Challis v. State , 157 So. 3d 393 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    STEVEN CHALLIS,                               )
    )
    Appellant,                      )
    )
    v.                                            )                 Case No. 2D14-3826
    )
    STATE OF FLORIDA,                             )
    )
    Appellee.                       )
    )
    Opinion filed January 30, 2015.
    Petition Alleging Ineffective Assistance
    of Appellate Counsel. Pasco County;
    Mary Handsel, Judge.
    Steven Challis, pro se.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General,
    Tallahassee, and C. Suzanne Bechard,
    Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for
    Appellee.
    PER CURIAM.
    Steven Challis, in his petition filed under Florida Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 9.141(d), alleges that his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to
    argue that the trial court committed fundamental error by inappropriately speculating
    during the sentencing proceeding that he was responsible for a number of deaths from
    drug overdoses. Because a trial court commits fundamental error when it considers
    improper factors such as this at sentencing, we grant Mr. Challis's petition.1
    After a jury trial, Mr. Challis was convicted of three counts of trafficking in
    hydrocodone, two counts of trafficking in oxycodone, and four counts each of
    possession of alprazolam, methadone, diazepam, and carisoprodol. At sentencing, the
    State urged the trial court to sentence Mr. Challis to a total of one hundred years'
    imprisonment by ordering that the twenty-five-year mandatory minimum terms for
    counts one through four be served consecutively.2 The State, detailing the various
    dates on which undercover officers purchased drugs from Mr. Challis and describing the
    large quantity of pills and cash in Mr. Challis's possession at the time of his arrest,
    argued that such a lengthy sentence was appropriate because he was "out there selling
    to society" and he fled during trial. Defense counsel maintained that consecutive
    sentences were not appropriate because Mr. Challis, aged thirty-eight, had only one
    prior felony conviction for an offense that was committed when he was sixteen. Mr.
    Challis himself argued that he had provided the State substantial assistance in a large
    drug investigation and in an unsolved murder case in Pasco County. The court rejected
    the defense arguments. After imposing the one hundred-year sentence requested by
    the State, the trial court commented as follows:
    Mr. Challis, if you had any information that
    you want to provide and the State finds it useful
    1
    Because Mr. Challis alleges a fundamental error in the sentencing
    process rather than in the sentencing order, Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(b)
    does not apply. See Jackson v. State, 
    983 So. 2d 562
    , 572-74 (Fla. 2008).
    2
    See Kraft v. State, 
    583 So. 2d 365
    , 367 (Fla. 4th DCA 1991) ("When
    multiple offenses are sufficiently separate, occurring at separate times and places, the
    imposition of consecutive mandatory minimum sentences is appropriate.").
    -2-
    they're more than welcome to come back and ask me
    to mitigate your sentence at a later date. But,
    sir, I've done this job for a long time and before
    that I was a prosecutor.
    I sat through the trial and the amount of
    pills that you were trafficking in this county,
    probably accounts for well over 10 to 20 deaths.
    I've never seen so many pills. There were
    boxes and boxes and boxes of pills. So, somehow,
    someway you were getting these pills. You were
    either stealing them or having people forge
    scripts for them; I have no idea how you got them.
    My first thought is how did you obtain all of
    these pills.
    THE DEFENDANT: Over half of them –
    THE COURT: Ahh.
    THE DEFENDANT: Over half of them I took from
    my girlfriends [sic]. They were her scripts.
    THE COURT: Well, then your girlfriend should
    be dead because I saw boxes and boxes and I heard
    testimony on the search warrant, how there was
    this shed with pills in it and that shed with
    pills in it and this lock box with pills in it and
    that lock box with pills in it and all those pills
    went into evidence in this case.
    You are a major trafficker, was a major
    trafficker and at this time, I'm going [to] sentence
    you as such.
    (Emphasis added.)
    In his petition, Mr. Challis asserts that appellate counsel was ineffective for
    failing to argue that the trial court's unsupported opinion that his trafficking in
    prescription drugs probably accounted for well over ten to twenty deaths impermissibly
    influenced the sentencing decision. Mr. Challis acknowledges that his trial counsel did
    not object to the court's accusation, but he argues that appellate counsel should have
    -3-
    raised the issue as one of fundamental error. See Jackson v. State, 
    983 So. 2d 562
    ,
    574 (Fla. 2008) ("[A]n unpreserved error may be considered on appeal only if the error
    is fundamental.").
    To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, Mr.
    Challis must show that appellate counsel's performance fell " 'measurably outside the
    range of professionally acceptable performance' " and that counsel's deficient
    performance prejudiced him by undermining confidence in the result of the appeal.
    Rutherford v. Moore, 
    774 So. 2d 637
    , 643 (Fla. 2000) (quoting Thompson v. State, 
    759 So. 2d 650
    , 660 (Fla. 2000)). Because the error alleged by Mr. Challis was not
    preserved, appellate counsel cannot be deemed ineffective for failing to raise it on
    appeal unless it is fundamental error. See Downs v. Moore, 
    801 So. 2d 906
    , 910 (Fla.
    2001). In order to establish fundamental error, Mr. Challis must initially show that the
    error was harmful or prejudiced him. See Reed v. State, 
    837 So. 2d 366
    , 370 (Fla.
    2002) ("[A]ll fundamental error is harmful error. However, we likewise caution that not
    all harmful error is fundamental."); accord Berube v. State, 
    149 So. 3d 1165
    , 1168 (Fla.
    2d DCA 2014) (noting that under the fundamental error analysis articulated in Reed,
    "[f]irst, the defendant must show that an unpreserved error is harmful or prejudicial. If
    that is demonstrated, the defendant must then establish that the error reaches the level
    of a fundamental error").
    "[A] sentence based on mere allegation or surmise violates the
    fundamental constitutional rights of the defendant . . . [and] is reviewable as
    fundamental error." Martinez v. State, 
    123 So. 3d 701
    , 704 (Fla. 1st DCA 2013); accord
    Yisrael v. State, 
    65 So. 3d 1177
    , 1177 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011) ("Fundamental error occurs
    -4-
    where a trial court considers constitutionally impermissible factors when imposing a
    sentence."). This is an exception to the rule that a sentence within statutory limits is
    generally not subject to review. See Nawaz v. State, 
    28 So. 3d 122
    , 124 (Fla. 1st DCA
    2010).
    Many cases addressing a trial court's consideration of impermissible
    factors in sentencing a defendant involve statements made by the court before
    sentence was imposed. For example, in Yisrael, the trial court asked the defendant at
    sentencing whether he had "rape[d] these other children," and it stated that there were
    other victims who did not want to testify. 
    65 So. 3d at 1178
    . Finding that these
    statements strongly indicated that the trial court's decision to impose the maximum
    allowable sentence was influenced by dismissed and pending charges, the First District
    reversed and remanded for resentencing before a different judge. Id.; see also
    Martinez, 
    123 So. 3d at 705
     (finding that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to
    argue that the trial court erred in accepting as fact the State's argument that the murder
    was over drugs); Reese v. State, 
    639 So. 2d 1067
    , 1068 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994) (reversing
    and remanding for resentencing before a different judge because the State argued at
    sentencing that Reese was a principal in other drug offenses for which he was not
    charged and the trial court stated that it would take that into consideration in deciding
    Reese's sentence); Cook v. State, 
    647 So. 2d 1066
    , 1067 (Fla. 3d DCA 1994) (holding
    that it could not be said from the record as a whole that the trial court did not take
    impermissible factors into consideration when it stated that the verdict was a jury pardon
    and was more a tribute to counsel's skills than to the truth); Epprecht v. State, 
    488 So. 2d 129
    , 130-31 (Fla. 3d DCA 1986) (reversing and remanding for resentencing before a
    -5-
    different judge because when Epprecht stated that he had never hurt anyone, the trial
    court retorted by saying, among other things, that when someone like Epprecht was
    found guilty in so many cases, there were probably many more offenses that he had
    committed that had not come to the State's attention). But when a trial court's
    comments during the sentencing hearing indicate that it considered an impermissible
    factor in imposing sentence, it matters not whether the court made the statement before
    or after it imposed sentence.
    In context, the challenged statement in this case indicates that the trial
    court would not look favorably on a future motion to mitigate partly due to speculation
    that Mr. Challis's trafficking "probably account[ed] for well over 10 to 20 deaths."
    Because it appears that this articulated speculation would influence the trial court's
    decision on a motion to mitigate, Mr. Challis could rationally believe that the trial court
    was silently influenced by the same assumption. Cf. Nawaz, 
    28 So. 3d at 125
     ("[F]or
    justice to be done, it must also appear to be done."). If the trial court's decision about
    Mr. Challis's sentence was influenced by its speculation that his actions resulted in
    numerous deaths, this harmed Mr. Challis by violating his due process rights. See
    Martinez, 
    123 So. 3d at 703
    . And because consideration of an improper factor such as
    uncharged offenses goes to the heart of the sentencing process, the error is
    fundamental. See Martinez v. State, 
    933 So. 2d 1155
    , 1159 (Fla. 3d DCA 2006)
    ("Fundamental error . . . refers to error that goes to the very heart of the judicial
    process.").
    The record does not demonstrate that the trial court did not inappropriately
    consider uncharged crimes when imposing Mr. Challis's sentence. If appellate counsel
    -6-
    had raised this issue on appeal, we would have been constrained to reverse.
    Accordingly, we grant Mr. Challis's petition. Because a new appeal would be
    redundant, we reverse Mr. Challis's sentences and remand for a new sentencing
    hearing before a different judge. See Anderson v. State, 
    988 So. 2d 144
    ,146 (Fla. 1st
    DCA 2008).
    Petition granted; reversed and remanded for resentencing.
    WALLACE, KHOUZAM, and BLACK, JJ., Concur.
    -7-