TOMMIE BROWN V. COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
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AS MODIFIED: December 15, 2009
RENDERED : OCTOBER 29, 2009
TO BE PUBLISHED
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2008-SC-000281-MR
APPEAL FROM FULTON CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE TIMOTHY A. LANGFORD, JUDGE
NO . 07-CR-00133
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
APPELLEE
OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE NOBLE
AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING AND VACATING IN PART
Appellant Tommie Brown was convicted in the Fulton Circuit Court of
first-degree fleeing or evading police, first-degree wanton endangerment, two
counts of second-degree wanton endangerment, reckless driving, disregarding
a stop sign, driving on a suspended license, and being a first-degree persistent
felony offender . On appeal, Appellant raises four issues . First, he argues that
he was entitled to a directed verdict as to the first-degree wanton
endangerment charge . Second, he argues that the judge erred in allowing the
jury to hear testimony of his passenger's age and in referring to her age in jury
instructions . Third, he argues that his convictions for first-degree fleeing or
evading police and wanton endangerment constitute double jeopardy . Last, he
argues that approving statements the judge made about the jury's sentencing
recommendation shows that he was denied a fair tribunal during sentencing.
For the reasons set forth below, Appellant's two convictions for second-degree
wanton endangerment are reversed and vacated, and all others are affirmed .
I. Background
Near midnight on November 25, 2007, Officer Vincent, Officer Latta, and
Trooper Miller were operating a checkpoint, looking for drunk drivers. Officer
Vincent saw Appellant driving his car on a nearby cemetery road, a route which
circumvented the checkpoint . Officer Vincent then left the checkpoint to
observe Appellant's driving.
Soon after Officer Vincent began observing Appellant's driving, Appellant
began accelerating away from him. Once Appellant was driving above the
speed limit, Officer Vincent attempted to pull him over by turning on his lights
and siren . Appellant continued accelerating, and a chase ensued. During the
chase, Officer Vincent's top speed reached almost eighty miles per hour. The
roads had speed limits of twenty-five and thirty-five miles per hour .
During the chase, Appellant nearly caused three accidents. First, while
driving down the center of the road, Appellant caused a driver coming from the
opposite direction to swerve off the road to avoid a head-on collision with him.
Later, another car had to swerve onto the sidewalk for the same reason. And at
one point, Appellant lost control of his car, drove onto someone's front yard,
and then drove between a telephone pole and a tree . Officer Vincent testified
that the distance between the pole and the tree was so narrow that he was
surprised Appellant's car could even fit through it .
Approximately ten minutes into the chase, Officer Latta and Trooper
Miller closed down the checkpoint to assist Officer Vincent. They eventually
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caught up to him and Appellant, and they estimated that their top speed was
between fifty and seventy miles per hour. Eventually, Appellant stopped in
front of his mother's house, where the officers arrested him . Also in the car
was Appellant's sixteen-year-old niece .
At trial, the jury was informed of the passenger's age, over Appellant's
objection. During the penalty phase, the three officers referred to her as a
"juvenile" and a "high school student ." Additionally, the judge's instructions
for second-degree wanton endangerment to the passenger described her as "his
[Appellant's] passenger a high school student." Appellant did not object to the
offered instructions or offer alternative instructions .
The jury convicted Appellant of first-degree wanton endangerment of his
passenger, second-degree wanton endangerment of Officer Vincent and of
Officer Latta, reckless driving, disregarding a stop sign, driving on a suspended
license, and being a first-degree persistent felony offender .
After the jury gave the judge its sentencing recommendations, the judge
told the jury that he "would have found exactly the same as [they] found" and
that Appellant's misdemeanor convictions of second-degree wanton
endangerment to the two police officers was "[c]ertainly worth" the sentence the
jury recommended . He also stated, however, that he was "not sure [he]'d have
found him guilty in regard to a felony . . . given the circumstances and
evidence ."
Appellant was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment . He appeals to
this Court as a matter of right. Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b) .
11 . Analysis
A. Directed Verdict of Acquittal
As this Court stated in Commonwealth v . Benham, 816 S .W.2d 186 (Ky .
1991), "On appellate review, the test of a directed verdict is, if under the
evidence as a whole, it would be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find
guilt . . . ." Id. at 187 . The test this Court must employ, therefore, is whether
the jury was clearly unreasonable in convicting Appellant of first-degree
wanton endangerment, given the evidence introduced at trial .
A person is guilty of first-degree wanton endangerment if, "under
circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life, he
wantonly engages in conduct which creates a substantial danger of death or
serious physical injury to another person." KRS 508.060(l) . With respect to
the first element, this Court has held that "whether wanton conduct
demonstrates extreme indifference to human life is a question to be decided by
the trier of fact." Brown v. Commonwealth , 975 S .W .2d 922, 924 (Ky. 1998) .
In this case, the jury's verdict was not clearly unreasonable. The jury
concluded that the Appellant's conduct, which included driving late at night,
sometimes down the middle of the road, at perhaps triple the speed limit,
created a substantial danger of death or serious physical injury to his
passenger. Finding such a danger seems quite reasonable given this evidence .
In fact, Appellant nearly caused two high-speed, head-on collisions, and he
barely avoided crashing into a tree and telephone pole. Although Appellant
avoided getting into a catastrophic accident, the evidence supports that he
repeatedly foisted the risk of catastrophic injury onto his passenger.
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Nevertheless, this issue is not properly preserved for appeal . A party
may not complain on appeal that an instruction was defective unless that party
objected to its defect at trial or offered at trial an alternative instruction without
the defect. CR 51(3); Burke Enterprises, Inc . v. Mitchell , 700 S .W.2d 789, 792
(Ky. 1985) . The record shows that Appellant did not object to the judge's
instruction and did not offer an alternative one. Accordingly, this Court will
scrutinize the instruction only for palpable error . RCr 10.26 .
This Court finds that the error, if any, was not palpable as no "manifest
injustice has resulted." Id. The jury already knew that Appellant's passenger
was a high school student, and regardless, Appellant was convicted of wantonly
endangering her under an instruction that did not refer to her age . Thus, this
is not reversible error.
C. Double Jeopardy
"No person shall, for the same offense, be twice put in jeopardy of his life
or limb . . . ." Ky. Const. § 13 ; accord U .S . Const. amend. V. Under Kentucky
law, the test for whether a person has been put twice in jeopardy for the same
offense is the same as was stated in Blockburger v. United States , 284 U.S .
299 (1932) . See Dixon v . Commonwealth , 263 S.W.3d 583, 588-89 (Ky . 2008)
(recounting that although this state once departed from the Blockburger test, it
now relies on it to resolve double jeopardy claims) ; Beaty v. Commonwealth ,
125 S .W .3d 196, 210 (Ky. 2003) (finding that KRS 505.020 codified the
Blockburger test) . In Blockburger, the U.S . Supreme Court held that "where
the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory
provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or
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only one, is whether each provision requires proof of a fact which the other
does not." Blockburger , 284 U .S. at 304 .
Accordingly, resolving Appellant's double jeopardy claim requires
comparing the provisions under which he was convicted . First, this Court will
compare the provisions for Appellant's first-degree fleeing or evading police and
his second-degree wanton endangerment convictions . Then this Court will do
the same with his first-degree fleeing or evading police and first-degree wanton
endangerment convictions.'
1 . Second-Degree Wanton Endangerment Conviction
The provision under which Appellant was convicted of first-degree fleeing
or evading police requires :
while operating a motor vehicle with intent to elude or flee, the
person knowingly or wantonly disobeys a direction to stop his or
her motor vehicle, given by a person recognized to be a police
officer, and . . . [b]y fleeing or eluding, the person is the cause, or
creates a substantial risk, of serious physical injury or death to
any person or property . . . .
KRS 520.095(1) . The provision under which Appellant was convicted of
second-degree wanton endangerment requires : "wantonly engag[ing] in conduct
which creates a substantial danger of physical injury to another person." KRS
508 .070(1) .
First-degree fleeing or evading police contains proof of four facts that
second-degree wanton endangerment does not. Specifically, first-degree fleeing
or evading police requires proof that the accused was operating a motor
1 Appellant's brief on this issue is confused . His heading refers to first-degree wanton
endangerment, but the body of that section seems to discuss only second-degree
wanton endangerment . This Court will discuss both.
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vehicle, had intent to elude or flee, disobeyed a police officer's direction to stop,
and that the risk of physical injury was serious. Second-degree wanton
endangerment requires proof of none of these facts .
Second-degree wanton endangerment, however, requires proof of no fact
beyond first-degree fleeing or evading police . Both provisions are satisfied by
proof of wantonly engaging in certain conduct which creates a substantial
danger of serious physical injury to another person . For second-degree wanton
endangerment, the conduct is general and open-ended; for first-degree fleeing
or evading police, the conduct is specified as intentionally fleeing from police
while operating a motor vehicle . It follows, therefore, that once the
Commonwealth proved the specific conduct required to convict Appellant of
first-degree fleeing or evading police, it necessarily proved the general conduct
necessary to convict him of second-degree wanton endangerment, too .
Consequently, Appellant's convictions for first-degree fleeing or evading
police and second-degree wanton endangerment constitute double jeopardy.
Given that first-degree fleeing or evading police is a felony and that seconddegree wanton endangerment is a misdemeanor, the remedy is to vacate the
lesser offenses of wanton endangerment. Clark v. Commonwealth, 267 S .W .3d
668, 678 (Ky. 2008) . This is because the principle of double jeopardy prohibits
the Commonwealth from "punish[ing] a single episode as multiple offenses,"
not from "carv[ing] out of a single criminal episode the most serious offense."
Id. (quoting Commonwealth v. Burge, 947 S.W.2d 805, 811 (Ky. 1996)) . Given
that Appellant's second-degree wanton endangerment convictions would result
in concurrently running sentences of 365 days, KRS 532 .110, and that his
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,;vuyrrmr (~ourf of ~irnfurhV
2008-SC-000281-MR
TOMMIE BROWN
..
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM FULTON CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE TIMOTHY A . LANGFORD, JUDGE
1010 . 07-CR-00133
V.
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
APPELLEE
ORDER
On the Court's own motion, the Opinion of the Court by Justice Noble
rendered October 29, 2009 in the above styled case shall be modified by the
substitution of new pages 1 and 7 of the opinion as attached hereto . Said
modification does not affect the holding, and is made only to reflect
modification on page 7, line 15, by changing the words 'Ky. Const. § 12' to 'Ky .
Const. § 13.'
Entered : December 15, 2009 .
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