State v. Terrell

858 So. 2d 1282, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3158, 2003 WL 22705350
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 2003
DocketNo. 37,762-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 858 So. 2d 1282 (State v. Terrell) 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. Terrell, 858 So. 2d 1282, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3158, 2003 WL 22705350 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

I,CARAWAY, J.

A jury found defendant, Patrick Wayne Terrell, guilty as charged on one count of possession of cocaine, in violation of La. R.S. 40:967 C. Terrell was adjudicated a fourth felony offender and given the mandatory sentence of life imprisonment at hard labor without benefits. After the trial court denied Terrell’s motion to reconsider the sentence, the defendant appealed his sentence. He complains that the term is disproportionate to the severity of the offense and excessive due to his disabilities and the non-violent nature of his prior offenses. Additionally, he asserts that the trial court did not use the correct Habitual Offender Law which was amended after the commission of the crime. Since we find that the trial court could consider the legislative change in policy brought about by the 2001 amendment to the Habitual Offender Law, we vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.

Facts

On October 1, 1999, members of the Caddo Parish Sheriffs Office Organized Crime Division executed a search warrant on a Shreveport residence upon information that from that location Terrell had made several sales of cocaine to an informant. Upon entering the house, police encountered and detained two males who indicated that they were visiting Terrell. Terrell fled the scene but was apprehended by police officers. While executing the search, officers found crack cocaine on the kitchen table near the door where Terrell exited and on the path he took as he ran away. In the kitchen police observed a plate containing what appeared to be L,cocaine residue. Police later identified Terrell’s fingerprints on the plate. A set of scales with cocaine residue, several packaged rocks of crack cocaine, packages of plastic bags and other paraphernalia were found in the residence. The total amount of cocaine was not presented in evidence; however, the evidence transfer receipt in the record indicates that the total quantity was 5.5 grams. Police also found mail addressed to Terrell in the home. Terrell provided the subject residence as his address to the Caddo Parish Sheriffs Office bonding office.

A unanimous jury found defendant guilty as charged. Thereafter, Terrell was adjudicated a fourth felony offender based upon prior convictions for distribution of marijuana in May of 1989 and possessions of cocaine in 1994 and 1996. The court imposed the mandatory life sentence despite Terrell’s contention that the life sentence as applied to him was unconstitutionally excessive.

[1284]*1284Terrell sought reconsideration of the sentence on the grounds that he was the exceptional defendant for which downward departure from the mandatory sentencing provisions was warranted. Terrell cited the legislative change to the Habitual Offender Law by Act 408 of 2001. At the hearing on the motion to reconsider the sentence, the trial court considered Terrell’s arguments that his physical limitations, including partial paralysis and AIDS, and non-violent criminal history, mandated downward departure from the mandatory life sentence of La. R.S. 15:529.1. Ultimately, however, the court rejected Terrell’s claims recommending that he seek |3relief from the sentencing review panel which was established as a part of the legislation of 2001. La. R.S. 15:574.22.

On appeal, Terrell’s counsel reiterates the claim that the life sentence imposed is constitutionally excessive due to the trial court’s failure to give sufficient consideration to the above-noted mitigating factors. In a pro se brief, Terrell adds that the sentence is illegal because the trial court applied the wrong habitual offender law to his case and that the trial court erroneously believed that it could not deviate from the statutory mandatory minimum sentence.

Discussion

At the time of the present offense in 1999, the Habitual Offender Law, La. R.S. 15:529.1(A)(1)(c)(ii), imposed a mandatory life sentence for a fourth felony offender when “the fourth or subsequent felony or any of the prior felonies” amounted to “a violation of the Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substance Law punishable by imprisonment for more than five years.” Because at the time of Terrell’s 1989 conviction, distribution of marijuana carried a maximum sentence of more than five years, the applicable provisions of the Habitual Offender Law at the time of the offense in 1999 mandated a life sentence for Terrell.

Terrell notes that his three other drug convictions were for possession charges which did not carry a maximum sentence of more than five years. Under the posfi-2001 Habitual Offender Law, “the fourth felony and two of the prior felonies” would be required to be “violation[s] of the Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substance Law punishable by imprisonment for ten hyears or more” in order for the enhanced sentence of life imprisonment to apply. La. R.S. 15:529.1(A)(1) (c) (ii) following amendment by Act 408 of 2001. Likewise, none of his four drug felonies, under either version of the Habitual Offender Law, were crimes of violence which also serve to enhance the punishment to life imprisonment for four time offenders.

We initially reject Terrell’s argument regarding the direct application of the new Habitual Offender Law to his sentencing. Indeed, Act 403 of 2001 amended the provisions of La. R.S. 15:529.1. Nevertheless the effective date of that amendment was June 15, 2001 and Section 6 of the Act provided that it was to have prospective effect only. The changes mandated by Act 403, including the changes to La. R.S. 15:529.1, do not apply to sentences imposed for crimes committed before the acts’s effective date. State v. Barnes, 02-2059 (La.4/4/03), 845 So.2d 354; State v. Surry, 37,448 (La.App.2d Cir.9/24/03), 855 So.2d 893. Because Terrell committed the present offense prior to the effective date of the amendments to La. R.S. 15:529.1, the enhancement statute to be applied is the one in effect at the time of the commission of the offense for which the sentence is being enhanced. State v. Barnes, supra; State v. Wade, 36,295 (La.App.2d Cir.10/23/02), 832 So.2d 977, writ denied 02-2875 (La.4/4/03), 840 [1285]*1285So.2d 1213. Thus, the court correctly applied the statute in effect in 1999 at the time of the commission of the offense, for which Terrell’s sentence is being enhanced.

Terrell’s argument that the 1999 version of the Habitual Offender Law imposes unconstitutionally excessive punishment requires review of |fithe decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court on that subject. In State v. Dorthey, 623 So.2d 1276 (La.1993), while finding that the Habitual Offender Law did not violate Louisiana’s constitutional separation of powers provision, the court stated:

If ... the trial judge were to find that the punishment mandated by R.S. 15:529.1 makes no “measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment” or that the sentence amounted to nothing more than “the purposeful imposition of pain and suffering” and is “grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crime”, he has the option, indeed the duty, to reduce such sentence to one that would not be constitutionally excessive.

Id. at 1280-1281.

Following the Dorthey ruling, the court later found the need “to curtail the district court’s use of Dorthey in cases in which it appeared that the courts were simply substituting their judgment of what constituted an appropriate penalty for that of the legislature,” as seen by its rulings in State v. Johnson, 97-1906 (La.3/4/98), 709 So.2d 672 and State v.

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State v. Green
873 So. 2d 889 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
858 So. 2d 1282, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3158, 2003 WL 22705350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-terrell-lactapp-2003.