People of Michigan v. Tj Lee Rose ( 2010 )


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  • Order                                                                       Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    January 15, 2010                                                                        Marilyn Kelly,
    Chief Justice
    139201                                                                            Michael F. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth A. Weaver
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                                   Maura D. Corrigan
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                                     Robert P. Young, Jr.
    Stephen J. Markman
    v                                                       SC: 139201                Diane M. Hathaway,
    COA: 284241                              Justices
    Lenawee CC: 06-012133-FH
    T.J. LEE ROSE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________________/
    On order of the Court, the application for leave to appeal the May 12, 2009
    judgment of the Court of Appeals is considered, and it is DENIED, because we are not
    persuaded that the questions presented should be reviewed by this Court.
    KELLY, C.J. (dissenting).
    I would grant defendant’s application for leave to appeal. I find many aspects of
    this case troubling. I believe that this Court should reconsider the use of acquitted
    conduct at sentencing and our decision in People v Ewing.1 Moreover, I am concerned
    about how the trial judge used a second charge of second-degree criminal sexual conduct,
    (CSC II), of which defendant was acquitted, in sentencing him.
    I. Facts
    Defendant was jury convicted on one count of CSC II, but acquitted of another
    count of CSC II in regard to the victim’s sister. The judge sentenced him at the top of the
    sentencing guidelines range, resulting in a sentence of 86 to 180 months in prison. The
    Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction but remanded for resentencing because it
    concluded that offense variables 7 and 9 had been incorrectly scored. The trial court
    corrected the scoring of the variables, which lowered the guidelines minimum sentence
    range to 12 to 30 months. However, the court again sentenced defendant to 86 to 180
    months, an upward departure from the guidelines range. In its discussion of why it
    believed a departure was warranted, the court noted that it had previously found by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the second act of CSC had occurred. Defendant
    1
    
    435 Mich 443
     (1990).
    2
    challenged the use of his acquittal on the second CSC II charge as a violation of his Fifth
    and Sixth Amendment rights. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
    II. The Use of Acquitted Conduct Generally
    A. Federal Law
    In United States v Watts,2 the United States Supreme Court held that a jury’s
    verdict of acquittal does not prevent the sentencing court from considering conduct
    underlying the acquitted charge. To qualify for consideration, the conduct need be
    proven by only a preponderance of the evidence. Watts involved a challenge to the use of
    acquitted conduct under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Relying
    on Watts, every federal circuit that has considered the issue since has concluded that the
    use of acquitted conduct at sentencing is constitutional.3
    In United States v White,4 the Sixth Circuit, sitting en banc, divided 9-6 on
    whether the use during sentencing of facts underlying an acquittal constitutes a Sixth
    Amendment violation. The majority concluded that it does not, under Booker, as long as
    the resulting sentence does not exceed “the statutory ceiling set by the jury’s
    verdict. . . .”5
    2
    
    519 US 148
     (1997) (per curiam).
    3
    United States v Magallanez, 408 F3d 672, 684-685 (CA 10, 2005); United States v
    Vaughn, 430 F3d 518, 526 (CA 2, 2005); United States v Price, 418 F3d 771, 787-788
    (CA 7, 2005); United States v Ashworth, 139 Fed Appx 525, 527 (CA 4, 2005) (per
    curiam); United States v Hayward, 177 Fed Appx 214, 215 (CA 3, 2006); United States v
    Farias, 469 F3d 393, 399 (CA 5, 2006); United States v Gobbi, 471 F3d 302, 314 (CA 1,
    2006). These courts assumed that Watts controls the outcome of both Fifth and Sixth
    Amendment challenges to the use of acquitted conduct.
    However, in United States v Booker, 
    543 US 220
    , 240 & n 4 (2005), the United States
    Supreme Court explicitly limited Watts’s reach to the Fifth Amendment double jeopardy
    question. Although other courts have recognized that Watts is not controlling on the
    Sixth Amendment question, they have nevertheless been influenced by the other courts
    that erroneously presumed the contrary. See, e.g., United States v Dorcely, 372 US App
    DC 170, 175 (DC, 2006); United States v Mercado, 474 F3d 654, 657 (CA 9, 2007).
    Only one federal court of appeals has recognized that Watts has absolutely no bearing on
    a Sixth Amendment challenge and has addressed the issue absent any reliance on that
    case. United States v Duncan, 400 F3d 1297, 1304-1305 & n 7 (CA 11, 2005).
    4
    551 F3d 381 (CA 6, 2008) (en banc).
    5
    Id. at 385.
    3
    The dissenting opinion in White undertook a very different analysis, examining the
    common-law heritage of the use of acquitted conduct. The dissent observed that most
    states do not allow the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing.6 Moreover, the dissent
    noted that the American Law Institute and American Bar Association have joined the
    ranks of those formally opposed to the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing.7
    The White dissent also criticized the majority’s “simple and single-minded
    reliance on Watts” as dispositive of a Sixth Amendment claim.8 The dissent
    acknowledged that the federal circuits are uniform on this issue. However, it noted that
    the Booker line of cases has cast doubt on whether Watts governs Sixth Amendment
    challenges to the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing.9 Moreover, increasingly, federal
    district and court of appeals judges have questioned whether the use of acquitted conduct
    is constitutional under the Sixth Amendment and the Due Process Clause. They have
    even questioned whether it is consistent with common sense.10
    B. Michigan Law
    In Ewing, four justices of this Court sanctioned the consideration of acquitted
    conduct by a sentencing judge when the facts were proven to the judge by a
    6
    Id. at 394 (Merritt, J., dissenting).
    7
    Id. at 395.
    8
    Id. at 392.
    9
    The dissent noted that the Booker Court distinguished Watts as irrelevant to the issue of
    the use of acquitted conduct generally or under the Sixth Amendment. In Watts, there
    was no “contention that the sentence enhancement had exceeded the sentence authorized
    by the jury verdict in violation of the Sixth Amendment. The issue . . . simply was not
    presented.” White, 551 F3d at 392, quoting Booker, 543 US at 240 (2005).
    10
    United States v Canania, 532 F3d 764, 777 (CA 8, 2008) (Bright, J., concurring) (“In
    my view, the Constitution forbids judges-Guidelines or no Guidelines-from using
    ‘acquitted conduct’ to enhance a defendant’s sentence because it violates his or her due
    process right to notice and usurps the jury’s Sixth Amendment fact-finding role.”);
    United States v Mercado, 474 F3d 654, 658 (CA 9, 2007) (Fletcher, J., dissenting)
    (“Reliance on acquitted conduct in sentencing diminishes the jury’s role and dramatically
    undermines the protections enshrined in the Sixth Amendment.”); United States v Faust,
    456 F3d 1342, 1349 (CA 11, 2006) (Barkett, J., specially concurring) (“I strongly
    believe . . . that sentence enhancements based on acquitted conduct are unconstitutional
    under the Sixth Amendment, as well as the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
    Amendment.”); United States v Pimental, 367 F Supp 2d 143, 153 (D Mass, 2005)
    (Gertner, J.) (“To tout the importance of the jury in deciding facts, even traditional
    sentencing facts, and then to ignore the fruits of its efforts makes no sense-as a matter of
    law or logic.”).
    4
    preponderance of the evidence.11 The Court further held that a prior acquittal alone is not
    a sufficient reason to preclude the judge from taking those facts into account when
    sentencing a defendant for another offense.12 In support of this holding, Justice
    BRICKLEY’S lead opinion and Justice BOYLE’S opinion (joined by Chief Justice RILEY
    and Justice GRIFFIN) noted that “an acquittal does not necessarily mean that the defendant
    did not engage in criminal conduct.”13
    Ewing has now lain dormant for almost 20 years,14 despite significant
    developments in United States Supreme Court jurisprudence since it was decided. Just as
    the federal circuits have questioned the use of acquitted conduct at sentencing, I believe
    we should consider the continued vitality of Ewing in light of recent developments.
    C. Other States
    It is noteworthy that some state courts consider the use of acquitted conduct at
    sentencing to be unconstitutional or an abuse of discretion. These courts cite many of the
    same reasons mentioned by the federal judges who have objected to the practice.15 For
    example, the New Hampshire Supreme Court concluded:
    We think that the logical and legal inconsistencies associated with
    considering acquittals in enhancing sentencing are readily apparent. . . .
    . . . We think that the presumption of innocence is as much
    ensconced in our due process as the right to counsel, and that a criminal
    defendant in Mr. Cote’s position is entitled to its full benefit. This benefit
    is denied when a sentencing court may have used charges that have resulted
    in acquittals to punish the defendant.
    11
    Ewing, 
    435 Mich at 446
     (opinion by BRICKLEY, J.); 
    435 Mich at 473
     (opinion by
    BOYLE, J.). Justice ARCHER disagreed with the majority and would have held that
    acquitted conduct may not be used at sentencing. 
    435 Mich at 459
     (ARCHER, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part). Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Justice LEVIN,
    did not address the issue. 
    435 Mich at 461-462
     (CAVANAGH, J., concurring).
    12
    
    Id. at 451
     (opinion by BRICKLEY, J.).
    13
    
    Id. at 451-52
    ; see also 
    id.
     at 473 n 15 (opinion by BOYLE, J.).
    14
    We remanded three cases to the Court of Appeals for reconsideration in light of Ewing
    in the years after the decision was released. Other than that, Ewing has not been cited by
    this Court once since its release.
    15
    State v Marley, 321 NC 415, 423-425 (1988); Bishop v State, 268 Ga 286, 295 (1997),
    citing Jefferson v State, 256 Ga 821, 827 (1987); see n 10 supra.
    5
    We think it disingenuous at best to uphold the presumption of
    innocence until proven guilty, a principle that is “axiomatic and elementary,
    and [whose] enforcement lies at the foundation of the administration of our
    criminal law,” while at the same time punishing a defendant based upon
    charges in which that presumption has not been overcome. The
    presumption is not a presumption of “not guilty” or guilty only by a
    preponderance. It is a presumption of innocence, and innocence means
    “absence of guilt.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 708. (Emphasis
    added.)[16]
    These concerns are similar to those expressed by Justice ARCHER in his
    concurrence/dissent in Ewing:
    Once the cloud of suspicion has been removed from a defendant as
    to a particular charge, the facts or circumstances surrounding such removal
    should not come before a subsequent sentencing trial court. In my view,
    there is no viable justification in support of inviting a defendant to engage
    in any kind of discussion or exchange concerning a prior exoneration of
    guilt. This expanded version of sentencing allocution, which, according to
    Justice Boyle, would require an additional and clearly belated rehashing of
    a matter which has been definitively resolved and disposed of, will not
    remove, or, in any way, diminish the eminent danger of precondemnation
    that would befall a defendant if this practice were allowed. The resurrection
    of a favorably resolved past accusation for the purpose of merely
    contemplating its existence would serve only to unfairly and unnecessarily
    prejudice a defendant with the probability of improperly drawn inferences
    of wrongful conduct.[17]
    In sum, I would grant leave to appeal to revisit the use of acquitted conduct at
    sentencing as a general matter. I would do so to consider developments in constitutional
    jurisprudence since Ewing, the widespread criticism of the practice,18 and the split among
    state courts on the issue.
    16
    State v Cote, 129 NH 358, 375 (1987) (citation omitted).
    17
    Ewing, 
    435 Mich at 458-459
    .
    18
    See, e.g., Ngov, Judicial nullification of juries: The use of acquitted conduct at
    sentencing, 76 Tenn L R 235, 261 (2009) (“A paradox is thus presented. Apprendi [v
    New Jersey, 
    530 US 466
     (2000)] and its progeny, including Booker, have elevated the
    role of the jury verdict by circumscribing a defendant’s sentence to the relevant statutory
    maximum authorized by a jury; yet, the jury’s verdict is not heeded when it specifically
    withholds authorization. Stated differently, the jury is essentially ignored when it
    disagrees with the prosecution. This outcome is nonsensical and in contravention of the
    thrust of recent Supreme Court jurisprudence.”).
    6
    III. The Use of Defendant’s Acquittal in This Case
    In People v Grimmett, this Court concluded that a sentencing judge may not make
    an “independent finding of defendant’s guilt” on another charge.19 Ewing and later Court
    of Appeals cases, on the other hand, have allowed sentencing judges to impose sentences
    using conduct underlying acquitted charges.20 The dividing line between these two
    considerations is unclear, as the Ewing Court noted.21
    Here, defendant was acquitted of the second CSC charge, yet the trial judge
    concluded by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant committed that CSC.
    Given the trial judge’s language, it appears the sentencing departure here was based on an
    independent finding of guilt, not acquitted conduct. At the resentencing hearing, the
    judge stated “[t]he court made a finding previously that the second sexual act that [sic]
    actually occurred and the court found that by a preponderance of the evidence.”22
    Also of particular significance to this case is the limiting language in Justice
    BRICKLEY’S Ewing opinion. Justice BRICKLEY provided the crucial fourth vote in favor
    of allowing acquitted conduct to be used in sentencing.                 He explained
    19
    People v Grimmett, 
    388 Mich 590
    , 608 (1972), overruled on other grounds by People v
    White, 
    390 Mich 245
     (1973), see also People v Fleming, 
    428 Mich 408
    , 417-418 (1987).
    20
    People v Compagnari, 
    233 Mich App 233
    , 236 (1998).
    21
    Ewing, 
    435 Mich at 471-472
     (opinion by BOYLE, J.) (noting that “[t]he difficulty in
    drawing a distinction between People v Lee [
    391 Mich 618
     (1974)] [the trial court may
    “notice the existence of pending charges”] and Grimmett [the trial court may not “use
    unsupported assumption of guilt of other crimes as a factor” at sentencing] has created a
    lack of consistency in the Court of Appeals decisions on this issue. . . . The confusion in
    the lower courts regarding whether and under what circumstances a court may consider
    other criminal activity of a defendant which has not resulted in a conviction or charge
    necessitates some action by this Court to clarify the rule. We would clarify Grimmett and
    hold, in line with the majority of jurisdictions, that any circumstance which aids the
    sentencing court’s construction of a more complete and accurate picture of a defendant’s
    background, history, or behavior is properly considered in individualizing the sentence
    . . . .”).
    However, because Justice BOYLE’s opinion in Ewing garnered only three votes, this
    confusion was not dispelled by Ewing’s release.
    22
    Transcript from the March 18, 2008 sentencing hearing. The previous finding the court
    referred to was from defendant’s original sentencing, when the court stated “[t]he court
    finds by a preponderance of the evidence that he [defendant] did commit the offense.”
    Transcript from the October 19, 2006 sentencing hearing.
    7
    that, in the context of prior acquittals, the defendant must be afforded the opportunity to
    “test the accuracy” of the underlying facts of that acquittal when they are considered
    during sentencing.23
    Considering the record here, there is no indication that the judge allowed the
    defendant to “test the accuracy” of the facts underlying the acquitted conduct used to
    enhance his sentence, as Ewing requires. The fact that defendant did get a chance to “test
    the accuracy” of this finding during the trial on the additional CSC II count is insufficient
    to give meaning to the holding in Ewing. He had tested the accuracy of those facts and
    succeeded; the jury, by acquitting him of that count, determined that he did not commit
    the offense. When a judge then finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    defendant did commit the crime, how is the defendant to again “test the accuracy” of
    those facts? Is the defendant supposed to make his argument at sentencing? Should an
    evidentiary hearing be held? Is the defendant not then required to defend against the
    charge twice?
    These inconsistencies, coupled with the blurred line between what Ewing allows
    and what Grimmett prohibits, illuminate the problems inherent in using facts underlying
    acquitted conduct at sentencing. Particularly, this practice exposes the difficulty a
    defendant faces in testing the accuracy of these facts.
    IV. Conclusion
    For these reasons, I think this case raises several jurisprudentially significant
    issues. I would grant defendant’s application for leave to appeal.
    23
    Ewing, 
    435 Mich at 454
    .
    I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
    foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
    January 15, 2010                    _________________________________________
    p0112                                                                Clerk