State of Iowa v. Thomas Edward Jenkins Sr. ( 2015 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 15-0589
    Filed December 9, 2015
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    THOMAS EDWARD JENKINS SR.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Stuart P. Werling
    (plea) and Marlita A. Greve (sentencing), Judges.
    Thomas Jenkins Sr. appeals from his sentence following his guilty plea to
    two counts of second-degree sexual abuse. SENTENCE VACATED AND CASE
    REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
    Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Vidhya K. Reddy, Assistant
    Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kevin Cmelik and Louis Sloven,
    Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.
    Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, Judge.
    Thomas Jenkins Sr. appeals from his sentence following his guilty plea to
    two counts of second-degree sexual abuse. He contends the sentencing court
    considered impermissible factors in ordering the count 1 and count 2 sentences
    to be served consecutively rather than concurrently.        He also asserts the
    sentence entered was illegal because the court taxed to him “the costs of the
    entire action, rather than only the costs associated with the convicted counts.”
    We vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing before a different judge.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Jenkins was charged by trial information in 2014 with three criminal counts
    of second-degree sexual abuse, asserting he committed three separate sex acts
    against a child under the age of twelve, in violation of Iowa Code section 709.3(2)
    (2011).1 In 2015, Jenkins pled guilty pursuant to a plea agreement. The State
    agreed to dismiss count 3 in exchange for Jenkins’s guilty plea to counts 1 and 2.
    The plea was “open as to whether the sentences [would] run consecutively or
    concurrently.”   As part of the agreement, Jenkins admitted “the incidents
    underlying these pleas are separate and distinct acts.”
    At the subsequent sentencing hearing, the State recommended the court
    order Jenkins to serve his sentences consecutively. The prosecutor stated:
    Looking through his previous history, he has been on
    probation before and his probations were revoked for non-
    compliance. He has an indecent contact with a child from April of
    2013. Subsequent to that, he had a sex offender registry violation
    in July of 2014. And it was during the pendency of the previous
    1
    Section 709.3 was renumbered in 2013, and the “under the age of twelve”
    element is now found at section 709.3(1)(b). See 2013 Iowa Acts ch. 90, § 228.
    3
    indecent contact with a child that it would appear that this current
    case occurred in which he sexually abused an eight-year-old girl.
    And in looking at the presentence investigation [(PSI)],
    there’s almost an air of nonchalance about his rendition or speaking
    about what had occurred. It’s almost unimportant. The—It appears
    from his statements and his prior record that he’s likely to offend
    again if and when released.
    In response, Jenkins’s attorney requested the court order his sentences be
    served concurrently, stating, among other things:
    I will certainly not try to minimize at all the seriousness of . . . this
    offense because it is an extremely serious offense and I agree with
    [the prosecutor] in that regard. I do believe that this is a twenty-
    four-year-old man who aside from the indecent contact in this
    offense had very little criminal record. That does not excuse this
    offense.
    To [Jenkins’s] credit, he has not attempted to minimize that
    offense. He was up front with the police when he was interviewed.
    He did not try to disguise the offense. He, in his interview,
    described his—his interaction with the police that were interviewing
    him as cathartic, that it had been weighing on him for some time.
    He realizes that he has a problem and he needs to deal with that
    problem.
    He should be punished and he should be punished severely
    for this offense. And I would probably agree with [the prosecutor],
    except for the mandatory minimum sentences, no matter what this
    court does, Mr. Jenkins will be in prison for seventeen and a half
    years. I believe that does give him a chance at rehabilitation and
    still does inflict a punishment or at least the punishment that should
    be inflicted for these offenses.
    Because of those mandatory minimums, I would ask the
    court to run these sentences concurrently to give Mr. Jenkins a
    chance to perhaps rehabilitate. Even if he is released at the end of
    those sentences, he’s going to be subject to lifetime parole and all
    the other restrictions of a sex offender and it will give him a chance
    to rehabilitate and go through the sex offender treatment program,
    which as I understand it he’s scheduled to start very shortly as he is
    in Mount Pleasant at the present time. So for those reasons, I’d
    ask the court to consider running these sentences concurrently.
    Thereafter, the parties’ counsels clarified for the court that Jenkins’s plea was to
    touching one child, not two, in two separate acts.            In ordering Jenkins’s
    sentences be served consecutively, the court explained:
    4
    Well, my job is to look at these cases and determine an
    appropriate sentence. I am bound by what the law requires that I
    do in certain cases. I look at the least restrictive going to the worst.
    Mr. Jenkins, the two crimes that you pled guilty to are what
    are called forcible felonies and have mandatory prison time
    required as well as a minimum sentence under 902.12, which
    provides that you have to serve at least 70 percent of the maximum
    time. You have pled guilty to two separate class “B” felonies. A
    class “B” felony means that you can be put into prison for a period
    not to exceed twenty-five years. So that does mean that you have
    to serve seventeen-and-a-half years before you would have served
    your 70 percent.
    That is not discretionary on my part. And frankly even if it
    were, that would be the same sentence that I would give you for
    these types of acts which were simply horrendous. You have
    basically hurt, and I say that in a very plain way, you hurt a child in
    a sexual manner, and that child in seventeen and a half years is not
    going to be over that hurt. That child will not be over that hurt in
    thirty-five years or one hundred and thirty-five years. This is the
    type of thing that people never get over.
    I can tell you about having jury trials of these types of cases
    where we individually interview potential jurors to see if they can
    even hear this kind of a case, and on several different occasions, I
    have had potential jurors break down and be almost hysterical
    because it’s the first time they’ve had to admit to someone that this
    type of thing happened to them as a child. And there—it never
    goes away. Never.
    To your credit, you pled guilty. You are not making this little
    girl go through a trial. But by the same token, I’m very concerned
    because these types of acts are so horrendous and leave such a
    lifetime of hurt for a child that they certainly deserve to be punished.
    There is a need for us to have the community understand that this
    type of behavior will be punished. There is a need for you to be
    punished because of it and to receive whatever treatment you can.
    And I think that the community needs to be protected from your
    acts for as long as is possible.
    Because we have two separate and distinct acts, each of
    those acts, in my mind, deserves a sentence. And I’m going to run
    them consecutive for that reason. This is not a one-time thing.
    This happened on two separate distinct times. If you had any
    remorse or if you had any willingness to stop, it would have only
    happened once, and it did not. So this little girl is going to suffer for
    the rest of her life based on the acts that you committed.
    I can tell you . . . I was shocked when I read your rendition of
    the version in the PSI. I have never seen something put in such
    blunt and vulgar terms as what you put in there. In my mind, these
    5
    charges, as [the prosecutor] said, if they don’t deserve consecutive,
    I don’t know what would.
    Taking into account what I read in the [PSI], the nature of
    this—these crimes, the fact that you have a criminal history which
    includes indecent contact with a child, that probation has been
    revoked because you, obviously, did not even register correctly or
    didn’t register when you were supposed to as a sex offender, all of
    those things are going into account as well as what I just stated as
    far as my reasons for sentencing.
    Pursuant to your pleas of guilty to the charges of sex abuse
    in the second degree, in violation of Iowa Code section 709.3(1)(b)
    under Counts 1 and 2, and as provided by sections 902.3 and
    902.9 of the Iowa Code, it is the judgment and sentence of this
    court that you be committed to the custody of the Iowa Department
    of Corrections for a period not to exceed twenty-five years on each
    of these counts. I am running them consecutive for the reasons I
    stated on the record.
    The same day the court filed its written order sentencing Jenkins to two
    consecutive terms of incarceration not to exceed twenty-five years on each
    count.     The court ordered Jenkins “to make restitution for court costs and
    surcharges, if any.” Thereafter, Jenkins was assessed court costs of $180: $100
    for the case filing and docketing fee, $40 court reporter fee for the February 13,
    2015, guilty-plea proceeding, and $40 court reporter fee for the April 2, 2015,
    sentencing hearing.
    Jenkins now appeals.      He contends the sentencing court abused its
    discretion because it considered information outside the case record and relied
    on an erroneous belief that the acts happened “two separate distinct times.” He
    also asserts the sentence entered was illegal because it taxed to him “the costs
    of the entire action, rather than only the costs associated with the convicted
    counts.”
    6
    II. Discussion.
    A. Improper Considerations.
    Jenkins asserts the court’s statement that this “happened on two separate
    distinct times” is erroneous and therefore an impermissible factor, because its
    use of the word “times” indicates the court believed the crimes to which he pled
    guilty were “committed at temporally separate and distinct times—that is, that
    [Jenkins] abused the child on more than one occasion.”
    “The law is clear regarding consideration of impermissible sentencing
    factors.   We will not vacate a sentence on appeal unless the defendant
    demonstrates an abuse of trial court discretion or a defect in the sentencing
    procedure such as the trial court’s consideration of impermissible factors.” State
    v. Lovell, 
    857 N.W.2d 241
    , 242-43 (Iowa 2014) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted).   “In exercising its discretion, the district court is to weigh all
    pertinent matters in determining a proper sentence including the nature of the
    offense, the attending circumstances, the defendant’s age, character, and
    propensities or chances for reform.” State v. Loyd, 
    530 N.W.2d 708
    , 713 (Iowa
    1995) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see also Iowa Code
    § 907.5(1).
    It is also well-established that, in exercising its discretion, a sentencing
    court may not rely upon additional, unproven, and unprosecuted charges or facts
    “unless the defendant admits to the charges or there are facts presented to show
    the defendant committed the offenses.” State v. Washington, 
    832 N.W.2d 650
    ,
    659 (Iowa 2013) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see also State v.
    Jose, 
    636 N.W.2d 38
    , 41 (Iowa 2001).         When a defendant challenges the
    7
    sentence on this basis, “the issue presented is simply one of the sufficiency of
    the record to establish the matters relied on.” State v. Grandberry, 
    619 N.W.2d 399
    , 401 (Iowa 2000).     The sentencing court can consider only those facts
    contained in the minutes of testimony “that are admitted to or otherwise
    established as true.” 
    Lovell, 857 N.W.2d at 243
    . Similarly, the “district court is
    free to consider portions of a [PSI] that are not challenged by the defendant.”
    
    Grandberry, 619 N.W.2d at 402
    .       We will not infer the court considered an
    improper factor if it is not apparent from the record. See State v. Formaro, 
    638 N.W.2d 720
    , 725 (Iowa 2002). Our goal is not to second guess the sentencing
    decision but to determine if the decision rests on an untenable or improper
    ground. See State v. Seats, 
    865 N.W.2d 545
    , 553 (Iowa 2015).
    Jenkins asserts the sentencing court’s statement that “[t]his happened on
    two separate distinct times . . . indicates that the district court erroneously
    believed the count 1 and count 2 offenses to have been committed at temporally
    separate and distinct times—that is, that [Jenkins] abused the child on more than
    one occasion.” To support his contention, Jenkins claims on appeal that the
    offenses to which he pled guilty “occurred during a single incident—that is during
    a single game of hide and seek.” Jenkins then argues “[b]ecause the sentencing
    court’s conclusion that the sex acts underlying the count 1 and count 2 offenses
    occurred at temporally separate and distinct times were neither admitted by
    Jenkins nor proven by the State, it was not a permissible sentencing
    consideration.”
    To put the phrase in question in context, the sentencing court said, as
    noted above:
    8
    Because we have two separate and distinct acts, each of
    those acts, in my mind, deserves a sentence. And I’m going to run
    them consecutive for that reason. This is not a one-time thing.
    This happened on two separate distinct times. If you had any
    remorse or if you had any willingness to stop, it would have only
    happened once, and it did not. So this little girl is going to suffer for
    the rest of her life based on the acts that you committed.
    I can tell you I was—I was shocked when I read your
    rendition of the version in the PSI. I have never seen something
    put in such blunt and vulgar terms as what you put in there. In my
    mind, these charges, as [the prosecutor] said, if they don’t deserve
    consecutive, I don’t know what would.
    In our analysis of the consideration-of-impermissible-factors issue on appeal, we
    are only able to look at the words used by the sentencing court. The words used
    by the sentencing court—“This is not a one-time thing,” “This happened on two
    separate distinct times,” and “If you had any remorse or if you had any
    willingness to stop, it would have only happened once, it did not”—taken in the
    context of the other words used by the court strongly suggests, in our minds, that
    the court concluded the two acts of abuse were committed upon the one victim
    on two separate and distinct occasions. To be fair to the sentencing court, this
    conclusion, while erroneous, is understandable.
    We turn to the record before the sentencing court. Each count of the trial
    information charged that, between October 2012 and April 2013, Jenkins
    committed a sex act against a child under the age of twelve. The record is clear
    that Jenkins admitted to committing two separate and distinct acts with regard to
    the crimes to which he pled guilty.     In the memorandum of plea agreement,
    signed by Jenkins, Jenkins “admits the incidents underlying these pleas are
    separate and distinct acts.” The PSI provides no elucidation relevant to the facts
    at issue. During the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor and defense counsel
    9
    clarified for the court that Jenkins had pled to two separate acts concerning one
    victim, not two. It’s no wonder the sentencing court was left with the impression
    that Jenkins committed the acts during separate and distinct occasions.
    The sentencing court did not have the benefit of the record made at the
    guilty plea hearing before a different judge.2 There, in reciting the elements of
    the two offenses, the plea court said, “and that you committed that act on two
    separate and distinct occasions. Have I correctly stated the elements of the two
    offenses, Mr. [Prosecutor]?” The prosecutor responded, “In this case, I believe it
    would be there were two separate and distinct sex acts.”                 Defense counsel
    assisted the court with the factual basis. Jenkins admitted that on one day,
    between October 2012 and April 2013, while playing a game of hide-and-seek,
    he was alone “for some period of time” with the victim, and it was during that
    period of time he committed two separate and distinct acts of sexual abuse upon
    the victim. No reference was made to the minutes of testimony during the plea
    colloquy and Jenkins made no admissions to the factual allegations contained
    therein.
    There is no question that Jenkins committed two separate acts of abuse
    upon the victim, but the acts were committed during one occasion—that is,
    during the one game of hide-and-seek. Without the plea record before it, the
    sentencing court could have reasonably believed it was considering separate and
    distinct episodes of sexual abuse committed by Jenkins, but the court’s
    conclusions are not supported by the record. Its apparent misunderstanding of
    2
    A transcript of the guilty plea hearing was not transcribed until after the notice of
    appeal was filed.
    10
    the facts is the equivalent to considering facts outside the record—an
    impermissible factor. “If a court in determining a sentence uses any improper
    consideration, resentencing of the defendant is required.”        
    Grandberry, 619 N.W.2d at 401
    . Jenkins must therefore be resentenced.
    Jenkins also argues the court’s reference in its sentencing statement to its
    experiences with potential jurors who were victims of sexual abuse reveal it
    improperly considered facts outside the case record. In view of our disposition of
    the appeal, we need not consider this argument.
    B. Illegal Sentence.
    Jenkins also argues the court entered an illegal sentence when it required
    him to pay as restitution court costs in the action without specifying he was only
    responsible for the costs associated with counts 1 and 2, to which he pled guilty.
    Essentially, he contends he is only responsible for two-thirds of the court costs
    because one of the three charges was dismissed. We review both restitution
    orders and illegal-sentence claims for correction of errors at law. See State v.
    Hoeck, 
    843 N.W.2d 67
    , 70 (Iowa 2014); State v. Hagen, 
    840 N.W.2d 140
    , 144
    (Iowa 2013).
    “Criminal restitution is a creature of statute.” State v. Watson, 
    795 N.W.2d 94
    , 95 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011).        A defendant is responsible for court costs
    associated with the particular charge to which he pleads or is found guilty. Iowa
    Code § 910.2. Additionally, Iowa Code section 910.1(4) identifies court costs as
    a form of restitution. However, restitution, as defined in section 910.1(4), only
    applies to “criminal cases in which there is a plea of guilty, verdict of guilty, or
    special verdict upon which a judgment of conviction is rendered.” 
    Id. § 910.2(1);
                                            11
    see also State v. Petrie, 
    478 N.W.2d 620
    , 622 (Iowa 1991) (stating “only such
    fees and costs attributable to the charge on which a criminal defendant is
    convicted should be recoverable under a restitution plan”).      Similarly, section
    815.13 authorizes the collection of costs of a criminal prosecution from a
    defendant “unless the defendant is found not guilty or the action is dismissed.”
    Jenkins cites the Iowa Supreme Court’s statement in Petrie, that “[f]ees
    and costs not clearly associated with any single charge should be assessed
    proportionally against the defendant,” as requiring the district court to assess
    fees proportionally here.    
    See 478 N.W.2d at 621-22
    .         However, Petrie is
    distinguishable, in that the court only applied proportionality because it
    specifically found the costs in that case were not clearly associated with any
    single charge. See 
    id. Here, the
    court costs assessed are clearly associated
    with the charges to which Jenkins pled guilty. Put another way, none of the
    taxed court costs were associated with the dismissed count.
    The record indicates the court costs consisted of a $100 filing and
    docketing fee and two $40 court reporting fees, for a total of $180. The amount
    of the filing and docketing fee would have been the same even if the State had
    not charged Jenkins with a third count. The same is true for the court reporter
    fees assessed. Those fees were charges for the court reporter’s time incurred at
    the plea and sentencing hearings. Those fees would have been the same even if
    Jenkins had not been charged with count 3. Unlike the situation in Petrie, the
    record before us shows the court costs taxed to Jenkins are clearly attributable to
    the charges to which Jenkins plead guilty.        There is no reason to invoke
    12
    proportionality here. We agree with the State that Jenkins failed to establish the
    court erred in approving the restitution order or entered an illegal sentence.
    III. Conclusion.
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate Jenkins’s sentence and remand the
    case to the district court for resentencing before a different judge consistent with
    this opinion.
    SENTENCE           VACATED        AND       CASE      REMANDED            FOR
    RESENTENCING.
    Tabor, J., concurs; Potterfield, P.J., dissents.
    13
    POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge. (dissenting)
    How long is a game of hide and seek? How many criminal acts can be
    committed during one game? How much time must separate two acts during one
    game of hide and seek to justify consecutive sentences? The majority concludes
    the sentencing court acted under a misapprehension that the acts occurred at
    different times, “temporally.” They reach this conclusion by stretching the court’s
    explanation at sentencing, “we have two separate and distinct acts . . . . This
    happened on two separate distinct times,” to indicate the court understood that
    Jenkins’s acts occurred in two separate episodes as opposed to two separate
    and distinct acts during a single game of hide and seek.
    A trial court “generally has discretion to impose concurrent or consecutive
    sentences for convictions on separate counts.” State v. Delaney, 
    526 N.W.2d 170
    , 178 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994). That said, “the duty of a sentencing court to
    provide an explanation for a sentence includes the reasons for imposing
    consecutive sentences.” Id.; see also State v. Jacobs, 
    607 N.W.2d 679
    , 690
    (Iowa 2000). Those reasons need not be detailed but must be sufficient to allow
    for appellate review of the discretionary action. 
    Jacobs, 607 N.W.2d at 690
    . The
    sentencing court gave a sufficient explanation for imposing consecutive
    sentences.   The explanation was consistent with the facts in the record and
    within the range of the court’s discretion. As the majority concedes, both counsel
    informed the sentencing court Jenkins’s plea was an admission he touched one
    child in two separate acts. The plea agreement that Jenkins signed also contains
    his admission there were separate and distinct acts. The majority parses the
    words of the sentencing court as “the equivalent to considering facts outside the
    14
    record”—a characterization based upon the majority’s assumption the sentencing
    court considered a longer period of time between the criminal acts than actually
    existed. I dissent.