CALVIN MELVIN v. STATE OF FLORIDA , 246 So. 3d 424 ( 2018 )


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  •         DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    CALVIN MELVIN,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D15-4071
    [May 9, 2018]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit,
    Broward County; Matthew I. Destry, Judge; L.T. Case No. 13-4752 CF10A.
    Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Tatjana Ostapoff, Assistant
    Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Jeanine
    Germanowicz, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
    LEVINE, J.
    Appellant appeals his convictions and sentences for three counts of
    providing false information to law enforcement in a missing child
    investigation. Appellant raises several issues, including that the trial court
    erred in denying his motion to dismiss and in finding that a non-state
    prison sanction presented a danger to the public. We affirm the denial of
    the motion to dismiss based on the plain language of the statute under
    which appellant was charged. However, we reverse appellant’s sentence
    because the trial court’s order was insufficient to support a finding that
    appellant was a danger to the public. We affirm the remaining issues
    without comment.
    Appellant was charged with three counts of providing false information
    to law enforcement during the investigation of his missing child. He made
    the allegedly false statements on January 9 and 10, 2013. On January 11
    and 12, the child’s skeletal remains were found in the backyard of the
    residence appellant had shared with Brittney Cierra, who was his girlfriend
    and the deceased child’s mother. Forensics determined that the child had
    died in July 2011 at the age of five months, around the same time the child
    had gone missing.
    Appellant moved to dismiss the charges, arguing there was no nexus
    between the false information he provided to law enforcement and the
    child’s death since the child had died a year and a half before he gave the
    false information. The state argued that the statute and jury instruction
    did not contain any language requiring a causal connection. The trial
    court agreed with the state and denied the motion to dismiss. Thereafter,
    appellant entered an open plea to the charges, reserving the right to appeal
    the denial of his motion to dismiss.
    Testimony during the sentencing hearing revealed that on January 9,
    2013, Child Protective Services and a police officer went to appellant and
    Cierra’s house to investigate the well-being of the children residing there.
    According to a report, Cierra used drugs, verbally abused the children, and
    threatened to physically harm them. At the house, when questioned about
    the missing child’s whereabouts, appellant told the authorities that the
    child was with the paternal grandmother. When the child could not be
    located, a detective became involved in the case.
    The next day, during a five-hour long interview with the police,
    appellant repeatedly stated that the child had been taken to a fire station.
    Towards the end of the interview, appellant admitted he believed the
    missing child was dead because he had an argument with Cierra and left
    for a couple of months. When he came back, Cierra said, “[I]f you love me
    . . . you will forgive me,” but would not tell him what she was referring to.
    He told the detectives to “look under the ground” behind the house where
    appellant used to live with Cierra and drew a map for the detectives. A
    search of the backyard revealed the skeletal remains of the missing child.
    Appellant testified that he lied to the police because he was “in love,
    and being stupid.” According to appellant, Cierra threatened to harm the
    children every time he left her. Appellant also testified he told the police
    that there was a spot in the backyard where Cierra would sit and cry.
    After the hearing, the trial court found that imposing a non-state prison
    sanction on appellant would present a danger to the public. The court
    stated:
    Through his lies and misdirection, the Defendant confused
    and delayed the investigation in the disappearance of a child,
    his child, who was ultimately found dead and buried in his
    own backyard. The Defendant’s actions put other young
    children at risk; most directly those who lived in the home
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    with him and his paramour. His actions would allow others
    to carry out violence against children with potential impunity.
    The trial court sentenced appellant to consecutive terms of five years’
    imprisonment on two counts and time served on the third count.
    “Because a motion to dismiss pursuant to rule 3.190(c)(4) requires the
    lower court to make a pretrial determination of the law of the case when
    the facts are not in dispute, the standard of review on appeal is de novo.”
    State v. Benjamin, 
    187 So. 3d 352
    , 354 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (citation
    omitted). “The interpretation of a statute is a purely legal matter and
    subject to review de novo.” State v. Brock, 
    138 So. 3d 1060
    , 1062 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 2014).
    Appellant was charged with three counts of violating section
    837.055(2), Florida Statutes (2013). This statute was enacted in the wake
    of the Casey Anthony case. In that case, the defendant made false
    statements to the police during an investigation into the disappearance of
    her young daughter. Anthony v. State, 
    108 So. 3d 1111
    , 1113 (Fla. 5th
    DCA 2013). The child’s remains were later discovered near the defendant’s
    family home. 
    Id. at 1116
    . The defendant was convicted of four counts of
    providing false information to a law enforcement officer, a first-degree
    misdemeanor. 
    Id. at 1117
    .
    As a result of Anthony, the legislature enacted section 837.055(2),
    creating a third-degree felony when a person
    knowingly and willfully gives false information to a law
    enforcement officer who is conducting a missing person
    investigation involving a child 16 years of age or younger with
    the intent to mislead the officer or impede the investigation,
    and the child who is the subject of the investigation suffers
    great bodily harm, permanent disability, permanent
    disfigurement, or death . . . .
    § 837.055(2), Fla. Stat. (2013).
    Thus, the plain language of the statute requires two elements: (1)
    knowingly and willfully giving false information to law enforcement during
    a missing child investigation, and (2) the child suffering great bodily harm,
    permanent disability, permanent disfigurement, or death. See id. In this
    case, both elements of the statute were met. As such, we find the trial
    court did not err in denying the motion to dismiss based on the plain
    language of the statute. See Schoeff v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 
    232 So.
                              3
    3d 294, 313 (Fla. 2017) (“When the language of the statute is clear and
    unambiguous and conveys a clear and definite meaning, there is no
    occasion for resorting to the [secondary] rules of statutory interpretation
    and construction; the statute must be given its plain and obvious
    meaning.”) (Lawson, J., concurring) (citation omitted).
    As to the sentencing issue, because appellant scored less than twenty-
    two points on the sentencing guidelines, the trial court was statutorily
    required to impose a non-state prison sanction unless the court made
    written findings that a non-state prison sanction would present a danger
    to the public. See § 775.082(10), Fla. Stat. (2013). In considering the
    propriety of an upward departure from a non-state prison sanction, a court
    may consider “criminal history, victim injury, and propensity for one to
    commit future crimes.” Reed v. State, 
    192 So. 3d 641
    , 646 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2016).
    In Jones v. State, 
    71 So. 3d 173
     (Fla. 1st DCA 2011), the trial court
    found the defendant a danger to the public after he was convicted of
    driving while his license was suspended. The trial court reasoned that the
    defendant was likely to continue to drive without a license, which would
    endanger the public because it made it more likely he would attempt to
    elude law enforcement officers. The First District reversed, finding that
    “the court did not make sufficient findings . . . that imprisonment within
    the state prison system rather than the county jail would better deter him
    from continued unlicensed driving.” 
    Id. at 176
    .
    In contrast, in Porter v. State, 
    110 So. 3d 962
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2013), this
    court upheld a prison sentence for a defendant convicted of grand theft
    because the trial court articulated sufficient facts to sustain the requisite
    written finding that the defendant was a danger to the public. The trial
    court found, inter alia, that the theft was accomplished by writing a
    worthless check, which was consistent with the defendant’s lifelong modus
    operandi; that the defendant caused significant financial and emotional
    damage; and that he would continue to commit financial crimes against
    the public if not incarcerated. 
    Id. at 964
    . Thus, the Porter court made
    sufficient written findings as to “criminal history, victim injury, and
    propensity for one to commit future crimes.” See Reed, 192 So. 3d at 646.
    Like in Jones, and unlike in Porter, here the trial court’s written order
    did not articulate sufficient facts to sustain a finding that appellant was a
    danger to the public as required by the statute. The trial court did not
    explain how appellant’s actions “put other young children at risk.” Nor
    did the trial court state how the lies appellant told on January 9 delayed
    the investigation when he confessed the very next day and the remains
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    were found a day or two later. The trial court also did not make any
    findings as to appellant’s lack of any criminal history or propensity to
    commit future crimes. Because the trial court did not make sufficient
    findings that imprisonment within the state prison system rather than
    county jail or another potential non-state prison sanction would deter him
    from committing future crimes, we reverse appellant’s sentence and
    remand for the trial court to impose a non-state prison sanction. See id.
    at 648.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
    WARNER, J., concurs.
    GROSS, J., concurs specially with opinion.
    GROSS, J., concurring specially.
    I concur in the majority opinion. One possible reading of section
    837.055(2), Florida Statutes (2013), is that the child who is the subject of
    investigation suffers harm after the giving of the false information, without
    there being any causal connection. If a criminal statute is ambiguous, we
    would normally apply the rule of lenity in section 775.021(1), Florida
    Statutes (2017), and construe the statute “most favorably to the accused.”
    As the majority notes, the legislature amended the statute in response
    to the Casey Anthony case, where the death of a child preceded a mother’s
    giving of false information. We know this from the legislative history. See
    Florida Staff Analysis, H.B. 37, 4/10/2012. “Although not determinative
    of legislative intent, staff analyses are one touchstone of the collective
    legislative will.” Sun Bank/South Florida, N.A. v. Baker, 
    632 So. 2d 669
    ,
    671 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994). We should not ignore the clear legislative history
    and engage in a hypertextual analysis of the statute to arrive at a result
    that the legislature sought to avoid in enacting the statute.
    *            *     *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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