1993.