Tyrone Gowdy v. State of Mississippi ( 2009 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2009-KA-00890-SCT
    TYRONE GOWDY
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         04/21/2009
    TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. ROBERT WALTER BAILEY
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                LAUDERDALE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                   RANDALL HARRIS
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: JOHN R. HENRY, JR.
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                        BILBO MITCHELL
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                              AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART
    AND REMANDED - 12/16/2010
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    Following a jury trial, Tyrone Gowdy was convicted of felony driving under the
    influence of alcohol (DUI). Two months after his trial and conviction, but before his
    sentencing, the State amended the indictment to allege that Gowdy was an habitual offender
    as defined by Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83 (Rev. 2007).         The trial judge then
    adjudicated Gowdy an habitual offender and sentenced him to life imprisonment without the
    possibility of parole. Finding that the State was prohibited from amending the indictment
    after Gowdy’s conviction, but finding that no reversible error occurred at trial, we affirm
    Gowdy’s conviction, vacate the enhanced portion of his sentence, and remand the case for
    resentencing.
    Facts
    ¶2.    In the early morning hours of March 30, 2008, Officer John Straight, a patrolman with
    the Meridian Police Department, witnessed a vehicle running a stop sign. Straight pursued
    the vehicle and attempted to initiate a traffic stop by activating his blue lights and siren.
    Eventually, the car stopped, whereupon the driver, Tyrone Gowdy, got out and began to run
    away. Straight caught up with Gowdy on foot and restrained him as he awaited assistance
    from other officers. The arresting officer testified that because Gowdy was unruly, slurring
    his speech, and smelled of alcohol, Straight requested assistance from a DUI enforcement
    officer.
    ¶3.    Officer David Rosenbaum arrived shortly thereafter and found Gowdy as Straight had
    described him: belligerent, smelling of alcohol, and slurring his words. Rosenbaum testified
    that Gowdy refused to breathe into the portable testing device at the scene and was
    transported to the police station. Rosenbaum continued that, at the station, he offered Gowdy
    both a field sobriety test and a breath test, and Gowdy again refused.
    ¶4.    At trial, Gowdy testified in his own defense. He admitted having run the stop sign,
    but denied that he had been drinking. According to Gowdy, Rosenbaum never offered him
    a breath test or a field sobriety test once they arrived at the police station.
    ¶5.    Gowdy was indicted for felony driving under the influence of alcohol under
    Mississippi Code Section 63-11-30 (Rev. 2004), as this was his fourth DUI offense within
    2
    the preceding five years.1 The jury found Gowdy guilty on February 4, 2009. On April 21,
    2009, just before sentencing, the trial judge allowed the State to amend the indictment to
    reflect that Gowdy was an habitual offender as defined in Mississippi Code Section 99-18-
    83. The trial judge adjudicated Gowdy an habitual offender and sentenced him to life
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
    Issues
    ¶6.    Gowdy raises six points of error on appeal, arguing: (1) he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel; (2) the trial judge erred by allowing the State to ask the venire
    members about verdicts they had rendered in other criminal cases; (3) the trial judge
    committed plain error by failing to issue a limiting instruction regarding evidence of
    Gowdy’s prior convictions; (4) cumulative errors warrant reversal; (5) the trial court erred
    by allowing the State to amend the indictment, after conviction, to include habitual offender
    status; and (6) the sentence was disproportionate to the crime and amounted to cruel and
    unusual punishment.
    Discussion
    I. Gowdy’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims are dismissed without
    prejudice.
    ¶7.    Gowdy argues on appeal that his trial counsel was ineffective for eleven reasons: (1)
    failing to object to evidence of other DUIs; (2) failing to ask for a limiting instruction
    regarding prior DUI offenses; (3) failing to object to evidence of other non-DUI crimes; (4)
    1
    The indictment initially alleged that Gowdy previously had been convicted of two
    DUIs, but, before trial, the State amended the indictment to add a third prior DUI conviction.
    3
    failing to object to the State’s amending the indictment to add habitual offender status; (5)
    failing to request a video recording of the traffic stop; (6) failing to offer a jury instruction
    on Gowdy’s theory of the case; (7) failing to object to alleged prosecutorial misconduct; (8)
    failing to offer a circumstantial evidence instruction; (9) failing to cross-examine a State’s
    witness about a prior statement; (10) failing to object to the State’s peremptory jury
    challenges; and (11) failing to include significant errors in his post-trial motion for a new trial
    or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The second, fourth, and tenth points of error are
    addressed below. As for the remainder, this Court has held:
    Ordinarily, ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims are more appropriately
    brought during post-conviction proceedings. This is because during direct
    appeals the Court is limited to the trial court record in its review of the claim,
    and there may be instances in which insufficient evidence exists within the
    record to address the claim adequately. Wilcher v. State, 
    863 So. 2d 776
    , 825
    (Miss. 2003). In such a case, the appropriate procedure is to deny relief,
    preserving the defendant’s right to argue the issue through a petition for post-
    conviction relief. Read v. State, 
    430 So. 2d 832
    , 837 (Miss. 1983).
    However, this Court may address an ineffectiveness claim on direct appeal if
    the presented issues are based on facts fully apparent from the record.
    M.R.A.P. 22; see also Havard v. State, 
    928 So. 2d 771
    , 786 (Miss. 2006).
    Archer v. State, 
    986 So. 2d 951
    , 955 (Miss. 2008). In his brief, Gowdy makes cursory
    arguments on each point of error and often fails to cite to the record or to any relevant
    authority. We find that Gowdy’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims are best reserved
    for a petition for possible post-conviction relief. 
    Id. II. The trial
    judge did not commit plain error by allowing the State to ask
    the venire members about verdicts they had rendered in other criminal
    cases.
    4
    ¶8.    During voir dire examination, the prosecutor asked the venire members whether they
    previously had served as jurors in criminal cases. Those who responded affirmatively were
    asked the nature of the crime and the verdict, if any. During jury selection, the State
    exercised two of its peremptory strikes against venire members who had sat on juries that had
    returned not guilty verdicts, and one peremptory strike against a venire member who had sat
    on three juries that had returned two guilty verdicts and one not guilty verdict, respectively.
    The defendant exercised two peremptory strikes against venire members who had sat on
    juries that had returned guilty verdicts. Ultimately, the impaneled jury consisted of two
    jurors who previously had served on juries in criminal cases. In both cases, the jury had
    returned guilty verdicts. The other impaneled jurors had never served as jurors in criminal
    cases. The defendant did not object to either the State’s line of questioning or the State’s use
    of peremptory strikes.
    ¶9.    On appeal, Gowdy argues that the trial judge committed plain error in allowing the
    State to ask the venire members whether they previously had served on juries in criminal
    cases, and if so, whether those juries had acquitted or convicted the defendants in those cases.
    Gowdy also argues that the prosecutor then was able to use peremptory strikes to ensure that
    no juror impaneled in his case previously had voted not guilty in another criminal case. He
    argues that this denied him a fair and impartial jury.
    ¶10.   Because Gowdy made no objections at trial, he asks us to review this under the “plain
    error” doctrine. Under this doctrine, we will reverse if the error involved a fundamental
    and/or substantive right and resulted in a “manifest miscarriage of justice” or “seriously
    5
    affect[ed] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Brown v.
    State, 
    995 So. 2d 698
    , 703 (Miss. 2008) (citations omitted).
    ¶11.   We find no error, plain or otherwise, in the trial court’s having allowed the State to
    question the venire members about prior jury service. We are not aware of any case which
    condemns or finds fault with this common practice, and Gowdy does not provide one. Such
    questions often are posed by both sides in criminal and civil cases alike, and are patently
    legitimate as voir dire questions. Indeed, in the present case, Gowdy struck two venire
    members who previously had voted to convict criminal defendants. Although we cannot
    know the reasons for these strikes, it is not at all unlikely that Gowdy and/or his lawyer
    considered these persons’ history as jurors, about which Gowdy would not have known
    without the State’s questioning. Accordingly, we find this issue without merit.
    III. The trial judge gave a limiting instruction.
    ¶12.   Gowdy argues that the trial judge erred by failing to give a cautionary instruction
    regarding evidence of his prior DUI convictions and evidence that he had been cited for
    driving with a suspended driver’s license. However, the trial judge did give a limiting
    instruction; the jury was told by the court that it could consider Gowdy’s prior DUI
    convictions only as impeachment evidence and as evidence that the case being tried was his
    third DUI. Gowdy does not reveal to this Court how the trial judge should have further
    instructed the jury, and we find no reversible error in this regard.
    IV. The cumulative error doctrine does not apply.
    ¶13.   Gowdy also argues that cumulative errors warrant reversal, but “where there is no
    error in part, there can be no reversible error to the whole.” Harris v. State, 
    970 So. 2d 151
    ,
    6
    157 (Miss. 2007) (citing Gibson v. State, 
    731 So. 2d 1087
    , 1098 (Miss. 1998)). Thus, this
    assignment of error is without merit.
    V. The trial court erred by allowing the State to amend the indictment,
    after conviction, to include habitual offender status.
    ¶14.     On the morning of trial, February 3, 2009, the parties had an on-the-record discussion
    regarding plea negotiations. The State expressed a willingness to recommend to the court
    a sentence of one year in custody with two years’ post-release supervision and a $2,000 fine
    if Gowdy would plead guilty. Although Gowdy’s attorney said that he believed it was in his
    client’s best interest to accept such an offer, Gowdy rejected it and invoked his right to a jury
    trial.
    ¶15.     The next day, February 4, 2009, immediately after Gowdy had been convicted, the
    State informed the court that it had “just received” information about Gowdy’s prior
    convictions in Iowa and would seek to amend the indictment to include his habitual offender
    status. The prosecutor further informed the court that he was “not certain whether there will
    be an amendment to 99-19-83 or whether it will be 99-19-81.” 2 Nearly two months later, on
    March 30, 2009, the day for which Gowdy’s sentencing hearing was scheduled, the State
    filed its motion to amend the indictment to charge Gowdy as an habitual offender under
    Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83, which requires a mandatory life sentence. Gowdy’s
    sentencing hearing was then rescheduled to April 21, 2009. Just before the sentencing
    2
    Mississippi Code Section 99-19-81 (Rev. 2007) requires that certain habitual
    offenders be given the maximum sentence for the crime charged upon conviction, while
    Section 99-19-83 requires the imposition of a sentence of life without parole.
    7
    hearing, the trial judge overruled Gowdy’s objection to the amendment, concluding that
    “there is no prejudice.”
    ¶16.     Rule 7.09 of the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice provides:
    All indictments may be amended as to form but not as to the substance of the
    offense charged. Indictments may also be amended to charge the defendant as
    an habitual offender or to elevate the level of the offense where the offense is
    one which is subject to enhanced punishment for subsequent offenses and the
    amendment is to assert prior offenses justifying such enhancement (e.g.,
    driving under the influence, Miss. Code Ann. § 63-11-30). Amendment shall
    be allowed only if the defendant is afforded a fair opportunity to present a
    defense and is not unfairly surprised.
    The rule does not speak to the timing of the amendment, only that the defendant must be
    “afforded a fair opportunity to present a defense” and “not [be] unfairly surprised.” URCCC
    7.09. This means that the defendant must be afforded due process of law and be given fair
    notice of “the nature and cause of the accusation.” U.S. Const. amends. VI, XIV; Miss.
    Const. art. 3, §§ 14, 26.
    ¶17.     We find but one case in which this Court has held that the State can amend an
    indictment to charge a defendant as an habitual offender after a guilty verdict has been
    rendered, Torrey v. State, 
    891 So. 2d 188
    , 195 (Miss. 2004). Yet, Torrey’s holding conflicts
    with prior case law that has not been overruled. Akins v. State, 
    493 So. 2d 1321
    , 1322 (Miss.
    1986).
    ¶18.     In 
    Akins, 493 So. 2d at 1322
    , this Court held that an amendment to the indictment
    which changed the habitual offender charge from the “little” enhancement (Section 99-19-81)
    to the “big” enhancement (Section 99-19-83) was an impermissible amendment. In that case,
    the defendant originally was charged as an habitual offender under Mississippi Code Section
    8
    99-19-81, and thus faced a maximum penalty of thirty years if convicted of aggravated
    assault on a police officer. 
    Id. After his conviction,
    but before sentencing, the State was
    allowed to amend the indictment to have the defendant sentenced to imprisonment for life
    under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83. On appeal, this Court held that the amendment
    was improper, and this Court vacated the defendant’s enhanced sentence. Id.3
    ¶19.   It logically follows that if the State may not amend the indictment to charge the “big”
    enhancement after conviction when the original indictment charged only the “little”
    enhancement, then the State may not amend the indictment to add an enhanced penalty after
    conviction.   Our Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice support this
    interpretation because, as discussed above, “[i]ndictments may also be amended to charge
    the defendant as an habitual offender,” but an “[a]mendment shall be allowed only if the
    defendant is afforded a fair opportunity to present a defense and is not unfairly surprised.”
    URCCC 7.09 (emphasis added.) We find that, in line with Akins, an amendment to the
    indictment to allege habitual offender status after conviction is an unfair surprise.
    ¶20.   Moreover, Rule 11.03(1) requires that an indictment “must allege with particularity
    the nature or description of the offense constituting the previous convictions, the state or
    federal jurisdiction of any previous convictions, and the date of judgment,” and failure to
    comply with this rule will result in reversal of the enhanced sentence. Ormond v. State, 
    599 So. 2d 951
    , 962-63 (Miss. 1992) (vacating enhanced penalty where indictment failed to list
    the date of one of the prior charges). There is no incentive for the State to be diligent in
    3
    The Court also noted, in passing, that the record lacked proof that the defendant had
    actually served one year or more on two separate felony convictions. 
    Id. 9 obtaining a
    prospective indictee’s criminal record in advance of presenting a new charge to
    a grand jury and timely complying with Rule 11.03 if it may simply amend the indictment
    at any time before sentencing. Had that occurred in this case, Gowdy would have been in
    a better position to make an informed and rational decision when presented with a proposed
    plea bargain.
    ¶21.   Finally, notice of the charge includes notice of the applicable minimum and maximum
    penalties. Under Rule 8.04 (A)(4)(b), before a defendant can plead guilty, the trial court has
    a duty to ensure that he “understands the nature and consequences of the plea, and the
    maximum and minimum penalties provided by law.” The rule should not be different for
    defendants who choose to exercise their right to trial by jury.
    ¶22.   Pursuant to 
    Akins, 493 So. 2d at 1322
    , and our uniform rules, we find that the State
    should not have been permitted to amend the indictment after Gowdy’s conviction. To the
    extent that 
    Torrey, 891 So. 2d at 195
    , holds otherwise, it is overruled. Thus, we vacate the
    enhanced penalty and remand the case for resentencing under Mississippi Code Section 63-
    11-30 (2)(c).
    VI. The proportionality of Gowdy’s sentence is a moot issue.
    ¶23.   Gowdy argues that a life sentence is disproportionate to the crime of driving under the
    influence of alcohol, and, thus, is prohibited by our state and federal constitutions as cruel
    and unusual punishment. U.S. Const. amend. VIII; Miss. Const. art. 3 § 28. Because we are
    vacating Gowdy’s sentence based on the untimely amendment to the indictment, this issue
    is moot.
    Conclusion
    10
    ¶24.   We find no error at trial that would warrant reversal of Gowdy’s conviction.
    However, because the trial judge erred by allowing the State to amend the indictment after
    Gowdy had been convicted, we vacate the enhanced portion of his sentence and remand the
    case for resentencing under Mississippi Code Section 63-11-30 (2)(c).
    ¶25. CONVICTION OF FELONY DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE,
    AFFIRMED.   SENTENCE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT, AS A HABITUAL
    OFFENDER, IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
    CORRECTIONS, VACATED.    THIS CASE IS REMANDED TO THE
    LAUDERDALE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT FOR RESENTENCING.
    WALLER, C.J., GRAVES, P.J., DICKINSON, LAMAR AND CHANDLER, JJ.,
    CONCUR. PIERCE, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART WITH
    SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY CARLSON, P.J., AND RANDOLPH,
    J.
    PIERCE, JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART:
    ¶26.   While I agree that we should affirm Gowdy’s conviction, I disagree with the
    majority’s decision to remand the case for resentencing. Accordingly, I dissent.
    I. Akins
    ¶27.   The majority seeks to vacate the enhanced portion of Gowdy’s sentence and remand
    the case for resentencing under Akins.4 But the majority fails to fully acknowledge three key
    points that distinguish Akins from the present facts: (1) the Akins Court applied a strict
    standard of review under which the sufficiency of indictments was analyzed prior to the
    enactment of the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice when it vacated
    Akins’s enhanced sentence; (2) the record lacked proof that Akins had served one year or
    4
    Akins v. State, 
    493 So. 2d 1321
    , 1322 (Miss. 1986).
    11
    more on two separate, prior felonies as required by Mississippi Code Section 99-19-83;5 and
    (3) the Akins Court found the amendment to be substantive (under the more stringent
    standard), and did not vacate the enhanced sentence because of the timing of the amendment.
    In fact, the Akins Court never addressed the timing of the amendment. Thus, the majority’s
    reliance on Akins is misplaced.
    ¶28.   Today, Rule 7.09 of the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice explicitly
    allows indictments to be amended to charge a defendant as a habitual offender as long as “the
    defendant is afforded a fair opportunity to present a defense and is not unfairly surprised.” 6
    As the majority correctly notes, the rule does not address the timing of such amendment.
    Under our current law, an indictment may be amended to reflect habitual-offender status,
    even after a defendant’s conviction.7 And I would note that the Court handed down Torrey
    subsequent to, and in line with, Rule 7.09. Thus, the timing of the amendment in this case
    was permissible.
    II. Gowdy and the plea bargain
    ¶29.   Prior to trial, the State offered Gowdy a plea deal. As the majority notes, the State
    would have recommended to the trial court a sentence of one year in custody and two years
    5
    Unlike the record in Akins, the record in this case provides proof that Gowdy served
    one year or more on each of his separate felony convictions in Iowa. Thus, the record
    warranted the charge of habitual offender under Section 99-19-83. See Miss. Code Ann. §
    99-19-83 (Rev. 2007).
    6
    URCCC 7.09.
    7
    Torrey v. State, 
    891 So. 2d 188
    , 195 (Miss. 2004); URCCC 7.09.
    12
    post-release supervision and a fine in exchange for Gowdy’s guilty plea. Gowdy chose to
    forgo this opportunity to help himself, and now argues for a second bite at the apple.
    ¶30.   I would remind the majority that Gowdy has no constitutional right to a plea bargain.8
    Thus, the notion that the post-conviction amendment somehow robbed Gowdy of his right
    to “make an informed and rational decision when presented with a proposed plea bargain”
    has no support from our caselaw or the Mississippi Constitution.
    III. The amendment was one of form, and not substance.
    ¶31.   Habitual-offender status, in and of itself, is not a crime, i.e., offense, in the State of
    Mississippi, but a means to reduce crime through deterrence and/or incapacitation by
    enhancing a defendant’s sentence. Thus, a post-conviction amendment to the indictment to
    “charge” a defendant as a habitual offender does not raise the same concerns as would an
    amendment to reflect a new, criminal offense or substantive element of the charged offense.
    ¶32.   Moreover, a change in the indictment is permissible if “it does not materially alter
    facts which are the essence of the offense on the face of the indictment as it originally stood,
    or materially alter a defense to the indictment as it originally stood.” 9 And it is well-
    established that “prior offenses used to charge the defendant as a habitual offender are not
    substantive elements of the offense charged.” 10 Gowdy admits this on appeal.
    8
    See Weatherford v. Bursey, 
    429 U.S. 545
    , 561, 97 S. Ct.837, 
    51 L. Ed. 2d 30
    (1977);
    Medina v. State, 
    688 So. 2d 727
    , 731 (Miss. 1996).
    9
    Nathan v. State, 
    552 So. 2d 99
    , 107 (Miss. 1989) (citing Ellis v. State, 
    469 So. 2d 1256
    , 1258 (Miss. 1986); Shelby v. State, 
    246 So. 2d 543
    , 546 (Miss. 1971)).
    10
    Adams v. State, 
    772 So. 2d 1010
    , 1020-25 (Miss. 2000); Swington v. State, 
    742 So. 2d
    1106, 1118 (Miss. 1999).
    13
    ¶33.   Because the added prior convictions were used only to enhance Gowdy’s sentence,
    and not as an underlying element of the charge of felony DUI, the amendment to the
    indictment did not prejudice Gowdy, nor did it impede Gowdy’s defense at trial. Thus, the
    amendment, unlike the one in Akins, was one of form, and therefore permissible.
    IV. Gowdy was not unfairly surprised.
    ¶34.   Gowdy received notice of the State’s intent to amend the indictment at the close of
    trial on February 4, 2009. The State filed its motion, which it sent to Gowdy, on March 30,
    2009. Gowdy did not ask for a continuance, nor did he object to such amendment at either
    time.11 Gowdy did not oppose the motion until the sentencing hearing on April 21, 2009, at
    which point he did so orally. In fact, Gowdy had more than seventy days to prepare a
    defense to the State’s motion. And the record is clear that Gowdy was well aware of his prior
    felony convictions in Iowa. Thus, it cannot seriously be argued that Gowdy was unfairly
    surprised by the amendment.
    ¶35.   Further, the record is clear that the State did not have the information at the time it
    offered the plea deal to Gowdy. And Gowdy provides no evidence to show otherwise. Had
    the State possessed such information, surely it would not have presented Gowdy with such
    a generous plea deal in the first place. Thus, any implication that the State withheld
    information or somehow acted with disregard lacks support from the record.
    V. Rules 11.03 and 7.09 of the URCCC
    11
    This Court has held that, “[w]here a defendant does not ask for a continuance when
    an indictment is amended he cannot later object that he was surprized [sic] and prejudiced
    in this defense.” Nathan v. State, 
    552 So. 2d 99
    , 107 (Miss. 1989).
    14
    ¶36.   The majority states that “Rule 11.03 requires that an indictment ‘must allege with
    particularity the nature or description of the offense constituting the previous convictions,
    the state or federal jurisdiction of any previous convictions, and the date of judgment,’ and
    failure to comply with this rule will result in reversal of the enhanced sentence.” But I would
    point out that the charge of “habitual offender” is not an “offense” within the meaning of
    Rule 11.03. The charge of “habitual offender” strictly relates to sentencing. And nothing
    in our case law, nor the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice, precludes an
    amendment to assert such charge later in the proceedings.
    ¶37.   Further, the majority cites Ormond v. State for the proposition that failure to comply
    with Rule 11.03, i.e., charge a defendant with habitual offender at the outset, “will result in
    reversal of the enhanced sentence.” 12 Once again, the majority fails to acknowledge that
    Ormond was decided prior to the enactment of Rule 7.09, which allows indictments to be
    amended to charge a defendant as a habitual offender. Thus, the majority’s reliance on
    Ormond is incorrect. Ormond has no application to the present facts.
    ¶38.   Additionally, the majority claims that the ability to amend the indictment at any time
    prior to sentencing would decrease the State’s incentive timely to comply with Rule 11.03.
    But the State has plenty of incentive to seek a defendant’s criminal record in advance,
    because if the State obtains information concerning a defendant’s criminal record pre-
    indictment or post-indictment, but well in advance of trial, such criminal history will be
    beneficial to the State in the prosecution of the principal charge in the indictment, such as
    12
    Ormond v. State, 
    599 So. 2d 951
    , 962-963 (Miss. 1992).
    15
    admissible evidence under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 404(b), or evidence for the purposes
    of impeachment on cross-examination of a testifying defendant.13
    ¶39.   With that being said, the State may, however, amend the indictment to reflect the
    “charge” of habitual offender at any point prior to sentencing, subject to Rule 7.09, because
    such amendment is one of form, and not substance, i.e., a new criminal charge or substantive
    element of the charged offense. To be clear, there is no inconsistency between Rule 11.03
    and Rule 7.09. Rule 7.09 simply allows the State to comply with Rule 11.03.
    Conclusion
    ¶40.   In light of the foregoing reasons, I disagree with the majority’s decision to remand the
    case for resentencing. Accordingly, I dissent and would affirm both Gowdy’s conviction and
    sentence.
    CARLSON, P.J., AND RANDOLPH, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.
    13
    See Miss. R. Evid. 609(a).
    16