Alexander Regino Quintanilla v. State of Indiana ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                FILED
    Apr 08 2020, 12:51 pm
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                      ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Paula M. Sauer                                              Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Danville, Indiana                                           Attorney General of Indiana
    Tiffany A. McCoy
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Alexander Regino Quintanilla,                               April 8, 2020
    Appellant-Defendant,                                        Court of Appeals Case No.
    19A-CR-2779
    v.                                                  Appeal from the Hendricks
    Superior Court
    State of Indiana,                                           The Honorable Mark A. Smith,
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                                         Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    32D04-1807-F2-14
    Najam, Judge.
    Statement of the Case
    [1]   Alexander Regino Quintanilla appeals his conviction for dealing in
    methamphetamine, as a Level 2 felony, and his ensuing sentence. Quintanilla
    raises two issues for our review, which we restate as the following three issues:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020                            Page 1 of 14
    1.       Whether Indiana’s statutory requirement to use a turn
    signal prior to turning does not apply where it might not be
    clear to other motorists where specifically the driver will
    turn.
    2.       Whether the trial court abused its discretion when it relied
    on the substantial amount of methamphetamine—ten
    pounds—found in Quintanilla’s vehicle when sentencing
    him for an already enhanced Level 2 felony offense.
    3.       Whether Quintanilla’s twenty-year sentence, with ten
    years suspended, is inappropriate in light of the nature of
    the offense and Quintanilla’s character.
    [2]   We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [3]   On July 15, 2018, officers with the Hendricks County Sheriff’s Department
    received a tip that Quintanilla would be traveling through Hendricks County
    with narcotics in his vehicle. Officers in multiple vehicles followed Quintanilla
    westbound on U.S. 36 in Avon. As Quintanilla passed a Target department
    store, he failed to use his left turn signal continuously as he made a “rapid lane
    change” into a turn lane and then turned left onto Gable Drive. Tr. Vol. 2 at
    37. Multiple officers saw the traffic infraction, and Hendricks County Sheriff’s
    Deputy Dennis Sanchez initiated a traffic stop.
    [4]   During the stop, a K-9 unit indicated the presence of contraband inside
    Quintanilla’s vehicle. Officers then searched the vehicle and seized
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020              Page 2 of 14
    approximately ten pounds of methamphetamine, distributed over ten one-
    pound bags. Officers arrested Quintanilla.
    [5]   The State charged Quintanilla with dealing in methamphetamine as a Level 2
    felony because “the amount of the drug involved” was “at least ten (10) grams,”
    or about two-hundredths of one pound. Ind. Code § 35-48-4-1.1(e)(1) (2019).
    Quintanilla moved to suppress the ten pounds of methamphetamine seized
    from the traffic stop on the ground that, had he used a left turn signal, it would
    have been ambiguous to other motorists if he were turning left onto Gable
    Drive or instead into the parking lot of a nearby business. The trial court
    denied the motion. Quintanilla renewed his objection to the admissibility of the
    evidence at his ensuing bench trial, which the trial court overruled. The court
    then found Quintanilla guilty of dealing in methamphetamine, as a Level 2
    felony.
    [6]   Thereafter, the court sentenced Quintanilla as follows:
    [T]here is some prior criminal history but not significant enough
    where I would consider it an aggravating circumstance. Both
    offenses appear to be minor. I do think it is an aggravating
    circumstance that he was arrested while this case was pending for
    a new criminal offense. I also find that the amount of the drug was
    a—obviously ten pounds is way over[,] above[,] and beyond what the
    State had to prove in order to meet its burden. . . . [I]n addition to
    that I have considered the fact that the Defendant . . . did score
    low . . . on the risk assessment. Having considered those things
    the Court . . . hereby imposes a sentence of twenty years in the
    Department of Correction[]. Ten of those years will be executed,
    ten . . . will be suspended to probation.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020           Page 3 of 14
    Id. at 155-56
    (emphasis added). This appeal ensued.
    Discussion and Decision
    Issue One: Admission of the Methamphetamine
    [7]   On appeal, Quintanilla first asserts that officers violated his state and federal
    constitutional rights when they stopped his vehicle. As we have explained:
    [The defendant’s] arguments that police violated his Fourth
    Amendment and Article 1, Section 11 rights raise questions of
    law we review de novo. As the United States Supreme Court has
    explained with respect to the Fourth Amendment, “as a general
    matter determinations of reasonable suspicion and probable
    cause should be reviewed de novo on appeal,” while “findings of
    historical fact” underlying those legal determinations are
    reviewed “only for clear error.” Ornelas v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 699 (1996). The Indiana Supreme Court applies the same
    standard under Article 1, Section 11. E.g., McIlquham v. State, 
    10 N.E.3d 506
    , 511 (Ind. 2014). In other words, we review whether
    reasonable suspicion or probable cause exists “under a standard
    ‘similar to other sufficiency issues’—whether, without reweighing
    the evidence, there is ‘substantial evidence of probative value that
    supports the trial court’s decision.’”
    Id. (quoting State
    v.
    Richardson, 
    927 N.E.2d 379
    , 385 (Ind. 2010)).
    Redfield v. State, 
    78 N.E.3d 1104
    , 1106 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017) (some citations and
    quotation marks omitted), trans. denied.
    [8]   An officer’s observation of a traffic infraction is a well-established basis for a
    traffic stop under both the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution and Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution. E.g., Doctor
    v. State, 
    57 N.E.3d 846
    , 853, 856 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016). And Indiana Code
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020           Page 4 of 14
    Section 9-21-8-25 provides, in relevant part, that “[a] signal of intention to turn
    right or left shall be given continuously during not less than the last two
    hundred (200) feet traveled by a vehicle before turning or changing lanes.” 1
    There is no dispute that Quintanilla did not signal a left turn continuously for at
    least 200 feet prior to turning.
    [9]    Nonetheless, Quintanilla asserts that the statute does not apply here. In
    particular, Quintanilla asserts that using the left turn signal as required would
    not have clearly indicated to other motorists where specifically Quintanilla
    intended to turn—namely, whether Quintanilla intended to turn onto Gable
    Drive or into the parking lot of a nearby business.
    [10]   In support of that argument, Quintanilla relies on this Court’s opinion in State v.
    Rhodes, 
    950 N.E.2d 1261
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). In Rhodes, the trial court
    granted the defendant’s motion to suppress, finding that the facts did not
    support the officer’s initiation of a traffic stop for the defendant’s purported
    failure to signal a turn. On the State’s appeal from a negative judgment, we
    recited the defendant’s arguments in support of the trial court’s judgment and
    held as follows:
    [The defendant] notes that the trial court questioned why he
    would have turned . . . unless [the officer] had already initiated a
    traffic stop. He also notes that the State did not show that it was
    1
    For speed zones of at least fifty miles per hour, the signal shall be given continuously for at least 300 feet.
    I.C. § 9-21-8-25. But there is no dispute that U.S. 36 at the location in question was a forty-five mile-per-hour
    speed zone.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020                                   Page 5 of 14
    possible for him to comply with the statute. The record is clear
    that [the location where the defendant turned off the street] is
    across the street from [where he had originally turned onto the
    street]. [The officer] estimated that [the defendant] turned his
    signal on about 150 feet before turning, but the record does not
    reflect whether there was at least 200 feet between the place
    where he turned onto [the street] and the place where he turned
    [off of the street]. We agree that the State failed to show that
    compliance with the statute was possible under the
    circumstances. In addition, if the trial court credited [the
    defendant’s] testimony, once the officer turned on his emergency
    lights [on the street before the defendant turned], [the defendant]
    was required to pull over immediately. See Ind. Code § 9-21-8-35
    (providing that drivers must “immediately” yield to an
    emergency vehicle when its siren or emergency lights are
    activated). Thus, we cannot say that the trial court erred by
    concluding that [the defendant] was not properly stopped for a
    traffic violation.
    Id. at 1265.
    [11]   Quintanilla reads Rhodes to stand for the proposition that, where the continuous
    use of a turn signal would not unambiguously tell other motorists where the
    driver is turning, compliance with the turn-signal statute is not possible. But
    Rhodes does not stand for that proposition. Rhodes stands for the proposition
    that the trial court is the finder of fact, that the State’s burden on appeal from a
    negative judgment is formidable, and that complying with the turn-signal
    statute might not be possible when a driver is on a street for less than 200 feet
    before turning off that same street. None of those circumstances are present
    here.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020          Page 6 of 14
    [12]   Moreover, Quintanilla’s argument that the turn-signal statute applies only when
    using the turn signal will unambiguously inform other motorists where
    specifically the driver intends to turn would create an exception that swallows
    the rule. In any municipality of even slight population density, driveways,
    parking lots, cross-streets, and alleyways are often within 200 feet of each other.
    To hold that the turn-signal statute does not apply under such circumstances
    would amount to an exemption from the turn-signal statute at many locations
    where it is required and beneficial. Our legislature did not intend such an
    absurd result. The statute requires a continuous signal to inform other
    motorists of a driver’s intent to turn—most motorists will figure out where the
    driver is turning based on where the driver actually slows down before the turn,
    not from the use of the signal alone.
    [13]   Accordingly, the statute applied to Quintanilla’s left turn, regardless of whether
    his use of the signal would have clearly communicated that he intended to turn
    onto Gable Drive or into the nearby business parking lot. Again, there is no
    dispute that Quintanilla failed to use the turn signal continuously. Accordingly,
    Officer Sanchez did not violate Quintanilla’s state or federal constitutional
    rights when the officer stopped Quintanilla for an observed traffic infraction,
    and we affirm the trial court’s admission of the ten pounds of seized
    methamphetamine.
    Issue Two: Sentencing Discretion
    [14]   Quintanilla next asserts that the trial court abused its discretion when it
    sentenced him. Sentencing decisions lie within the sound discretion of the trial
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020         Page 7 of 14
    court. Cardwell v. State, 
    895 N.E.2d 1219
    , 1222 (Ind. 2008). An abuse of
    discretion occurs if the decision is “clearly against the logic and effect of the
    facts and circumstances before the court, or the reasonable, probable, and actual
    deductions to be drawn therefrom.” Gross v. State, 
    22 N.E.3d 863
    , 869 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2014) (citation omitted), trans. denied.
    [15]   A trial court abuses its discretion in sentencing if it does any of the following:
    (1) fails “to enter a sentencing statement at all;” (2) enters “a
    sentencing statement that explains reasons for imposing a
    sentence—including a finding of aggravating and mitigating
    factors if any—but the record does not support the reasons;” (3)
    enters a sentencing statement that “omits reasons that are clearly
    supported by the record and advanced for consideration;” or (4)
    considers reasons that “are improper as a matter of law.”
    Id. (quoting Anglemyer
    v. State, 
    868 N.E.2d 482
    , 490-491 (Ind.), clarified on reh’g
    on other grounds, 
    875 N.E.2d 218
    (Ind. 2007)).
    [16]   The sentencing range for a Level 2 felony is ten to thirty years, with an advisory
    sentence of seventeen and one-half years. I.C. § 35-50-2-4.5. In sentencing
    Quintanilla to a term of twenty years, with ten years suspended, the trial court
    found the substantial amount of methamphetamine seized from Quintanilla’s
    vehicle to be an aggravating circumstance along with Quintanilla’s alleged
    commission of a new criminal offense during the pendency of these
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020           Page 8 of 14
    proceedings. 2 The trial court did not give aggravating weight to Quintanilla’s
    criminal history, and the court gave some mitigating weight to Quintanilla’s
    low risk to reoffend.
    [17]   Quintanilla asserts that the trial court abused its discretion when it sentenced
    him because, in finding the ten pounds of methamphetamine to be an
    aggravating circumstance, the court used an element of the Level 2 felony
    offense as an aggravator. Again, the offense for which Quintanilla was charged
    and convicted required the State to show that “the amount of the drug
    involved” was “at least ten (10) grams.” I.C. § 35-48-4-1.1(e)(1). The State’s
    evidence that Quintanilla possessed ten pounds of methamphetamine cleared
    that burden more than 450 times over.
    [18]   In support of his argument on this issue, Quintanilla relies on Smith v. State, a
    2003 opinion in which a panel of this Court held that the trial court abused its
    discretion when it used the defendant’s possession of eighty-five grams of
    cocaine as a sentencing aggravator because the degree of the offense had
    already been elevated based on the defendant’s possession of three or more
    grams. 
    780 N.E.2d 1214
    , 1219 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied. That holding
    in Smith has been followed in only one other published opinion from our
    2
    Quintanilla states that he is challenging the trial court’s use of his arrest as an aggravator, but Quintanilla’s
    precise argument here is not that the trial court erred in finding this aggravator but only that “it is more
    logical to address it as part of an inquiry of his character” under Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B). Appellant’s Br.
    at 28. Accordingly, we conclude that Quintanilla does not challenge on appeal the trial court’s finding that
    his arrest during the instant proceedings is an aggravating circumstance.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020                                     Page 9 of 14
    Court. 3 See Donnegan v. State, 
    809 N.E.2d 966
    , 978 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans.
    denied. And our similar holding in Donnegan has not been relied upon in any
    subsequent and factually comparable published Indiana appellate opinions.
    [19]   We conclude that Smith and Donnegan have been superseded on this issue.
    These opinions predate the General Assembly’s substantial overhaul of our
    criminal sentencing statutes in 2005. See 
    Anglemyer, 868 N.E.2d at 487-88
    . The
    very notion of an “enhanced” sentence has been diluted by the 2005 sentencing
    revisions, under which our trial courts have broad discretion to impose a
    sentence anywhere within the applicable statutory range. Under this statutory
    regime, our appellate courts have routinely deferred to our trial courts’
    assessments of particularized facts in crafting appropriate sentences. E.g.,
    Sorenson v. State, 
    133 N.E.3d 717
    , 729 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019) (“Our trial courts
    are broadly authorized to tailor sentences to the facts and circumstances before
    them.”), trans. denied.
    [20]   Further, and significantly, our current sentencing statute expressly states that,
    “[i]n determining what sentence to impose for a crime, the court may consider”
    as an aggravating circumstance that the “harm . . . suffered by the victim of an
    offense was: (A) significant; and (B) greater than the elements necessary to prove the
    3
    In a 2004 Indiana Supreme Court opinion, the defendant relied on this holding from Smith, but rather than
    challenge the merits of that argument the State conceded it and proceeded to argue harmless error. Our
    Supreme Court explicitly skipped an analysis on the merits of the defendant’s argument because of the State’s
    position and instead assessed the defendant’s sentence under Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B). Merlington v. State,
    
    814 N.E.2d 269
    , 272-73 (Ind. 2004).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020                               Page 10 of 14
    commission of the offense.” I.C. § 35-38-1-7.1(a)(1) (emphasis added); cf. I.C. § 35-
    38-1-7.1 (2003) (containing no similar language). We think that language
    applies here, where the extraordinary quantity of the drugs seized indicates the
    degree of harm the dealing and dissemination of those drugs would inflict upon
    the community. Finally, we note that the enumerated sentencing factors “do
    not limit the matters that the court may consider in determining the sentence.”
    I.C. § 35-38-1-7.1(c).
    [21]   While the Indiana Supreme Court has not expressly disapproved of the
    holdings in Smith or Donnegan, other holdings from the Court confirm that we
    should defer to the trial court’s consideration of the particular amount of drugs
    seized here. For example, in Hamilton v. State, our Supreme Court, relying on
    prior case law, reiterated that a trial court does not abuse its discretion in
    finding a victim’s “particularly tender years” to be an aggravating circumstance
    even though the degree of the felony offense for child molesting had already
    been elevated based on the victim being less than twelve years of age. 
    955 N.E.3d 723
    , 727 (Ind. 2011).
    [22]   In sum, our trial courts have broad discretion in sentencing defendants based on
    the actual and specific facts of the offenses, and our trial courts may consider
    the degree to which the amount of drugs actually in the defendant’s possession
    is greater than the statutory threshold required to prove the charged offense.
    That is what the trial court here did. The court did not abuse its discretion in
    sentencing Quintanilla.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020          Page 11 of 14
    Issue Three: Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B)
    [23]   Last, Quintanilla asserts that his twenty-year sentence, with ten years
    suspended, for dealing ten pounds of methamphetamine is inappropriate in
    light of the nature of the offense and his character. As our Supreme Court has
    made clear:
    The Indiana Constitution authorizes appellate review and
    revision of a trial court’s sentencing decision. Ind. Const. art. 7,
    §§ 4, 6; Serino v. State, 
    798 N.E.2d 852
    , 856 (Ind. 2003). This
    authority is implemented through Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B),
    which permits an appellate court to revise a sentence if, after due
    consideration of the trial court’s decision, the sentence is found to
    be inappropriate in light of the nature of the offense and the
    character of the offender. 
    Serino, 798 N.E.2d at 856
    . The
    principal role of such review is to attempt to leaven the outliers.
    Cardwell v. State, 
    895 N.E.2d 1219
    , 1225 (Ind. 2008). The burden
    is on the defendant to persuade the reviewing court that the
    sentence is inappropriate. Bowman v. State, 
    51 N.E.3d 1174
    , 1181
    (Ind. 2016).
    Robinson v. State, 
    91 N.E.3d 574
    , 577 (Ind. 2018) (per curiam).
    [24]   Further:
    Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B) is a “rare” avenue for appellate relief
    that is reserved “for exceptional cases.” Livingston v. State, 
    113 N.E.3d 611
    , 612-13 (Ind. 2018) (per curiam). Even with Rule
    7(B), “[s]entencing is principally a discretionary function in
    which the trial court’s judgment should receive considerable
    deference.” Stephenson v. State, 
    29 N.E.3d 111
    , 122 (Ind. 2015)
    (quoting 
    Cardwell, 895 N.E.2d at 1222
    ). “Such deference should
    prevail unless overcome by compelling evidence portraying in a
    positive light the nature of the offense (such as accompanied by
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020         Page 12 of 14
    restraint, regard, and lack of brutality) and the defendant’s
    character (such as substantial virtuous traits or persistent
    examples of good character).”
    Id. Absent such
    a “sufficiently
    compelling” evidentiary basis, we will not “override the decision
    of . . . the trial court.”
    Id. Sorenson, 133
    N.E.2d at 728 (alteration and omission original to Sorenson).
    [25]   According to Quintanilla, there was nothing about his dealing in
    methamphetamine offense that is not already accounted for by the 17.5-year
    advisory sentence for the Level 2 felony. He further asserts that his sentence is
    inappropriate in light of his character because he has lived a mostly law-abiding
    life; the fact that he was arrested while the instant case was pending, without
    more, is not significant; while he did not plead guilty, he did waive his right to a
    jury trial, for which he should receive some mitigating credit; he had a low
    recidivism score; and, he continues, “[i]t does not appear that the trial court
    considered any less restrictive, alternative placement programs . . . .”
    Appellant’s Br. at 37.
    [26]   We cannot agree. The officers’ testimony at trial demonstrated that Quintanilla
    was in possession of ten pounds of methamphetamine, which, like the trial
    court, we consider an extraordinary quantity, which is many times the amount
    needed to prove the charged offense. Further, he was alleged to have
    committed a new offense while on bond for the instant proceedings. While not
    a conviction, we agree with the trial court that this fact speaks poorly to
    Quintanilla’s character, as does his prior criminal history, even though it is
    minor. And the trial court suspended half of Quintanilla’s sentence to
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020          Page 13 of 14
    probation. We see no sufficiently compelling evidence in this record to justify
    appellate relief under Rule 7(B) here. We affirm Quintanilla’s sentence.
    Conclusion
    [27]   In sum, officers did not violate Quintanilla’s constitutional rights when they
    stopped him for a traffic infraction. Indiana’s turn-signal statute required
    Quintanilla to signal his turn continuously for at least 200 feet, which he does
    not dispute he did not do. We therefore affirm Quintanilla’s conviction. We
    also conclude that the trial court did not exceed its authority when it considered
    the extraordinary quantity of drugs in Quintanilla’s possession when he was
    arrested, and Quintanilla’s sentence is not inappropriate. We therefore also
    affirm his sentence.
    [28]   Affirmed.
    Kirsch, J., and Brown, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-CR-2779 | April 8, 2020        Page 14 of 14