Thomas Clayton Baldwin, Sr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 6, 2004
Docket1668013
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Clayton Baldwin, Sr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Thomas Clayton Baldwin, Sr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Clayton Baldwin, Sr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Kelsey Argued at Salem, Virginia

THOMAS CLAYTON BALDWIN, SR.

v. Record Nos. 1658-01-3 and 1668-01-3

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA OPINION BY JUDGE JAMES W. BENTON, JR. THOMAS CLAYTON BALDWIN, S/K/A JULY 6, 2004 THOMAS CLAYTON BALDWIN, SR.

v. Record Nos. 2289-01-3 and 2291-01-3

COMMONWEATLH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TAZEWELL COUNTY Donald R. Mullins, Judge

Robert M. Galumbeck (Michael L. Dennis; Kelly C. Necessary; Dudley, Galumbeck, Necessary and Dennis, on brief), for appellant.

Stephen R. McCullough, Assistant Attorney General (Jerry W. Kilgore, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

The trial judge convicted Thomas Clayton Baldwin, Sr. of discharging a firearm within an

occupied dwelling house and possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute. Baldwin contends

the trial judge erred by: (1) prohibiting Baldwin from attending the judge’s conference in chambers

with the attorneys to discuss post-sentencing motions and afterwards failing to make a record in

open court, (2) failing to hear Baldwin’s post-sentencing objections and motions in a timely manner

and thereby denying him an opportunity to preserve a record for appeal, and (3) failing to suspend

an additional portion of Baldwin’s sentence. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the convictions. I.

In accordance with two plea agreements, Baldwin pled guilty to indictments charging

malicious discharge of a firearm within an occupied dwelling house and possession of cocaine with

the intent to distribute. As a part of the agreement, the Commonwealth requested an order of nolle

prosequi on other indictments. The trial judge granted the prosecutor’s motion for an order of nolle

prosequi, accepted Baldwin’s guilty pleas, and ordered a pre-sentence report.

At the sentencing hearing, the probation officer testified that Baldwin admitted he had been

selling cocaine for about a year prior to his arrest in July 2000. Describing Baldwin’s employment

history, the probation officer testified that Baldwin said he owned an automobile salvage business

during the years 1995 through 2000. The probation officer also testified that Baldwin’s social

security records indicated he reported no income after 1990, that Baldwin said he only worked odd

jobs between 1990 and 1995, and that Baldwin failed to provide documentation of his income or tax

filings.

Based on the testimony of the probation officer and a narcotics investigator, the prosecutor

argued that Baldwin’s sparse employment history indicated a long course of selling narcotics and

that Baldwin “was a pretty healthy drug dealer.” Baldwin’s attorney responded that Baldwin had

sold narcotics for only a year and did not have an extensive criminal record. He also asked the trial

judge to take into consideration that the sentencing guidelines recommended a range of

imprisonment from three years and six months to five years and ten months and that the quantity of

cocaine was on the “lower end of the scale.” Indicating that he doesn’t “follow the guidelines . . .

[n]ot always,” the trial judge announced that he was imposing a four-year sentence on the firearm

charge, suspending two years, and a thirty-year sentence on the possession charge, suspending

fifteen years.

-2- On April 30, 2001, the same day the judge orally announced the sentence, Baldwin filed a

written objection to the sentence and a motion for modification of the sentence. The pleading

asserted that the trial judge failed to consider the sentencing guidelines and that no evidence proved

Baldwin “had been dealing drugs for a long time”; it requested the judge to set a sentence “within

the discretionary guidelines or to consider . . . alternative sentencing.” According to a written

statement of facts, Baldwin’s objections and motion were to be heard on May 30, 2001. However,

on May 24, 2001, the trial judge entered the sentencing order on the firearm conviction, which

conformed to his oral ruling. On May 30, 2001, the trial judge directed Baldwin’s attorney and the

prosecutor to meet with him in chambers to discuss the basis for Baldwin’s objection and motion.

Baldwin’s attorney informed the judge of the basis of the written motion and also said he intended

to present a chart and copies of other court orders indicating that Baldwin’s sentence was

disproportionate to sentences given to similar defendants. The trial judge denied Baldwin’s

attorney’s request for a formal hearing at which Baldwin would be present and also denied the

attorney’s request “to place on the record, in open court with [Baldwin] present, the proceedings

which occurred in chambers.” The judge also “directed . . . that [the] matters would be set out in an

Order.”

The following day, May 31, 2001, the trial judge entered the sentencing order on the

narcotics conviction, which conformed to his oral ruling. Baldwin filed additional motions that

same day requesting the trial judge to set aside the sentencing orders, to impose a sentence within

the sentencing guidelines, or to impose an alternative sentence. When Baldwin’s attorney appeared

before the trial judge on June 22, 2001 to present an order memorializing the judge’s May 30, 2001

ruling, the trial judge instead entered an order to stay and suspend the imposition of both sentences

pending a hearing to be held on Baldwin’s previously filed objections and motions. The trial judge

-3- also ordered that Baldwin remain in the county jail and not be transferred into the custody of the

Department of Corrections.

At a hearing on July 12, 2001, the trial judge heard argument on Baldwin’s motions to set

aside the sentences and to modify the sentences. A month after this hearing, the trial judge entered

the final order denying Baldwin’s objections to the sentence and denying his motions for

modification of the sentence. Baldwin appeals the trial judge’s rulings.

II.

Baldwin contends that the trial judge erred by considering in his absence the post-sentencing

objection and motion and by failing to make a record in open court. He argues that the judge’s

decision to exclude him from the chambers conference violated his right to be present at the

proceedings as protected by the Sixth Amendment and Code § 19.2-259. The Commonwealth

responds that Baldwin had no constitutional or statutory right to be present.

It is well accepted as a constitutional principle that an accused has a due process “right to be

present at all stages of the trial where his absence might frustrate the fairness of the proceedings.”

Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 819 n.15 (1975). In other words, “[s]o far as the Fourteenth

Amendment is concerned, the presence of a defendant [at the hearing] is a condition of due

process to the extent that a fair and just hearing would be thwarted by his absence, and to that

extent only.” Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 107-08 (1934).

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