Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this
Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of establishing
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
PAULA M. SAUER GREGORY F. ZOELLER
Danville, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
JAMES B. MARTIN
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
Apr 30 2013, 9:24 am
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
SHAWN E. VOORHIES, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 32A05-1208-CR-408
)
STATE OF INDIANA, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
APPEAL FROM THE HENDRICKS SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Mark A. Smith, Judge
Cause No. 32D04-1108-FA-12
April 30, 2013
MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
KIRSCH, Judge
Following his plea of guilty to Class A felony burglary resulting in serious bodily
injury,1 Shawn E. Voorhies (“Voorhies”) appeals the fifty-year sentence imposed by the trial
court. He raises the following two restated issues:
I. Whether the trial court considered two improper aggravating
circumstances and thereby abused its discretion, and
II. Whether the sentence is inappropriate in light of the nature of the
offense and the character of the offender.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On August 11, 2011, Voorhies broke into and entered the residence of Jerry Partin
(“Partin”) with the intent to steal items from the home. Partin came home from work to have
lunch and found an unknown pick-up truck parked in his driveway with a number of his
belongings visible in the bed of the truck. Partin encountered Voorhies, whom he did not
know, inside the home and attempted to talk him out of the crime, but Voorhies continued to
remove items from the home. When Partin began to use his phone to call 9-1-1 for help,
Voorhies smacked the phone out of his hand, punched Partin in the face, knocked him
unconscious, and “continued to beat [his] head in.” Tr. at 42.
At some point, Voorhies left the premises, and Partin’s uncle, who lived next door,
heard noises and came over to Partin’s home to find Partin bloodied and injured. Partin
underwent an emergency surgery for injuries to his nose. After the swelling reduced, Partin
had an additional surgery to reconstruct his nose and face.
1
See Ind. Code § 35-43-2-1.
2
In August 2011, the State charged Voorhies, by amended information, with: (1) Class
A felony burglary resulting in serious bodily injury; (2) Class C felony battery resulting in
serious bodily injury; (3) Class D felony theft; (4) Class B felony burglary; (5) Class B felony
criminal confinement. The State also charged Voorhies with being an habitual offender.
Under the terms of a plea agreement, Voorhies pleaded guilty to the burglary resulting in
serious bodily injury charge, and in exchange for his plea, the State dismissed all of the
remaining counts.
At the sentencing hearing, the trial court advised Voorhies of his rights and expressly
reminded him that it was an “open sentence,” and he could be sentenced to a term from
twenty to fifty years at the Department of Correction. Id. at 35-36. Partin testified that he
encountered Voorhies when he came home for lunch, that he attempted to talk Voorhies out
of doing what he was doing, that when he tried to use his phone and call for emergency help,
Voorhies knocked the phone out of his hand and hit or choked him. Partin lost
consciousness, but Voorhies continued to hit him with something causing injuries. Partin had
to have emergency surgery to his nose and face, and when the swelling went down, he
required additional surgery. Now, Partin has scarring to his face from deep sutures, must be
careful to avoid the sun, and has trouble breathing with when he has a common cold. He also
is supposed to wear a sleep breathing machine, but because of how his face has healed, the
apparatus is unstable and makes it difficult to sleep. Partin may require additional surgery to
cosmetically improve the scarring. He testified that the incident greatly affected him and his
family, who continue to fear for their security. They removed a tree line, got a home alarm
3
system, installed a fence, and a German shepherd dog. Partin testified that the incident even
affected not only him, but his neighbors as well in terms of contentment and security.
Voorhies read a statement to the trial court accepting responsibility and expressing
remorse, and he apologized to Partin and Partin’s family for the pain he caused by his
actions. Voorhies conceded, “I am a drug addict,” and he expressed his desire for substance
abuse treatment. Tr. at 58. In addition, Voorhies testified that he suffers from a variety of
physical health issues, such as degenerative disc disease, Crohn’s Disease, fibromyalgia,
anxiety, and depression that contributed to his substance abuse problems. On the day of the
incident, Voorhies was under the influence of the drugs dilaudid and klonopin, and he had no
memory of the events that occurred at Partin’s home.
The trial court identified the following aggravating circumstances: (1) Voorhies’s
criminal history, including three misdemeanor and four felony convictions; (2) Voorhies
violated parole at the time he committed the current offense; (3) the significant emotional
hardship to the victim and the victim’s family; (4) the injury to the victim was above and
beyond what was necessary to constitute serious bodily injury; and (5) Voorhies is likely to
reoffend. It identified the following mitigating circumstances: (1) Voorhies pleaded guilty
and accepted responsibility for his actions; (2) he showed remorse; (3) he has a history of
mental health issues; and (4) he was under the influence when he committed the offense.
Finding that the aggravators “substantially outweigh” the mitigators, the trial court sentenced
Voorhies to the maximum fifty years of incarceration. Id. at 84; see also Appellant’s App. at
52. Voorhies now appeals.
4
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. Abuse of Discretion
Voorhies argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it sentenced him by
“citing two improper aggravating circumstances to justify the maximum fifty-year sentence.”
Appellant’s Br. at 4. Sentencing decisions rest within the sound discretion of the trial court
and are reviewed on appeal only for an abuse of discretion, which occurs if the decision is
clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before the court. Webb v.
State, 941 N.E.2d 1082, 1088 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied.
A trial court must enter a sentencing statement that includes reasonably
detailed reasons for imposing a particular sentence. The purpose of this rule is
to guard against arbitrary sentencing and to provide an adequate basis for
appellate review. A trial court may abuse its discretion by issuing an
inadequate sentencing statement, finding aggravating or mitigating factors that
are not supported by the record, omitting factors that are clearly supported by
the record and advanced for consideration, or by finding factors that are
improper as a matter of law.
Id. (citations omitted). The relative weight given to aggravating and mitigating
circumstances is not subject to review for an abuse of discretion. Id.
Initially, we observe that Voorhies does not challenge two of the four aggravating
circumstances cited by the trial court in the sentencing statement to justify its sentence,
namely that he had a criminal history and that he was on parole at the time he committed the
offense; he acknowledges that it was proper for the trial court to consider those two
circumstances. Appellant’s Br. at 7. Rather, Voorhies claims that the trial court abused its
discretion by using the following as aggravating factors: the seriousness of the crime and
Partin’s injuries, as well as the impact on the victim’s family. We examine each in turn.
5
Voorhies takes issue with the trial court’s finding as an aggravator that “[t]he victim’s
injuries were above and beyond those [that] the State had to prove in this case for purposes of
‘serious bodily injury.’” Appellant’s App. at 51. Voorhies asserts that a factor constituting a
material element of an offense cannot be used as an aggravating circumstance, and he is
correct in that regard. Hall v. State, 870 N.E.2d 449, 464 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). However,
“even when serious bodily injury is an element of the crime charged, the severity of the
injury may serve as a valid aggravating circumstance.” Patterson v. State, 846 N.E.2d 723,
731 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006); see also Ind. Code § 35-38-1-7.1(a)(1) (providing non-exhaustive
list of aggravators that may be considered when imposing sentence, including that harm,
injury, loss, or damage suffered by victim of offense was: (A) significant; and (B) greater
than elements necessary to prove commission of offense).
Turning to the elements of the instant offense, Indiana Code section 35-43-2-1
provides that “[a] person who breaks and enters the building or structure of another person,
with intent to commit a felony in it, commits burglary, a Class C felony.” The offense is a
Class A felony if it results in either bodily injury or serious bodily injury “to any person other
than a defendant.” Id. Serious bodily injury is injury that creates a substantial risk of death
or that causes: (1) serious permanent disfigurement; (2) unconsciousness; (3) extreme pain;
(4) permanent or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a bodily member or organ;
or (5) loss of a fetus. Ind. Code § 35-31.5-2-292; Hurst v. State, 890 N.E.2d 88, 96 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2008), trans. denied. Whether bodily injury is serious has been held to be a matter of
degree and therefore a question reserved for the fact finder. Hurst, 890 N.E.2d at 96. Our
6
commitment to the role of fact finders produces considerable deference on a matter as
judgmental as whether a bodily injury was serious. Id.
Here, the trial court in its sentencing statement found, “Partin was rendered
unconscious, suffered permanent disfigurement, could no longer wear his sleep apnea
machine due to the injury to his nose, would incur future surgeries, treatment and doctor
appointments and suffered significant emotional trauma.” Tr. at 51-52. Voorhies argues that
the record did not support a finding that the victim’s injuries were “above and beyond” those
that the State had to prove for purposes of serious bodily injury, and the trial court erred in
holding otherwise. We disagree. Here, the record before us indicates that Voorhies, while
burglarizing Partin’s home, encountered Partin and knocked Partin unconscious. Voorhies at
that point could have left the premises, either with or without the stolen items, but according
to Partin, Voorhies continued, by some means, to injure Partin, whether by kicking or
punching him or using a weapon, which resulted in major injuries to Partin’s face. Partin
required emergency surgery to make initial repairs to his face, and then he underwent
subsequent surgery “to have [his] whole … face rebuilt.” Id. at 42. Partin was the victim of
a brutal beating, resulting in unconsciousness, lacerations, contusions, and broken bones.
Voorhies has failed to establish that the trial court abused its discretion when it considered
the severity of Partin’s injuries as an aggravator.
Voorhies also asserts that it was improper for the trial court to consider the trauma
suffered by Partin’s family as an aggravating circumstance. In its sentencing order, the trial
court identified as one of four aggravating factors that “[t]he victim’s family suffered severe
7
emotional trauma. The family has purchased a guard dog, cut down trees, erected a fence,
and installed home security equipment.” Appellant’s App. at 52. Voorhies argues that it was
improper for the trial court to consider the impact on the family as an aggravating
circumstance because the loss that accompanies a person’s injury or death and its impact on
family and friends is already factored into the statutory advisory sentence scheme. It is
correct that “under normal circumstances the impact upon family is not an aggravating
circumstance for purposes of sentencing.” Bacher v. State, 686 N.E.2d 791, 801 (Ind. 1997);
see also Sipple v. State, 788 N.E.2d 473, 480 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied. However,
the impact on others may qualify as an aggravator in certain cases but, in order to qualify as
such, the defendant’s actions must have had an impact on other persons of a destructive
nature that is not normally associated with the commission of the offense in question and this
impact must be foreseeable to the defendant. Sipple, 788 N.E.2d at 480-81.
In this case, Partin presented testimony at the sentencing hearing that, as a result of
this incident, his two minor sons “literally were afraid to be in their own home, their own
yard.” Tr. at 48. To make the home more secure, they cut down a tree line around the front
yard so that neighbors could see the house, purchased a “policy quality German shepherd”
dog to protect the house, erected a fence, and installed motion detectors all the way around
his house. Id. at 48-49. Partin explained he had been active in his sons’ lives and that the
injuries inflicted by Voorhies had impacted all their lives, testifying, by way of example, that
he had planned to coach their baseball team(s) that autumn, but he could not be in the sun,
could not throw a ball, and the like. Further, Partin stated that the incident with Voorhies
8
“changed my whole neighborhood,” with neighbors being “on top alert” both after it
happened and currently, and that “nobody is the same because of this.” Id. at 53.
Voorhies concedes that there is “[n]o doubt that the Partin family was traumatized by
the incident.” Appellant’s Reply Br. at 4. He argues, however, that the impact was
encompassed within the expected impact on family members of a victim of violence, and that
the impact was not so distinct so as to rise to the level of a separate aggravating
circumstance. Voorhies’s argument is not without merit; however, we conclude that it
presents questions of shades of judgment that are best left to trial court discretion, and we
cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion when it determined that the impact upon
Partin’s family was of such a destructive degree and type that it constituted an aggravating
circumstance.
Regardless, even if we were to find that consideration of the impact upon Partin’s
family was improper, the trial court identified several other valid aggravating factors,
including Voorhies’s criminal history that consisted of four prior felony convictions and three
misdemeanors and the fact that he was on parole at the time he committed the Partin
burglary. We discern no abuse of discretion in the sentence that the trial court imposed.
II. Appropriateness of Sentence
Next, Voorhies argues that his fifty-year sentence is inappropriate. Under Indiana
Appellate Rule 7(B), this court may revise a sentence authorized by statute if, after due
consideration of the trial court’s decision, the court finds that the sentence is inappropriate in
light of the nature of the offense and the character of the offender. Childress v. State, 848
9
N.E.2d 1073, 1079-80 (Ind. 2006). Although this court is not required to use “great restraint,”
we nevertheless exercise deference to a trial court’s sentencing decision, both because
Appellate Rule 7(B) requires that we give “due consideration” to that decision and because
we recognize the unique perspective a trial court has when making decisions. Stewart v.
State, 866 N.E.2d 858, 865-66 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). The “principal role of appellate review
should be to attempt to leaven the outliers, and identify some guiding principles for trial
courts and those charged with improvement of the sentencing statutes, but not to achieve a
perceived ‘correct’ result in each case.” Cardwell v. State, 895 N.E.2d 1219, 1225 (Ind.
2008). The question under Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B) analysis is not whether another
sentence is more appropriate, but whether the sentence imposed is inappropriate. King v.
State, 894 N.E.2d 265, 268 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008). The defendant bears the burden of
persuading this court that the sentence is inappropriate. Childress, 848 N.E.2d at 1080.
Burglary resulting in serious bodily injury is a Class A felony. Ind. Code § 35-43-2-
1(2). The advisory sentence for a Class A felony is thirty years, with a maximum sentence of
fifty years and a minimum sentence of twenty years. Ind. Code § 35-50-2-4. Voorhies
claims that his fifty-year sentence was not appropriate in light of the nature of the offense and
his character.
As for the nature of the offense, Partin returned to his home for lunch and found
Voorhies, whom he did not know, removing items from the house. Partin “tried to talk him
out of what he was doing,” but Voorhies continued. Tr. at 41. When Partin attempted to use
his cell phone in the driveway to call 9-1-1, Voorhies knocked it away. Voorhies struck
10
Partin and rendered him unconscious. Partin explained, “[H]e had knocked me unconscious,
[and] continued to beat my head in after I was unconscious with, I’m not sure how it
happened . . . I’m not sure what he hit me with if it was his foot or weapon, I’m not sure.”
Id. at 42. Partin required emergency surgery to stabilize the injuries and later had to have his
nose completely rebuilt. Voorhies could have left when he encountered Partin, or he could
have left when he knocked Partin unconscious; he did neither. These facts demonstrate a
callous disregard for another person’s life and property, even a level of superfluous brutality.
As for Voorhies’s character, he was on parole for three felony thefts at the time of the
burglary and attack on Partin. He did not have steady employment at that time, but had
arranged to work a landscaping job for a friend. On the day of the burglary, Voorhies was
not scheduled to go into work, so he got up “shot some dilaudid, snorted some klonopin.” Id.
at 60. He then received a call to come into work, but he “did some more klonopin, shot some
more dilaudid and took off.” Id. After that, he remembers nothing until he found himself in
jail.
Voorhies’s criminal history reflects that he had accumulated three misdemeanor
convictions and four felony convictions prior to this offense. As the State recognized in its
argument at sentencing, Voorhies had been charged with burglary on nine prior occasions,
but he had always pleaded guilty to something else, such as theft. Id. at 68. A record of
arrest, particularly a lengthy one, may reveal that a defendant has not been deterred even after
having been subject to the police authority of the State. Cotto v. State, 829 N.E.2d 520, 526
(Ind. 2005). Such information may be relevant to the trial court’s assessment of the
11
defendant’s character in terms of the risk that he will commit another crime. Id. Voorhies
explained that the majority of the offenses in his criminal record were precipitated by his
need to obtain money to buy drugs. Prior to this incident with Partin, Voorhies had “never
hurt anybody before.” Tr. at 61.
We find that Voorhies’s criminal history demonstrates an escalating pattern of taking
other people’s property to support his drug addiction, and the incident against Partin
illustrated the introduction of violence into the pattern. We acknowledge that Voorhies
pleaded guilty, accepted responsibility, and expressed remorse to Partin, his family, and the
trial court. Voorhies explained that he was not otherwise a violent type of person; rather, it
was his addiction to drugs that fueled his burglaries and, eventually, violence. The trial court
noted that, while it was not completely unsympathetic to Voorhies’s addiction issues, that
mitigator was not extended significant weight because Voorhies had failed to pursue or take
advantage of drug rehabilitation or mental health opportunities. In sum, Voorhies has failed
to persuade us that his fifty-year sentence for Class A burglary resulting in serious bodily
injury is inappropriate.
Affirmed.
ROBB, C.J., and PYLE, J., concur.
12