State of Louisiana v. William Serigne & Lionel Serigne ( 2017 )


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  •                          Supreme Court of Louisiana
    FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE                                         NEWS RELEASE #059
    FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    The Opinions handed down on the 6th day of December, 2017, are as follows:
    PER CURIAM:
    2016-K -1034      STATE OF LOUISIANA v. WILLIAM SERIGNE & LIONEL SERIGNE (Parish of
    St. Bernard)
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the court of appeal’s
    determination in errors patent review that Lionel Serigne’s
    conviction and sentence must be set aside because he was unable
    to validly waive a jury trial. We reinstate Lionel’s conviction
    and sentence. In addition, we reverse the court of appeal’s
    determination that William Serigne is entitled to a new trial
    based on a Brady violation, which issue was never passed on by
    the trial court, and we reinstate his convictions and sentences.
    However, we also remand to the district court for further
    proceedings to determine if Lionel and William are entitled to
    new trials based on undisclosed Brady material in the grand jury
    testimony. Thereafter, Lionel and William may appeal any
    unfavorable determination by the district court on remand as well
    as   seek   appellate  review  of  any   previously   pretermitted
    assignments of error. In addition, we preserve William’s claim of
    prejudicial   misjoinder  for  appellate   review   after  further
    proceedings in the district court.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    12/06/17
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    No. 2016-K-1034
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    WILLIAM SERIGNE & LIONEL SERIGNE
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL,
    FOURTH CIRCUIT, PARISH OF ST. BERNARD
    PER CURIAM
    In 2009, 39-year-old D.A. accused her cousins William and Lionel Sergine
    of sexually abusing her when she was a child. Other family members, B.M. and
    M.S., also came forward to accuse William Serigne of sexually abusing them.
    Because of these accusations, Lionel was indicted for the aggravated rape of D.A.
    committed before 1981. William was separately indicted for the aggravated rape of
    D.A. based on an allegation of “oral sexual intercourse” committed in or after
    1981, sexual battery of B.M., and aggravated incest of his daughter, M.S.
    After the trial court denied the state’s motion to try the defendants together,
    the state convened a second grand jury and obtained a new indictment. Lionel was
    indicted for the aggravated rape of D.A., committed between the years of 1976 and
    1983, in which William was alleged to have jointly participated. William was
    indicted for two counts of the aggravated rape of D.A., committed between the
    years of 1981 and 1983, in which Lionel was alleged to have jointly participated in
    one count. William was also indicted for the sexual battery of B.M. and aggravated
    incest of M.S. The co-defendants’ motions to sever their trials were denied and the
    matter proceeded to a bench trial.
    After the victim testified, the co-defendants re-urged their motions to sever,
    and moved for a mistrial, on the basis that the victim’s testimony did not support
    the allegation that the co-defendants jointly participated in raping her. The co-
    defendants also asked the trial court to perform an in camera review of the victim’s
    grand jury testimony. The trial court denied the motions and declined to review the
    grand jury testimony.
    The trial court found Lionel guilty as charged of aggravated rape and
    William guilty of forcible rape, not guilty of a second count of aggravated rape,
    and guilty of sexual battery and aggravated incest. The court sentenced Lionel to
    life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension
    of sentence, and sentenced William to a total of 40 years imprisonment at hard
    labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence.
    The court of appeal panel vacated the convictions and sentences. State v.
    Serigne, 14-0379 (La. App. 4 Cir. 5/2/16), 
    193 So. 3d 297
    . The court of appeal first
    noted that Lionel was indicted for an aggravated rape alleged to have occurred
    between 1976 and 1983, which span included a time when La.R.S. 14:42 provided
    a penalty of death for aggravated rape.1 Citing, inter alia, State v. Holmes, 
    263 La. 685
    , 
    269 So. 2d 207
    (1972), the court found as an error patent that, because
    Lionel’s offense was classified as capital during at least part of the time alleged in
    the indictment, the procedural safeguards for capital trials applied and therefore a
    unanimous 12-person jury was necessary. Because Lionel was found guilty in a
    bench trial rather than by a unanimous 12-person jury, the court of appeal vacated
    his conviction and sentence. Because the court of appeal vacated Lionel’s
    1
    In Roberts v. Louisiana, 
    428 U.S. 325
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 3001
    , 
    49 L. Ed. 2d 974
    (1976), the U.S.
    Supreme Court found that Louisiana’s mandatory death penalty for first degree murder violated
    the Eighth Amendment. In Selman v. Louisiana, 
    428 U.S. 906
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 3214
    , 
    49 L. Ed. 2d 1212
    (1976), the U.S. Supreme Court found that a mandatory sentence of death for aggravated rape
    violated the Eighth Amendment for the reasons expressed in Roberts. In response to Selman, the
    legislature amended La.R.S. 14:42 to provide a penalty of life imprisonment without parole
    eligibility for aggravated rape. 1977 La. Acts 343 (eff. September 8, 1977).
    2
    conviction and sentence in errors patent review, it did not consider his four
    assignments of error.
    Regarding William, the court of appeal first found the evidence sufficient to
    support the convictions before then finding that his trial was misjoined to Lionel’s.
    The court noted that no evidence was presented at trial in support of the allegation
    that Lionel and William jointly participated in a rape, which allegation was the
    justification for trying them together. After hearing oral argument, the court of
    appeal obtained the grand jury transcript and found there was also no evidence
    presented to the grand jury that would support the state’s allegation of joint
    participation in a rape. 2 The court of appeal then found that the state withheld the
    grand jury transcript from the codefendants in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    (1963), and Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    , 153–54, 
    92 S. Ct. 763
    , 
    31 L. Ed. 2d 104
    (1972), because it contained
    evidence William did not rape D.A. and William and Lionel did not jointly rape
    D.A. 3 Therefore, the court of appeal ordered that William receive a new trial and
    pretermitted consideration of all remaining assignments of error.
    The court of appeal erred in applying State v. Holmes to find that Lionel was
    indicted for an offense classified as capital and therefore unable to waive a jury
    trial. In Furman v. Georgia, 
    408 U.S. 238
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 2726
    , 
    33 L. Ed. 2d 346
    (1972),
    the Supreme Court held in a single-paragraph per curiam that the manner in which
    the death penalty was imposed and carried out in Georgia and Texas constituted
    cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Five justices
    concurred individually and at length in the judgment, disagreeing in many aspects
    2
    The grand jury testimony is not included in the appellate record submitted to this court
    to review.
    3
    There was no Brady claim assigned as error and the court of appeal reached this issue
    sua sponte after it obtained the grand jury transcript.
    3
    (such as their understanding of the history and meaning of the Cruel and Unusual
    Punishments Clause), but four justices appeared to agree in one regard: statutory
    schemes that give unbridled discretion to the jury to determine if the death penalty
    will be applied are so arbitrary as to violate the Eighth Amendment. See 
    Furman, 408 U.S. at 253
    , 92 S.Ct. at 2734 (Douglas, J., concurring) (“[W]e deal with a
    system of law and of justice that leaves to the uncontrolled discretion of judges or
    juries the determination whether defendants committing these crimes should die or
    be imprisoned. Under these laws no standards govern the selection of the penalty.
    People live or die, dependent on the whim of one man or of 12.”); 
    id., 408 U.S.
    at
    
    294–95, 92 S. Ct. at 2754
    –55 (Brennan, J., concurring) (“[J]uries . . . make the
    decision whether to impose a death sentence wholly unguided by standards
    governing that decision”); 
    id., 408 U.S.
    at 
    310, 92 S. Ct. at 2763
    (Stewart, J.,
    concurring) (“I simply conclude that the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments
    cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence of death under legal systems that permit
    this unique penalty to be so wantonly and so freakishly imposed.”); 
    id., 408 U.S.
    at
    
    314, 92 S. Ct. at 2764
    –65 (White, J., concurring) (“[The] recurring practice of
    delegating sentencing authority to the jury and the fact that a jury, in its own
    discretion and without violating its trust or any statutory policy, may refuse to
    impose the death penalty no matter what the circumstances of the crime [violates
    the Eighth Amendment]”).
    In cases that followed Furman, this court grappled with the implications of a
    constitutionally unenforceable death penalty that had not yet been repealed or
    replaced by the legislature. For example, in State v. Flood, 
    263 La. 700
    , 
    269 So. 2d 212
    (1972), the court found that murder remained classified as a capital offense for
    purpose of determining whether an accused is entitled to bail. The court stated:
    [W]e conclude that Furman v. Georgia does not destroy the system of
    4
    classification of crimes in Louisiana. Murder is still a crime, and,
    when our legislature last acted with respect to it, murder was, as it has
    ever been, a capital crime. The crime remains unchanged; only the
    penalty has been changed. True, the penalty is what made murder a
    capital offense, and it is not actually a capital offense in Louisiana
    today. But the Nature of the offense has not changed—only the
    punishment.
    Because the system of classifying certain serious offenses as capital,
    and then providing the procedural structure for the administration of
    criminal justice based on that classification is so fundamental in the
    organization of our criminal statutes, we find it preferable to make no
    change in the interpretation of the constitutional provisions
    concerning bail. Those offenses classified as capital before Furman v.
    Georgia are still classified as capital offenses, and those charged with
    an offense punishable by death before Furman v. Georgia are not
    entitled to bail where the proof is evident or the presumption great.
    
    Flood, 263 La. at 705
    –06, 269 So.2d at 214.
    Likewise, in State v. Holmes (decided on the same day as Flood), the court
    found that murder remains classified as a capital case, although it could not be
    punished as such under Furman, and therefore must be tried before a unanimous,
    sequestered 12-person jury. Dicta suggests Flood and Holmes were decided against
    the backdrop of a belief that the Eighth Amendment problem identified in Furman
    could be readily remedied by a legislative switch to a mandatory death penalty.4
    That belief did not prove correct. In response to Furman, Louisiana, along with 21
    other states, eliminated the jury’s role in sentencing in a capital prosecution
    entirely by making the imposition of the death penalty mandatory. See John W.
    Poulos, The Supreme Court, Capital Punishment and the Substantive Criminal
    4
    See, e.g. 
    Holmes, 263 La. at 691
    , 269 So.2d at 209 (emphasis added):
    However, it was not the legislature, but the United States Supreme Court that has
    held the Imposition and Execution of the death sentence, as now applicable in our
    State, to be violative of the United States Constitution. No presumption arises that
    any other provision of Louisiana law has been affected by the United States
    Supreme Court, except those having to do with the Imposition and Execution of
    death sentence. Nor, indeed, has the United States Supreme Court eliminated the
    possibility that the Louisiana legislature might enact statutes which could
    constitutionally impose the death sentence, when the sentence is mandatory and
    cannot be applied in a discriminatory manner.
    5
    Law: The Rise and Fall of Mandatory Capital Punishment, 
    28 Ariz. L
    . Rev. 143,
    201–02 (1986). As noted above (see n.1), Louisiana’s mandatory death penalty for
    first degree murder was then declared unconstitutional in Roberts v. Louisiana.
    Thus, Flood and Holmes arose in a particularly unusual and volatile era of
    developing death penalty jurisprudence and associated legislative responses.
    Subsequently, however, in State v. Schrader, 
    518 So. 2d 1024
    (La. 1988), this court
    rejected prior jurisprudence under which a defendant, who could not have been
    sentenced to death due to the constitutional infirmities of the statutes in place at the
    time of the homicide, would have nonetheless been entitled to the protections
    afforded the accused in a capital case (including a sequestered jury) because the
    homicide prosecution retained for procedural purposes its capital classification.
    The court held:
    We now hold, despite its long lineage, the jurisprudential presumption
    of prejudice for “capital cases” does not apply to a “capital case”
    where the defendant never faced the prospect of the death penalty and
    where counsel failed to press the point in the trial court, or object to
    the lack of sequestration. In the absence of actual prejudice, this right
    to sequestration is waived.
    
    Schrader, 518 So. 2d at 1037
    . Although the co-defendants argue Schrader should
    be narrowly construed as applying only to jury sequestration (and not any other
    procedural protections afforded a capital defendant), nothing in that opinion, which
    acknowledged Flood and Holmes, suggests the analysis should be so confined.
    Instead, we find Schrader more broadly rejected the prior “capital classification”
    jurisprudence, and that it applies equally to Lionel Serigne here.5 Lionel, who
    5
    In addition, even accepting for the sake of argument the viability of the capital
    classification jurisprudence after Schrader, the parties and the court below neglect to address
    State v. Louviere, 00-2085 (La. 9/4/02), 
    833 So. 2d 885
    , in which this Court held:
    [N]othing in Art. I, § 17 requires the jury to decide all phases of the trial . . . we
    find the relevant limitation embodied in Art. I, § 17 is that of all the components
    of a trial, from indictment to sentence, only the issue of the ultimate penalty of
    death is strictly required to be put before the jury.
    6
    never faced the prospect of the death penalty, validly waived his right to a jury trial
    and never challenged that waiver until the court of appeal raised this issue as an
    error patent. Therefore, we reinstate his conviction and sentence. However, for the
    reasons below, we remand to the district court rather than the court of appeal. After
    further district court proceedings, as described below, Lionel may seek review in
    the court of appeal of his pretermitted assignments of error.
    As noted above, the court of appeal obtained a transcript of the grand jury
    proceedings after hearing oral argument and determined the transcript contained
    Brady material, although a Brady claim had not been presented to the trial court
    first and ruled upon below. William claimed on appeal the trial court erred in
    denying his motion to sever and erred in denying his request for a new trial based
    on prejudicial joinder. By intertwining the joinder and Brady issues so closely, the
    court of appeal relied on evidence the trial court did not consider, i.e. the grand
    jury transcript, in determining whether the trial court erred in declining to sever the
    trials.
    Code of Criminal Procedure art. 494 provides:
    Two or more defendants may be charged in the same indictment or
    information if they are alleged to have participated in the same act or
    transaction or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an
    offense or offenses. Such defendants may be charged in one or more
    counts together or separately and all of the defendants need not be
    charged in each count.
    The trial court is vested with broad discretion in determining whether to grant a
    motion to sever, and its determination should be upheld in the absence of an abuse
    of that discretion. State v. Brooks, 88-1420 (La. 1/30/89), 
    541 So. 2d 801
    , 804–05.
    In the present case, the state alleged in its second indictment that William and
    Louviere, 00-2085, p. 
    8, 883 So. 2d at 893
    .
    7
    Lionel jointly participated in the aggravated rape of D.A.6 Based on this allegation,
    and with no contrary information before it, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying the various motions to sever before trial.
    At trial, however, the testimony did not support the allegation of joint
    participation, and the co-defendants sought a new trial on that basis. To obtain a
    new trial for misjoinder, it is necessary for a defendant to show prejudice. See
    La.C.Cr.P. art. 851(2), (4); cf. La.C.Cr.P. art. 495.1. The court of appeal discussed
    the prejudice William suffered only in the context of the analysis of the possible
    Brady violation. See Serigne, 14-0379, pp. 
    31–32, 193 So. 3d at 319
    . Review is
    further hampered by the absence of the grand jury transcript from the appellate
    record. Under the unusual circumstances presented here, faced with a record
    inadequate to evaluate this issue, and mindful of the constitutional prohibition
    against appellate factfinding in a criminal matter, La. Const. Art. 5, § 5(C), we
    remand to the district court to determine whether the grand jury testimony contains
    undisclosed Brady material warranting new trials for Lionel and William in
    accordance with Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    , 154, 
    92 S. Ct. 763
    , 766, 
    31 L. Ed. 2d 104
    (1972) and United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682, 
    105 S. Ct. 3375
    , 
    87 L. Ed. 2d 481
    (1985). Thereafter, Lionel and William can seek review in
    the court of appeal with regard to any unfavorable ruling by the district court.
    William can also seek review of his claim of prejudicial misjoinder as well as any
    pretermitted assignments of error.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the court of appeal’s determination in
    errors patent review that Lionel Serigne’s conviction and sentence must be set
    6
    Unlike present law, see R.S. 14:42(A)(5), the statute defining the offense during the
    pertinent period did not include multiple, joint perpetrators among the aggravating factors that
    elevated the grade of the offense. That aggravating factor was first added by 1984 La. Acts. 579.
    Therefore, the allegation of joint participation in the indictment, while not necessary as an
    element of the offense, was likely included to obtain a joint trial of the co-defendants.
    8
    aside because he was unable to validly waive a jury trial. We reinstate Lionel’s
    conviction and sentence. In addition, we reverse the court of appeal’s
    determination that William Serigne is entitled to a new trial based on a Brady
    violation, which issue was never passed on by the trial court, and we reinstate his
    convictions and sentences. However, we also remand to the district court for
    further proceedings to determine if Lionel and William are entitled to new trials
    based on undisclosed Brady material in the grand jury testimony. Thereafter,
    Lionel and William may appeal any unfavorable determination by the district court
    on remand as well as seek appellate review of any previously pretermitted
    assignments of error. In addition, we preserve William’s claim of prejudicial
    misjoinder for appellate review after further proceedings in the district court.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2016-K -1034

Judges: PER CURIAM

Filed Date: 12/6/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/6/2017