State of New Hampshire v. Keith C. Fitzgerald ( 2022 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Belknap
    No. 2020-0595
    THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    v.
    KEITH C. FITZGERALD
    Submitted: December 14, 2021
    Opinion Issued: January 11, 2022
    John M. Formella, attorney general, and Anthony J. Galdieri, solicitor
    general (Gregory M. Albert, assistant attorney general, on the brief), for the
    State.
    Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green, P.A., of Manchester (Michael D.
    Ramsdell on the brief), for the defendant.
    HICKS, J. The defendant, Keith C. Fitzgerald, appeals an order of the
    Superior Court (O’Neill, J.) sentencing him, on remand, to nine and one-half to
    twenty-five years in prison. See State v. Fitzgerald, 
    173 N.H. 564
    , 583-84
    (2020) (remanding for resentencing). On appeal, the defendant argues that the
    trial court: (1) unsustainably exercised its discretion and committed an error of
    law by re-imposing the same sentence that it had imposed previously; and (2)
    violated his state and federal constitutional rights to due process by relying
    upon improper information and failing to set forth, in detail, the basis for its
    sentencing decision. We affirm.
    I. Background
    In 2015, the defendant was indicted on five counts of theft by
    unauthorized taking in violation of RSA 637:3 (2016). 
    Id. at 569
    . His jury trial
    took place in 2017 in Superior Court (Smukler, J.). At trial, the jury heard
    evidence that the defendant made several transactions using his father’s assets
    without consulting his father or the defendant’s siblings, and that, after
    obtaining his father’s durable power of attorney, he transferred his father’s
    assets from accounts and trusts in his father’s name to accounts only in the
    defendant’s name. 
    Id. at 570-71
    . At the conclusion of trial, pursuant to the
    sentence enhancement contained in RSA 651:6, the jury was instructed to
    determine whether the defendant’s father was 65 years or older and whether
    the defendant, in perpetrating a crime under RSA 637:3, intended to take
    advantage of his father’s age. 
    Id. at 571
    . The jury returned guilty verdicts on
    all five charges and specifically found that the State had proven the sentence
    enhancement factors beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id.
     The court subsequently
    sentenced the defendant to a term of no less than nine and one-half years and
    no more than twenty-five years in the New Hampshire State Prison. 
    Id.
    The defendant appealed his convictions, and we affirmed them in a non-
    precedential order in 2018. Thereafter, the defendant filed a motion for a new
    trial based upon ineffective assistance of counsel. 
    Id. at 569
    . The Superior
    Court (Smukler, J.) denied the motion, and the defendant appealed the denial.
    
    Id.
    On appeal, the defendant argued that his trial counsel had been
    ineffective in advising him as to the merits of the State’s plea offer and his
    exposure to the sentencing enhancement. See 
    id. at 575
    . Under the plea offer,
    the defendant would serve two years in the Belknap County House of
    Corrections, followed by two years on administrative home confinement, and he
    would have a four-to-ten-year suspended sentence “with a window of ten years
    after completion of his final year of home confinement.” 
    Id. at 570
    .
    With regard to the performance prong of the ineffective assistance of
    counsel test set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-88
    (1984), we determined that the defendant’s trial counsel failed to “adequately
    advise [him] about the applicable sentence enhancement and the merits of the
    State’s plea offer relative to [his] likelihood of success at trial,” and, thus, his
    performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness. Id. at 576.
    As to the prejudice prong, we adopted the Supreme Court’s approach in
    Lafler v. Cooper, 
    566 U.S. 156
    , 163-64 (2012). 
    Id.
     Under that approach, to
    demonstrate prejudice when the ineffective assistance has resulted in a
    2
    defendant’s rejection of a plea, the defendant must show that, but for his
    counsel’s ineffective advice, “there is a reasonable probability that: (1) ‘the plea
    offer would have been presented to the court . . . ’; (2) ‘the court would have
    accepted its terms’; and (3) ‘the conviction or sentence, or both, under the
    offer’s terms would have been less severe than under the judgment and
    sentence that in fact were imposed.’” Id. at 577 (quoting Lafler, 
    566 U.S. at 164
    ). We concluded that the defendant demonstrated prejudice under the
    Lafler test. Id. at 577-81.
    We then discussed the proper remedy. Id. at 581-84. We again adopted
    the Supreme Court’s approach in Lafler:
    In Lafler, the Supreme Court stated that the “injury suffered by
    defendants who decline a plea offer as a result of ineffective
    assistance of counsel and then receive a greater sentence as a
    result of trial can come in at least one of two forms.” [Lafler, 
    566 U.S. at 170
    .] In some cases, typically when the charges that would
    have been admitted as part of the plea bargain are the same as the
    charges the defendant was convicted of after trial, “the sole
    advantage a defendant would have received under the plea is a
    lesser sentence.” 
    Id. at 170-71
    . “In this situation the court may
    conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the
    defendant has shown a reasonable probability that but for
    counsel’s errors he would have accepted the plea.” 
    Id. at 171
    . “If
    the showing is made, the court may exercise discretion in
    determining whether the defendant should receive the term of
    imprisonment the government offered in the plea, the sentence he
    received at trial, or something in between.” 
    Id.
    In some cases, for example, where an offer was for a guilty plea
    to a count or counts less serious than the ones for which a
    defendant was convicted at trial, or if a mandatory sentence
    confines a judge’s sentencing discretion after trial, resentencing
    alone may not provide full redress for the constitutional injury. 
    Id.
    “In these circumstances, the proper exercise of discretion to
    remedy the constitutional injury may be to require the prosecution
    to reoffer the plea proposal.” 
    Id.
     “Once this has occurred, the
    judge can then exercise discretion in deciding whether to vacate
    the conviction from trial and accept the plea or leave the conviction
    undisturbed.” 
    Id.
    “In implementing a remedy in both of these situations, the trial
    court must weigh various factors; and the boundaries of proper
    discretion need not be defined here.” 
    Id.
     In Lafler, the Supreme
    Court provided two guiding considerations that the Court deemed
    to be of relevance: first, “a court may take account of a defendant’s
    3
    earlier expressed willingness, or unwillingness, to accept
    responsibility for his or her actions”; and second, it is not
    necessary here to decide as a constitutional rule that the court is
    required to disregard “any information concerning the crime that
    was discovered after the plea offer was made.” 
    Id. at 171-72
    .
    Fitzgerald, 173 N.H. at 581-82 (footnote omitted).
    We explained that the defendant acknowledged that the sole advantage
    that he would have received under the rejected plea was a lesser sentence. Id.
    at 582. In light of that acknowledgement, we remanded to the trial court to
    allow it to “exercise [its] discretion in determining whether to resentence the
    defendant to either the term of imprisonment the government offered in the
    plea, the sentence he received at trial, or something in between.” Id. at 583-84.
    We explained that, in exercising that discretion, the trial court need not hold
    an evidentiary hearing to determine whether there was a reasonable probability
    that but for counsel’s errors the defendant would have accepted the plea,
    because we had already made that determination. Id. at 582-83. The
    defendant did not ask us to reconsider our decision.
    On remand, the defendant asked that the trial court impose a sentence
    that was as close to the sentence offered in the rejected plea as possible, and
    the State asked the trial court to impose the same sentence that it had
    previously imposed. After holding a sentencing hearing over two days, the trial
    court adopted the State’s recommendation, stating that its sentence was based
    upon its “review of the charges and convictions involving the Defendant, the
    applicable law, including the [remand order], and the pleadings and arguments
    made by respective counsel.” The defendant unsuccessfully moved for
    reconsideration, and this appeal followed.
    II. Analysis
    Generally, “trial judges are vested with broad discretionary powers with
    regard to sentencing.” State v. Benner, 
    172 N.H. 194
    , 198 (2019) (quotation
    and brackets omitted). The trial court’s discretion extends to determining the
    evidence to be considered at a sentencing hearing. State v. Castine, 
    172 N.H. 562
    , 567 (2019). We generally review a trial court’s sentencing decision under
    our unsustainable exercise of discretion standard. 
    Id.
     However, to the extent
    that the defendant argues that the sentencing decision violated his
    constitutional rights, we review that claim de novo. See State v. Willey, 
    163 N.H. 532
    , 541 (2012).
    A. Decision to Re-Impose Same Sentence
    On appeal, the defendant first argues that the trial court unsustainably
    exercised its discretion and committed an error of law when it declined to
    4
    impose a sentence that most closely approximated the sentence in the plea
    offer and, instead, imposed the same sentence that it had previously imposed.
    The defendant asserts that the re-imposed sentence failed to neutralize the
    taint of the ineffective assistance of counsel and place him in the same position
    he would have been had there been no violation of the right to counsel. He
    argues that, in this way, the trial court failed to comply with the remand
    instructions in Fitzgerald.
    As a general proposition, a trial court is bound by the mandate of an
    appellate court on remand. State v. Abram, 
    156 N.H. 646
    , 650 (2008). “[I]n
    ascertaining what the mandate commands, the trial court need not read the
    mandate in a vacuum, but rather has the opinion of the appellate court to aid
    it.” 
    Id.
     (quotation and brackets omitted). “In this way, the trial court may
    examine the rationale of an appellate opinion in order to discern the meaning
    of language in the court’s mandate.” 
    Id.
     (quotation and brackets omitted).
    Thus, the trial court proceedings on remand must be in accord “with both the
    mandate of the appellate court and the result contemplated in the appellate
    opinion.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    Here, we expressly instructed the trial court that it had the discretion to
    impose “the term of imprisonment the government offered in the plea, the
    sentence [the defendant] received at trial, or something in between.” Fitzgerald,
    173 N.H. at 583-84. As the defendant acknowledges, we specifically declined to
    define the boundaries of the trial court’s exercise of discretion, leaving “open to
    the trial court how best to exercise that discretion in all the circumstances of
    the case before it.” Id. at 582-83. Although we explained that, on
    resentencing, the trial court would have to “weigh various factors,” we did not
    delineate those factors or in any way limit the factors that the trial court could
    consider. Id. at 582 (quotation omitted). Nor did we limit the information upon
    which the court could rely. See id. at 582-84. In short, our opinion “neither
    expressly nor implicitly barred the trial court” from imposing the same
    sentence on the defendant that it originally had imposed. Abram, 156 N.H. at
    651. Therefore, the trial court’s decision on remand to re-impose its original
    sentence was consistent with both the mandate in Fitzgerald and the result
    contemplated therein. See id. at 650.
    B. Due Process
    The defendant next argues that the trial court violated his state and
    federal constitutional due process rights because it improperly considered
    information other than that which ordinarily would have been available
    between the plea offer and sentence and because it failed to explain, in detail,
    the basis for its sentence. See N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 15; U.S. CONST.
    amends. V, XIV.
    5
    1. Information Considered
    “[S]entencing judges exercise a wide discretion in the types of evidence
    they may consider when imposing sentence . . . .” Pepper v. United States, 
    562 U.S. 476
    , 480 (2011) (quotation omitted). “[A]s a general proposition, a
    sentencing judge may appropriately conduct an inquiry broad in scope, largely
    unlimited either as to the kind of information he may consider, or the source
    from which it may come.” Witte v. United States, 
    515 U.S. 389
    , 398 (1995)
    (quotations omitted). Nonetheless, “there are constitutional limitations on the
    generally broad scope of information a court may consider at sentencing.”
    United States v. Nichols, 
    438 F.3d 437
    , 440 (4th Cir. 2006) (quotation,
    brackets, and ellipsis omitted). For example, in United States v. Tucker, 
    404 U.S. 443
    , 447-49 (1972), the Supreme Court ruled that a sentencing judge may
    not consider “a defendant’s prior felony convictions that had been obtained
    without affording [him] the right to counsel,” Nichols, 
    438 F.3d at 440
    .
    The defendant argues that: (1) under Lafler and Fitzgerald, a
    “resentencing court should consider only that information that ordinarily
    would have been discovered between the acceptance of the plea offer and
    sentencing”; (2) here, the trial court must have considered other information;
    and (3) its doing so violated his federal and state constitutional rights to due
    process. In so arguing, he relies upon the following language from Lafler,
    which we partially quoted in Fitzgerald:
    Principles elaborated over time in decisions of state and federal
    courts, and in statutes and rules, will serve to give more complete
    guidance as to the factors that should bear upon the exercise of
    the judge’s discretion. At this point, however, it suffices to note
    two considerations that are of relevance.
    First, a court may take account of a defendant’s earlier
    expressed willingness, or unwillingness, to accept responsibility for
    his or her actions. Second, it is not necessary here to decide as a
    constitutional rule that a judge is required to prescind (that is to
    say disregard) any information concerning the crime that was
    discovered after the plea offer was made. The time continuum
    makes it difficult to restore the defendant and the prosecution to
    the precise positions they occupied prior to the rejection of the plea
    offer, but that baseline can be consulted in finding a remedy that
    does not require the prosecution to incur the expense of
    conducting a new trial.
    Lafler, 
    566 U.S. at 171-72
    ; see Fitzgerald, 173 N.H. at 582.
    The defendant’s interpretation of Lafler and Fitzgerald is mistaken.
    Nothing in the quoted text limits a resentencing court to the “two
    6
    considerations . . . of relevance” described by the Court. Lafler, 
    566 U.S. at 171
    . The first consideration is permissive — allowing trial courts to “take
    account of a defendant’s earlier expressed willingness, or unwillingness, to
    accept responsibility” for his actions. 
    Id.
     The second consideration is also
    permissive — allowing a trial court to consider “information concerning the
    crime that was discovered after the plea offer was made.” 
    Id. at 171-72
    .
    To the extent that the defendant asserts that Lafler prohibited the trial
    court from considering his trial testimony, he is again mistaken. “Lafler clearly
    indicates that the [resentencing] court need not disregard what occurred at
    trial when attempting to neutralize the taint of ineffective assistance of
    counsel.” United States v. Cobb, 695 F. App’x 650, 653 (3d Cir. 2017). None of
    the cases from other jurisdictions upon which the defendant relies support his
    assertions that Lafler limited the information that the resentencing court could
    consider or precluded the resentencing court from considering a defendant’s
    trial testimony. Having rejected the premise of the defendant’s argument as to
    Lafler and Fitzgerald, we necessarily reject the argument itself.
    The defendant also analogizes this case to Abram. The issue in that case
    was whether the sentence the defendant received on remand after a partially
    successful appeal was “effectively more severe than the first [sentence he
    received], and, thus, [was] presumptively vindictive.” Abram, 156 N.H. at 651.
    We explained that “when a defendant receives a more severe sentence from the
    same sentencing judge on retrial after appeal, judicial vindictiveness is
    presumed unless the judge states the reasons for the increased sentence on
    the record, and those reasons are based on objective information concerning
    identifiable conduct on the part of the defendant occurring after the time of the
    original sentencing procedure.” Id. at 652 (quotation, brackets, and emphasis
    omitted). The defendant in the instant case argues that just as we “limited the
    information upon which the trial court could rely when resentencing a
    defendant to a harsher sentence after a successful appeal” so as “to remedy the
    harm of a presumptively vindictive sentence,” so too should we limit “the
    information properly available for the trial court’s consideration” in an appeal
    like his appeal. We decline the defendant’s invitation to extend Abram to this
    case.
    2. Explaining Basis of Sentencing Decision
    The defendant argues that the trial court’s failure to describe the basis
    for its sentencing decision in more detail violated his state and federal
    constitutional rights to due process. See N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 15; U.S.
    CONST. amends. V, XIV. We first consider the defendant’s argument under the
    State Constitution, using federal cases only to aid in our analysis. State v.
    Ball, 
    124 N.H. 226
    , 231-33 (1983).
    7
    “Due process requires that the court inform the defendant at the time of
    sentencing in plain and certain terms what punishment it is exacting as well as
    the extent to which the court retains discretion to impose punishment at a
    later date and under what conditions the sentence may be modified.” Benner,
    172 N.H. at 198-99 (quotation omitted). “Although there are occasions when
    an explanation of the reasons for a [trial court] decision may be required by the
    demands of due process, such occasions are the exception rather than the
    rule.” Harris v. Rivera, 
    454 U.S. 339
    , 344 (1981) (per curiam) (footnote
    omitted).
    The defendant argues that “[t]he circumstances here are at least as
    compelling as other instances in which a defendant’s [state and federal
    constitutional] right[s] to due process of law require[] the sentencing court to
    state on the record the reasons for the sentence imposed.” He seeks to liken
    his circumstance to that of a defendant whose suspended sentence has been
    revoked, see Stapleford v. Perrin, 
    122 N.H. 1083
    , 1088 (1982), or who has
    received a harsher sentence on remand, see Abram, 156 N.H. at 651.
    In proceedings to revoke a suspended sentence, probation, or parole, due
    process requires, among other things, “a statement in the record by the [trial]
    court indicating in substance the evidence relied upon and the reasons for
    imposing commitment.” Stapleford, 
    122 N.H. at 1088
    ; see Morrissey v. Brewer,
    
    408 U.S. 471
    , 488-89 (1972) (parole); Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 
    411 U.S. 778
    , 782
    (1973) (probation). Similarly, “when a defendant receives a more severe
    sentence from the same sentencing judge on retrial after appeal, judicial
    vindictiveness is presumed unless the judge states the reasons for the
    increased sentence on the record, and those reasons are based on objective
    information concerning identifiable conduct on the part of the defendant
    occurring after the time of the original sentencing procedure.” Abram, 156
    N.H. at 652 (quotation, brackets, and emphasis omitted); see North Carolina v.
    Pearce, 
    395 U.S. 711
    , 726 (1969); cf. Alabama v. Smith, 
    490 U.S. 794
    , 795
    (1989) (deciding that the presumption of vindictiveness does not arise when a
    defendant receives a harsher sentence after a new trial than pursuant to a
    prior guilty plea).
    We decline the defendant’s invitation to extend Stapleford and Abram to
    the circumstances present here. We similarly decline his invitation to interpret
    Fitzgerald and Lafler “to require that the [trial court] state the information
    relied upon and the basis for [the] sentence on the record.”
    In this case, “we cannot say that [the defendant] was due any more
    process than was provided by the trial court.” State v. Perfetto, 
    160 N.H. 675
    ,
    680 (2010). On remand, the trial court held a sentencing hearing over two
    days at which the defendant was represented by counsel. Before the hearing,
    both the State and defense counsel submitted sentencing memoranda for the
    court’s review. At the conclusion of the second day of the hearing, the court
    8
    explained that it had determined certain sentences after reviewing the
    defendant’s “charges and convictions . . . , the applicable law,” including our
    remand order, the pleadings, “and arguments made by respective counsel.”
    The sentences were then read into the record and submitted in writing.
    The defendant has failed to demonstrate that due process required the
    trial court to give a more fulsome explanation of its reasoning. We reach the
    same result under the Federal Constitution because the State Constitution
    provides at least as much protection as the Federal Constitution provides
    under these circumstances. See Harris, 
    454 U.S. at 344
    ; Benner, 172 N.H. at
    198-99.
    Although due process did not require the trial court in this case to
    explain its reasoning more fully, “[t]he work of appellate judges is facilitated
    when trial judges make findings of fact that explain the basis for [their] . . .
    rulings.” Harris, 
    454 U.S. at 344
    . Accordingly, we advise trial judges that the
    better practice is to set forth the bases for their sentencing decisions in a
    written order when resentencing a defendant on remand.
    Affirmed.
    DONOVAN, J., concurred; BROWN, J., retired superior court justice,
    specially assigned under RSA 490:3, concurred.
    9