State v. Swan

178 A.3d 455
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 10, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 A.3d 455 (State v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Swan, 178 A.3d 455 (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

John A. Parkins, Jr. Superior Court Judge

Introduction

Presently before the court is Defendant’s February 9 application for a sen[456]*456tencing hearing. Defendant is scheduled to be resentenced to a mandatory sentence life without parole on February 21, 2017. In his application, Swan contends that the court is not obligated to sentence him to life without parole and he is entitled to a sentencing hearing after which the court may sentence' him to something less. The court finds the petition is without merit and has decided to rule upon it without waiting for a response from the State.1

Background

Defendant was convicted of a 1996 home invasion murder in the first degree of Kenneth Warren and sentenced to death. In 2016 the Delaware Supreme Court in Rauf v. State2 declared unconstitutional Delaware’s statutory scheme for imposing the death penalty. A few months later the same court held in Powell, v. State3 that its decision in Rauf must be retroactively applied to death sentences imposed before Rauf was announced. Following Powell, this court issued a Rule to Show Cause to the State directing it to show cause why Swan’s death penalty should not be vacated and he be resentenced to life without parole. In response the State conceded that Rauf and Powell require that Swan’s death sentence be vacated. This court has set Swan’s resentencing for February 21.

Swan, through his counsel, has filed a motion seeking to be sentenced as a Class A felon, claiming he cannot be subjected to mandatory sentence of life without parole. He argues that the Delaware Supreme Court declared the death penalty unconstitutional in its entirety and therefore he cannot be sentenced under the portion of that statute which calls for a life sentence without parole in cases in which a sentence of death is not imposed. He also argues that a sentence of life without parole violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment. His arguments • are without merit.

Analysis

A. Rmf did not invalidate the portion of the statute calling for life without parole.

The analysis begins and ends with the obvious: the question of what sentence is to be imposed in lieu of the current death sentences has already been decided by the Supreme Court. In its conclusion in Powell the Court wrote “Powell’s death sentence must be vacated and he must be sentenced to ‘imprisonment for the remainder of his natural life without benefit of probation or parole or any other reduction.’”4 Following Powell the Supreme Court has, on at least two occasions, remanded other cases in which a death sentence had been imposed with instructions to vacate that sentence and. impose a sentence of life without parole. In Phillips v. State5 it wrote that “[w]e agree that Otis’s death sentence must be vacated and that he must be resentenced on the conviction of Murder in the First Degree to ‘imprisonment for the remainder of his natural life without benefit of probation or parole or any other reduction.’ ” And in State v. Reyes6 it directed that “[t]he Superior Court shall impose on each of the murder convictions a sentence of imprisonment for the remainder of Reyes’ natural life without benefit of probation or parole or any other reduction,”

[457]*457The court can think of no meaningful distinction between Powell, Phillips and Reyes and the instant case; certainly Swan suggests none. The hierarchical nature of our judicial system demands that an inferi- or court , such as this one faithfully adhere to the applicable precedents of an appellate court. Our system of. laws would quickly plummet into chaos if trial.courts felt free to ignore those precedents. Thus this court has no choice but to re-sentence Swan to life without parole.

. Lest the language in this opinion about adherence to the Supreme Court’s rulings be viewed as an implicit disagreement with the Supreme Court’s,rulings that a sentence of life without parole must be. imposed, this court will indulge itself with its musings that Swan is incorrect when he asserts that the Supreme Court invalidated 11 Del. C. § 4209 in its entirety in Rauf. Section 4209 is a comprehensive statute governing punishment for murder in the first degree. It sets the penalty as either death or life without parole; limits the circumstances in which a sentence of death may be imposed; establishes substantive elements which must be proven as a requisite to the imposition of the death sentence; specifies the procedures to be employed in determining whether to impose the death sentence; and describes the evi-dentiary standard applicable to some of the determinations which go into this calculus. The Rauf court found some, but not all, of section 4209’s provisions are unconstitutional.

The constitutional flaws in section 4209 found in Rauf are limited to some of the procedures required by the statute and the standard the trial judge was to employ when deciding whether to impose a sentence of death. Under the mechanism provided by section 4209, the jury was required to determine if one or more of the statutory aggravating factors had been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. If the jury found the existence of at least one statutory aggravating factor it was next required to weigh the aggravating factors (both statutory and non-statutory) against any mitigating factors- and then make a recommendation to the trial judge whether the death penalty -should be imposed. In turn the trial judge,

after considering the findings and recommendation’of the jury and without hearing or reviewing any additional evidence, shall impose a sentence of death if the Court finds by a preponderance of the evidence, after weighing all relevant evidence in aggravation or mitigation which .bears upon, the particular circumstances or details of the commission of the offense and the character and propensities of the .offender, that the aggravating circumstances found by the Court .to exist outweigh the mitigating circumstances found by. the Court to exist,

The statute was silent as to whether.the jury could rely upon non-statutory aggravating factors which it did not unanimously find, nor did it require that the jury’s recommendation be unanimous. ■

The Rauf court found the statutory scheme - unconstitutional because at many points in the decision-making process it allowed for a less than unanimous decision or for a finding based on less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The Chief Justice summarized the point in his concurring opinion:

There is no circumstance in which it is more critical that a jury act with the historically required confidence than when it is determining whether a defendant should live or’die. If, as a majority of us have concluded, the Sixth Amendment requires a jury to make all the necessary factual determinations relevant to a capital defendant’s fate, there is no reason to depart from -the -long[458]*458standing beyond a reasonable doubt standard when the jury is making the crucial fact-laden judgment of whether the defendant should be executed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 A.3d 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-swan-delsuperct-2017.