State of Minnesota v. Robert John Meyers , 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 82 ( 2014 )


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  •                                STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A13-1313
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Robert John Meyers,
    Appellant.
    Filed September 15, 2014
    Affirmed
    Reyes, Judge
    Hennepin County District Court
    File No. 27CR1212589
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Thomas A. Weist, Assistant County
    Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Jessica Merz Godes, Assistant
    Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Reyes, Presiding Judge; Hooten, Judge; and
    Willis, Judge.*
    SYLLABUS
    Departure from a presumptive sentence is properly based on the aggravating factor
    articulated in Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) (2010) when the underlying conviction
    involves injury, even if injury is an essential element of the conviction. The category of
    offenses subject to an upward departure under this factor includes those current
    *
    Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
    Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
    convictions that involve harm or criminal sexual conduct; the basis for departure is that
    the offender has a prior conviction of an offense involving harm or criminal sexual
    conduct.
    OPINION
    REYES, Judge
    Appellant argues that the district court erred by imposing an upward durational
    departure based on an aggravating factor that duplicated an element of his conviction for
    first-degree assault and an aggravating factor that was not noticed by the state. Appellant
    also argues that his conduct was not significantly more serious than the typical first-
    degree assault, and, therefore, no substantial and compelling circumstances warranted an
    upward departure. Because we conclude that the district court had valid grounds for
    departure and did not abuse its discretion by determining that substantial and compelling
    circumstances were present, we affirm.
    FACTS
    On April 19, 2012, around 4:00 p.m., A.C. was entering her car in a downtown
    Minneapolis parking ramp when she was attacked from behind by appellant Robert John
    Meyers. A.C. felt something at her throat and discovered that it was a knife when she
    reached up to grab the object, cutting her thumb. When A.C. screamed and fought back,
    Meyers said to her, “We’re going for a ride.” As A.C. continued to scream, Meyers
    attempted to cover her mouth with his hand and A.C. bit him. Meyers then stabbed A.C.
    in the abdomen. A.C. ended up seated in the driver’s seat of her car, facing Meyers, who
    was dressed in a business suit and holding a bloody hunting knife. A.C. asked Meyers
    2
    what he wanted from her and offered him her car and the other possessions that she had
    with her. Meyers then looked at A.C. and said, “You’re lucky you’re a fighter,” before
    turning and walking away.
    After locking herself inside her car, A.C. called 911. Because the dispatch center
    could not determine her location, A.C. ran down four stories on the exit ramp to the
    bottom of the parking ramp and sought assistance from the ramp’s attendant. An
    ambulance then transported A.C. to the hospital, where she underwent surgery for her
    injuries and remained for six days. A.C. suffered a ten-inch knife wound that penetrated
    the left side of her liver and pierced her adrenal gland, which was a life-threatening
    injury. She also suffered permanent nerve damage to her thumb, as well as other
    lacerations.
    Meyers was apprehended later that day after stealing a woman’s purse in another
    downtown parking ramp. He was identified as a suspect in A.C.’s stabbing after officers
    reviewed surveillance-video footage from the parking ramp.
    Meyers was indicted on three charges: attempted first-degree criminal sexual
    conduct, first-degree assault, and attempted kidnapping. The state moved for an upward
    departure from the sentencing guidelines based on evidence that A.C. was injured and
    that Meyers had a prior felony conviction for sexual assault. A jury trial was held, and
    the jury found Meyers not guilty of attempted first-degree criminal sexual conduct and
    guilty of first-degree assault. The jury was unable to reach a verdict on the attempted-
    kidnapping charge.
    3
    After the verdict was read, the court instructed the jury to determine departure
    grounds, and the jury was given a special-verdict form asking it to decide two facts:
    “whether or not in the course of the commission of the assault, [Meyers] intentionally
    injured [A.C.] and, whether or not at the time of the commission of [the assault],
    [Meyers] had a previous conviction for criminal sexual conduct to wit: [s]exual abuse in
    the third degree in the Iowa District Court in and for the County of Washington on June
    17, 2002.” Meyers stipulated to the prior conviction. The jury answered both fact
    questions affirmatively.
    At the sentencing hearing, Meyers argued that the aggravating factors found by the
    jury could not be used for an upward departure in Meyers’s sentence because they
    duplicated an element necessarily proved to convict him of assault. The district court
    disagreed based on its reading of the sentencing guidelines and related law and sentenced
    Meyers to 240 months in prison, an upward departure from the presumptive sentence of
    158 months. The district court based its departure on its assessment that substantial and
    compelling circumstances existed for departure from the guidelines: (1) the current
    conviction resulted in injury to the victim and Meyers had a prior conviction for sexual
    assault and (2) Meyers acted with particular cruelty. This appeal follows.
    ISSUES
    I.     Did the district court err by identifying Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3)
    as a valid ground for departure?
    4
    II.    If not, did the district court abuse its discretion by determining that this
    crime was significantly more serious than the typical first-degree assault and imposing an
    upward durational departure?
    ANALYSIS
    “[A] sentencing court has no discretion to depart from the sentencing guidelines
    unless aggravating or mitigating factors are present.” State v. Spain, 
    590 N.W.2d 85
    , 88
    (Minn. 1999). As to the factual basis for the departure, a presumptive sentence must be
    imposed unless “identifiable, substantial, and compelling circumstances” warrant an
    upward departure. Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D. (2010). Substantial and compelling
    circumstances are those showing that the defendant’s conduct was significantly more
    serious than that typically involved in the offense. State v. Edwards, 
    774 N.W.2d 596
    ,
    601 (Minn. 2009). Whether the district court identified valid grounds as the basis for a
    departure is a matter of law, which we review de novo. Dillon v. State, 
    781 N.W.2d 588
    ,
    595 (Minn. App. 2010), review denied (Minn. July 20, 2010). When aggravating
    circumstances are present, the district court has discretion to depart, State v. Stanke, 
    764 N.W.2d 824
    , 827 (Minn. 2009), and this court reviews a district court’s departure
    decision for abuse of discretion, State v. Reece, 
    625 N.W.2d 822
    , 824 (Minn. 2001).
    The district court stated that its departure was based on the facts that Meyers’s
    current conviction “was for an offense in which the victim was injured and [Meyers] had
    a prior felony conviction in which the victim was injured” and that Meyers acted with
    particular cruelty, assessing that his conduct “was at the outer limits of criminal conduct
    for [f]irst [d]egree [a]ssault,” falling just short of murder. Meyers argues that the district
    5
    court erred by imposing an upward durational departure for his conviction because (1) the
    district court improperly relied on elements of the offense in assessing the aggravating
    factors; (2) the district court improperly relied on the particular-cruelty factor, which was
    not an aggravating factor of which the state gave notice or a factor considered by the jury;
    and (3) Meyers’s conduct was not significantly more serious than the typical first-degree
    assault case.
    I.     Grounds for departure
    A valid ground for departure exists when “[t]he current conviction is for a
    [c]riminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense or an offense in which the victim was otherwise
    injured and there is a prior felony conviction for a [c]riminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense
    or an offense in which the victim was otherwise injured.” Minn. Sent. Guidelines
    II.D.2.b.(3)1; see also Minn. Stat. § 244.10, subd. 5a(a)(3) (2010) (repeating this language
    in listing aggravating factors that may be used to deviate from the sentencing guidelines).
    Based on the jury’s findings of fact, the district court relied on this aggravating factor as a
    reason for imposing an upward departure in sentencing Meyers.
    Meyers argues that this ground for departure is improper because it relies on an
    element of the offense of conviction – namely that the victim was injured2 – citing the
    1
    In the current version of the sentencing guidelines, this aggravating factor has been
    renumbered as Minn. Sent. Guidelines 2.D.3.b.(3) (2014), and the language is slightly
    different, but the application remains the same.
    2
    To convict Meyers of first-degree assault, the state had to prove that he assaulted A.C.
    and inflicted great bodily harm on her. Minn. Stat. § 609.221, subd. 1 (2010). “Great
    bodily harm” is defined as “bodily injury which creates a high probability of death, or
    which causes serious permanent disfigurement, or which causes a permanent or
    6
    proposition that “elements of an offense cannot be used as aggravating factors to impose
    an upward sentencing departure for that same offense.” State v. Osborne, 
    715 N.W.2d 436
    , 446 (Minn. 2006). But the supreme court’s ruling in State v. Peake establishes that
    departure is permissible when the current conviction is for an offense that involves injury
    to the victim and the defendant has a prior felony conviction for an offense involving
    injury to a victim, whether or not injury to the victim was an essential element of the
    conviction. 
    366 N.W.2d 299
    , 301 (Minn. 1985). Meyers contends that Peake has been
    “effectively overruled” by recent jurisprudence. This argument is unavailing.
    Meyers relies on State v. McIntosh, 
    641 N.W.2d 3
    (Minn. 2002), and State v.
    Thompson, 
    720 N.W.2d 820
    (Minn. 2006), to support the proposition that an element of
    an offense cannot be used as an aggravating factor. In McIntosh, the defendant was
    convicted of four controlled-substance offenses, one of which was for second-degree sale
    of a controlled substance (three grams or more of 
    cocaine). 641 N.W.2d at 5
    . The
    district court imposed an upward departure for that conviction after determining that it
    was a “major controlled substance offense” as defined in the list of aggravating factors in
    the sentencing guidelines. 
    Id. The district
    court cited three sub-factors for support,
    including the fact that the quantity involved was substantially larger than for personal
    use. 
    Id. The supreme
    court reversed the upward departure, finding insufficient support
    in the record for these factors, but cautioned courts “against using quantity to support a
    protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily member or organ or other
    serious bodily harm.” Minn. Stat. § 609.02, subd. 8 (2010).
    7
    departure under the major controlled substance offense departure criteria when to do so
    duplicates an element of the offense.” 
    Id. at 12.
    In Thompson, the defendant was convicted of nine counts of theft by swindle over
    $35,000, and the district court imposed an upward durational departure assessing that she
    had engaged in a major economic offense, an aggravating factor defined by the
    sentencing 
    guidelines. 720 N.W.2d at 823
    . The district court there found that the
    defendant’s conduct fell under four of the sub-factors for this aggravating factor,
    including that the offense involved a substantially greater monetary loss than the
    minimum specified by the statute. 
    Id. at 825.
    The supreme court determined that the
    district court abused its discretion by applying that particular sub-factor, assessing that
    “use of this factor amounted to using a factor necessarily used in convicting Thompson
    on each count to support the finding that Thompson engaged in a major economic
    offense. That sort of double counting is impermissible.” 
    Id. at 830.
    The precedent set by these cases is not applicable here. First and foremost, Minn.
    Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) specifically addresses repeat violent offenders. In Peake,
    the supreme court assessed that this aggravating factor is a recognition by the guidelines
    of “the unfairness of treating all felonies the same in determining criminal history” and
    that “where past crimes are violent and the present crime [is] a continuation of the
    violence, departure is permissible under the 
    guidelines.” 366 N.W.2d at 301
    . In State v.
    Petschl, this court repeated that concern about recidivism in addressing Minn. Sent.
    Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) (1997), stating:
    8
    an appellant’s prior conviction for a crime involving injury to
    a victim alone may be sufficient to justify an upward
    durational departure. State v. Peake, 
    366 N.W.2d 299
    , 301
    (Minn. 1985). “This is so because repeated crimes against
    persons pose a greater threat to society than repeated property
    crimes.” State v. Larson, 
    379 N.W.2d 165
    , 167 (Minn. App.
    1985).
    
    692 N.W.2d 463
    , 472-73 (Minn. App. 2004), review denied (Minn. Jan. 20, 2005). It is
    within the legislature’s purview to enact statutes and exceptions to general sentencing
    rules to address specific conduct that it determines to be eligible for increased
    punishment. State v. Jones, 
    745 N.W.2d 845
    , 850 (Minn. 2008) (stating that a statutory
    amendment authorizing cumulative punishment for certain crimes, amounting to an
    exception to the general prohibition of such punishment for conduct relating to the same
    behavioral incident, “reflect[s] legislative determinations concerning specific conduct
    that is eligible for increased punishment even when committed as part of the same
    behavior incident.”). And Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) was established to address
    repeated crimes against persons, making such conduct eligible for increased punishment.
    The cases cited by Meyers do not contemplate the violent recidivist behavior against
    persons addressed by this aggravating factor.
    Additionally, Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) is not duplicative in its
    consideration of victim injury. Rather, this consideration serves to limit the applicability
    of this aggravating factor. The category of convictions to which this factor may be
    applied is limited to those “for a [c]riminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense or an offense in
    which the victim was otherwise injured.” Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3). If a
    conviction falls into this category, the basis for departure is that “there is a prior felony
    9
    conviction for a [c]riminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense or an offense in which the victim
    was otherwise injured.” 
    Id. In other
    words, the courts can consider this aggravating
    factor only if the current conviction is for a crime that involved injury to a victim, and the
    court can only apply this factor if the defendant has a previous conviction for a crime
    involving injury to a victim.
    Likewise, other enumerated aggravating factors are limited in applicability to
    certain categories of crimes based on articulated grounds for departure. See, e.g., Minn.
    Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(4) (2010) (limited in application to illegal acts involving
    “concealment or guile to obtain money or property, to avoid payment or loss of money or
    property, or to obtain business or professional advantage” and requiring the presence of at
    least two of five sub-factors to serve as grounds for departure); Minn. Sent. Guidelines
    II.D.2.b.(5) (2010) (limited in application to offenses “related to trafficking in controlled
    substances under circumstances more onerous than the usual offense” and requiring the
    presence of at least two of seven sub-factors to serve as grounds for departure). As
    recognized in Peake, Larson, and Petschl, Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) provides a
    mechanism for addressing repetitive violent behavior that is not otherwise addressed by
    the sentencing guidelines or criminal statutes.
    Furthermore, McIntosh and Thompson illustrate a general policy against imposing
    an upward departure based on facts already used to determine the degree or severity of
    the crime, which is a key factor in determining the sentence on conviction.3 “A basic
    3
    In McIntosh, a key element of the appellant’s conviction for second-degree sale of a
    controlled substance was the quantity of the cocaine, whereas lesser degrees of the same
    10
    tenet of Sentencing Guidelines jurisprudence is that the district court may not base an
    upward durational departure on factors that the legislature has already taken into account
    in determining the degree or seriousness of the offense.” State v. Shattuck, 
    704 N.W.2d 131
    , 140 (Minn. 2005). As applied in this case, the aggravating factor set forth in Minn.
    Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) does not contravene this policy. The statute under which
    Meyers was convicted does not already take into account his prior conviction in
    determining the degree or severity of the present conviction. And while proof that
    Meyers caused injury was required to convict him of first-degree assault, this aggravating
    factor relates to unspecified injury or criminal sexual conduct, not an identified fact or
    element that might be used to enhance the particular degree of a crime or severity of the
    punishment. This is consistent with our reading that the requirement that the current
    conviction involves victim injury or criminal sexual conduct serves to limit the category
    of crimes to which this factor is applicable.
    Contrary to Meyers’s assertion, applying Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3) to a
    current assault conviction does not inherently contradict the general rule that elements of
    a conviction may not be used in imposing an upward sentencing departure. In fact, this
    application is expressly contemplated by the guidelines commission and legislature,
    crime did not specify a quantity of cocaine necessary for conviction and were
    accompanied by a lesser punishment. Minn. Stat. §§ 152.022, .023 (1998). This is what
    made the district court’s consideration of the quantity in assessing the presence of
    aggravating factors that warranted an upward departure impermissible. 
    McIntosh, 641 N.W.2d at 12
    . Likewise, in Thompson, the aggregate value of property swindled
    determined the severity of the punishment imposed for Thompson’s conviction for theft
    by swindle, so the district court abused its discretion by again considering the value of the
    property stolen when assessing that Thompson had engaged in a major economic offense
    warranting an upward 
    departure. 720 N.W.2d at 830
    .
    11
    which fashioned a means to impose an enhanced punishment based on the nature of a
    defendant’s prior conviction. While there may be scenarios where application of this
    aggravating factor would inappropriately duplicate a factor already taken into account by
    the legislature in determining the degree or seriousness of the offense, this is not such an
    instance. There was no duplicative consideration of essential elements of Meyers’s first-
    degree assault conviction, and the district court did not err by determining that there were
    valid grounds for departure under Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D.2.b.(3). Meyers
    demonstrated the exact behavior targeted by this aggravating factor by committing a
    subsequent violent crime after his first conviction for criminal sexual assault. Because
    only one aggravating factor is necessary to serve as a basis for departure, we need not
    address Meyers’s argument that the district court improperly relied on the particular-
    cruelty factor. See 
    Dillon, 781 N.W.2d at 599
    (“[A] single aggravating factor may justify
    a departure.”).
    II.    Decision to impose upward departure
    Because there were adequate grounds upon which to base the departure, we next
    review the district court’s decision to depart for an abuse of discretion. State v. Geller,
    
    665 N.W.2d 514
    , 516 (Minn. 2003). Meyers argues that the district court did not
    articulate how this crime was significantly more serious than the typical first-degree
    assault, contending that the district court erroneously focused on the nature of A.C.’s
    injuries instead of Meyers’s conduct. We disagree.
    12
    In addition to addressing the injuries Meyers inflicted on A.C., the district court
    focused on the egregious nature of Meyers’s conduct. Responding to Meyers’s claim that
    he intended to steal A.C.’s car, the court stated:
    [Y]ou could have taken that and accomplished your mission
    of stealing her car, or you could have simply turned and fled
    when you found that this woman was as courageous a woman
    as I have ever heard about . . . .
    And instead, despite her repeated requests asking you
    what it is you wanted, you decided, in the [c]ourt’s view, to
    act with particular cruelty toward her by gratuitously
    physically assaulting her by putting a knife to her throat, then
    goading her by telling her that you two were going to go for a
    ride. And then when she further resisted, you plunged a knife
    into her stomach with such significant force that she lost two
    liters of blood, she was in critical condition, she had a
    significant laceration of her adrenal gland, the knife went
    through her liver.
    And with those significant injuries, what is it that
    Mr. Meyers did? He turned and calmly walked away.
    As the district court’s analysis reflects, Meyers’s conduct was unprovoked and seemingly
    motivated by a desire to be violent simply for the sake of violence. This behavior differs
    from the allegedly typical assault cases cited by Meyers and is especially concerning
    given Meyers’s demonstrated pattern of violent conduct. Additionally, the jury
    determined that Meyers intentionally injured A.C., which exceeds the requirements of a
    typical assault. See State v. Fleck, 
    810 N.W.2d 303
    , 309 (Minn. 2012) (holding that
    assault-harm is a general-intent crime, meaning that proof that the defendant intended to
    cause a particular result is unnecessary to convict). Meyers acted deliberately in causing
    great bodily harm to A.C. and did so without provocation or motivation other than
    causing injury. The district court did not abuse its discretion by determining that
    13
    Meyers’s conduct was significantly more serious than the conduct involved in a typical
    first-degree assault.
    DECISION
    The district court did not err by determining that Minn. Sent. Guidelines
    II.D.2.b.(3) provided adequate grounds for departure, and it did not abuse its discretion
    by imposing an upward durational departure.
    Affirmed.
    14