State of Tennessee v. Kalandra Lacy ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                            05/12/2017
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    March 7, 2017 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. KALANDRA LACY
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
    No. 14-04930    Carolyn Wade Blackett, Judge
    No. W2016-00837-CCA-R3-CD
    The defendant, Kalandra Lacy, appeals her Shelby County Criminal Court guilty-pleaded
    conviction of abuse of a corpse, arguing that the trial court erred by denying her bid for
    judicial diversion. Following a de novo review occasioned by the trial court’s failure to
    consider on the record all the factors relevant to the denial of judicial diversion as well as
    the trial court’s consideration of irrelevant factors, we conclude that the defendant is
    entitled to judicial diversion. We remand the case for entry of an order placing the
    defendant on judicial diversion under the same terms and conditions of her previously-
    imposed sentence of probation.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court Reversed and Remanded
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T.
    WOODALL, P.J., and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., J., joined.
    Vicki M. Carriker, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kalandra Lacy.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrew C. Coulam, Assistant
    Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Paul Goodman,
    Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    On May 12, 2015, the defendant entered an open plea of guilty to one count
    of abuse of a corpse, a Class E felony. The State summarized the facts of the offense:
    [O]n October the 19th of 2014 officers started an
    investigation at the Gus’s Fried Chicken on North
    Germantown Road in Bartlett, Tennessee. A motorist had
    found the remains of a deceased new born infant in the alley
    there behind the restaurant. Officers located a clear plastic
    bag with what appeared to be blood inside the bag [and] an
    infant’s body. The umbilical cord was attached to the infant,
    and it appeared that the body of the infant had been run over
    by a vehicle.
    Officers traced this in their investigation to the interior
    of the restaurant to a woman’s restroom inside. They were
    told that the defendant . . . was possibly pregnant although it
    was not known for sure by coworkers. The store employee
    was contacted and advised that there had been a miscarriage
    that had happened in the women’s restroom and [the
    defendant] had left work early on that occasion. The officers
    tracked down the defendant. The defendant told officers that
    she knew why they were there. And she stated that she had
    had a miscarriage and had put the baby in the dumpster
    behind the Gus’s restaurant. . . . She stated that she had
    placed the body of the infant in the plastic bag.
    The Medical Examiner’s Office of course examined
    the infant and they could not determine cause of death. They
    could not determine whether this was a live birth or not.
    There was no way to say medically whether the infant had
    been born alive. The defendant is not charged with homicide
    but abuse of a corpse which was the charge that the State
    could have proven in this case.
    The State noted that the defendant “does qualify for diversion” but indicated that the
    “State is not agreeing to that.”
    At a hearing conducted that same day, the defendant, who had previously
    given birth to three children, testified that on October 19, 2014, she went to the restroom
    near the end of her shift and “had a miscarriage” inside the restroom. She said that her
    “baby came out. It wasn’t moving or making any sounds or anything.” She described the
    infant as “pretty small.” She said that she “was weak” and “in shock.” She described
    what happened next:
    I just was thinking I just really want to go home. I just
    have to go home. And so I put the baby in the bag and put it
    in the dumpster and I told my manager I have to go. I had
    -2-
    a[n] accident. And of course he could see all the blood and
    stuff over me.
    She said that she was “distraught, hurt and shocked and just weak all in one.” The
    defendant said that she sat in her car “a while” because she “couldn’t drive or anything.”
    She eventually went home. The following morning, her mother came and took her to the
    hospital, where she was treated and released.
    The defendant denied running over her child. She asked the trial court to
    grant judicial diversion so that the offense would not prevent her from obtaining “a good
    job” so that she could provide for her other children. She said that she knew that what
    she did was wrong.
    During cross-examination, the defendant said she could not explain why
    she had done what she did, saying, “I can’t give you an answer to why I did it. I was just
    in shock.”
    The trial court expressed incredulity at the defendant’s lack of explanation
    for her actions and implored the defendant to offer more, saying, “This is the only time
    you’re going to get a chance to go through this and you might as well tell me now
    because it will depend on how I rule on this. I don’t care what the truth is. I just want to
    know what it is.” The defendant adamantly denied that she acted out of a desire to get rid
    of the child. The defendant responded, “I just was really weak and tired and I just wanted
    to go home. . . . I knew I couldn’t leave it in the bathroom. So that’s why I took it to the
    dumpster.” She said that she did not know how the child had gotten out of the dumpster
    but that the police had told her that “cats drug the infant out of the garbage.” The trial
    court stated its belief that the conviction needed to be on the defendant’s “record to let
    people know” that the defendant had “a problem” because the defendant could not “even
    tell [the court] why.” The court indicated that the defendant needed “serious counseling”
    and expressed concern that the defendant was “likely to repeat the same behavior again.”
    The trial court indicated that it was not prepared to rule on the defendant’s request for
    judicial diversion. The court ordered the defendant to take parenting classes and undergo
    counseling and asked the defendant to provide “a written report from a doctor and a
    psychologist.”
    On July 28, 2015, the defendant asked the trial court for more time to
    complete the evaluation process requested by the trial court. The court then reset the case
    two more times before holding a sentencing hearing on April 13, 2016. During the
    -3-
    intervening eleven months, the defendant underwent two mental health evaluations1 and
    attended counseling.
    At the hearing, the trial court denied the defendant’s request for diversion,
    ultimately concluding that the court “would want people to have notice” in the form of a
    felony conviction on the defendant’s criminal record “that if for some reason, or another,
    something like this even remotely happened, again, due to this, everyone would be put on
    notice.” The court expresed “a very, very deep concern” “for the safety of her children
    that she has now, any children she may have in the future,” and stated that it was this
    concern that made the court “want to make sure that the records were accessible and not
    in terms of diversion, there was no mention of any of this.” The court indicated that it
    had “thought about it” and had done “some outside research” on cases similar to the
    defendant’s. The court said:
    There is a huge number, in terms of the increase of the
    number of women who are being prosecuted exactly for this
    same type of offense. And they are not going as far as we
    went on this case. They have a woman who has recently had
    a baby, or a miscarriage, or was pregnant and if they can find
    the fetus, or the baby, they are prosecuting murder one, across
    this country, in numbers that you would not believe. And I
    do not want the same thing to happen to her.
    The trial court ordered that the defendant serve one year of “intensive” supervised
    probation.
    In this timely appeal, the defendant asserts that the trial court erred by
    denying her bid for judicial diversion, arguing that the trial court failed to weigh and
    consider all the factors relevant to a determination of judicial diversion. The State
    contends that the trial court appropriately considered all the relevant factors and that the
    court’s decision to deny judicial diversion based upon the circumstances of the offense
    was justified.
    “Judicial diversion” is a reference to the provision in Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 40-35-313(a) for a trial court’s deferring proceedings in a criminal
    case. See T.C.A. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(A). Pursuant to such a deferral, the trial court places
    the defendant on probation “without entering a judgment of guilty.” 
    Id. To be
    eligible or
    “qualified” for judicial diversion, the defendant must plead guilty to, or be found guilty
    1
    The defendant’s memorandum in support of her request for diversion indicated that she had had
    two evaluations, and both defense counsel and the court indicated that reports from both evaluations were
    included “in the jacket.” Only one report appears in the record on appeal.
    -4-
    of, an offense that is not “a sexual offense or a Class A or Class B felony,” and the
    defendant must not have previously been convicted of a felony or a Class A
    misdemeanor. 
    Id. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(B)(i)(b),
    (c). Diversion requires the consent of the
    qualified defendant. 
    Id. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(A).
    “[A] ‘qualified’ defendant is not
    necessarily entitled to diversion. Whether to grant judicial diversion is left to the
    discretionary authority of the trial courts.” State v. King, 
    432 S.W.3d 316
    , 326 (Tenn.
    2014). Following a determination that the defendant is eligible for judicial diversion, the
    trial court must consider
    “(a) the accused’s amenability to correction, (b) the
    circumstances of the offense, (c) the accused’s criminal
    record, (d) the accused’s social history, (e) the accused’s
    physical and mental health, and (f) the deterrence value to the
    accused as well as others. The trial court should also consider
    whether judicial diversion will serve the ends of justice—the
    interests of the public as well as the accused.”
    
    Id. (quoting State
    v. Parker, 
    932 S.W.2d 945
    , 958 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996)). “Further,
    the trial court must weigh the factors against each other and place an explanation of its
    ruling on the record.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 326
    (citing State v. Electroplating, Inc., 
    990 S.W.2d 211
    , 229 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998)).
    Although judicial diversion is not a sentence, our supreme court determined
    that the standard of review first expressed in State v. Bise, 
    380 S.W.3d 682
    (Tenn. 2012),
    applies to “appellate review for a trial court’s sentencing decision to either grant or deny
    judicial diversion.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 325
    . Importantly, however, the court
    emphasized that the adoption of the Bise standard of review “did not abrogate the
    requirements set forth in Parker and Electroplating, which are essential considerations
    for judicial diversion.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 326
    .
    The trial court need not provide a recitation of all the applicable “factors
    when justifying its decision on the record in order to obtain the presumption of
    reasonableness,” but “the record should reflect that the trial court considered the Parker
    and Electroplating factors in rendering its decision and that it identified the specific
    factors applicable to the case before it.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 327
    . When the trial court
    considers each of the factors enumerated in Parker and weighs them against each other,
    placing its findings in the record, as required by Electroplating, Inc., we “apply a
    presumption of reasonableness,” per Bise, and will “uphold the grant or denial so long as
    there is any substantial evidence to support the trial court’s decision.” 
    Id. When “the
    trial court fails to consider and weigh the applicable common law factors, the
    presumption of reasonableness does not apply and the abuse of discretion standard . . . is
    -5-
    not appropriate.” 
    Id. Instead, “the
    appellate courts may either conduct a de novo review
    or, if more appropriate under the circumstances, remand the issue for reconsideration.
    The determination as to whether the appellate court should conduct a de novo review or
    remand for reconsideration is within the discretion of the reviewing court.” 
    Id. at 328.
    Here, the trial court indicated that it had reviewed the defendant’s
    memorandum in support of her bid for judicial diversion, which included each of the
    factors relevant to the consideration of diversion, but the trial court did not consider each
    factor on the record and did not weigh the factors against each other or place an
    explanation of its consideration of each factor on the record. The trial court did not
    mention any of the applicable factors and focused exclusively on the circumstances of the
    offense and its own concerns about the potential of future harm to the defendant’s
    children. Additionally, the trial court indicated that it had conducted “independent
    research” and had weighed this research heavily in the decision to deny judicial
    diversion. Consequently, the ruling of the trial court is not entitled to a presumption of
    reasonableness, and the abuse of discretion standard of review is “not appropriate.”
    “Because, however, the record is sufficient for de novo review, we have chosen to
    address whether the denial of judicial diversion was appropriate in these circumstances,
    rather than remand the case for reconsideration by the trial court.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 328
    .
    The record clearly establishes that the 23-year-old defendant is qualified for
    judicial diversion. The defendant’s social history weighs heavily in favor of a grant of
    judicial diversion. The defendant has no criminal record. The record contains no
    evidence that the defendant uses illegal drugs or that she consumes alcohol in excess.
    She possesses a high school diploma and some college credits toward her associate’s
    degree. At the time of the hearing, the defendant had been gainfully employed for the
    entirety of her adult life. By the time of the hearing, the defendant had already lost one
    well-paying job as a result of her arrest in this case, but she had managed to obtain full
    time employment as an office assistant at a tax preparation office.
    The defendant shares three children with her partner, Michael Baines, who
    was also the father of the deceased infant in this case, and the record indicates that she
    has the support of her mother and other extended family members. The family had never
    been the subject of an investigation or any other action by the Department of Children’s
    Services. Although the trial court expressed a concern for the safety of the defendant’s
    children, the record contains no evidence that might have given rise to such a concern.
    No evidence suggested that the defendant had ever harmed any of her children or that she
    had made a pattern of the behavior that gave rise to the charge in this case. Importantly,
    no evidence in the record indicates that the defendant caused the death of her infant in
    this case.
    -6-
    Medical records exhibited to the hearing established that the defendant’s
    third child was born prematurely in December 2012 after the defendant suffered a
    “complete placental abruption.” That child spent several weeks in the neonatal intensive
    care unit.
    At the trial court’s insistence, the defendant underwent a mental health
    evaluation. The defendant’s sentencing memorandum actually states that the defendant
    underwent two evaluations, but the copy of only one evaluation appears in the record on
    appeal. The examiner concluded that the defendant did “not suffer from a mental illness”
    but that “her judgment was undoubtedly impaired at the time of her miscarriage.”
    The record indicates that the defendant had complied with all of the
    conditions of her release on bond prior to her guilty plea as well as those additional
    conditions imposed by the trial court during the 11 months between her guilty plea and
    the sentencing hearing in this case. The defendant garnered no new criminal charges
    during this time period.
    With regard to the circumstances of the offense, the record establishes that
    the defendant suffered a miscarriage in the restroom of the Gus’s Fried Chicken, where
    she was working at the time. The defendant, who had experienced the premature birth of
    her third child, testified that the premature infant was “pretty small” and “gray.” The
    medical examiner could not determine whether the infant had been born alive, and the
    record clearly establishes that the defendant believed the infant to be dead. The
    defendant said that she was disoriented, distraught, and in shock when she placed the
    infant’s body in a plastic bag and then placed the bag into the dumpster. She then drove
    home. Officers later discovered the infant’s body in the alley; it had been run over by a
    car. The record suggests that animals removed the body from the dumpster, and,
    importantly, no evidence suggests that the defendant was responsible for the damage
    inflicted on the body after she placed it in the dumpster.
    The defendant did not attempt to conceal her pregnancy either before or
    after the offense. When she went to the hospital for treatment, she told doctors that she
    had suffered a miscarriage. Then, when contacted by police, the defendant immediately
    admitted what she had done. She testified that she understood and accepted
    responsibility for the wrongfulness of her actions. The defendant’s version of the offense
    remained consistent throughout the case.
    As mentioned, the trial court indicated that it had performed “outside
    research” that evinced an exponential increase in “this same type of offense,” indicating,
    perhaps, the need for deterrence to the defendant and others. The trial court’s conducting
    -7-
    independent research into facts outside the record and then relying on that evidence was
    wholly improper. To be sure, a trial court may take into account matters that are of
    common knowledge to every person but may not “base [its] decisions on the existence or
    nonexistence of facts according to [its] personal beliefs or experiences.” Fairbanks v.
    State, 
    508 S.W.2d 67
    , 69 (Tenn. 1974). Our supreme court has explained,
    There is ample authority for the proposition that a judge is not
    to use from the bench, under the guise of judicial knowledge,
    that which he knows only as an individual observer outside of
    the judicial proceedings. Judicial knowledge upon which a
    decision may be based is not the personal knowledge of the
    judge, but the cognizance of certain facts the judge becomes
    aware of by virtue of the legal procedures in which he plays a
    neutral role. No judge is at liberty to take into account
    personal knowledge which he possesses when deciding upon
    an issue submitted by the parties. In other words, “[i]t
    matters not what is known to the judge personally if it is not
    known to him in his official capacity.”
    Vaughn v. Shelby Williams of Tenn., Inc., 
    813 S.W.2d 132
    , 133 (Tenn. 1991) (citations
    omitted). To the extent that the trial court’s “independent research” consisted of news
    reports of “this same type of offense,” our supreme court has observed that Rule 201 does
    not permit a trial judge to take judicial notice of the contents of news articles. State v.
    Henretta, 
    325 S.W.3d 112
    , 144 (Tenn. 2010) (“While Rule 201 of the Tennessee Rules of
    Evidence allows a court to take judicial notice of certain adjudicative facts, it does not
    allow a court to take judicial notice of hearsay statements contained in a newspaper
    article.”). No evidence in the record supports the trial court’s finding of a significant
    increase in the occurrence of cases similar to the defendant’s.
    Referencing her “outside research,” the trial judge also noted that cases
    similar to the defendant’s had been prosecuted as first degree murder, suggesting that the
    defendant had been granted some largesse in being permitted to plead guilty to abuse of a
    corpse. Although this court has previously “recognized that leniency in the terms of a
    plea agreement may support the imposition of a formidable sentence,” we have done so
    only when the defendant was originally charged with, and the facts supported a finding
    of, a much greater charge. State v. John Clayton Fields, No. M2014-01691-CCA-R3-
    CD, slip op. at 9-10 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, July 6, 2015), perm. app. denied
    (Tenn. Oct. 23, 2015); see also, e.g., State v. Krystal Bowman, No. E2011-01906-CCA-
    R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Aug. 13, 2012); State v. Larry J. Coffey, Jr., No.
    E2008-00087-CCA-R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Feb. 18, 2009). In this case,
    the defendant pleaded guilty to the offense charged in the indictment, and only evidence
    -8-
    to support that offense was placed into the record. Under these circumstances, the trial
    court should not have considered an offense that the defendant “could” or “should” have
    faced. See State v. Chyanne Elizabeth Gobble, No. E2014-01596-CCA-R3-CD, slip op.
    at 10-12 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Aug. 12, 2015). In Chyanne Elizabeth Gobble,
    this court concluded that “[a] trial court’s consideration of an offense different or greater
    than that for which the defendant was indicted when determining whether the defendant
    should receive judicial diversion offends the constitutional right to due process.” 
    Id., slip op.
    at 12.
    Clearly, the defendant’s amenability to correction, her lack of criminal
    record, her social history, and her physical and mental health all weigh in favor of a grant
    of judicial diversion. Turning then to the circumstances of the offense, we observe that
    the seriousness of the offense may serve as the sole basis for denying judicial diversion
    only when “the circumstances of the offense as committed [are] especially violent,
    horrifying, shocking, reprehensible, offensive or otherwise of an excessive or
    exaggerated degree, and the nature of the offense must outweigh all factors favoring a
    sentence other than confinement.” State v. Trotter, 
    201 S.W.3d 651
    , 654 (Tenn. 2006).
    The evidence established that the defendant suffered a miscarriage and then placed the
    miscarried infant into a dumpster behind her place of work. The defendant’s conduct
    certainly evinces a serious mistake in judgment, which judgment “was undoubtedly
    impaired at the time of her miscarriage.” As a result of the defendant’s poor judgment,
    the infant’s body was dragged from the dumpster and run over by a car. These facts,
    while unsettling, were already incorporated into the conviction offense. As charged in
    this case, “[a] person commits an offense who, without legal privilege, knowingly . . .
    [p]hysically mistreats a corpse in a manner offensive to the sensibilities of an ordinary
    person.” T.C.A. § 39-17-312(a)(1). The record contains no evidence to suggest that the
    defendant’s actions significantly exceeded those required to satisfy the elements of the
    offense. Furthermore, the defendant’s actions following the discovery of the infant,
    including her ready admission and full cooperation with the police, weigh in favor of a
    grant of judicial diversion. See Chyanne Elizabeth Gobble, slip op. at 15.
    Because we conclude, based upon our de novo review of the record, that
    each of the factors weighs in favor of a grant of judicial diversion in this case, we reverse
    the judgment of the trial court denying judicial diversion and remand the case for the
    entry of an order placing the defendant on judicial diversion for one year under the same
    conditions attendant to the previously-imposed sentence of probation.
    _________________________________
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: W2016-00837-CCA-R3-CD

Judges: Judge James Curwood Witt, Jr.

Filed Date: 5/12/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/12/2017