Courts don’t need a charging document for jurisdiction, but do need a pretty good reason to impose consecutive terms
State v. Bautista (HSC September 13, 2023)
Background. The prosecution filed a complaint in the district
court alleging seven crimes of violence against Rommel Bautista, including
attempted murder in the second degree. All of the charges stemmed from an
incident that occurred between Bautista and his wife in their home in Kahului.
The district court held a preliminary hearing and found probable cause
supported every count. The district court confirmed bail and committed the case
to the circuit court.
The prosecution did not file a complaint in the
circuit court. At the arraignment, Bautista pleaded not guilty. Five months
later, the parties reached an agreement. Bautista pleaded no contest to three
class C felonies: assault in the second degree, terroristic threatening in the
first degree, and abuse of a family or household member in the presence of a
minor. All other counts—including the attempted murder and assault in the first
degree—were dismissed. There were no agreements as to sentencing. The circuit
court—with the Honorable Judge Rhonda I. L. Loo presiding—accepted the plea, found
him guilty of the three offenses, and ordered a presentence investigation and
report.
The PSI report included supportive letters from
Bautista’s family, coworkers, and his wife, the complainant. She wrote that the
incident “did not have any lasting effects on me. The only effect it has had on
our son is that his father is gone and he misses his father. Please we ask for
your help and kindness to lessen him years in jail.” She added this was the
first time Bautista hit him and “despite what happened that night I feel safe
with him if he could be on probation and be given another chance.”
At the sentencing hearing, Bautista’s wife,
parents, and sister sat in the courtroom. Bautista appeared on zoom from the
jail and was not brought up due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He agreed to waive
his physical presence for the sentencing hearing. At the hearing, the
prosecution asked the court to sentence Bautista to three consecutive five-year
terms of imprisonment for a total of 15 years. Bautista argued for probation.
The court addressed Bautista. “Mr. Bautista, you
know, what’s worse than a jealous man is a drunk, jealous man. And that night
you . . . were drinking a lot of tequila, and you went off on your wife.” The court
recounted the incident and the impact it had on children exposed to domestic
violence. The court recounted the complaining witness’s injuries and commented
that “there was no part of your wife’s body that was not untouched.” The court then
commented on Bautista’s letter that was in the PSI report:
You know, Mr. Bautista, your statement to the
Court that you wrote was: ‘I’d like to spread my wings, fly high again, and
catch . . . my dreams.’ . . . Sure sounds like a caged bird to me. Well, I know
Big Bird, Angry Birds, and jail birds. And you know what we do with jailbirds?
. . . We clip their wings and we keep them locked up in cages.
The court acknowledged the lack of criminal
record, but said it was a “very severe case” and the offenses were “so serious
you could have killed your wife.” And while she “maybe now . . . has changed
her tune, she thought that night that she as going to die.” The court then
sentenced Bautista:
So the Court feels that
there’s a need for respect for the law and you need to be justly punished and
afford adequate deterrence to everyone. Will five years protect her and your family?
I don’t think so. Will ten years protect your wife and your family? I don’t
think so. Will fifteen years protect your wife and your family? Perhaps.
The court sentenced him to the fifteen years—three
five-year terms running consecutively. Bautista moved to reconsider the
sentence. The court—this time with the Hon. Judge Kirstin M. Hamman presiding—denied
the motion. Bautista appealed and the ICA affirmed. Bautista petitioned for a
writ of cert, which was accepted.
The circuit court had jurisdiction to sentence—even
without a charging document filed in the circuit court. Bautista first presented a
jurisdictional challenge. After the preliminary hearing, the case was committed
to the circuit court and the prosecution did not file a charging document.
Bautista argued that without a charging document in the circuit court, the
circuit court did not have jurisdiction to accept the no-contest plea, find him
guilty, and sentence him. “Jurisdiction is defined as the power and authority
on the part of the court to hear and judicially determine and dispose of the
cause pending before it.” Schwartz v. State, 136 Hawai'i 258, 262, 361
P.3d 1161, 1165 (2015).
The HSC rejected Bautista’s argument that without
a charging document filed in the circuit court, the circuit court lacked
jurisdiction. The HSC specifically rejected his reliance on State v. Kaulia,
128 Hawai'i 479, 291 P.3d 377 (2013). In that case, the HSC held that after the
defendant demanded a jury trial for assault in the third degree and after the
prosecution moved to amend the complaint to aver a petty misdemeanor, the
district court lacked jurisdiction on remand because the prosecution failed to
file an amended charging document averring the petty misdemeanor. Id. at
491, 291 P.3d at 389.
The HSC explained that the jurisdictional problem
in Kaulia was that the prosecution did not file an amended complaint in
the district court and no “valid charging document re-established district
court jurisdiction. Instead, the original misdemeanor complaint was still in
play. That meant Kaulia retained his constitutional right to a jury trial, and
the circuit court still had jurisdiction.” This, according to the HSC, was
different. The prosecution charged Bautista with felony offenses and the case
was committed to the circuit court without an amendment of the charges. The
charges did not change when the case was committed to the circuit court. There being
no amendment to the charge, there was no need to file a charging document in
the circuit court.
Narrowing Obrero. The HSC also rejected
Bautista’s reliance on State v. Obrero, 151 Hawai'i 472, 517 P.3d 755 (2022).
Circuit courts have jurisdiction over “offenses cognizable under the laws of the
State, committed within their respective circuits or transferred to them for trial
by change of venue from some other circuit.” HRS § 603-21.5(a)(1). “Cognizable
means capable of being known or recognized, or capable of being judicially tried
or examined before a designated tribunal; within the court’s jurisdiction.” State
v. Obrero, 151 Hawai'i at 478 n. 12, 517 P.3d at 761 n. 12. Here, the
charging document pleaded cognizable offenses and it did not matter that it was
filed in the district court.
The HSC also rejected Bautista’s argument that the
prosecution violated HRS § 801-1, a statute that required an indictment to be
filed before the arraignment pursuant to Obrero. The HSC held that Obrero
does not apply retroactively.
We hold that Obrero applies
to cases that were pending trial before the decision. Obrero does not
apply retroactively to defendant who pled out or to defendants convicted after
a trial. So defendants awaiting sentencing, or those challenging a charging
instrument’s validity for the first time on appeal (like Bautista) or even
later per HRPP Rule 40, are foreclosed from having their pleas nullified or
their trial conviction overturned per HRS § 801-1.
The HSC reasoned, among other things, that “vacating
virtually every conviction initiated by a felony complaint does not” further the
interests of justice.
The Rules of Penal Procedure do not Require a
Second Complaint in the Circuit Court. The HSC also rejected Bautista’s argument that the
penal rules contemplate that a complaint be filed in the circuit court after a
preliminary hearing in the district court.
A complaint may be filed
in either the district or circuit court; provided that a complaint shall not be
filed initially in the circuit court when it charges: (i) a felony, and none of
the 3 conditions set for in Rule 7(b) of these rules has yet occurred, or (ii)
only an offense or offenses other than a felony.
HRPP Rule 7(h)(2). HRPP Rule 7(b) identified the
three conditions: a finding of probable cause by the district court after a
preliminary hearing; the defendant waiving the right to a preliminary hearing;
or the defendant waiting the right to an indictment.
According to the HSC, because there was no waiver
of indictment or preliminary hearing, and because there was a preliminary
hearing and finding of probable cause, HRPP Rule 5(c) applied: “If the defendant
is held to answer in the circuit court, the court shall transmit to the circuit
court all papers and articles received in evidence at the preliminary hearing
and any bail received by it.”
The HSC held that no rule requires a scone
complaint to be filed in the circuit court. While the complaint “may be filed
in either the district or circuit court,” HRPP Rule 7(h)(2), it is not required
to do both. The circuit court had jurisdiction to sentence Bautista.
Each consecutive term of imprisonment requires an adequate
on-the-record basis. The
sentencing court must consider the factors in HRS § 706-606 when imposing any sentence.
Id. The sentencing court is presumed to have reviewed and considered these
factors absent any evidence to the contrary. State v. Hussein, 122 Hawai'i
495, 518, 229 P.3d 313, 336 (2010).
While courts may impose consecutive terms of
imprisonment, “there exists a presumption that multiple terms of imprisonment
run concurrently, unless the court orders or the [applicable] statute mandates
that the terms run consecutively.” Lewi v. State, 145 Hawai'i 333, 350,
452 P.3d 330, 347 (2019). The sentencing court is required to explain the need
for consecutive sentences as opposed to the presumed concurrent sentence. Id.
at 351, 452 P.3d at 348.
Thus, a sentencing court must put on the record “a
meaningful rationale to the defendant, the victim, and the public” when imposing
consecutive terms of imprisonment. State v. Hussein, 122 Hawai'i 509,
229 P.3d at 327. When the sentencing court uses the same factors to justify
multiple consecutive sentences, it must still “specify . . . or identify another
basis for determining how many consecutive sentences to impose.” Barrios,
139 Hawai'i at 337, 389 P.3d at 932. A “clearly articulated rationale is
necessary when there is a large disparity between the maximum statutory
sentence for each offense and the aggregate consecutive sentence imposed by the
court.” Id. at 338, 389 P.3d at 933. This must be given for “each and
every consecutive sentence.” State v. Sandoval, 149 Hawai'i 221, 236,
487 P.3d 308, 323 (2021).
The sentencing court did not provide an adequate
basis for each consecutive sentence. The HSC held that the sentencing court did not
follow these “stringent” directives. The sentencing court’s rationale was that “perhaps”
fifteen years would protect the complaining witness and Bautista’s family. This
was not enough. The HSC noted that the rationale
“must be tethered to each consecutive sentence. The court acted as if it were
sentencing Bautista to one count with a potential range of 0 to 15 years.” The
HSC emphasized the need for “substantial and pointed reasons to justify a
consecutive sentence.” Reciting sentencing factors may sometimes work for
concurrent terms, but not consecutive ones. The HSC noted that the sentencing
court did not distinguish the three offenses and treated them all as a single
offense. “Stacking sentences after merely reciting a case’s circumstances is an
abuse of discretion.”
Finally, it noted that consecutive terms are severe. “Our law requires a court to do much more than express a desire to clip a person’s wings, and put them in a cage.” The HSC vacated the judgment and remanded for resentencing.
Comments