Supreme Court of Louisiana
FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE NEWS RELEASE #035
FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
The Opinions handed down on the 1st day of July, 2014, are as follows:
PER CURIAM:
2013-C -2982 STATE OF LOUISIANA v. LEONARD CARDENAS, III (Parish of E. Baton
Rouge)
We express no opinion here whether respondent may be entitled to
expungement of his record of arrest and conviction for domestic
abuse battery under this latest expression of legislative will.
DECISION OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT REVERSED; ORDERS OF EXPUNGEMENT
VACATED.
HUGHES, J., dissents and would deny the application and affirm
the decisions of the lower courts.
07/01/14
SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
NO. 13-C-2982
STATE OF LOUISIANA
V.
LEONARD CARDENAS, III
On Writ of Certiorari to the
First Circuit Court of Appeal, Parish of East Baton Rouge
PER CURIAM:
We granted the state’s application to review the decision of the First Circuit
affirming the district court’s order of expungement entered in respondent’s case
following the court’s set aside of his misdemeanor conviction and sentence for
domestic abuse battery with child endangerment in violation of La.R.S.14:35.3(I),
and dismissal of the prosecution under La.C.Cr.P. art. 894. The district court
entered the order, and the court of appeal affirmed, notwithstanding La.R.S.
44:9(A)(5)(b), which provides that “[n]o person shall be entitled to an
expungement if the misdemeanor conviction arose from circumstances involving a
sexual act or act of domestic violence.” For reasons that follow, we reverse the
decision of the court of appeal and vacate the expungement order under the law as
it currently exists.
In September 2006, the state charged respondent with domestic abuse
battery involving an incident with his wife that occurred on July 19, 2006 in the
presence of their minor child. A bench trial took place on April 4, 2007, and the
court found respondent guilty as charged. The court sentenced him to six months
imprisonment, suspended all but 60 days of that term, directed home incarceration
for the executory portion of the sentence, and imposed one year of active probation
with a variety of special conditions. The trial court terminated the probation as
successfully completed on May 19, 2010. Thereafter, defendant filed a motion to
reconsider sentence in which he requested that the court set aside his conviction
and dismiss the prosecution under La.C.Cr.P. art. 894. The court granted the
motion over the state’s objection on May 18, 2011. Respondent then filed an
Expungement Form on July 28, 2011, seeking to expunge his arrest and conviction
record for domestic abuse battery with child endangerment. The district court
granted the motion on August 23, 2011 and directed counsel to prepare the order of
expungement. Two such orders appear in the record. The first, dated September 5,
2012, and apparently stamped with the judge’s signature, directs the named parties
to “expunge any and all public records of the arrest and disposition . . . the date of
arrest being on or about July 19, 2006, and the disposition of these charges namely,
DOMESTIC ABUSE BATTERY WITH CHILD ENDANGERMENT
(MISDEMEANOR).” The second, dated September 17, 2012, drafted by
counsel and signed by the judge, directs the named parties to expunge only the
record of respondent’s arrest on July 19, 2006.
The state appealed to the First Circuit, arguing that the district court had
erred as an initial matter by granting respondent’s motion to reconsider sentence
after he finished serving it and setting aside his conviction, and then in ordering
expungement of the records relating to the prosecution in apparent complete
disregard of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(b). In a split-panel decision, the First Circuit
declined to revisit the district court’s judgment granting respondent’s motion to
reconsider sentence and affirmed the court’s expungement order. State v.
2
Cardenas, 13-0509 (La. App. 1 Cir. 11/26/13) (unpub’d).1 The majority conceded
at the outset that Louisiana’s expungement law is convoluted and confusing.
Cardenas, 13-0509 at 7 (“‘Our observation that the clarity of these laws, as
amended, leaves much to be desired.’”) (quoting State v. Savoie, 92-1586, p. 2 (La.
5/23/94), 637 So.2d 408, 409). The majority nevertheless divided expungement of
misdemeanor arrest and/or conviction records into three general categories: (1)
R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a) applies to the expungement or destruction of conviction records
in misdemeanor prosecutions that are dismissed pursuant to La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B);
(2) R.S. 44:9(A)(1)(b) applies to the expungement of arrest records when a
misdemeanor prosecution has been instituted “and such proceedings have been
1
With regard to misdemeanor convictions, La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(A)(1) permits a trial court to
suspend the imposition or execution of sentence and place the defendant on active or inactive
probation. When imposition of sentence has been deferred, La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B)(1) provides
that if the court finds “at the conclusion of the period of deferral that the defendant has not been
convicted of any other offense during the period of the deferred sentence, and that no criminal
charge is pending against him, the court may set the conviction aside and dismiss the
prosecution.”
In the present case, the trial court did not defer the imposition of sentence but suspended
execution of all but 60 days of the six-month sentence imposed. The option of setting aside the
conviction and dismissing the prosecution would ordinarily not be available under that
circumstance, but in its written judgment, dated April 27, 2011, granting respondent’s motion to
reconsider sentence, the court adverted to La.C.Cr.P. art. 881.1(A)(2) which provides that in
misdemeanor cases, a defendant may move to reconsider sentence at any time “following
commencement or execution of such sentence” and the court may “grant the motion and amend
the sentence, even following completion of execution of the sentence, to impose a lesser sentence
which could lawfully have been imposed.” On the premise that a deferred sentence as a matter
of La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(A)(1) is a lesser sentence for purposes of La.C.Cr.P. art. 881.1(A)(2), the
district court vacated defendant’s original sentence and deferred imposition of sentence under the
same terms of probation as originally imposed. Respondent had successfully fulfilled those
conditions and the court accordingly set aside his conviction and dismissed the prosecution under
La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B)(1). The court acknowledged that when domestic abuse battery involves
child endangerment, the minimum mandatory term of imprisonment for a first offense “shall be
served without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence.” R.S. 14:35.3(C). The
court further noted, however, that when the legislature intends to eliminate deferral of sentence
as an option, it does so expressly. See, e.g., La.R.S. 14:80(D)(1) (in cases of felony carnal
knowledge of a juvenile, “the defendant shall not be eligible to have his conviction set aside or
his prosecution dismissed in accordance with the provisions of Code of Criminal Procedure
Article 893.”). No such restriction exists in R.S. 14:35.3 and after noting the salutary effects of
the law for those offenders able to complete a probationary term successfully, the court found
“no basis in law or in fact” for denying the motion to reconsider.
The First Circuit declined to review the merits of the court’s judgment in this respect
because the state, although objecting at the time, did not timely seek review and the judgment
therefore became final before the state appealed from the subsequent order of expungement.
Cardenas, 13-0509 at 4-5. Thus, the only issues properly before this Court are those raised by
the district court’s order of expungement.
3
finally disposed of by dismissal, sustaining of a motion to quash, or acquittal;” and
(3) R.S. 44:9(A)(5) governs expungement of arrest records in cases in which the
movant has been convicted of a misdemeanor, “if five or more years [have]
elapsed between the date of the motion and the successful completion of any
sentence, deferred adjudication, or period of probation or parole.” Cardenas, 13-
0509 at 10.2
For the court of appeal majority, the rule of statutory interpretation that the
specific governs over the general, id. at 9 (citing Corbello v. Sutton, 446 So.2d
301(La. 1984)), meant that respondent’s case, in which he “sought expungement of
his arrest record”, id. at 6, fell in either the first or second categories to the
exclusion of the third category because “[t]he present case [did] not involve a
situation in which the defendant has waited five years since the serving of his
sentence or probation to seek expungement.” Cardenas, 13-0509 at 11. To this
extent, R.S. 44:9(A)(1)(b) and (E)(3)(a) were “more directly applicable to the
present situation and [they] have no limitation on domestic violence cases being
ineligible for expungement.” Id. The upshot for the majority was that, given the
remedial purposes of the law, State v. Boniface, 369 So. 2d 115, 116 (La. 1979)
(“R.S. 44:9 was designed to protect individuals from future harassment and
embarrassment by virtue of a criminal record . . . . Remedial statutes are liberally
2
Current Louisiana expungement law distinguishes between the expungement and destruction of
arrest or conviction records. As specifically defined, expungement “means removal of a record
from public access but does not mean destruction of the record.” La.R.S. 44:9(G). Thus, while
La.R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a) permits a court to expunge or destroy the record of conviction in a
misdemeanor case that has been dismissed pursuant to La.C.Cr.P. art. 894, it expressly provides
that a court may not order the destruction of the record for first or second offense D.W.I. The
legislature does not, however, consistently adhere to the distinction. While La. R.S. 44:9(A)(1)
provides for the expungement of arrest records under the circumstances defined in (1)(a) and
(1)(b), (A)(2) states that “[i]f the court finds that the mover is entitled to the relief sought as
authorized by this Subsection, it shall order all agencies and law enforcement offices having any
record of the arrest . . .. to destroy any record of arrest . . . .” (emphasis added). La.R.S.
44:9(A)(2) excludes from its compass only the destruction of arrest records for first or second
offense D.W.I., consistent with the identical exclusion in (E)(3)(a). Thus, while La.R.S.
44:9(A)(1) addresses expungement of arrest records, (A)(2) expressly authorizes their
destruction in all but D.W.I. misdemeanor cases. In the 2014 comprehensive revision (see text,
infra), Louisiana law will consistently provide for expungement only of arrest and conviction
records, not their destruction in any case.
4
construed to suppress the evil and to advance the remedy.”) (citation and footnote
omitted), “the trial court correctly granted defendant’s expungement of his arrest
record pursuant to La.R.S. 44:9(A)(1).” Cardenas, 13-0509 at 11. The premise for
the conclusion is that a set aside of a conviction and dismissal of the prosecution
which “shall have the same effect as an acquittal” as a matter of La.C.Cr.P. art.
894(B)(2), is an acquittal for purposes of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(1)(b) governing
expungement of arrest records in cases in which there has been a “dismissal,
sustaining of a motion to quash, or acquittal.”
Judge Guidry dissented. In his view, the majority had the case backwards
when discussing its preference for the specific over the general. The general
provision for expunging misdemeanor arrest records appears in La.R.S.
44:9(A)(1)(a), when prosecution is not instituted, or (A)(1)(b) when prosecution
has been instituted but does not result in a conviction. The general provision for
expunging conviction records in misdemeanor cases when there has been a
conviction subsequently set aside under La.C.Cr.P. art. 894 is La.R.S.
44:9(E)(3)(a). On the other hand, “La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(a) relates specifically to
obtaining expungement of an arrest record after a conviction of a misdemeanor and
allows for expungement ‘if five or more years have elapsed between the date of the
motion and the successful completion of any sentence, deferred adjudication, or
period of probation or parole.’” Id. at 2 (Guidry, J., dissenting). Judge Guidry
reasoned that the specific provision for expunging arrest records when a conviction
has been entered is therefore La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(a), not (A)(1)(a) or (b), as the
majority concluded, but under (A)(5)(b), “no person shall be entitled to an
expungement if the misdemeanor conviction arose from circumstances involving a
sexual act or act of domestic violence.” Id. Thus, Judge Guidry concluded that
respondent was “not entitled to seek expungement of his arrest record.” Id.
5
The majority and dissenting opinions in the First Circuit panel thus
addressed the district court’s order of September 17, 2012 directing expungement
of respondent’s record of arrest only, without regard to the earlier order dated
September 5, 2012, directing expungement of both the arrest and conviction
records. The ambiguity in the record with respect to the breadth of the district
court’s order3 touches on yet another ambiguity in Louisiana’s expungement law
adding to our prior expressions of dismay over its convoluted nature. 4 The
provisions of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5) originated in 2010 La. Acts 609. The title to the
act reads as follows: “To enact R.S. 44:9(A)(5) relative to the expungement of
certain criminal records; to authorize the expungement of certain misdemeanor
conviction records under certain circumstances; to provide relative to the motion
for expungement; and to provide for related matters.” (emphasis added). The title
of an act “may be instructive in determining legislative intent.” Authement v.
Shappert Engineering, 02-1631, p. 8 (La. 2/25/03), 840 So.2d 1181, 1186; State v.
Madere, 352 So.2d 666, 668 (La. 1977)(same). But the text of R.S. 44:9(A)(5)
says nothing about conviction records. It states in pertinent part:
(5)(a) Any person who has been convicted for the violation of a . . .
state statute which is classified as a misdemeanor may make a
written motion to the district . . . court in which the violation was
prosecuted or to the district court located in the parish in which he
was arrested, for expungement of the arrest record if five or more
years has elapsed between the date of the motion and the successful
3
The state’s original application to this Court specifically adverted to the order dated September
5, 2012, and argued that the court erred in ordering expungement of respondent’s conviction.
But the application also referred to the order dated September 17, 2012, and, in fact, attached an
unsigned copy of it as prepared by counsel. The brief subsequently filed by the state also refers
to both orders as if they were interchangeable. We understand the state to take the position that
respondent is simply not entitled to an expungement (to whatever extent) in the present case. For
his part, respondent poses the issue as whether present law provides for expungement of an arrest
record following the set-aside of a conviction for domestic abuse battery under La.C.Cr.P. art.
894.
4
The legislature implicitly acknowledged as much in 2014 La. Acts 145, signed by the
Governor into law on May 23, 2014 (effective August 1, 2014), repealing La.R.S. 44:9 in its
entirety and adding articles 971 through 995 to the Code of Criminal Procedure in a
comprehensive revision of Louisiana’s expungement law. See text, infra.
6
completion of any sentence, deferred adjudication, or period of
probation or parole. Notwithstanding the provisions of Code of
Criminal Procedure Article 892.1 or 894, or any other provision of
law to the contrary regarding the set aside of a conviction or the
dismissal of a prosecution, an expungement shall occur only once
with respect to any person during a five-year period, except in the
case of a misdemeanor offense of operating a vehicle while
intoxicated which may occur only once with respect to any person
during a ten-year period (emphasis added).
(b) No person shall be entitled to an expungement if the
misdemeanor conviction arose from circumstances involving a
sexual act or act of domestic violence.
* * *
(d) If, after a contradictory hearing with the district attorney and the
arresting law enforcement agency, the court finds that the mover is
entitled to the relief sought for the above reasons, it shall order all
law enforcement agencies to expunge but not destroy the record of
the same in accordance with the provisions of this Paragraph. . . .
Before the enactment of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5), the only provision authorizing
expungement of conviction records was La.R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a), enacted by 1999 La.
Acts 1111, which generally authorizes the expungement or destruction of
conviction records in misdemeanor cases in which the conviction has been set
aside under La.C.Cr.P. art. 894. The legislature did not provide a definition of
what it meant by the term “conviction record,” but it did provide that “[u]pon the
entry of such an order of expungement, all rights which were lost or suspended by
virtue of the conviction shall be restored to the person against whom the conviction
has been entered, and such person shall be treated in all respects as not having been
arrested or convicted unless otherwise provided in this Section or otherwise
provided in the Code of Criminal Procedure Articles 893 or 894.” La.R.S.
44:9(E)(3)(b) (former (E)(3)) (emphasis added). Expungement of the conviction
record as a matter of (E)(3)(a) seemingly encompasses the record of arrest as well,
just as the district court’s order dated September 5, 2012, provided. See also
La.R.S. 44:9(I) (“Except for those entities listed in Subsection G of this Section, no
person whose record of arrest and conviction has been expunged pursuant to the
provisions of this Section shall be required to disclose that he was arrested or
7
convicted for the subject offense or that the record of the arrest and conviction has
been expunged unless otherwise provided in this Section.”) (emphasis added).
The provisions of La.R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a) did not, however, address extant
misdemeanor convictions and House Representative Gallot introduced 2010 H.B.
927, which then became 2010 La. Acts 609, to remedy that situation. In his
remarks to the House Committee on the Administration of Justice on May 5, 2010,
and to the Senate Judiciary Committee B on June 8, 2010, Representative Gallot
explained that the bill would offer an alternative route to expungement for those
persons who, for one reason or another, did not have the advantage of the set-aside
provided by La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B) as the first step towards expungement under
R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a). 5 As originally proposed in House Bill 927, La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)
provided the basic rule that any person convicted of a misdemeanor offense may
apply for an expungement of the record of arrest following the expiration of five
years from the finality of conviction and sentence. Subsequent amendments in the
Senate added (A)(5)(b), excluding crimes involving sexual acts or acts of domestic
violence, and in the House, inserted the language in (A)(5)(a) that
“[n]otwithstanding the provisions of Code of Criminal Procedure Article 892.1 or
894, or any other provision of law to the contrary regarding the set aside of a
conviction or the dismissal of a prosecution, an expungement shall occur only once
with respect to any person during a five-year period except in the case of a
misdemeanor offense of operating a vehicle while intoxicated which may occur
only once with respect to any person during a ten-year period.” A virtually
identical proviso appears in La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B)(2), with respect to setting aside
misdemeanor convictions and dismissing the prosecutions. The amendments thus
5
In both appearances, Representative Gallot used as an example misbehaving college students
acquiring a minor misdemeanor record which then may shadow their subsequent careers as they
finally mature and may hold them back. See: http://house.louisiana.gov/H_video/2010/2010.htm;
http://senate.lagov/judiciayb/archives/2010/video.htm (accessed May 27, 2014). Expungement
8
narrowed the scope of Representative Gallot’s original bill by excluding specified
classes of cases and sharply curtailing the availability of expungement in any given
five-year period including those cases involving set-asides under La.C.Cr.P. art.
894.
Under current law, and at the time the district court issued the expungement
order(s) in respondent’s case, the latest expression of legislative will with regard to
expungement of arrest and/or conviction records in misdemeanor cases is not
La.R.S. 44:9(A), or La.R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a), but La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5). McLane
Southern, Inc. v. Bridges, 11-1141, p. 9 (La. 1/24/12), 84 So.3d 479, 485 (“This
Court has held that it is a fundamental rule of statutory construction that when two
statutes deal with the same subject matter, if there is a conflict, the statute
specifically directed to the matter at issue must prevail as an exception to the
statute more general in character. Further, this Court has provided that the latest
expression of legislative will is considered controlling and prior enactments in
conflict are considered as tacitly repealed in the absence of an express repealing
clause.”)(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We need not in the present
case resolve as a general matter any ambiguity in R.S. 44:9(A)(5) whether the
legislature meant to address expungement of both misdemeanor conviction records
(as in the title to the act) and arrest records (as in the text of the act). With regard
to the specific crime of domestic abuse battery, the majority on the First Circuit
panel failed to take into account the limiting language inserted by the House in
(A)(5)(a). Under current law, a person may set aside a misdemeanor conviction
and dismiss the prosecution once during a given five-year period of time as a
matter of La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B)(2). He may obtain an expungement in the case of
a misdemeanor conviction once during the same five-year period of time as a
of the convictions would bring those persons pursuing employment under the umbrella of R.S.
44:9(I).
9
matter of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(a). A conviction set aside under La.C.Cr.P. art.
894(B)(2), otherwise subject to expungement under R.S. 44:9(E)(3)(a), counts as
the one conviction for purposes of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(a). But within this five-year
period marked out by the legislature, “[n]o person shall be entitled to an
expungement if the misdemeanor conviction arose from circumstances involving a
sexual act or act of domestic violence.” La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(b) (emphasis added).
We therefore agree with Judge Guidry that at least in this instance, R.S.
44:9(A)(5), and specifically (A)(5)(b), as the latest expression of legislative will
embodied in current law, superseded the earlier provisions of La.R.S. 44:9(A) and
44:9(E)(3)(a). We further find, consistent with the broad and unqualified language
of La.R.S. 44:9(A)(5)(b), removing expungement as an alternative in cases
involving sexual acts or acts of domestic violence, that the district court erred in
the present case by ordering the expungement of respondent’s record to any extent,
whether of arrest only or of arrest and conviction. Accordingly, the decision of the
First Circuit is reversed and, out of an abundance of caution, both orders of
expungement dated September 5, 2012, and September 17, 2012, are vacated in
their entirety.
We note here that during the pendency of the state’s application in this
Court, the legislature was considering 2014 House Bill 55, which proposed to
repeal La.R.S.44:9 in its entirety and to enact Title XXXIV of the Code of
Criminal Procedure to add Articles 971 through 995. That bill, passed by the
legislature as 2014 La. Acts 145, was signed into law by the Governor on May 23,
2014, effective August 1, 2014. As now the latest expression of legislative will,
La.C.Cr.P. art. 977 specifically provides for the expungement (but not destruction)
of the record of arrest and conviction in misdemeanor cases if: (1) the conviction
was set aside and the prosecution dismissed pursuant to La.C.Cr.P. art. 894(B); or
(2) more than five years have elapsed since completion of sentence, deferred
10
adjudication, or period or probation or parole. Further, La.C.Cr.P. art. 977(D)(1)
provides that expungement of a record of arrest and conviction may occur only
once with respect to any person during a five-year period, “unless the person was
sentenced pursuant to Code of Criminal Procedure Article 894(B).” But, “[n]o
person shall be entitled to expungement of a record under . . . the following
circumstances . . . (2) The misdemeanor conviction was for domestic abuse battery
which was not dismissed pursuant to Code of Criminal Procedure Article 894(B).”
La.C.Cr.P. art. 979(C)(2). We express no opinion here whether respondent may be
entitled to expungement of his record of arrest and conviction for domestic abuse
battery under this latest expression of legislative will.
DECISION OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT REVERSED; ORDERS OF
EXPUNGEMENT VACATED.
11
07/01/14
SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
No. 2013-C-2982
STATE OF LOUISIANA
versus
LEONARD CARDENAS, III
ON WRIT OF REVIEW TO THE COURT OF APPEAL,
FIRST CIRCUIT,
PARISH OF EAST BATON ROUGE
HUGHES, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent and would deny the application and affirm the
decisions of the lower courts.
1