People of Michigan v. Matthew John Scotton ( 2017 )


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  •                           STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                   UNPUBLISHED
    May 11, 2017
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                  No. 332864
    Charlevoix Circuit Court
    MATTHEW JOHN SCOTTON,                                              LC No. 13-014711-FC
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: SAWYER, P.J., and MURRAY and GLEICHER, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    A jury convicted defendant of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, felonious assault, and
    domestic violence after he attacked his long-term girlfriend. In a previous appeal, we rejected
    defendant’s challenges to the scoring of various offense and prior record variables, but remanded
    pursuant to People v Lockridge, 
    498 Mich. 358
    ; 870 NW2d 502 (2015), and Crosby v United
    States, 397 F3d 103 (CA 2, 2005), because OV 11 had been scored based on judge-found facts.
    People v Scotton, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 24,
    2015 (Docket Nos. 321370; 325372), unpub op at 5-9. On remand, the trial court reaffirmed the
    earlier imposed sentences. Defendant now raises a new challenge to the scoring of OV 11.
    Defendant waived this argument by failing to raise it in the initial appeal. In any event, we
    discern no error and affirm.
    I. PROCEEDINGS FOLLOWING REMAND
    Following our 2015 decision, defendant filed an application for leave to appeal to the
    Michigan Supreme Court. The Supreme Court held defendant’s application in abeyance pending
    its decision in People v Comer, 
    312 Mich. App. 538
    ; 879 NW2d 306 (2015). People v Scotton,
    ___ Mich ___; 885 NW2d 467 (2016). The Supreme Court’s decision could affect only
    defendant’s challenge to the lifetime electronic monitoring provision of his judgment of
    sentence. It therefore does not interfere with our resolution of the current appeal.
    On remand in the trial court, defendant filed a sentencing memorandum, claiming for the
    first time that the trial court improperly scored OV 11 based on a second CSC charge of which
    he was acquitted. The trial court acknowledged that the 25-point assessment for OV 11 was
    based on judicial fact-finding and that the addition of these points increased defendant’s
    minimum sentencing guidelines range from 51 to 85 months to 81 to 135 months. However,
    “[t]he [c]ourt determine[d] that it would not have imposed a different sentence knowing that the
    -1-
    guidelines range is now advisory pursuant to” Lockridge. The trial court did not specifically
    address defendant’s new challenge to OV 11.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Defendant now challenges the scoring of OV 11 and the length of his sentences. He
    contends that his sentences are disproportionate because he “is not the sort of defendant who
    requires nor deserves an excess of incarceration. . . .” However, his proportionality challenge is
    based entirely on his claim that the trial court improperly scored OV 11 based on conduct
    underlying a charge for which he was acquitted by the jury.
    Defendant was charged with various offenses arising out of the physical and sexual
    assault of his girlfriend, DK, over August 27 and 28, 2013. The jury convicted defendant of one
    count of CSC-I for forceful penile-oral penetration causing injury. The jury acquitted defendant
    of a second count of CSC-I based on an act of penile-vaginal penetration later in the night.
    Defendant claimed at trial that this act was consensual. DK testified that she was frightened and
    only complied in the intercourse to prevent further violence.
    When imposing sentence, the trial court assessed 25 points for OV 11, which requires the
    court to “[s]core all sexual penetration of the victim by the offender arising out of the sentencing
    offense.” MCL 777.41(2)(a). The court found by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    penile-vaginal penetration had occurred and arose out of the sentencing offense—forced penile-
    oral penetration—supporting a 25-point score under MCL 777.41(1)(b) (“One criminal sexual
    penetration occurred.”). See MCL 777.41(2)(c) (instructing courts not to score the penetration
    upon which the CSC-I charge is based).
    In his first appeal, defendant contended only that the second penetration did not arise out
    of the sentencing offense. We rejected that challenge, holding that “[t]he penetration that
    occurred at 3:00 a.m. arose out of the sentencing offense because it occurred as part of a
    continuous sequence of criminal acts that were more than just incidentally related to each other.”
    Scotton, unpub op at 8. In remanding for resentencing, we acknowledged that the trial court
    based the OV 11 score on conduct underlying a charge of which defendant had been acquitted.
    We did not hold this improper, but remanded because the judge was required to independently
    find that defendant had committed the act. 
    Id. at 8-9.
    Defendant now claims that the scoring of OV 11 was improper because it required the
    trial court to score points for an offense of which defendant had been acquitted by a jury.
    However, defendant waived this issue by not raising it in the first appeal.
    “[T]he principles of res judicata require that a party bring in the initial appeal all issues
    which were then present and could have and should have been raised,” and the failure to do so
    results in abandonment of the challenge. VanderWall v Midkiff, 
    186 Mich. App. 191
    , 201-202;
    463 NW2d 219 (1990). Here, defendant did not raise this challenge to the scoring of OV 11 in
    his initial appeal as of right or in his application for leave to appeal our prior opinion to the
    Supreme Court. Defendant has thereby waived or abandoned his challenge. He cannot now seek
    relief at this late stage of the proceedings.
    -2-
    In any event, defendant can establish no error. “Although a trial court may not make an
    independent finding of guilt with respect to a crime for which a defendant has been acquitted,
    and then sentence the defendant on the basis of that finding, the court in fashioning an
    appropriate sentence may consider the evidence offered at trial, including other criminal
    activities established even though the defendant was acquitted of the charges . . . .” People v
    Compagnari, 
    233 Mich. App. 233
    , 236; 590 NW2d 302 (1998). As found by four out of five
    justices considering the issue in People v Ewing, 
    435 Mich. 443
    ; 458 NW2d 880 (1990), “such
    conduct could be taken into account at sentencing because an acquittal does not necessarily mean
    that the defendant did not engage in criminal conduct, but only demonstrates a lack of proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” People v Harris, 
    190 Mich. App. 652
    , 663; 476 NW2d 767 (1991).
    See People v Hardy, 
    494 Mich. 430
    , 438; 835 NW2d 340 (2013) (holding that a scoring decision
    need only be supported by the lesser preponderance-of-the-evidence burden). “A trial court may
    consider facts concerning uncharged offenses, pending charges, and even acquittals, provided
    that the defendant is afforded the opportunity to challenge the information and, if challenged, it
    is substantiated by a preponderance of the evidence.” People v Golba, 
    273 Mich. App. 603
    , 614;
    729 NW2d 916 (2007) (emphasis added). And as more recently reasoned in People v Stokes,
    
    312 Mich. App. 181
    , 194; 877 NW2d 752 (2015), the only error emanating from the trial court’s
    reliance on conduct underlying an acquitted charge was that the court engaged in fact-finding,
    leading to an increase in the defendant’s minimum sentencing guidelines range, without
    recognizing that the guidelines should be advisory.
    Here, the trial court was already warned that the guidelines are advisory and, in light of
    its reliance on judicially found facts, that it must determine “whether it would have imposed a
    different sentence.” Scotton, unpub op at 8. The trial court expressly indicated “that it would not
    have imposed a different sentence.” The court found by a preponderance of the evidence that
    one sexual penetration occurred, in addition to the penetration underlying the sentencing offense,
    to support it score for OV 11. There is no further error for this Court to remedy.
    We affirm.
    /s/ David H. Sawyer
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher
    -3-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 332864

Filed Date: 5/11/2017

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021