Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Paradise Burkhead ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •                                              RENDERED: DECEMBER 14, 2023
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2022-SC-0304-DG
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                             APPELLANT
    ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                         NO. 2021-CA-0873
    JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 21-CR-000186
    PARADISE BURKHEAD                                                     APPELLEE
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE BISIG
    REVERSING AND REMANDING
    Paradise Burkhead was charged with crimes committed while she was a
    juvenile. Based on a juvenile transfer statute in effect at the time, which
    required mandatory transfer if a juvenile over fourteen years old committed a
    felony with a firearm, the Jefferson District Court transferred her case to the
    Jefferson Circuit Court for prosecution as an adult. Subsequently, a new
    juvenile transfer statute took effect which eliminated the mandatory transfer
    requirement and instead vested district courts with sole discretion to
    determine, based on prescribed factors, whether a juvenile firearm case should
    be transferred to a circuit court. Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 635.020(4).
    Burkhead sought to take advantage of this new statute by a motion to transfer
    her case back to district court for a second transfer hearing. Over the
    Commonwealth’s objection, the circuit court granted the motion.
    The Commonwealth filed an interlocutory appeal from the district court’s
    transfer order and the Court of Appeals affirmed. This appeal followed. After
    careful review, we conclude that the interlocutory appeal was proper and that
    the circuit court erred by ordering a second transfer hearing. While we live in a
    society that understandably embraces second chances, the duly enacted
    transfer statute in effect at the time of Burkhead’s hearing must control. A
    second chance is not a “do-over” of a critical stage of a criminal proceeding.
    Burkhead will have a full resolution of her legal issue in circuit court.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Paradise Burkhead was charged with complicity to commit murder and
    fourth-degree assault stemming from her participation in a series of offenses on
    November 21, 2020 while she was a juvenile. Burkhead snuck out of her
    house and joined four others, three of whom were over eighteen years old.
    While walking down a street in downtown Louisville, one of the group members
    fired a gun several times into a house. Later, the group was recorded by video
    surveillance attacking an individual on a sidewalk. Then, they walked to the
    area of Sixth Street and River Road where someone in the group shot and killed
    Rocky Seibert. 1
    Since Burkhead was under eighteen at the time of the offenses, the
    Commonwealth filed a juvenile petition in December 2020. On December 21,
    1 It is unclear whether Burkhead fired the gun or ever had possession of it. In
    her brief, Burkhead states it is not alleged that she fired the gun or had possession of
    it, while the Commonwealth merely indicates that one of the group members fired the
    gun.
    2
    2020, the district court held a hearing to determine whether to transfer the
    case to circuit court for prosecution as an adult. At the time of the hearing,
    KRS 635.020 was in effect and required a district court to transfer a juvenile to
    circuit court to be tried as an adult upon a finding of probable cause that the
    juvenile committed a felony in which a firearm was used, and that the juvenile
    was over age fourteen at the time of the offenses. Pursuant to the statute, the
    district court transferred Burkhead’s case to circuit court.
    On March 4, 2021, Burkhead filed a motion in circuit court to remand
    her case back to district court for a new transfer hearing. In part, Burkhead
    relied on a proposed amendment to the juvenile transfer statute. This
    proposed amendment, which eventually became effective on June 29, 2021, no
    longer requires mandatory transfer of juvenile cases in which the juvenile was
    over fourteen years old and committed a felony involving a firearm. The
    Commonwealth opposed the motion, arguing that Burkhead’s case was
    unaffected by the amendment because her transfer hearing already occurred.
    On July 9, 2021, the circuit court granted Burkhead’s motion to remand
    the case to district court for a second transfer hearing. The circuit court based
    its ruling on the goals articulated as the reason for the statutory amendment
    and not a procedural analysis. While the circuit court recognized that the
    district court did not err in originally transferring the case to circuit court
    under the juvenile transfer provision as it then existed, the circuit court opined
    that the amendment sought to keep juveniles in district court, except in the
    rarest of circumstances.
    3
    The Commonwealth appealed pursuant to KRS 22A.020(4), which allows
    the Commonwealth to appeal adverse interlocutory orders in criminal cases.
    The Commonwealth also sought emergency and intermediate relief from the
    Court of Appeals, which stayed the proceedings during the pendency of the
    Commonwealth’s appeal.
    In its opinion, the Court of Appeals cited KRS 446.110, which governs
    the retroactive application of criminal statutes:
    [n]o new law shall be construed to repeal a former law as to any
    offense committed against a former law, . . . or in any way
    whatever to affect any such offense or act so committed or done,
    . . . before the new law takes effect, except that the proceedings
    thereafter had shall conform, so far as practicable, to the laws in
    force at the time of such proceedings. . . .
    Burkhead and the Commonwealth agree that the juvenile transfer statute is
    procedural, meaning it pertains to “the in-court procedures and remedies
    which are used in handling pending litigation.” Rodgers v. Commonwealth, 
    285 S.W.3d 740
    , 751 (Ky. 2009) (citation omitted). Relying on Rodgers, a
    unanimous Court of Appeals panel reasoned that amendments to procedural
    laws are to be applied retroactively so that the proceedings conform to the law
    in effect at the time of the proceedings. The Commonwealth argued that the
    amendment should only apply to cases still pending in juvenile court,
    prompting the Court of Appeals to analyze “proceedings” as used in KRS
    446.110.
    Ultimately, the Court of Appeals determined that “the plain meaning of
    ‘proceedings’ under KRS 446.110 means amended statutes apply retroactively
    in any case with no final decision on the merits.” The appellate court then
    4
    turned to the legislative intent of the Kentucky Unified Juvenile Code which is
    to rehabilitate and reform delinquent youth. KRS 600.010(2). The Court of
    Appeals reasoned that the plain language of KRS 446.110 and the express
    legislative intent for the Juvenile Code support the circuit court’s decision to
    remand Burkhead’s case for a new transfer hearing because “the proceedings
    against her are ongoing as she has not yet been convicted or acquitted under
    the indictment.”
    This appeal followed. In granting discretionary review, this Court
    specifically directed the parties to address the threshold question of whether
    KRS 22A.020(4) permits the Commonwealth to appeal from a circuit court
    order remanding a juvenile’s case to district court for a second transfer
    hearing.
    ANALYSIS
    The issues on appeal are (1) whether the Commonwealth’s interlocutory
    appeal is proper and (2) whether remanding the case for a second transfer
    hearing was proper. Both issues involve statutory interpretation—questions of
    law which we review de novo. Commonwealth v. B.H., 
    548 S.W.3d 238
    , 242
    (Ky. 2018). We address each issue in turn.
    I.    The Commonwealth’s interlocutory appeal pursuant to KRS
    22A.020(4) is proper.
    To determine whether KRS 22A.020(4) permits the Commonwealth to
    appeal from a circuit court order remanding a juvenile’s case to district court
    5
    for a second transfer hearing, we turn to the plain language of the statute.
    KRS 22A.020(4) states that
    [a]n appeal may be taken to the Court of Appeals by the state in
    criminal cases from an adverse decision or ruling of the Circuit
    Court, but only under the following conditions:
    (a) Such appeal shall not suspend the proceedings in the
    case.
    (b) Such appeal shall be taken in the manner provided by the
    Rules of Criminal Procedure and the Rules of the Supreme
    Court, except that the record on appeal shall be transmitted
    by the clerk of the Circuit Court to the Attorney General; and
    if the Attorney General is satisfied that review by the Court
    of Appeals is important to the correct and uniform
    administration of the law, he may deliver the record to the
    clerk of the Court of Appeals within the time prescribed by
    the above-mentioned rules.
    (c) When an appeal is taken pursuant to this subsection, the
    Court of Appeals, if the record so warrants, may reverse the
    decision of the Circuit Court and order a new trial in any
    case in which a new trial would not constitute double
    jeopardy or otherwise violate any constitutional rights of the
    defendant.
    Section 111(2) of the Kentucky Constitution grants the General Assembly
    authority to “prescribe the appellate jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals.”
    Commonwealth v. Farmer, 
    423 S.W.3d 690
    , 692 (Ky. 2014). By enacting KRS
    22A.020(4), the General Assembly created a statutory matter-of-right appeal
    from interlocutory orders for the Commonwealth in criminal cases. Ballard v.
    Commonwealth, 
    320 S.W.3d 69
    , 73 (Ky. 2010). Despite challenges to KRS
    22A.020(4), this Court has consistently upheld its constitutionality. See, e.g.,
    id.; Commonwealth v. Littrell, 
    677 S.W.2d 881
    , 885 (Ky. 1984), overruled on
    other grounds by Commonwealth v. Bailey, 
    71 S.W.3d 73
    , 80 (Ky. 2002).
    6
    Based on the plain language of KRS 22A.020(4), the conditions for the
    Commonwealth to bring an interlocutory appeal of an adverse ruling in a
    criminal case are clear: the appeal must not suspend the proceedings, must be
    taken under the normal rules, and must be approved by the Attorney General
    as “important to the correct and uniform administration of the law.” KRS
    22A.020(4)(b).
    The conditions are satisfied here. The circuit court ruling transferring
    the case back to district court for a second transfer hearing was adverse to the
    Commonwealth. Adverse is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary as “(1) Against;
    opposed to. (2) Having an opposing or contrary interest, concern, or position.” 2
    The case was originally properly transferred to circuit court under a then-
    existing statute, allowing the Commonwealth to prosecute. If the case were
    ultimately to be tried in district court, the Commonwealth would lose the
    ability to prosecute the case, which instead would be handled by the County
    Attorney’s Office. Further, the penalty and ultimate resolution will differ
    depending on the outcome of the transfer decision. Therefore, a transfer back
    to district court coupled with the possibility that the district court may rule to
    keep the case in district court after a second transfer hearing opposed the
    Commonwealth’s interests.
    Additionally, the interlocutory appeal has not suspended the proceedings
    as that term is used in KRS 22A.020(4). For over forty years, this Court has
    2 Adverse, Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    7
    interpreted the term “proceedings” in KRS 22A.020(4) “to refer only to
    proceedings after the attachment of jeopardy, and we will not change course
    today.” Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    636 S.W.3d 421
    , 442 (Ky. 2021). Jeopardy
    attaches when the jury is sworn, Cardine v. Commonwealth, 
    283 S.W.3d 641
    ,
    646 (Ky. 2009), and, in a bench trial, jeopardy attaches when the court begins
    to hear evidence. Serfass v. United States, 
    420 U.S. 377
    , 388 (1975). Jeopardy
    has not yet attached in Burkhead’s case, so the proceedings are not being
    suspended by the Commonwealth’s interlocutory appeal.
    As required by KRS 22A.020(4)(b), the appeal is following the normal
    rules and procedures. Finally, the record indicates that the Attorney General
    appointed counsel to serve as Special Assistant Attorney General and granted
    the authority to represent the Commonwealth and proceed under the Attorney
    General’s name in this interlocutory appeal. This serves as the Attorney
    General’s affirmation that appellate review “is important to the correct and
    uniform administration of the law.” KRS 22A.020(4)(b). See Smith, 636 S.W.3d
    at 440 (presuming that the Attorney General reviewed the case based on him
    “being listed as counsel and in assigning a Special Assistant Attorney General
    to the appeal”).
    Two years after the General Assembly enacted KRS 22A.020(4) this Court
    addressed the statute in Eaton v. Commonwealth, 
    562 S.W.2d 637
    , 639 (Ky.
    1978), and held that a writ of prohibition preventing a trial court from
    suppressing evidence was not warranted because a writ should not control a
    trial court’s discretionary acts done within its jurisdiction. In exploring the
    8
    Commonwealth’s available remedies, the Court explained that a
    Commonwealth’s Attorney seeking an appeal of a trial court’s discretionary
    ruling has a remedy through KRS 22A.020(4). 
    Id.
     “Unless the constitutional
    right to a speedy trial were unduly threatened, we see no reason why an
    interlocutory ‘ruling’ entered prior to trial, if it decides a matter vital to the
    Commonwealth's case, could not be reviewed by appeal.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    added).
    We take this opportunity to clarify that we interpret the Eaton Court’s
    statement that an interlocutory appeal under KRS 22A.020(4) must raise “a
    matter vital to the Commonwealth’s case” as simply another way of stating the
    statute’s express requirement that in order for the state to appeal an adverse
    ruling in a criminal case, the Attorney General must be “satisfied that review
    by the Court of Appeals is important to the correct and uniform
    administration of the law . . . .” (Emphasis added). “[T]he requirement that
    the Attorney General review the appeal before docketing it in the Court of
    Appeals is a purely administrative act, designed to eliminate frivolous,
    vexatious or meritless appeals.” Littrell, 677 S.W.2d at 885. 3
    By enacting KRS 22A.020(4), the legislature has specifically prescribed
    the conditions which must be met for the Commonwealth to pursue an
    3 KRS 22A.020(4) leaves the Attorney General with discretion in determining
    whether to pursue appeals. We note that generally, the Attorney General, as a
    constitutionally elected official, “is entrusted with broad discretion in the performance
    of his duties, which includes evaluating the evidence and other facts to determine
    whether a particular claim should be brought.” Overstreet v. Mayberry, 
    603 S.W.3d 244
    , 265 (Ky. 2020).
    9
    interlocutory appeal in a criminal case and the “matter vital to the
    Commonwealth’s case” language in Eaton is merely further explanation of the
    requirement that the Attorney General determine a matter is “important to the
    correct and uniform administration of the law.” This premise is supported by
    later cases, like Evans v. Commonwealth, 
    645 S.W.2d 346
     (Ky. 1982), in which
    the Court allowed the Commonwealth to use KRS 22A.020(4) to appeal an
    order transferring a Medicaid fraud prosecution from Franklin County to the
    defendants’ home counties. In that case, the Court effectively allowed an
    interlocutory appeal from a decision pertaining to which court would preside
    over a case. Later, in Commonwealth v. Bass, 
    777 S.W.2d 916
    , 917 (Ky. 1989),
    this Court allowed an interlocutory appeal from a circuit court’s dismissal of
    numerous counts of an indictment because “the action of the trial court ha[d]
    adversely affected an issue which is vital to the Commonwealth.” (citing Eaton,
    
    562 S.W.2d 637
    ).
    Here, the Commonwealth appealed from the circuit court order
    transferring Burkhead’s case back to district court for a second transfer
    hearing—a decision adverse to the Commonwealth’s position that the case
    should be tried in circuit court, as previously determined by the district court
    as it applied the then-existing juvenile transfer statute. Again, if the case were
    ultimately to be tried in district court, the County Attorney, not the
    Commonwealth’s Attorney, would prosecute the case. Because the Attorney
    General, acting as gatekeeper to “eliminate frivolous, vexatious or meritless
    appeals,” Littrell, 677 S.W.2d at 885, determined that review by the Court of
    10
    Appeals was “important to the correct and uniform administration of the law,”
    the final condition as expressly stated in KRS 22A.020(4)(b) is satisfied and we
    conclude that the interlocutory appeal is proper.
    Finally, although we hold today that the Commonwealth’s appeal of the
    circuit court order remanding Burkhead’s case to district court for a new
    transfer hearing is proper, our holding should not be interpreted as endorsing
    or otherwise approving a general right to an interlocutory appeal of a district
    court decision denying transfer. The issue before us today satisfies KRS
    22A.020 because it deals with the retroactivity of a statute, which the Attorney
    General was wholly within his authority to determine was “important to the
    correct and uniform administration of the law.”
    II.   The circuit court erred by remanding the case for a new
    transfer hearing.
    The next issue is whether the circuit court correctly remanded
    Burkhead’s case to district court for a second transfer hearing. To resolve this
    issue, we must first determine whether the 2021 amendment to the juvenile
    transfer statute applies retroactively pursuant to KRS 446.110. Statutory
    interpretation is a question of law, which we review de novo. B.H., 548 S.W.3d
    at 242.
    KRS 446.110 provides that
    11
    [n]o new law shall be construed to repeal a former law as to any
    offense committed against a former law, . . . or in any way
    whatever to affect any such offense or act so committed or done,
    . . . before the new law takes effect, except that the proceedings
    thereafter had shall conform, so far as practicable, to the laws in
    force at the time of such proceedings. . . .
    If a statute is silent as to whether it applies retroactively, this Court has
    determined that it nonetheless applies retroactively if it is procedural in nature.
    Rodgers, 285 S.W.3d at 751.
    The parties agree that the change to the juvenile transfer statute was
    procedural. However, the Commonwealth argues that the amendment should
    only apply to cases still pending in juvenile court. Procedural amendments,
    which apply to in-court procedures and remedies used in handling pending
    litigation, are “to be retroactively applied (assuming no separation-of-powers
    concerns) so that the proceedings ‘shall conform, so far as practicable, to the
    laws in force at the time of such proceedings.’” Id. (quoting KRS 446.110). In
    Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    400 S.W.3d 742
    , 745 (Ky. 2013), the Court further
    explained that one of the “distinct pronouncements” made by KRS 446.110 is
    that “proceedings that take place after a new law takes effect shall, so far
    as practicable, conform to the laws at the time of the proceeding.”
    (Emphasis added).
    The Court of Appeals determined that the proper resolution of
    Burkhead’s case hinged on the meaning of “proceedings” as used in KRS
    446.110. With no Kentucky caselaw defining “proceedings,” the appellate court
    reviewed Black’s Law Dictionary, and referenced this Court’s explanation in
    12
    Rodgers, 285 S.W.3d at 751, that amendments “used in handling pending
    litigation” are procedural. The Court of Appeals thus concluded that
    “‘proceedings’ under KRS 446.110 means amended statutes apply retroactively
    in any case with no final decision on the merits.” The appellate court also went
    a step beyond discerning the plain meaning of “proceedings” and interpreted
    the statute according to legislative intent by focusing on the Juvenile Code’s
    express intent to rehabilitate and reform delinquent youth.
    The Court of Appeals’ definition of proceedings is problematic.
    Effectively, the Court of Appeals determined that proceedings means the
    lifespan of a case, from filing to final judgment. But using that definition of
    proceedings in KRS 446.110 renders the statute illogical. If proceedings means
    the lifespan of a case, read literally, the statute would then allow a court to use
    any procedural rule that was in effect at some point during the case’s lifespan.
    It would also require a multitude of “do-overs” when procedural amendments
    are enacted, thus jeopardizing judicial efficiency and economy. This overly
    broad interpretation would lead to inconsistent results and negate the
    authority of the General Assembly to amend statutes.
    Instead, we find it more logical to construe proceedings as used in KRS
    446.110 narrowly and as referring to the distinct phases of a case, i.e.,
    arraignment, sentencing, suppression hearings, plea hearings, transfer
    hearings, etc. Defined in this manner, KRS 446.110 requires courts to apply
    the current procedural law governing the particular procedural phase being
    undertaken. That is, absent clear legislative intent to the contrary, a trial court
    13
    must always look to current procedural law when making procedural decisions
    in a case.
    This narrow interpretation prevents the type of “do-over” scenarios that
    Burkhead seeks in this case. More importantly, it prevents an inevitable flood
    of “do-overs” from “pending litigation” cases in which a final judgment has not
    been entered, which is a particularly troubling thought given the multitude of
    cases that are “pending” for many years.
    The proceeding at issue—Burkhead’s original transfer hearing in district
    court—occurred six months before the statutory amendment she seeks to
    invoke. This procedural step thus occurred when the prior juvenile transfer
    statute required a district court to transfer a juvenile case to circuit court upon
    a finding of probable cause that a juvenile over age fourteen committed a felony
    in which a firearm was used. Once transfer was ordered by the district court
    in December 2020, that stage of the proceedings ended. Nothing in the plain
    language of KRS 446.110 suggests that a court must repeat a completed phase
    of the criminal process to comply with a procedural amendment. In fact, the
    statute is clear that “proceedings thereafter had shall conform, so far as
    practicable, to the laws in force at the time of such proceedings.” KRS
    446.110. When interpreting a statute,
    we must look first to the plain language of a statute and, if the
    language is clear, our inquiry ends. We hold fast to the rule of
    construction that the plain meaning of the statutory language is
    presumed to be what the legislature intended, and if the meaning
    is plain, then the court cannot base its interpretation on any other
    method or source.
    14
    Univ. of Louisville v. Rothstein, 
    532 S.W.3d 644
    , 648 (Ky. 2017) (citations and
    quotations omitted). Because the statute is clear, the Court of Appeals’
    reliance on the purpose and intent behind the Juvenile Code, while well-
    intended, was misplaced. Further, the intent behind the Juvenile Code has no
    bearing on KRS 446.110 and whether the amended juvenile transfer provision
    applies retroactively. As a result, the post-transfer amendment to the juvenile
    transfer statute could not provide a basis for repeating the juvenile transfer
    hearing completed six months earlier.
    CONCLUSION
    The Court of Appeals erroneously upheld the circuit court’s remand of
    Burkhead’s case to district court for a second transfer hearing. Burkhead’s
    juvenile transfer hearing occurred when the prior statute was in effect, and
    thus that prior statute applies to that stage of the proceedings. As a result, we
    reverse the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Jefferson Circuit
    Court for further proceedings.
    All sitting. All concur.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Daniel J. Cameron
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Jason B. Moore
    Special Assistant Attorney General
    Matthew F. Kuhn
    Solicitor General
    Daniel J. Grabowski
    Assistant Solicitor General
    15
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
    Tricia Lister
    Rob Eggert
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022 SC 0304

Filed Date: 12/13/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/14/2023