Carlos Taylor v. State of Mississippi ( 2009 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2009-CT-00669-SCT
    CARLOS TAYLOR
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                        03/20/2009
    TRIAL JUDGE:                             HON. W. ASHLEY HINES
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:               LEFLORE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                  OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
    BY: ERIN ELIZABETH PRIDGEN
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                   OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: LAURA HOGAN TEDDER
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                       WILLIE DEWAYNE RICHARDSON
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                      CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                             THE SENTENCE OF LIFE IN THE CUSTODY
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
    C OR REC TIO N S A S A H A B ITU A L
    OFFENDER, WITHOUT ELIGIBILITY FOR
    PAROLE OR PROBATION, AFFIRMED -
    08/01/2013
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    RANDOLPH, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   Carlos Taylor appealed his sentence of life without parole, claiming that “the trial
    court abused [its] discretion in sentencing Taylor under Miss. Code Ann. Section 99-19-83,
    as the prosecution failed to prove all essential elements under the statute.” The Court of
    Appeals affirmed. Taylor v. State, __ So. 3d __, 
    2011 WL 5196781
    (Miss. Ct. App. Oct. 11,
    2011). We granted Taylor’s petition for writ of certiorari. We hold that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion by sentencing Taylor under Section 99-19-83. Accordingly, we affirm
    Taylor’s sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    In November 2007, Taylor was indicted for possession of a controlled substance in
    a prison facility and as a habitual offender under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83 in cause
    number 2007-0328. Taylor also was charged in separate, consecutively numbered
    indictments for possession of a firearm by a felon and assault on a law-enforcement officer
    as a habitual offender (cause number 2007-0326) and possession of a firearm by a felon,
    felony evasion, and simple assault on a law-enforcement officer as a habitual offender (cause
    number 2007-0327). Prior to trial, Taylor filed a motion to dismiss all charges (cause
    numbers 2007-0326, 2007-0327, and 2007-0328) for failure to provide a fast and speedy
    trial, which the trial judge denied. A jury trial was held in cause number 2007-0328 on the
    charge of possession of a controlled substance in a prison facility. Taylor was convicted of
    that offense.
    ¶3.    After the jury’s verdict was returned, the court held a hearing to determine whether
    Taylor should be sentenced as a recidivist under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83. At the
    hearing, the State introduced certified copies of two separate, prior felony indictments. The
    State also introduced two separate sentencing orders, which revealed that Taylor had pleaded
    guilty to separate felonies, the sale of marijuana and sexual intercourse with a child under
    age. The sentencing orders revealed that Taylor was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment
    2
    for the sale conviction and six years for the sex-crime conviction. The pen pack confirmed
    that Taylor had served the required terms. Taylor was given a reasonable opportunity to
    challenge the prosecution’s proof. Taylor offered no evidence to rebut or contest the State’s
    proof. The trial judge adjudicated in the sentencing order that “one (1) of [Taylor’s prior]
    felonies [was] a crime of violence.” Taylor was sentenced as a habitual offender to life
    imprisonment without parole.
    ¶4.    Thereafter, Taylor filed in the trial court two post-trial motions: a “Motion for a New
    Trial or, in the Alternative, Judgment of Acquittal Notwithstanding the Verdict,” and a
    separate “Motion to Reduce Mandated Sentence,” arguing that his sentence “is grossly
    disproportionate to the maximum sentence of seven years he would have received had he not
    been [charged] as an habitual offender[,]” and that “a sentence of life without parole would
    be cruel and unusual punishment under these circumstances.” Both motions were denied.
    Taylor appealed, and his case was assigned to the Court of Appeals.
    ¶5.    In his brief, Taylor asserted that “[t]he trial court erred in sentencing Taylor as a
    habitual offender under Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-83. During the sentencing hearing, the
    prosecution presented evidence that Taylor was previously convicted of sex with an underage
    child . . . .” Taylor argued that “[t]here is absolutely no implication that a violent act took
    place during the commission of this felony.” In its brief, the State argued that “[b]ased on the
    standard in Bandy,[1 ] statutory rape, or sexual intercourse with a child underage, is per se
    1
    Bandy v. State, 
    495 So. 2d 486
    (Miss. 1986).
    3
    violent.” In his reply brief, Taylor described the State’s position as being that “Taylor was
    correctly sentenced . . . because Taylor’s previous conviction of sex with an underage child
    was per se a crime of violence.”
    ¶6.    A good measure of confusion was injected into the appellate proceedings by the
    failure to furnish the Court of Appeals with a complete record of the evidence admitted at the
    sentencing hearing in the trial court. The “certified” copy of the pen pack presented to the
    Court of Appeals failed to include either the indictment or the sentencing order regarding
    Taylor’s felony sex crime. Even after the Court of Appeals ordered the parties to submit
    supplemental briefs addressing whether Taylor’s conviction for “sexual intercourse with a
    child under age” was a crime of violence, neither the appellant nor the State discovered the
    oversight or argued that the documents were not part of the record. The Court of Appeals
    concluded that Taylor’s prior sex-crime conviction was a crime of violence and affirmed
    Taylor’s sentence.
    ¶7.    Taylor filed a petition for writ of certiorari, claiming that the Court of Appeals’
    holding conflicts with prior decisions of this Court. The petition reasserted that the pen pack
    did not include the sentencing order for Taylor’s conviction of “sexual intercourse with a
    child under age,” while at the same time asking this Court to adopt the Court of Appeals’
    dissent. (Emphasis added.) After granting Taylor’s petition, we held oral argument, during
    which the attorneys for both parties asserted that the record did not include the sentencing
    order for the felony conviction for the sex crime against an underage child. Recognizing that
    all evidence considered by the trial court was significant for this Court’s determination of
    4
    whether Taylor was lawfully sentenced as a habitual criminal, this court directed the Clerk
    of Court to obtain a duplicate certified copy of the pen pack. The copy furnished in response
    contained the indictment charging Taylor with a prior sex offense and the sentencing order.
    The indictment alleged that Taylor, “being a person over eighteen (18) years of age . . . did
    unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously have sexual intercourse with [Jane Doe], a child under
    the age of fourteen (14) years.” The sentencing order reads that Taylor entered a plea of
    guilty to “sexual intercourse with a child underage.” Thus, we know with certainty that the
    previous conviction at issue was for “sexual intercourse with a child under age.”
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    I. Standard of Review
    ¶8.    “It is well-settled in this state that sentencing is within the complete discretion of the
    trial court. ‘Further, the general rule in this state is that a sentence cannot be disturbed on
    appeal so long as it does not exceed the maximum term allowed by statute.’” Long v. State,
    
    52 So. 3d 1188
    , 1195 (Miss. 2011) (citations omitted). “The trial court’s rulings are
    presumed correct, and this presumption will prevail unless the record shows otherwise.”
    Hardy v. Brock, 
    826 So. 2d 71
    , 76 (Miss. 2002) (citations omitted). Under an abuse-of-
    discretion standard of review, “[t]he trial court’s decision will be affirmed unless there is a
    ‘definite and firm conviction that the court below committed a clear error of judgment in the
    conclusion it reached upon weighing of relevant factors.’” Plaxico v. Michael, 
    735 So. 2d 1036
    , 1039 (Miss. 1999) (citation omitted).
    ¶9.    This Court has provided that:
    5
    [w]e must decide cases on the facts shown by the record, not by assertions of
    fact made in briefs or suggestions of error, however sincere counsel may be in
    those assertions. Facts asserted to exist ought to, and must, be definitely
    proved and placed before us by a record thereof certified as required by law;
    otherwise we cannot, in law, know them.
    Alexander v. Hancock, 
    174 Miss. 482
    , 
    164 So. 772
    (1935), on suggestion of error, 
    174 Miss. 498
    , 
    165 So. 126
    (1936). “Stated differently, our task on appeal is to review the actions and
    decisions of the trial court judge within the context of the situation as it existed at that time.”
    Phillips v. State, 
    421 So. 2d 476
    , 478 (Miss. 1982) (addressing 
    Alexander, 165 So. at 126
    ).
    II. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by sentencing Taylor as a
    violent habitual offender under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83.
    ¶10.   “At the bifurcated hearing required under the recidivist statutes, the State must prove,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant meets the requirements for sentencing as a
    habitual offender. The defendant has the right to be heard at this 
    hearing.”Bandy, 495 So. 2d at 491
    (citing Seely v. State, 
    451 So. 2d 213
    , 215 (Miss. 1984)). For a defendant to be
    sentenced under Section 99-19-83, the State must prove that he was:
    convicted twice previously of any felony or federal crime upon charges
    separately brought and arising out of separate incidents at different times and
    . . . sentenced to and served separate terms of one (1) year or more in any state
    and/or federal penal institution, whether in this state or elsewhere, and . . . any
    one (1) of such felonies shall have been a crime of violence . . . .
    Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-83 (Rev. 2007). This Court has explained that:
    for determining the defendant’s status as an habitual offender, the prosecution
    must show and the trial court must determine that the records of the prior
    convictions are accurate, that they fulfill the requirements . . . , and that the
    defendant sought to be so sentenced is indeed the person who was previously
    convicted.
    6
    Once the above mentioned factors have been ascertained, the trial court
    is not required to go beyond the fact of the prior convictions sought to be used
    in establishing the defendant’s status as an habitual offender. . . . [T]he trial
    court must not be placed in position of “retrying” the prior case. Certainly any
    such frontal assault upon the constitutionality of a prior conviction should be
    conducted in the form of an entirely separate procedure solely concerned with
    attacking that conviction.
    
    Bandy, 495 So. 2d at 491
    (citing Phillips v. State, 
    421 So. 2d 476
    , 481 (Miss. 1982)).
    ¶11.   We have further provided that “[a]ll that is required is that the accused be properly
    indicted as an habitual offender . . . ; that the prosecution prove the prior offenses by
    competent evidence . . . ; and that the defendant be given a reasonable opportunity to
    challenge the prosecution’s proof.” Keyes v. State, 
    549 So. 2d 949
    , 951 (Miss. 1989)
    (citations omitted). Each of these requirements was satisfied in the case sub judice. All agree
    that Taylor was indicted as a habitual offender. The sentencing orders presented by the State
    were competent evidence of Taylor’s separate felony convictions for sale of marijuana and
    sexual intercourse with a child under age. McIlwain v. State, 
    700 So. 2d 586
    , 589 (Miss.
    1997) (“We have regularly upheld sentences under the habitual criminal statutes where the
    proof of prior convictions was made by certified copies of the judgments of conviction.[2 ]
    This accords with the basic principle that the best evidence of a conviction is the judgment
    of conviction.” (citations omitted)). Moreover, “[w]e have repeatedly held that orders of a
    court having competent jurisdiction are presumed valid.” Farris v. State, 
    764 So. 2d 411
    , 422
    (Miss. 2000) (citations omitted). “Certified copies of the indictments and sentencing orders
    2
    See Miss. R. Evid. 803(22) (judgments of conviction are not excluded by the hearsay
    rule, and are admissible to prove any essential fact).
    7
    in these prior convictions were introduced into evidence at the sentencing hearing. [Neither
    the majority nor Taylor] dispute[s] their accuracy. . . . [T]hese records constitute sufficient
    evidence that he was a habitual offender within this statute.” Moore v. State, 
    631 So. 2d 805
    ,
    805-06 (Miss. 1994). Finally, Taylor had a reasonable opportunity to challenge the
    sufficiency of the evidence presented by the State at the sentencing hearing, but he declined
    to do so. Thus, the State presented uncontradicted, competent evidence for Taylor to be
    sentenced under Section 99-19-83, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by doing
    so.
    ¶12.   The dissent opines that “the evidence offered to identify the crime for which Taylor
    was convicted was vague and inconsistent.” (Dissent at ¶ 32). There is no vagueness or
    inconsistency in the sentencing order – Taylor was convicted of “sexual intercourse with a
    child under age.”
    ¶13.   The trial court did not err by concluding that Taylor’s sex-crime conviction was a
    crime of violence. In McQueen v. State, 
    473 So. 2d 971
    (Miss. 1985), this Court concluded
    that the term “crime of violence” is not unconstitutionally vague, citing authorities from
    numerous jurisdictions:
    “[V]iolence is a general term and includes all sorts of force.”
    ...
    “Violence” is force, physical force; force unlawfully exercised. Bouvier in his
    Law Dictionary, 2 Bouvier Law Dictionary, Rawle’s 3rd Rev., p. 3402, defines
    “violence” as: “The abuse of force. That force which is employed against
    common right, against the laws, and against public liberty.”
    8
    ...
    “Violence” is a relative term. No particular degree of force is required to
    constitute violence. Violence is broadly defined in Webster's New
    International Dictionary, 2nd ed., as “the exertion of any physical force
    considered with reference to its effect on another than the agent.” It is not
    necessary that the impact be of sufficient force to inflict damage.
    ...
    The terms “violence” and “force” are synonymous when used in relation to
    assault, and include any application of force even though it entails no pain or
    bodily harm and leaves no mark.
    
    McQueen, 473 So. 2d at 972-73
    (emphasis added) (citations omitted). Sexual intercourse
    between an underage child and an adult clearly is a crime of violence, for sexual intercourse
    cannot occur without the exertion of some degree of physical force, even if it entails no pain
    or bodily harm and leaves no mark. Under Mississippi law, such force is “unlawfully
    exercised” and is “against the law.” 3
    ¶14.   The same is true for any other sex-crime victim who lacks the capacity to consent. It
    matters not whether a victim is a ninety-year-old Alzheimer’s patient or a one-day-old infant,
    whether he or she is a mentally handicapped person or a child. No overt act of resistance to
    3
    Numerous statutes prohibit sexual contact between an adult and a minor. See Miss.
    Code Ann. § 97-3-65 (Rev. 2006) (statutory rape); Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-95 (Rev. 2006)
    (sexual battery); Miss. Code Ann. § 97-5-23 (Rev. 2006) (fondling of a child); Miss. Code
    Ann. § 97-5-24 (Rev. 2006) (sexual involvement of a school employee over the age of
    eighteen years with a student under the age of eighteen years); Miss. Code Ann. § 97-5-41
    (Rev. 2006) (carnal knowledge of certain children). This Court also clearly has provided that
    a child cannot consent to engage in sexual activity with an adult. Phillipson v. State, 
    943 So. 2d
    670, 672 (Miss. 2006); Collins v. State, 
    691 So. 2d 918
    , 924 (Miss. 1997); McBride v.
    State, 
    492 So. 2d 581
    , 584 (Miss. 1986).
    9
    force or violence, no matter how slight, is required for sex crimes against such defenseless
    victims to be crimes of violence.
    ¶15.   Sexual intercourse with a child under age is forceful, because, by operation of law,
    the child is unable to consent. See Phillipson, 
    943 So. 2d
    at 672 (“The age of a minor is [a]
    complete bar to the legal exercise of consent to sexual intercourse.”); 
    Collins, 691 So. 2d at 924
    (“‘[t]he child was under the age of consent, and it was not material whether the rape was
    accomplished by force or violence and against the will of the child.’ Consent is no defense
    to the charge.” (quoting 
    McBride, 492 So. 2d at 584
    ) (emphasis added)); Brooks v. State,
    
    242 So. 2d 865
    , 867 (Miss. 1971) (“It is immaterial whether the rape was accomplished by
    force or violence or against the will of the child, because she was under the age of consent.”
    (emphasis added)); Wilson v. State, 
    221 So. 2d 100
    , 103 (Miss. 1969) (where the victim in
    a rape case was incapable of consent, “it was not necessary to prove ‘actual force’ beyond
    the mere force of penetration so that actual resistance was not necessary to constitute the
    offense”). Federal courts have held the same. United States v. Herrera, 
    647 F.3d 172
    , 180
    (5th Cir. 2011) (“because a minor lacks legal capacity to consent to sexual relations, any such
    relations are ‘forcible’”) (citing United States v. Remoi, 
    404 F.3d 789
    , 795 (3d Cir. 2005)).
    ¶16.   Further, this Court consistently has held that sex crimes against underage children are
    different. In Long v. State, 
    52 So. 3d 1188
    , the defendant previously had been convicted of
    two counts of sexual assault upon a child and one count of aggravated incest with his own
    daughter when she was seventeen years old. We found that at least one of the prior
    10
    convictions was for a crime of violence, citing U.S. v. Vigil, 
    334 F.3d 1215
    (10th Cir. 2003),
    as follows:
    “psychological brutilization is inherent in an offense like [aggravated incest]
    and incest and rape are in the same category as both being crimes of violence
    inherently whether or not raw force is used.” The Vigil court found that even
    consent by the child-victim would not eliminate the risk of physical harm and
    that the age of the victim was immaterial.
    
    Long, 52 So. 3d at 1196
    (citing 
    Vigil, 334 F.3d at 1220
    , 1223-24) (emphasis added).
    ¶17.   The language in Long is consistent with our holding in Bandy v. State, 
    495 So. 2d 486
    (Miss. 1986). Bandy was charged with gratifying his lust by touching a child under the
    age of fourteen years. 
    Bandy, 495 So. 2d at 488
    . He was indicted as a habitual offender under
    Section 99-19-83, based on prior convictions for indecency with a child under Texas law and
    assault with intent to commit a felony, to wit: sodomy under Iowa law. 
    Id. Bandy made
    the
    same argument as Taylor does today, by challenging his sentence under Section 99-19-83
    that “[t]he proof of prior convictions for enhancement did not sustain the charge.” 
    Id. at 487.
    At the habitual-offender hearing in trial court, Bandy testified that neither of the previous
    crimes was violent. 
    Id. at 490.
    A review of the record 4 reveals that Bandy testified that his
    previous sodomy conviction was not a violent crime, because “the information . . . where it
    mentions assault, was served to me . . . as being simple assault nonviolent by touching, and
    that is what assault they mean. There was no violence.” He further testified that “[t]he
    4
    Appellate records for criminal cases in which the mandate was handed down more
    than ten years ago are available to the public at the Mississippi Department of Archives and
    History.
    11
    charges I had in . . . Iowa was fondling. Which was termed to sodomy because of oral
    copulation of the penis and it was not assault.” The trial court found that both prior
    convictions “were per se violent, and that ‘beyond a reasonable doubt,’ Bandy could be
    sentenced under § 99-19-83.” 
    Id. at 490.
    In Bandy, this Court approvingly cited a California
    Court of Appeals holding that “the word ‘violence’ . . . applies to any criminally lewd act
    upon the body of the witness child.” 
    Bandy, 495 So. 2d at 492
    (quoting People v. Brown,
    
    262 Cal. App. 2d 378
    (1968)) (emphasis added). Bandy explicitly declared that “[i]n the
    absence of a legislative standard, we adopt the rationale that a separate standard of
    determining violence applies when the victim is a child.” 
    Bandy, 495 So. 2d at 492
    (emphasis
    added).
    ¶18.   In Lee v. State, 
    322 So. 2d 751
    (Miss. 1975), we held that “intercourse with a female
    unable to consent because of tender years . . . establishes the common law crime of rape, the
    essential element being the inability to consent rather than the requirement of force.” 
    Lee, 322 So. 2d at 752
    (emphasis added).5 In 1997, we applied the same standard when addressing
    a charge of capital rape. 
    Collins, 691 So. 2d at 924
    . Collins held that “capital rape does not
    require that the act be ‘forcefully done against the will of the child.’ Rather, . . . ‘[t]he child
    was under the age of consent, and it was not material whether the rape was accomplished by
    5
    See also People v. Parker, 
    74 Cal. App. 540
    , 545 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925) (“The reason
    is that in such cases the female cannot consent to the assault. The law resists for her.”)
    (emphasis added).
    12
    force or violence and against the will of the child.’ Consent is no defense to the charge.” Id.
    (quoting 
    McBride, 492 So. 2d at 584
    ) (emphasis added).
    ¶19.   Long addresses the psychological harm inherent in sex crimes against children and
    the immateriality of the child’s consent. 
    Long, 52 So. 3d at 1196
    . All three of Long’s
    previous convictions involved felony sex crimes by an adult defendant upon a minor. Sexual
    intercourse with an underage child is the conviction we consider today. If incest – sexual
    penetration with a person’s own seventeen-year-old daughter – was the violent crime in
    Long, then sexual intercourse with a child who is not the daughter of the defendant also is
    violent, for it is the act of sexually penetrating a child that makes either a crime.6 The other
    crimes referenced in Long were sexual assaults. If sexual assault was the violent crime in
    Long, then it follows that sexual intercourse with an underage child (which meets all the
    elements of sexual battery 7 ) also is a violent crime.
    ¶20.   Taylor’s argument that the decision of the Court of Appeals conflicts with this Court’s
    decision in Hughes v. State, 
    892 So. 2d 203
    (Miss. 2004), is misplaced. Taylor argues that
    6
    It would be absurd to find incest – but not sexual intercourse with a child who is not
    the daughter of the defendant – violent, the only distinction being the existence of a familial
    relationship. It would be equally absurd to find sodomy, but not sexual intercourse with an
    underage child, to be a crime of violence.
    7
    The dissent concedes that six years’ imprisonment is a permissible sentence for a
    conviction of sexual battery for “sexual penetration with (a) another person without his or
    her consent[,]” but suggests that the elements are not met. (Dissent at ¶ 33). “A person is
    guilty of sexual battery if he or she engages in sexual penetration with . . . [a]nother person
    without his or her consent.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-95(1)(a) (Rev. 2006). “Sexual
    intercourse” meets the element of sexual penetration, and the law supplies the absence of
    consent when the victim is an underage child.
    13
    the Court of Appeals’ decision conflicts with a remark in Hughes that “there may be
    instances of consensual, nonviolent sex which nonetheless violate the statutory rape laws .
    . . .” 
    Hughes, 892 So. 2d at 211
    . As the Court of Appeals astutely recognized, this remark
    from Hughes is dicta and cannot control our decision today. Taylor v. State, __ So. 3d __,
    
    2011 WL 5196781
    , at *1 (Miss. Ct. App. Oct. 11, 2011). Hughes was before this Court on
    appeal of a conviction for kidnapping, rape, and murder of a sixteen-year-old. 
    Hughes, 892 So. 2d at 208
    . The quoted statement appears in the Hughes Court’s analysis of the admission
    at trial of the defendant’s prior conviction for raping a seven-year-old girl under Arkansas
    law. 
    Id. at 211.
    Neither the conviction on appeal nor Hughes’s prior conviction was under
    Mississippi’s statutory-rape law. In other words, this Court did not have under consideration
    a case of statutory rape. It follows that the statement that some consensual, nonviolent sex
    acts could violate Mississippi’s statutory-rape statute was not essential to the determination
    of any issue before the Hughes Court. The statement does “not embody the resolution or
    determination of the court,” and “is not decisive of, nor precedent for, the case at bar.” 8 Deer
    Island Fish & Oyster Co. v. First Nat’l Bank of Biloxi, 
    166 Miss. 162
    , 
    146 So. 116
    , 119
    (1933); see also Lee v. Mem’l Hosp. at Gulfport, 
    999 So. 2d 1263
    , 1266, n.3 (Miss. 2008)
    (“[T]his Court has held on more than one occasion that a statement which qualifies as dictum
    does not have a binding effect.”) (citing Collins v. McMurry, 
    539 So. 2d 127
    , 130-31 (Miss.
    8
    Cf. Bandy, 
    495 So. 2d 486
    (this Court’s finding that sex crimes against children are
    crimes of violence was essential to its adjudication of the defendant’s assignment of error
    that the State had failed to prove that he previously had been convicted of a crime of
    violence).
    14
    1989)); City of Jackson v. Wallace, 
    189 Miss. 252
    , 
    196 So. 223
    , 225 (1940) (“Language
    beyond the litigation in which it is used is limited to the facts involved in the litigation, and
    all beyond that, necessary or proper for the construction of the particular subject matter
    before the Court, is mere dictum – not decision. . . . [C]onsequently[,] the expressions beyond
    the necessities of the case are mere dicta.”); Aetna Ins. Co. v. Commander, 
    169 Miss. 874
    ,
    
    153 So. 877
    , 879-80 (1934) (declaring that an earlier decision was “not a precedent here for
    the . . . reason that the decision therein on the question here under consideration was not
    necessary for, and did not affect, the decision of the case”). Hughes “has been carefully
    considered, and we are of opinion that the language relied on . . . formed no part of the real
    decision of the court.” State v. Tingle, 
    103 Miss. 672
    , 
    60 So. 728
    , 729 (1913). Accordingly,
    Hughes does not control our decision today.
    ¶21.   Neither does the result of Brown v. State, 
    102 So. 3d 1087
    (Miss. 2012) (Dissent at
    ¶ 28), control our decision today. However, we can heed the language from Brown that when
    “some other provision of law . . . clearly and unambiguously requires us to [label a crime
    ‘violent,’]” we should do it. 
    Brown, 102 So. 3d at 1089
    . In Brown, this Court considered
    whether the offense of burglary of a dwelling was a crime of violence.
    ¶22.   Prior to Brown, no body of law had developed regarding whether burglary is a crime
    of violence. In contrast, preceding the case sub judice, this Court explicitly has established
    that a separate standard of violence applies to sex crimes against children, as 
    discussed supra
    .
    Thus, a body of law developed regarding sex crimes against children, compared to the void
    that existed regarding a crime against property, the issue in Brown. We stand on our
    15
    predecessors’ holdings that sex crimes against underage children are violent to provide us
    with guidance. Our caselaw clearly and unambiguously provides that sexual intercourse with
    an underage child is a crime of violence.
    ¶23.   Moreover, our Legislature consistently has provided that sex crimes are crimes of
    violence in other Mississippi statutes addressing the penalty or punishment to be imposed for
    crimes of violence. See Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-3(1)(h) (Rev. 2011) (addressing parole
    eligibility and defining “nonviolent crime” as “a felony other than . . . sex crimes . . .”); Miss.
    Code Ann. § 97-1-5(2) (Supp. 2012) (“[f]or the purposes of [sentencing upon conviction of
    accessory after the fact], ‘violent crime’ means . . . sex crimes . . .”). Thus, the Legislature
    unambiguously has declared that sex crimes are crimes of violence, consistent with our
    holdings.
    ¶24.   Our holdings that sex crimes against underage children are crimes of violence also
    comport with the holdings of courts in other states. In State ex rel. Spaulding v. Watt, 
    423 S.E.2d 217
    (W. Va. 1992), the West Virginia Supreme Court noted that “the word ‘violence’
    in our . . . statute is not limited by the adjective ‘physical.’ There can be no dispute that even
    in the absence of any significant physical trauma, sexual assaults on young children result
    in severe emotional and psychological harm.” 
    Watt, 423 S.E.2d at 219
    . The Court held that:
    [W]e decline to resolve the question presented here solely on the ground that
    physical violence is not an element of the crimes of which [the defendant] was
    convicted. The fact that the State elected to prosecute . . . sexual assault . . .
    based on the age of the children rather than upon a theory of forcible
    compulsion, does not mean that the children were not the victims of violence.
    16
    
    Id. at 220.
    Accordingly, the Watt Court concluded that the sexual assault of children
    involved “violence to a person” for purposes of West Virginia’s post-conviction bail statute.
    
    Id. ¶25. In
    Jarrett v. State, 
    333 N.E.2d 794
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1975), the Indiana Court of Appeals
    considered whether the intent to have intercourse with a minor satisfied the assault
    requirement of intent to commit a violent injury. The Court held that, “where the female is
    incapable of consent, the attempt to have intercourse satisfies the requirement . . . that the
    attempt be one to commit ‘a violent injury.’” 
    Jarrett, 333 N.E.2d at 796
    . In State v. Sprouse,
    
    719 S.E.2d 234
    (N.C. Ct. App. 2011), the North Carolina Court of Appeals held that “an act
    of sexual intercourse with a person deemed incapable of consenting as a matter of law is a
    violent act.” 
    Sprouse, 719 S.E.2d at 242
    (quoting State v. Clark, 
    714 S.E.2d 754
    (N.C. Ct.
    App. 2011) (holding that first-degree rape, which, under North Carolina law, involves a
    victim under the age of thirteen years, was a violent act)).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶26.   Because Taylor’s prior conviction was for sexual intercourse with an underage child,
    we conclude that, under the facts presented in this case, it was a crime of violence. Thus, the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion by sentencing Taylor under Section 99-19-83.
    Accordingly, we affirm the result reached by the Court of Appeals and Taylor’s sentence of
    life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
    17
    ¶27. THE SENTENCE OF LIFE IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER, WITHOUT
    ELIGIBILITY FOR PAROLE OR PROBATION, AFFIRMED.
    WALLER, C.J., LAMAR, PIERCE AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR.
    CHANDLER, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY
    DICKINSON, P.J., KITCHENS AND KING, JJ.
    CHANDLER, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
    ¶28.   I respectfully dissent. In this Court’s most recent pronouncement on crimes that are
    per se violent under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83, we held that “we will not place a
    ‘violent crime’ label on a crime where there was no proof of a violent act, unless the statute
    itself—or some other provision of law (such as the definitions within the chapter that include
    the statute)—clearly and unambiguously requires us to do so.” Brown v. State, 
    102 So. 3d 1087
    , 1089 (Miss. 2012). Taylor’s crime of “sexual intercourse with a child underage” is not
    defined by any statute identified by the State or by this Court. The majority errs by deeming
    Taylor’s sex crime to be one of violence in the absence of an applicable statute. I would hold
    that, because the record established only that Taylor previously had served six years for some
    unknown sex crime, the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Taylor had a
    prior conviction of a crime of violence. And because the State bore the burden of proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt, Taylor had no burden to refute the State’s evidence. Due to this
    failure of proof, I would reverse and remand for resentencing under Mississippi Code Section
    99-19-81.
    18
    ¶29.   I begin by clarifying that the question of whether a prior felony is a per se “crime of
    violence” under Section 99-19-83 is a question of law subject to de novo review, not a matter
    within the trial court’s discretion. 
    Brown, 102 So. 3d at 1089
    . It is well settled that the State
    must prove habitual-offender status beyond a reasonable doubt before the trial court can
    impose an enhanced sentence under Mississippi Code Sections 99-19-81 and 99-19-83. See
    e.g., Gilbert v. State, 
    48 So. 3d 516
    , 524-25 (Miss. 2010) (citing Dalgo v. State, 
    435 So. 2d 628
    , 630-31 (Miss. 1983)); Seely v. State, 
    451 So. 2d 213
    , 215 (Miss. 1984) (“The State has
    the same burden of proof as to the habitual offender portion of the indictment as it has on the
    principal charge.”). In most cases, the State can meet this burden by providing certified
    copies of indictments and sentencing orders. Duplantis v. State, 
    708 So. 2d 1327
    , 1347
    (Miss. 1998) (Moore v. State, 
    631 So. 2d 805
    , 806 (Miss. 1994)). Of course, this assumes
    that the indictments and sentencing orders clearly and correctly reflect the nature of the prior
    offenses. See Brown v. State, 
    222 Miss. 863
    , 
    77 So. 2d 694
    (1955) (reversing conviction of
    unlawful possession of intoxicating liquors, second offense, based on inconsistencies in the
    judgment of conviction for first offense). Here, the trial court found that Taylor had been
    previously convicted of a violent crime for the purposes of habitual-offender sentencing. The
    Court of Appeals stated that the trial court had determined that Taylor’s prior crime was
    “statutory rape,” and found that statutory rape is a per se violent crime. However, the record
    reveals that the State failed to prove that Taylor’s crime was statutory rape or any other
    specific crime defined by statute.
    19
    ¶30.   The indictment for the prior sex offense alleged that Taylor, “being a person over
    eighteen (18) years of age . . . did unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously have sexual
    intercourse with [Jane Doe], a child under the age of fourteen (14) years.” Thus, the charge
    alleged statutory rape, a violation of Mississippi Code Section 97-3-65(1)(b), and, because
    Taylor was nineteen at the time, the potential penalty ranged from twenty years to life
    imprisonment. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-65(3)(c) (Rev. 2006). However, the court order
    reflects that Taylor was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment, referencing a guilty plea to
    “sexual intercourse with a child underage.” No subsection of the statutory-rape law
    authorizes a six-year sentence when the offender is eighteen years of age or older.
    ¶31.   The records custodian for the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) and
    the Leflore County Sheriff testified that the prior conviction was for “sexual intercourse of
    a child underage.” The sheriff once described the offense as “sexual assault” but stated that
    he did not know any of the underlying facts. Throughout the hearing, the prosecutor was the
    only person to use the term “statutory rape,” at one point describing the conviction as
    “basically statutory rape.” Finally, when imposing the sentence, the trial judge referred to the
    prior conviction as a “sex crime,” and the sentencing order simply stated that Taylor was a
    habitual criminal as defined by Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83, without identifying his
    prior convictions.
    ¶32.   As noted above, the documents in the pen pack establish that Taylor had pleaded
    guilty to a crime designated “sexual intercourse with a child under age” or “sex offense,”
    and none of the documents cited a particular statute. The indictment related to the present
    20
    conviction, possession of marihuana in a correctional facility, charged Taylor as an habitual
    offender, and alleged that he had been “previously convicted of the felony crime of statutory
    rape, a crime of violence.” Although the indictment sufficiently alleged “the nature or
    description of the offense,” 9 the evidence offered to identify the crime for which Taylor was
    convicted was vague and inconsistent. All of the relevant evidence described a conviction
    for “sex with an underage child” or a “sex offense,” and Taylor’s sentence of six years’
    imprisonment does not fall within any of the permissible ranges for statutory rape. Miss.
    Code Ann. § 97-3-65.
    ¶33.   It is true that six years’ imprisonment is a permissible sentence for sexual battery.
    Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-101(1) (Rev. 2006) (providing sentence of not more than thirty
    years’ imprisonment for conviction of sexual battery under Mississippi Code Section 97-3-
    95(1)(a),(b), or (2)). But this punishment is limited to “sexual penetration with (a) another
    person without his or her consent; (b) a mentally defective, mentally incapacitated or
    physically helpless person,” or “a child under the age of eighteen (18) years if the person is
    in a position of trust or authority over the child.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-95(1)(a),(b), and
    (2) (Rev. 2006). “Sexual intercourse with a child under age,” does not describe precisely the
    elements of any of these crimes. Sexual battery is not a lesser-included offense of statutory
    9
    See URCCC 11.03 (“In cases involving enhanced punishment for subsequent
    offenses under state statutes . . . [t]he indictment must allege with particularity the nature or
    description of the offense constituting the previous convictions . . . .”).
    21
    rape, for which Taylor was indicted. For these reasons, Taylor’s crime cannot be
    characterized as sexual battery.
    ¶34.   Taylor’s status as a habitual offender under Section 99-19-83 was contingent upon
    proof beyond a reasonable doubt of a prior conviction of a crime of violence. The most the
    State proved was that Taylor had pleaded guilty to violating an unspecified provision of
    Mississippi’s sex-offense statutes. Because the State bore the burden of proof, Taylor had no
    burden to refute the State’s evidence. Lacking sufficient clarity, the proof did not establish
    that Taylor’s prior convictions warranted a sentence of life without parole pursuant to
    Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83.
    ¶35.   This Court has held that “we will not place a ‘violent crime’ label on a crime where
    there was no proof of a violent act, unless the statute itself—or some other provision of law
    (such as the definitions within the chapter that include the statute)—clearly and
    unambiguously requires us to do so.” 
    Brown, 102 So. 3d at 1089
    . Because the State did not
    prove that Taylor was convicted of a specific crime, there is no applicable criminal statute,
    and this Court is unable to examine the elements of the specific crime to determine whether
    that crime is per se violent. The majority’s blanket categorization of all sex crimes involving
    anyone underage as per se violent crimes doubtless will result in unintended consequences
    as the rule is applied in particular cases.10 Because the State did not prove beyond a
    10
    See, e.g., Taylor v. State, 
    2011 WL 5196781
    , at *11 (Miss. Ct. App. Oct. 11, 2011)
    (Roberts, J., dissenting).
    22
    reasonable doubt that Taylor had a prior conviction of a violent crime, I would reverse and
    remand for resentencing under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-81.
    DICKINSON, P.J., KITCHENS AND KING, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
    23