State Of Louisiana v. Daniel T. Hamilton ( 2020 )


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  •                                  STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    NUMBER 2019 KA 1206
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    DANIEL TUCKER HAMILTON
    Judgment Rendered:            FEB 2 12020
    Appealed from the
    Twenty -Second Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of St. Tammany
    State of Louisiana
    Docket Number 576714
    Honorable Alan A. Zaunbrecher, Judge Presiding
    Warren L. Montgomery                                Counsel for Appellee
    District Attorney                                   State of Louisiana
    J. Bryant Clark, Jr.
    Assistant District Attorney
    Covington, Louisiana
    Holli Herrle- Castillo                              Counsel for Defendant/Appellant
    Marrero, Louisiana                                 Daniel Tucker Hamilton
    BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., GUIDRY, AND BURRIS, ' JJ.
    The Honorable William J. Burris, retired, is serving as judge pro tempore by special
    appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court.
    GUIDRY, J.
    The    defendant, Daniel Tucker   Hamilton,      was    charged by grand jury
    indictment with second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14: 30. 1 ( count 1);
    and two counts of solicitation for murder, violations of La. R.S. 14: 28. 1 ( counts 2
    and 3).    The defendant pled not guilty and, following a jury trial, was found guilty
    as charged on all counts.     For the second degree murder conviction, the defendant
    was sentenced to life imprisonment. Because the defendant was under the age of
    eighteen years at the time of the offense, the sentence was imposed with the benefit
    of parole eligibility pursuant to La. R. S.     15: 574. 4( G).   For each solicitation for
    murder conviction, the defendant was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment at
    hard labor. The trial court ordered the count 2 sentence to run consecutive to the
    count 1 sentence, and the count 3 sentence to run concurrent with the count 1
    sentence.       The defendant now appeals, designating two assignments of error.            We
    affirm the convictions.     We affirm the sentences on counts 2 and 3.         We amend the
    life sentence on count 1 by providing that it be served at hard labor and affirm as
    amended, and remand.
    FACTS
    On Monday, March 7, 2016, James Kenneth Hamilton, known as " Kenny,"
    did not show up for work at Campbell Roofing Materials Company.                        Patricia
    Hamilton,       Kenny' s sister-in-law, went to Kenny' s house on Lenel Road in
    Covington and found Kenny dead in a recliner in the living room. Kenny had been
    shot six times in the head.     Most of the gunshot wounds were at or near the top of
    the   skull.      Kenny lived with his brother, Russell,          and   the   sixteen -year- old
    defendant, Kenny' s stepson.
    Dr. Michael Defatta, Chief Deputy Coroner for the St. Tammany Parish
    Coroner' s Office, performed the autopsy on Kenny.            Dr. Defatta testified at trial
    that he first examined Kenny' s body at Kenny' s house around noon on Monday,
    2
    March 7, 2016.     According to Dr. Defatta, Kenny was killed at least 36 to 48 hours
    prior to the examination.      Kenny was killed, therefore, on Friday or Saturday.
    Six . 22 caliber spent casings were found behind the chair Kenny was sitting
    in when he was shot.        Kenny was a member of the Not -A -Hill Hunting Club,
    located outside of Abita Springs.        According to Jeffrey King, the president of the
    club, Kenny often brought the defendant with him to the club. Kenny had his own
    camp in the club where he and the defendant spent time. The defendant had spent
    most of the weekend before Kenny was found at the hunting club with friends.
    During that time, the defendant had a Smith & Wesson . 22 caliber semi- automatic
    pistol with a wood grip, which the police later seized from the camp. The gun and
    the six .22 caliber spent casings found at Kenny' s house were sent to Patrick Lane
    for testing.      Lane,   an    expert   in   firearm   and   tool   mark   examination   and
    identification, testified at trial that the six spent casings had been fired from the
    defendant' s . 22 caliber pistol.
    The defendant was arrested for the second degree murder of Kenny and
    posted bail.     Prior to the trial, the defendant was riding with his girlfriend when
    they were pulled over for a traffic stop.           A gun was found in the vehicle.       The
    defendant told the police he had bought the gun for protection. In August of 2017,
    at a pretrial hearing, the State requested that the defendant' s bond be revoked. The
    defendant, Ricky Hamilton (Kenny' s brother), and Ricky' s wife, Patricia Hamilton,
    were present at the hearing. Initially, the trial court did not revoke the defendant' s
    bond.     Ricky and Patricia addressed the trial court and expressed their concern and
    dissatisfaction with the trial court' s ruling. The trial court reconsidered its previous
    ruling, revoked the defendant' s bond, and remanded the defendant to the sheriff' s
    office.
    On September 1 or 2 of 2017, while the defendant was in a holding cell in
    the St. Tammany Parish Jail awaiting his trial, he began talking to forty -eight -year -
    3
    old Roger Brock, who was also in the holding cell.             According to Brock, the
    defendant started talking about his case. When Brock told the defendant he did not
    look like he could do such a thing, the defendant told Brock he would be surprised
    what a person could do.      According to Brock, the defendant then stated that Kenny
    was not his real father, but " his stepdad, and he said something to the effect of --
    we started talking about weapons and he told me he didn' t like a . 22 but a . 22
    would get the job done."      In a statement to the police and later at trial, Brock stated
    that the defendant had talked about Kenny receiving five shots to the back of the
    head. Brock added, " He said in so many words that it was more than just him and
    that everybody had got their story straight."        Regarding why Kenny was killed,
    Brock      remembered      only that the defendant had told him it was about a
    disagreement.     In his statement to the police, Brock said it was a disagreement
    between the two that got him out of control and that he only -- the only thing that
    he wished he would have done differently was he wished he could have seen his
    face."
    Brock indicated that the defendant was very upset with some family
    members, one of whom was Kenny' s brother, who had gotten the defendant' s bond
    revoked.    According to Brock, the defendant then told him, regarding his relatives,
    that " maybe   it would be better if they didn' t show up period or if they was just
    taken care of."   The defendant asked Brock if he would handle it, and Brock told
    the defendant he did not have a gun.       The defendant, according to Brock, told him
    he could call his girlfriend and get the weapon and the money. The defendant
    called his girlfriend from the holding cell, and Brock heard the defendant refer to
    the gun as a paintball gun.     The defendant told Brock that the gun would be a . 40
    caliber.    The following exchange between Brock and the prosecutor then took
    place:
    Q. And so did he offer to pay you to do anything?
    A. Yes, he did.
    0
    Q. Okay. And what was your understanding of that proposition, what
    he was asking you to do?
    A. Frankly, I was scared, because of the fact that I didn' t want to be --
    really I didn' t think it was going to progress to that point.
    Q. Uh-huh.
    A.   I didn' t want any part of it. So when he was talking about the
    money issue, he threw a number out there, I think he said something
    like 1, 500 and I told him no, something like 5 grand, just something
    crazy just to try to get him off the conversation and it didn' t work. So
    I got kind of --
    I got nervous.        I got kind of nervous.    You know, even
    though he' s young I got nervous because I felt like it was something
    that I needed to tell someone.
    Q. Okay. What was he asking you to do at that point, was it just scare
    them?
    A. No.
    Q. What was he asking you to do?
    A. He was asking me to kill them.
    Q. And that was the arrangement for                 this    1, 500,    5, 000,   this
    conversation back and forth about money?
    A. Yeah.
    Shortly following this, Brock contacted a worker at the jail about his
    conversation with the defendant. Detective Lawrence Hudson, a member of the St.
    Tammany Parish Sheriff' s Office and the lead detective on the defendant' s murder
    case,   went to the jail and obtained a statement from Brock.                     A superceding
    indictment was returned, charging the defendant with second degree murder and
    two counts of solicitation for murder.
    The defendant did not testify at trial.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1
    In his first assignment of error, the defendant argues the trial court erred in
    denying his motion to sever offenses. Specifically, the defendant contends that the
    joinder      of   offenses   resulted   in   undue   prejudice,    requiring    reversal    of his
    convictions.
    The defendant filed a motion to quash and/ or sever counts.                  At a pretrial
    hearing on this matter, defense counsel argued there were very different time
    frames involved since the solicitation for murder charges were based on a crime
    allegedly committed about one -and -one-half years after Kenny was murdered.
    Defense counsel further argued that,            the only connection Ricky and Patricia
    5
    Hamilton had with the murder case was that they were family members of the
    defendant.      They were not eyewitnesses to the murder and, as such, allowing
    evidence of the solicitation for murder charges at the defendant' s murder trial
    would prejudice the jury and could result in an unjust conviction on the murder
    charge.
    The State responded that with crimes such as these, there would always be a
    lapse of time between the charges.     The State further contended that the fact that
    the Hamiltons were not eyewitnesses was irrelevant.      Both witnesses, according to
    the   State,   were going to testify at trial and would provide key pieces of
    circumstantial evidence to the State' s case.   Further, the State suggested, it would
    be impossible to present either case without discussion of the other, mainly because
    the defendant not only asked the informant to kill the Hamiltons,              but also
    confessed to the informant he killed Kenny.
    The trial court denied the defendant' s motion to sever offenses, finding that
    the cases were very similar and the offenses were sufficiently intertwined such that
    joinder was proper. Further, the trial court found that there would not be undue
    prejudice from the joinder and that there were no complex elements in either
    offense that would " result in any undue prejudice or frankly any prejudice at all."
    The defendant argues in brief that he was prejudiced by joinder of the
    offenses.      According to the defendant, adding the two solicitation for murder
    charges that occurred a year -and -a -half after the murder only " served to complicate
    the case and make it less clear than it otherwise would have been."     The defendant
    further suggests that since the second degree murder charge was based on weak
    circumstantial evidence, charging the three crimes together would have made the
    jury hostile and caused the jury to infer a criminal disposition to convict.
    Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure article 493 states:
    Two or more offenses may be charged in the same indictment or
    information in a separate count for each offense if the offenses
    31
    charged, whether felonies or misdemeanors, are of the same or similar
    character or are based on the same act or transaction or on two or
    more acts or transactions connected together or constituting parts of a
    common scheme or plan; provided that the offenses joined must be
    triable by the same mode of trial.
    Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure article 495. 1 provides: " If it appears
    that a defendant or the state is prejudiced by a joinder of offenses in an indictment
    or bill of information or by such joinder for trial together, the court may order
    separate trials, grant a severance of offenses, or provide whatever other relief
    justice requires."
    At the time of the offenses, La. C. Cr. P. art. 782( A) provided in pertinent
    part:
    Cases in which punishment is necessarily confinement at hard labor
    shall be tried by a jury composed of twelve jurors, ten of whom must
    concur to render a verdict. Cases in which the punishment may be
    confinement at hard labor shall be tried by a jury composed of six
    jurors, all of whom must concur to render a verdict.
    The      punishment     for the   offenses   the   defendant was      charged with is
    necessarily confinement at hard labor.               See La. R.S.     14: 28. 1( B) &   La. R.S.
    14: 30. 1( B).    Thus, joinder of the offenses would be proper under La. C. Cr. P. art.
    493 and tried by a twelve -person jury.
    As a general rule, evidence of criminal conduct that takes place in a series of
    events is admissible at the trial of one of the offenses. See La. C. E. art. 404( B);
    State v. Colomb, 98- 2813, p. 3 ( La. 10/ 1/ 99), 
    747 So. 2d 1074
    , 1075 ( per curiam).
    Any time the State introduces evidence of other criminal activity by the accused,
    the possibility exists that the trier of fact will be affected to some degree by the
    evidence.     Nevertheless, there is no absolute ban on the introduction of evidence of
    other   unrelated     crimes,    including felony      convictions;    instead,   statutory   and
    jurisprudential guidelines establish the circumstances under which this evidence is
    admissible.      See La. C.E. arts. 403 &     404(B); State v. Prieur, 
    277 So. 2d 126
    , 
    130 La. 1973
    );      State v. Morris, 99- 3075, p. 5 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 11/ 3/ 00), 
    770 So. 2d 908
    , 914, writ denied, 00- 3293 ( La. 10/ 12/ 01), 
    799 So. 2d 496
    , cert. denied, 535
    
    7 U.S. 934
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 1311
    , 
    152 L.Ed.2d 220
     ( 2002).
    In ruling on a motion for severance, the trial court should consider a variety
    of factors in determining whether or not prejudice may result from the joinder:
    whether the jury would be confused by the various counts; whether the jury would
    be able to segregate the various charges and the evidence; whether the defendant
    could be confounded in presenting his various defenses;                    whether the     crimes
    charged would be used by the jury to infer a criminal disposition; and whether,
    considering the nature of the offenses, the charging of several crimes would make
    the jury hostile. A severance need not be granted if the prejudice can effectively be
    avoided by other safeguards. In many instances, the trial judge can mitigate any
    prejudice resulting from joinder of offenses by providing clear instructions to the
    jury. The State can further curtail any prejudice with an orderly presentation of
    evidence.   A motion for severance is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial
    court, and its ruling should not be disturbed on appeal absent a showing of an
    abuse of discretion.   A defendant in any case bears a heavy burden of proof when
    alleging prejudicial joinder of offenses as grounds for a motion to sever. Factual,
    rather than conclusory, allegations are required.           State v. Friday,       10- 2309, p. 21
    La. App. 1st Cir. 6/ 17/ 11),        
    73 So. 3d 913
    , 928- 29, writ denied, 11- 1456 ( La.
    4/ 20/ 12), 
    85 So. 3d 1258
    .
    In State v. Vaud, 18- 0344 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 24/ 18), 
    259 So. 3d 1048
    ,
    rev' d in part on otherrog_ unds,         18- 01750 ( La. 11/ 25/ 19),    
    283 So. 3d 494
    , the
    defendant was charged with armed robbery and obstruction ofjustice, offenses that
    occurred about six months apart.          The trial court denied the motion to sever, and
    this court found no abuse of discretion in that ruling, stating in pertinent part:
    In denying the motion to sever, the trial                   court   noted   the
    obstruction    charge    is    somewhat part      and parcel       to    the   armed
    robbery[,]"   and "[    e] ven though it is a separate offense, I think it' s
    intertwined with [t]he State' s case that is going to be presented. I see
    no need -  I think [t]he [j]ury is quite capable of separating the two and
    I see no need for us to sever these and cause us to have two separate
    M.
    trials on this."   A review of the record reveals that the evidence against
    defendant on each count was not complex and was presented in an
    orderly fashion, allowing the jury to segregate the charges and
    evidence.
    
    Id.
     at 12- 13, 
    259 So. 3d at 1060
    .
    In State v. Hugle, 11- 1121, p. 1 ( La. App. 4th Cir. 11/ 7/ 12), 
    104 So. 3d 598
    ,
    604, writ denied,       12- 2721 ( La. 6/ 14/ 13),    
    118 So. 3d 1079
    , the defendant was
    charged with second degree murder that occurred in July of 2008. In June of 2009,
    the defendant was arrested for conspiracy to commit first degree murder of a
    witness to the murder. Id. at 6, 
    104 So. 3d at 606
    . The offenses were joined. 
    Id.
     at
    1- 2, 
    104 So. 3d at 604
    .      The defendant argued that his offenses should have been
    severed because, while evidence of the murder might be admissible in the trial of
    the conspiracy, the converse was not true; that is, evidence of the conspiracy
    charge was not necessary to prove the murder charge. Id. at 14, 
    104 So. 3d at 610
    .
    The fourth circuit found the defendant was not prejudiced by joinder of the
    offenses.     
    Id.
     at 17- 19, 
    104 So. 3d at
    612- 13.
    While Vaughn and Huglele are not directly on point in that the defendant' s
    aunt and uncle (     Ricky and Patricia Hamilton) were not eyewitnesses to Kenny' s
    murder, they are instructive.        The crimes, while intertwined, were separate and
    distinct, and arguably would have resulted in minimal juror confusion. Following
    closing arguments, the trial court instructed the jury to deliberate on each count
    separately and that finding the defendant guilty or not on any one count was not to
    affect the verdict on the other counts.           See State v. Crochet, 05- 0123,   p. 8 ( La.
    6/ 23/ 06),   
    931 So. 2d 1083
    ,   1088 ( per      curiam) (   wherein the court found the
    defendant was not unduly prejudiced by the consolidation of the charges in light of
    the instructions given the jury by the trial court). Moreover, even if the counts had
    been severed, then in the defendant' s solicitation for murder trial, the prosecutor
    would have been unable to address evidence of these crimes without addressing
    and discussing the underlying crime of second degree murder. See State v. Butler,
    9
    15- 89, p. 8 ( La. App. 5th Cir. 7/ 29/ 15), 
    171 So. 3d 1283
    , 1289, writ denied, 15-
    1608 ( La. 10/ 10/ 16), 
    207 So. 3d 408
    .
    The charges were properly joined. Because the evidence regarding each
    crime was easily distinguishable, the defendant did not establish that the evidence
    of the solicitation for murder charges was likely to confuse the jurors and cause
    them to be unable to segregate the charges and evidence. Despite the defendant' s
    assertion in brief, the State introduced evidence of each crime in a clear and
    orderly fashion.
    Based on the foregoing, we find the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying the defendant' s motion to sever. Accordingly, this assignment of error is
    without merit.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 2
    In his second assignment of error, the defendant argues that his sentences are
    excessive.        Specifically, the defendant contends the trial court erred in imposing
    consecutive sentences.
    A thorough review of the record indicates the defendant did not make or file
    a written motion to reconsider sentence based on any specific ground following the
    trial court' s imposition of the sentences.      Under La. C. Cr.P. arts. 881. 1( E)   and
    881. 2( A)( 1),    the failure to make or file a motion to reconsider sentence shall
    preclude a defendant from raising an objection to the sentence on appeal, including
    a claim of excessiveness.        See State v. Mims, 
    619 So. 2d 1059
     ( La. 1993) ( per
    curiam).      The     defendant, therefore,   is procedurally barred from having his
    assignment of error reviewed because of his failure to file a motion to reconsider
    sentence after being sentenced. See State v. Duncan, 94- 1563, p. 2 ( La. App. 1 st
    Cir. 12/ 15/ 95), 
    667 So. 2d 1141
    ,      1143 ( en banc per curiam).    See also State v.
    Leboeuf, 18- 1777, p. 3 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 8/ 2/ 19), 
    281 So. 3d 714
    , 715.
    This assignment of error is without merit.
    SENTENCING ERROR
    Under La. C. Cr.P.      art.     920( 2),   we are limited in our review to errors
    discoverable by a mere inspection of the pleadings and proceedings without
    inspection of the evidence. After a careful review of the record, we have found a
    sentencing error.
    For a conviction of second degree murder, the offender shall be imprisoned
    at hard labor for life without benefit of parole,                probation,     or    suspension   of
    sentence.       La. R.S. 14: 30. 1( B).     According to the sentencing transcript, the trial
    court failed to provide that the life sentence was to be served at hard labor.2
    Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure article 920( 2)               authorizes consideration of
    such an error on appeal.        Further, La. C. Cr.P. art. 882( A) authorizes correction by
    the appellate court.3 We find that correction of this illegally lenient sentence does
    not involve the exercise of sentencing discretion and, as such, there is no reason
    why this court should not simply amend the sentence.                         Accordingly, since a
    sentence at hard labor was the only sentence that could be imposed, we correct the
    sentence by providing that it be served at hard labor.
    We remand to the trial court for correction of the minutes and commitment
    order,    and    for    transmission    of    the    amended   record   to    the    Department    of
    Corrections.
    CONVICTIONS               AFFIRMED;            SENTENCES        ON      COUNTS          2   AND    3
    SOLICITATION              FOR MURDER) AFFIRMED;                     LIFE      SENTENCE           ON
    COUNT 1 AMENDED TO PROVIDE IT BE SERVED AT HARD LABOR
    AND AFFIRMED AS AMENDED; REMANDED FOR CORRECTION OF
    THE        MINUTES            AND          COMMITMENT              ORDER,             AND     FOR
    TRANSMISSION OF THE AMENDED RECORD TO THE DEPARTMENT
    OF CORRECTIONS.
    2 The minute entry indicates the sentence is at hard labor. However, when there is a discrepancy
    between the minutes and the transcript, the transcript must prevail.    State v. Lam, 
    441 So. 2d 732
    , 734 ( La. 1983).
    s An illegal sentence may be corrected at any time by the court that imposed the sentence or by
    an appellate court on review. La. C. Cr.P. art. 882( A).
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019KA1206

Filed Date: 2/21/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024