State v. Underwood

365 So. 2d 1339, 1978 La. LEXIS 6929
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1978
DocketNo. 62528
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 365 So. 2d 1339 (State v. Underwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Underwood, 365 So. 2d 1339, 1978 La. LEXIS 6929 (La. 1978).

Opinions

CALOGERO, Justice.

Lee Underwood was convicted after a jury trial of three counts of distribution of marijuana and sentenced to terms of imprisonment of seven, eight and ten years, respectively, the terms to run consecutively. On appeal we affirm the defendant’s convictions but vacated the sentences and remanded for re-sentencing because information brought to light at the time of an earlier limited remand1 indicated that the severe sentences imposed were possibly based on false information contained in the pre-sentence report. 353 So.2d 1013 (La. 1978). We determined that the trial court erred in denying Underwood access to the relevant and non-confidential portions of the pre-sentence report and in failing to afford the defendant an opportunity to rebut as false any derogatory information in the report. On remand for re-sentencing the trial judge imposed sentences which included four, six and ten year terms of imprisonment, respectively, and decreed that the sentences imposed are to be served consecutively, in effect decreeing a five year reduction. The defendant timely objected to the sentences imposed on the ground that they are excessive, and now seeks the Court’s review of that claim.

In connection with Underwood’s original appeal it was noted that the three instances of distribution took place within a two month time period and that the sale in each case was to the same undercover officer, Weems. The first sale was of ten lids of marijuana (less than one pound), the second involved twenty lids and the third, which culminated in Underwood’s arrest, was of fifty-three pounds. After the arrest, as a result of the execution of a search warrant, three large cellophane bags of marijuana were seized from Underwood’s residence.

In setting forth reasons for the sentences imposed in the instant case, the trial judge unequivocally stated that he did not use the prejudicial pre-sentence report originally prepared by the division of probation and parole which contained the offending data highlighted in our original opinion.2 His [1341]*1341reasons expressly recognized a joint stipulation that the state had no evidence in support of this prejudicial matter contained in the original pre-sentence report other than the evidence adduced at trial. The lengthy reasons for sentence filed in the record in support of the sentences imposed clearly set forth that the trial testimony of the undercover officer and inferences which the trial judge drew therefrom were the bases for the determination that none of the mitigating factors of Article 894.1 B of the Code of Criminal Procedure are present to an extent which would militate in favor of suspension of sentence or probation. The trial judge expressed the view that incarceration for a substantial period of time is appropriate on each count, for the reason that a lesser sentence would both enhance the risk of future drug dealings and grossly deprecate the seriousness of the defendant’s crimes.

Defendant relies heavily upon the observations made by this Court in its earlier opinion that on their face the consecutive sentences totalling twenty-five years appear excessive, absent some further explanation not found in the record. The original opinion set forth the view that in the case of a defendant with a settled family and no previous record who made three sales to the same agent over a short time span, consecutive sentences totalling twenty-five years are excessive. The Court reported that concurrent sentences are the usual rule in the case of a defendant without a previous record, absent a showing that the public safety requires a longer sentence, and noted that except in the case of a defendant with a previous record, concurrent sentences should normally not exceed the maximum for the most serious offense tried. National studies were said to indicate a usual range of sentence for a nondangerous first offender as not exceeding from five to ten years as a maximum, absent exceptional circumstances such as extended criminal activity which had not theretofore led to conviction.

The state in brief notes the proscription set forth in Article 878 of the Code of Criminal Procedure3 and argues that the Court’s reviewing authority in this matter is strictly limited to a review of the statute (R.S. 40:966) in order to determine its constitutionality. Because the sentences imposed in the instant case do not exceed the statutory maximum and do not violate the procedures set forth for sentencing in the Code of Criminal Procedure, the state urges that Underwood’s appeal is without merit.

A majority of the Court has indicated its agreement that Article I, § 20 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974 renders the issue of excessiveness of individual sentences a subject of appellate review. In State v. Segers, 355 So.2d 238 (La.1978), without addressing the issue of the scope of appellate review of sentences in light of that constitutional provision, the Court affirmed the sentences imposed, a majority agreeing that they were not excessive. Three judges merely concurred in Segers, two for the articulated reasons that the Court could not properly review the excessiveness of the sentences imposed. But see State v. Walker, 328 So.2d 87, 89 (La.1976), in which the judges who lately in Segers and other cases4 expressed or intimated the view that the excessiveness of individual sentences cannot properly be reviewed joined without reservation in the opinion which reviewed the length of an individual sentence and found it not to be excessive. However, this Court has never heretofore expressly held that Article I, § 20 of the 1974 Constitution confers upon this Court the authority, nor imposes upon it the duty, to determine whether sentences imposed are excessively severe. See State v. Kemp, 359 So.2d 978 [1342]*1342(La.1978).5 Therefore, members of the Court continue to author opinions viewing the matter as an undecided issue, in which even members of the Court who consider the matter settled in favor of appellate review of individual sentences for exces-siveness join. See, e. g., State v. Johnson, 363 So.2d 458 (La.1978). It is not necessary in this opinion to squarely meet the issue of the scope of the authority conferred by the 1974 Constitution’s prohibition against excessive punishment, since, under either interpretation of Article I, § 20, the facts and circumstances present in the instant case establish that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in imposing sentence upon the defendant.

When we originally considered Underwood’s appeal we did not have before us the testimony of the undercover officer, Weems, upon which the trial judge relied so heavily in determining the sentences he imposed. Weems’ unrebutted testimony recounted that when the officer first approached the defendant at his home, telling a story accepted by defendant that a man he met in jail had sent him to deliver $42.00 owed Underwood for marijuana, Underwood responded to a complaint by Weems that he was unable to obtain work by inquiring whether Weems was interested in purchasing quantities of marijuana from him at $7.00 per package for re-sale at a profit. To assuage Weems’ feigned apprehensions about detection in the event he would undertake marijuana sales, Underwood assured that there was no cause to “. . .

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Bluebook (online)
365 So. 2d 1339, 1978 La. LEXIS 6929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-underwood-la-1978.