Randall Northcutt v. Commonwealth of Kentucky ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                      RENDERED: OCTOBER 2, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2019-CA-0143-MR
    RANDALL NORTHCUTT                                                   APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT
    v.                HONORABLE KIMBERLY N. BUNNELL, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 18-CR-00131
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                              APPELLEE
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: ACREE, KRAMER, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
    KRAMER, JUDGE: Randall Ray Northcutt was convicted in Fayette Circuit
    Court of escape in the second degree1 and of being a persistent felony offender in
    the first degree (“PFO I”). 2 He now appeals. Upon review, we affirm.
    1
    See Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 520.030.
    2
    See KRS 532.080(3).
    On May 9, 2014, Northcutt was convicted of third-degree burglary in
    Fayette Circuit Court and thereafter began serving a three-year sentence of
    incarceration. On September 1, 2017, he was released from prison and allowed to
    serve the remainder of his sentence3 through participation in the Home
    Incarceration Program (“HIP”). As a condition of his home incarceration,
    Northcutt was required to wear an ankle bracelet and was prohibited from leaving
    the designated area where he was confined (i.e., his home at 1600 Clayton Avenue,
    and part of its curtilage, in Lexington, Kentucky) without permission of his HIP
    caseworker, Drew Chism. The ankle bracelet contained an electronic transmitter
    which, if broken, was designed to send an email notification of a “master tamper
    violation” to HIP.
    Approximately three weeks after Northcutt began his participation in
    HIP, the electronic transmitter in his ankle bracelet was broken; HIP received an
    email to that effect. After verifying the master tamper violation through HIP’s
    monitoring website, Chism tried, unsuccessfully, to contact Northcutt by
    telephone. Thereafter, he attempted to locate Northcutt at Northcutt’s home
    address and was likewise unsuccessful. But, using geolocation software, Chism
    found Northcutt’s ankle monitor on a road outside the area where Northcutt had
    3
    The record does not disclose when Northcutt’s three-year term commenced or when it would
    have otherwise ended, but Northcutt was undisputedly continuing to serve that term on
    September 27, 2017, when his ankle monitor was removed and he fell out of contact with HIP.
    -2-
    been allowed to be under the terms of his HIP agreement. Upon finding it, Chism
    noted the ankle monitor’s strap had clearly been cut. Based upon Chism’s
    investigation, a warrant was issued for Northcutt’s arrest. Northcutt was
    eventually arrested on December 12, 2017, after authorities located him at 1880
    Dunkirk Drive in the Cardinal Valley area of Lexington, Kentucky – an area well
    outside the permitted vicinity of his home incarceration.
    Ultimately, Northcutt was indicted by a grand jury in Fayette Circuit
    Court for second-degree escape and PFO I. The PFO I charge was based on two
    underlying felony convictions: (1) Northcutt’s 2014 third-degree burglary
    conviction; and (2) Northcutt’s earlier conviction, in 2007, of second-degree
    burglary. The case proceeded to a jury trial on November 27, 2018; Northcutt
    elected to present no evidence at trial, and the Commonwealth’s evidence was
    consistent with what is set forth above. Upon the conclusion of the guilt phase of
    the trial, the jury found Northcutt guilty of second-degree escape. Prior to the
    completion of the penalty phase of trial, Northcutt entered a conditional plea of
    guilty to the PFO I charge. Pursuant to his conditional plea, Northcutt reserved the
    right to raise the issues presented in this appeal, and the Commonwealth
    recommended the minimum sentence of one year on the second-degree escape
    conviction, enhanced to the minimum 10 years by the PFO I conviction. On
    January 15, 2019, the trial court rendered its final judgment sentencing Northcutt
    -3-
    to 10 years’ imprisonment. Northcutt now appeals. Additional facts will be
    discussed as necessary.
    As to the substance of his appeal, Northcutt’s assumption throughout
    these proceedings has been that a prior felony conviction is an essential
    precondition of second-degree escape. And, armed with that assumption,
    Northcutt makes the following two arguments.
    First, Northcutt reasons that because second-degree escape must be
    predicated upon a prior felony conviction, it therefore qualifies as an “enhanced”
    offense. Based upon that, he argues, the rule prohibiting “double enhancement”
    applies.4 In other words, he contends that if his prior felony conviction for third-
    degree burglary was the basis for enhancing his escape charge to second-degree
    escape, his prior felony conviction for third-degree burglary could not also have
    been the basis for prosecuting him for PFO I. Therefore, he claims, it was error for
    the trial court to permit the Commonwealth to prosecute him for PFO I.
    4
    See Corman v. Commonwealth, 
    908 S.W.2d 122
    , 123 (Ky. App. 1995), explaining:
    The rule is now established that when a single prior felony is
    utilized to create an offense or enhance a punishment at the trial of
    the second crime, that same prior felony cannot be used at that trial
    to prosecute the defendant as a persistent felony offender. If,
    however, the prior felony used to underlie PFO conviction is a
    separate prior felony from the one used to create the offense or
    enhance its punishment, the offense can be further enhanced under
    the PFO statute.
    (Citations omitted.)
    -4-
    Second, Northcutt reasons if all the jury needed to know (for purposes
    of finding him guilty of second-degree escape) was that he had been convicted of a
    felony, then it was unnecessary for the Commonwealth to go into any further detail
    regarding the nature of his prior felony conviction. Accordingly, Northcutt argues,
    the trial court “prejudiced” his defense by denying his requests, as set forth in his
    motion in limine, to: (1) require the Commonwealth to accept his stipulation, made
    under the auspices of Old Chief v. United States,5 “that he was a convicted felon
    subject to the rules of Probation and Parole”; and (2) “exclude at trial all other
    evidence introduced to prove [he] was a convicted felon.”
    However, Northcutt’s assumption underlying his appeal is founded
    upon a misapprehension of the law: A prior felony conviction is not a precondition
    of second-degree escape because that offense “does not distinguish between
    different statuses of offenders based on past offenses.” Lawton v. Commonwealth,
    
    354 S.W.3d 565
    , 572 (Ky. 2011). Indeed, that much is apparent from a cursory
    reading of KRS 520.030, which sets forth the offense as follows:
    (1) A person is guilty of escape in the second degree
    when he escapes from a detention facility or, being
    charged with or convicted of a felony, he escapes from
    custody.
    (2) Escape in the second degree is a Class D felony.
    5
    
    519 U.S. 172
    , 
    117 S. Ct. 644
    , 
    136 L. Ed. 2d 574
    (1997).
    -5-
    From the plain language of this statute, a person who escapes from a
    detention facility, who was merely in the detention facility due to a misdemeanor
    offense, is guilty of second-degree escape. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Johnson,
    
    615 S.W.2d 1
    (Ky. App. 1981).
    A person who escapes from custody, who was in custody merely due
    to a felony charge, is guilty of second-degree escape. See, e.g., Weaver v.
    Commonwealth, 
    156 S.W.3d 270
    (Ky. 2005).
    Moreover, under the Kentucky Supreme Court’s interpretation of this
    statute, a person convicted of a felony is guilty of second-degree escape if, and only
    if, that person escapes from custody while serving a felony sentence. See 
    Lawton, 354 S.W.3d at 573
    . Thus, a convicted felon who is not serving a felony sentence
    would not be guilty of second-degree escape if he or she is taken into custody due
    to a misdemeanor offense and, while in custody (as opposed to a detention
    facility), then escaped.
    Accordingly, it is apparent that Northcutt’s first argument set forth
    above, founded upon his incorrect assumption of second-degree escape, lacks
    merit. There was no “double enhancement.”
    His second argument also lacks merit. To review, Northcutt argues
    the trial court “prejudiced” his defense by denying his requests, as set forth in his
    motion in limine, to: (1) require the Commonwealth to accept his stipulation, made
    -6-
    under the auspices of Old Chief, “that he was a convicted felon subject to the rules
    of Probation and Parole”; and (2) “exclude at trial all other evidence introduced to
    prove [he] was a convicted felon.” At the onset, however, we note that even where
    our Courts have applied the rule of Old Chief, we have explained that a violation of
    that rule does not automatically warrant reversal. Specifically:
    In Anderson v. Commonwealth, [
    281 S.W.3d 761
                 (Ky. 2009), the Kentucky Supreme Court] adopted the
    limited holding from Old Chief, that “a defendant
    charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm
    may stipulate to having a prior felony conviction, even
    without the Commonwealth’s consent.” 
    281 S.W.3d 761
    ,
    762 (Ky. 2009). In Anderson, the defendant was charged
    with possession of a handgun by a convicted felon and
    the Commonwealth sought to introduce evidence of
    Anderson’s prior felony conviction for receiving stolen
    property and escape.
    Id. Anderson offered to
    stipulate to
    being a convicted felon to avoid potential prejudice from
    disclosing the details of his prior convictions, but the trial
    court denied his request.
    Id. at 762-63.
    The
    Commonwealth introduced the details to the jury, and
    Anderson was ultimately convicted of the firearm
    possession charge.
    Id. at 763.
    In Old Chief, the United States Supreme Court
    acknowledged “that evidence of the name or nature of the
    prior offense generally carries a risk of unfair prejudice
    to the 
    defendant.” 519 U.S. at 185
    , 
    117 S. Ct. 644
    .
    Further, the Court concluded that “there is no cognizable
    difference between the evidentiary significance of an
    admission and of the legitimately probative component of
    the official record the prosecution would prefer to place
    in evidence.”
    Id. at 191, 117
    S.Ct. 644. In Anderson,
    this Court decided to join the overwhelming majority of
    courts by adopting Old Chief, and holding that:
    -7-
    upon request, a criminal defendant charged
    with being a felon in possession of a firearm
    may stipulate (with the Commonwealth’s
    agreement) or admit (if the Commonwealth
    does not agree) that the defendant has been
    previously convicted of a felony. Such a
    stipulation or admission would mean that the
    jury would simply be informed that the
    defendant was a convicted felon, for
    purposes of the felon in possession of a
    firearm charge, but would not be informed
    of the specifics of the defendant’s previous
    felony 
    conviction(s). 281 S.W.3d at 766
    .
    . . . . However, “no error . . . or defect in any
    ruling . . . is ground for granting a new trial or for setting
    aside a verdict . . . unless it appears to the court that the
    denial of such relief would be inconsistent with
    substantial justice.”
    Id. (quoting Kentucky Rule
    of
    Criminal Procedure (RCr) 9.24). “A non-constitutional
    evidentiary error may be deemed harmless . . . if the
    reviewing court can say with fair assurance that the
    judgment was not substantially swayed by the error.”
    Winstead v. Commonwealth, 
    283 S.W.3d 678
    , 688-89
    (Ky. 2009).
    Ward v. Commonwealth, 
    568 S.W.3d 824
    , 835-36 (Ky. 2019).
    In Ward, for example, the defendant’s proffered stipulation was
    disallowed by the trial court; the rule of Old Chief was deemed violated, but
    nevertheless, any resulting error was deemed harmless because:
    At trial, the Commonwealth introduced very little
    evidence about Ward’s prior felony conviction. A single
    witness who obtained certified copies of Ward’s criminal
    record testified that Ward was convicted of first-degree
    -8-
    robbery in Jefferson County, that he entered a guilty plea,
    and provided the date of the offense. No other
    information was given. . . . The jury was not given any
    violent details, or even any information regarding what
    constitutes first-degree robbery. We cannot say that
    “there was a reasonable possibility that the jury’s
    knowledge of [Ward’s] specific prior convictions might
    have contributed to his conviction any more than their
    general knowledge of his status as a convicted felon
    would have.” 
    Anderson, 281 S.W.3d at 767
    . While the
    trial court’s denial of Ward’s request to stipulate his
    convicted felon status was error, it was harmless.
    Id. at 836.
    Here, beyond noting that the trial court denied his request to stipulate
    during trial “that he was a convicted felon subject to the rules of Probation and
    Parole,” Northcutt does not explain how the trial court otherwise “prejudiced” his
    case. Moreover, we cannot say “there was a reasonable possibility that the jury’s
    knowledge of [Northcutt’s] specific prior convictions might have contributed to his
    conviction any more than their general knowledge of his status as a convicted felon
    would have.” 
    Anderson, 281 S.W.3d at 767
    . When the Commonwealth informed
    the jury of Northcutt’s prior felony conviction, it only did so during Officer
    Chism’s testimony, and to the following extent:
    COMMONWEALTH: In case number 14-CR-264, out
    of the Fayette Circuit Court, the date of the offense is
    February 10th of 2014. The offense is burglary in the
    third degree. The defendant’s name is “Randall Ray
    Northcutt.” The date the judgment was entered was May
    9th of 2014 and he was sentenced to three years. And so,
    he was released on that sentence to the home
    -9-
    incarceration program, and you were supervising him on
    that?[6]
    OFFICER CHISM: Yes, ma’am.
    COMMONWEALTH: And remind me what date it was
    that he was released?
    OFFICER CHISM: September 1st of 2017.
    Like Ward, the jury in this matter was only informed of the name of
    Northcutt’s prior felony offense and the dates associated with it (i.e., the date he
    committed the offense, was convicted of it, and was later released to HIP while
    serving his sentence). The jury was not given any violent details of his prior
    offense, much less any information regarding what constitutes third-degree
    burglary. Thus, if the trial court erred in denying Northcutt’s request to stipulate
    “that he was a convicted felon subject to the rules of Probation and Parole,” its
    error was harmless.
    However, the trial court’s denial of Northcutt’s motion did not
    constitute error, and for at least three reasons. First, to the extent the rule of Old
    Chief has been adopted in Kentucky, its application has been limited to
    prosecutions of a specific type of status offense; namely, “where the defendant
    6
    The trial court only permitted the Commonwealth to read this portion of Northcutt’s prior
    judgment to the jury. The jury was not permitted to see Northcutt’s judgment.
    -10-
    stands charged with being a felon in possession of some type of firearm[.]”7 Here,
    Northcutt was charged with second-degree escape, which is not a status offense.
    Second, where – as here – the Commonwealth elects to prosecute a
    defendant for second-degree escape based upon a theory that he or she escaped
    from custody while charged with a felony or serving a felony sentence,8 the
    7
    
    Anderson, 281 S.W.3d at 766
    . More fully, the Anderson Court explained:
    We recognize that defendants may wish to admit or stipulate to previous
    convictions or other matters in situations not involving felon in possession of a
    handgun charges, such as cases involving PFO charges. But the application of
    Old Chief’s rationale to other cases and situations has not been argued by the
    parties to this case and, thus, is not properly before us. And the United States
    Supreme Court has not expressly extended Old Chief to other scenarios. So we
    emphasize that our holding today is limited only to cases like the one at hand—
    where the defendant stands charged with being a felon in possession of some type
    of firearm—and should not be construed as a license for criminal defendants
    unilaterally to admit over the Commonwealth’s objection any other factors or
    elements of the Commonwealth’s case that the defendant wishes to conceal from
    the jury. Thus, in all other circumstances where a defendant’s status as a
    convicted felon is relevant, such as PFO proceedings, courts should continue to
    rely upon our previous holding that “the prosecution is permitted to prove its case
    by competent evidence of its own choosing, and the defendant may not stipulate
    away the parts of the case that he does not want the jury to see.”
    Id. (footnotes omitted). 8
      “Based on the facts, the prosecutor has a certain amount of discretion in how he or she charges
    [second-degree] escape.” 
    Lawton, 354 S.W.3d at 567
    . As noted, Lawton provides that HIP
    qualifies as both “custody” and a “detention facility” for purposes of second-degree escape.
    Here, while it certainly caused no prejudice to Northcutt, the Commonwealth’s case against
    Northcutt apparently combined those theories. Specifically, the jury was instructed:
    You will find the Defendant guilty of Escape, Second Degree under this
    Instruction if, and only if, you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable
    doubt all of the following:
    A. That in this county on or about September 25, 2017, and before
    the finding of the Indictment herein, the Defendant was serving a
    sentence for Burglary, Third Degree, a Class D Felony, when he
    -11-
    Kentucky Supreme Court has held that the Commonwealth has a duty to prove
    what the felony charge or conviction was. See Cohron v. Commonwealth, 
    306 S.W.3d 489
    , 495-96 (Ky. 2010), explaining:
    Since it bore the burden of proof, the
    Commonwealth had the responsibility to present
    evidence of the fact that Cohron was in custody on June
    12 on a charge or conviction of a felony offense. Since
    this is what separates second-degree escape from third-
    degree escape, the fact that Cohron had been charged
    with felonies at the time of the June 12 escape was an
    element that had to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Because there was a total absence of evidence of that
    element, the jury could only surmise what the June 9
    charges were.
    We do not believe it is obvious to an average
    person what charges are felonies and what are
    misdemeanors, particularly when the offenses charged
    were not specifically enumerated for the jury.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Third, the latter part of Northcutt’s proffered stipulation (i.e., that he
    was “subject to the rules of Probation and Parole”) was a misrepresentation.
    Northcutt was under home incarceration, not “Probation and Parole.” Among the
    escaped from 1600 Clayton Avenue, Lexington, Kentucky, the
    home designated in the Defendant’s Home Incarceration Program
    agreement;
    AND
    B. That at the time of his escape, the Defendant had been confined
    to 1600 Clayton Avenue, Lexington, Kentucky under the terms of
    the Home Incarceration Program and his absence therefrom was
    not authorized by the terms of the Home Incarceration Program.
    -12-
    many salient differences between those two forms of rehabilitation, a defendant on
    probation or parole is not considered to be in “custody” for purposes of any
    “escape” offense. See KRS 520.010(2). Whereas, a defendant on “home
    incarceration” is not only considered to be in “custody,” but is also considered to
    be incarcerated in a “detention facility” for purposes of KRS 520.030. See 
    Lawton, 354 S.W.3d at 569-70
    .
    In short, the trial court would have improperly undermined the
    Commonwealth’s case against Northcutt if it had granted Northcutt’s motion to (1)
    require the Commonwealth to accept his stipulation “that he was a convicted felon
    subject to the rules of Probation and Parole”; and (2) “exclude at trial all other
    evidence introduced to prove [he] was a convicted felon.” Therefore, it did not err
    by denying his motion.
    We have reviewed the breadth of what Northcutt has asserted in this
    appeal, none of which indicates the Fayette Circuit Court erred in any respect. As
    such, we AFFIRM.
    ALL CONCUR.
    -13-
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Roy A. Durham, II         Daniel Cameron
    Frankfort, Kentucky       Attorney General of Kentucky
    M. Brandon Roberts
    Assistant Attorney General
    Frankfort, Kentucky
    -14-