[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
EASTERN DISTRICT
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : No. 18 EAP 2018
:
Appellee : Appeal from the Order of Superior
: Court entered on 12/20/2017 at No.
: 660 EDA 2015 affirming the
v. : Judgment of Sentence entered on
: 10/24/2014 in the Court of Common
: Pleas, Philadelphia County, Criminal
MICHAEL FELDER, : Division at No. CP-51-CR-0014896-
: 2009.
Appellant :
: ARGUED: September 11, 2019
DISSENTING OPINION
JUSTICE WECHT DECIDED: February 23, 2022
In 2005, the Supreme Court of the United States issued its first in a series of
decisions interpreting the Eighth Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause
as it applies to juveniles who have been convicted of serious criminal offenses. In that
case, Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 578 (2005), the Supreme Court held that it is
unconstitutional to impose the death penalty on individuals who committed their crime(s)
as juveniles. Then, in Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48, 82 (2010), the Court held that the
Eight Amendment prohibits a juvenile convicted of a non-homicide offense from being
sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The Graham Court
explained that, although a “State is not required to guarantee” a juvenile’s “eventual
freedom,” it must provide that juvenile with “some meaningful opportunity to obtain
release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Id. at 75.
The Supreme Court returned to this line of cases two years later in Miller v.
Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012). In Miller, the Court held that the Eighth Amendment
forbids sentencing schemes that automatically mandate life without parole sentences for
juveniles convicted of murder, because the mandatory nature of the sentence precludes
a sentencing court from considering the juvenile’s age and the hallmark features of youth,
most notably the continuing nature of brain development during those formative years.
Id. at 477. Invoking its prior Eighth Amendment jurisprudence, the Supreme Court
explained that, “given all we have said . . . about children’s diminished culpability and
heightened capacity for change, we think appropriate occasions for sentencing juveniles
to this harshest possible penalty will be uncommon,” particularly because of the difficulty
“of distinguishing at this early age between ‘the juvenile offender whose crime reflects
unfortunate yet transient immaturity, and the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects
irreparable corruption.’” Id. at 479-80. In doing so, the Miller Court favorably cited
Graham’s mandate that a juvenile must be given a reasonable opportunity for release
from prison before his or her natural death, and extended this principle to certain juveniles
convicted of murder. Id. at 479-80 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 75).
Four years later, in Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. 190 (2016), the Supreme
Court held that Miller announced a substantive, rather than procedural, rule of law that
applied retroactively to cases pending on collateral review. Of particular significance to
that determination, the Montgomery Court emphasized that Miller “drew a line between
children whose crimes reflect transient immaturity and those rare children whose crimes
reflect irreparable corruption.” Id. at 209. The Court further stressed that, even though
“Miller did not impose a formal factfinding requirement[,]” states are not “free to sentence
a child whose crime reflects transient immaturity to life without parole.” Id. at 211.
These four rulings—particularly the latter two—created a paradigmatic shift in
juvenile sentencing. In the wake of that shift, triggered by Miller and Montgomery,
Pennsylvania courts were tasked with re-sentencing a significant number of juveniles
convicted of murder whose life without parole sentences suddenly were unconstitutional.
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At that time, there was no framework in place to sentence a juvenile convicted of first- or
second-degree murder to anything other than life without parole. The Supreme Court left
the creation of procedures to implement Miller and Montgomery to the states.
Accordingly, in Commonwealth v. Batts, 163 A.3d 410 (Pa. 2017) (Batts II),1 this Court
established a set of legal criteria to guide the bench and bar. We held that the trial court
must operate initially under a presumption against sentencing a juvenile to life without
parole. Id. at 451-52, 483-84. To overcome that presumption, we explained, the
Commonwealth first must provide reasonable notice to the juvenile defendant that it
intends to seek such a sentence. Id. at 477, 484. Then, the Commonwealth must prove,
beyond a reasonable doubt, that the homicide was the product of the juvenile’s permanent
incorrigibility—meaning that the child is functionally incapable of rehabilitation—and was
not an act of the juvenile’s transient immaturity. Id. at 472-77. We added another
requirement to the Batts II criteria in Commonwealth v. Machicote, 206 A.3d 1110, 1120
(Pa. 2019), wherein we held that, “when a juvenile is exposed to a potential sentence of
life without the possibility of parole,” the sentencing court must determine whether the
Commonwealth has satisfied its burden, and it must “consider the Miller factors, on the
record, prior to imposing a sentence.”
Miller, Montgomery, Batts II, and Machicote, in tandem with subsequent legislative
enactments, see e.g. 18 Pa.C.S. § 1102.1, provided lower courts with much of the
framework necessary to sentence juvenile murderers in a constitutional manner.
However, (at least) one important legal question lingered: when did a term of years
function as a de facto life sentence without the possibility of parole? We had interpreted
1 In an earlier post-Miller case with the same name, this Court held that Miller did
not preclude in all instances a life without parole sentence for juvenile offenders.
Commonwealth v. Batts, 66 A.3d 286 (Pa. 2013). Thus, our 2017 decision is commonly
referred to as “Batts II”.
[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 3
Miller and Montgomery to require an examination of the juvenile’s mindset to ascertain
whether the murder was the product of transient immaturity or whether it was the result
of the child’s permanent incorrigibility. If it was the latter, then the trial court could impose
a life without parole sentence. However, if it was the former, then a trial court had to
impose a term of years consistent with Graham and Miller’s mandate that, although a
“State is not required to guarantee” the juvenile’s “eventual freedom,” it must provide him
or her with “some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated
maturity and rehabilitation.” Graham 560 U.S. at 75; Miller, 567 U.S. at 479-80. This
requirement would prove illusory if, for instance, a trial court sentenced a juvenile to a
minimum term of ninety years, which would eliminate any chance of the promised
“meaningful opportunity” to be released from prison. As a minimum term of years
increases, there eventually comes a point at which the sentence converts into the
functional equivalent of a life sentence. But at what point does this conversion occur?
After oral argument in September of 2019, we were set to rule on that discrete
question. It appeared that we were on the verge of establishing a near-complete model
for sentencing juvenile murderers. Or, so we thought. Before we could issue an opinion,
the Supreme Court of the United States granted certiorari in Jones v. Mississippi, 140 S.
Ct. 1293 (2020), and we placed the instant case on hold. On April 22, 2021, the Supreme
Court issued its decision in Jones, holding that, contrary to this Court’s understanding,
Miller did not require a sentencing court to make a separate factual finding that the
juvenile’s act was the product of his or her permanent incorrigibility before imposing a
sentence of life without the possibility of parole. Id. at 1314-15. Instead, the Supreme
Court construed Miller to prohibit only non-discretionary, automatic life without parole
sentences on juveniles. A trial court may impose a life without parole sentence on a
juvenile in a manner consistent with the Eighth Amendment, so long as the sentencing
[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 4
procedure was discretionary in nature and afforded the sentencing court an opportunity
to consider the juvenile’s age in some substantive way. Id. at 1315-16.
All of our recent jurisprudence emanated from our understanding that Miller
required a factual examination of the juvenile’s act, with the sentencing court assessing
whether that act was the product of transient immaturity or permanent incorrigibility. Batts
II and Machicote provided a procedural framework to assist the court in making this
determination. The present case was an opportunity to refine that framework even
further. Then, Jones changed everything. The factual assessment that was the driving
factor in our prior analyses is gone. So too is the notion that a life without parole sentence
is available only after a rigorous process. After Jones, all that is required before imposing
such a sentence is a discretionary process that includes age as a relevant sentencing
factor. In other words, a life sentence in any case involving a murder committed by a
juvenile does not necessarily violate the Constitution.
Jones has eliminated the need to devote any of our limited resources to this case.
The moment that Jones was decided, any form of relief for Felder was foreclosed entirely.
Moreover, the question posed by Felder was rendered unquestionably moot. As noted,
he asks whether a fifty year to life imprisonment amounts to a de facto life sentence. This
question falls at the end of the analytical line that the Supreme Court has erased. After
Jones, the answer to Felder’s question is simple: “it doesn’t matter.” A de facto life without
parole sentence is not unconstitutional, regardless of whether Felder’s murder was the
product of transient immaturity or otherwise. There now exists no reason to attempt to
ascertain when a term of years becomes a de facto life sentence. Accordingly, because
the question that once appeared significant in our formerly developing jurisprudence now
is moot and “not well-suited to facilitate our principal function of advancing the law,”
[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 5
Commonwealth v. Tighe, 224 A.3d 1268, 1292 (Pa. 2020) (Wecht, J., concurring and
dissenting), I would dismiss this case as improvidently granted.
The learned Majority presses forward anyway. Rather than deciding that Felder’s
question only existed in an Eighth Amendment landscape that has been razed to the
ground and reconstructed in a wholly different form, the Majority instead decides that
Jones “is dispositive of the issue presented here.” Maj. Op. at 2. It is not. Jones does
not dispose of the question of whether fifty years to life is a de facto life sentence without
parole on the merits. To the contrary, Jones makes that question constitutionally
irrelevant.
Mootness and constitutional irrelevancy aside, there is another compelling reason
not to continue with this case: the analysis is not substantially prompted, or supported,
by the parties’ arguments. In their principal briefs, which predated Jones, both Felder
and the Commonwealth focus upon the merits of the de facto life sentence question.
Neither party had any reason to argue that Miller, Montgomery, or Batts II were wrongly
decided, or that any of them should be reconsidered. No one at the time could have
predicted that Jones would shatter the foundation upon which their arguments were
based. Consequently, the parties’ principal briefs shed no light on the state of the law
post-Jones and are of little use to the instant discussion.
After Jones was decided, Felder filed an application asking this Court for
permission to rest on his principal brief. The Commonwealth submitted a “no answer”
letter to this Court. We denied Felder’s application and, instead, on June 22, 2021,
commanded the parties “to file supplemental briefs addressing the United States
Supreme Court’s decision in Jones v. Mississippi, ___ U.S. ___, 141 S. Ct. 1307 (2021),
and its impact on the issue presented in this appeal.” Order, 2/22/2021 (per curiam).
Both parties complied with our directive and filed additional briefs. Neither was helpful.
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Both Felder and the Commonwealth assert that Jones has no impact whatsoever on the
outcome of this case. That being the state of the argumentation, it seems to me ill-advised
to address the impact that Jones wrought upon Eighth Amendment jurisprudence in a
case involving parties who believe it had none. I would await a case in which the
respective parties willingly debate the key legal issue to reconstruct such an important
aspect of the law.
The Majority does not just evaluate Jones’ impact on our law. The Majority goes
one step further and contemplates the post-Jones viability of Batts II. The Majority
abrogates Batts II and finds “no choice but to dissolve those procedural requirements.”
Maj. Op. at 19. Neither party asks for a reevaluation of Batts II, and, more importantly,
neither seeks an outright annulment of it. Once more, the principal briefs are not helpful,
as the viability of Batts II could not have been at issue at that early point. The
supplemental briefing provides little more justification for such a sweeping ruling. This
too is understandable, because our mandate to the parties for additional briefing did not
mention Batts II, let alone direct the parties to address its ongoing viability. Nonetheless,
Felder maintains throughout his supplemental brief that Batts II was an exercise of this
Court’s state constitutional authority and, thus, can survive Jones’ holding. The
Commonwealth generally agrees with Felder that Batts II is an independent ruling from
this Court that is not impacted by Jones. Stated otherwise, nobody asks this Court to
overrule Batts II. To the contrary, both parties support its continued relevance.2 In such
circumstances, I would not relegate Batts II to the dustbin of history without full briefing
from adversarial parties that have a vested interested in the outcome of this case. For
the reasons stated above, Felder no longer has such an interest, because nothing we say
2 On April 23, 2019, we invited the Office of the Attorney General to submit an
amicus brief to provide another perspective on behalf of the Commonwealth. The
invitation went unanswered.
[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 7
or do can afford him relief. Moreover, Batts II is not a single-issue precedent of narrow
applicability. It is a complex, multi-faceted decision, one that drew authority from
numerous sources, establishing a series of procedural protections for juveniles. Before
unilaterally deciding that no aspect of that complicated decision can remain, I would first
consider the informed input of interested parties.
I offer no opinion on the merits of any issue raised and resolved by the learned
Majority. I do not dispute that each of those issues require this Court’s attention. To be
sure, it may be the case that the Majority correctly disposes of all relevant issues. The
problem is that doing so in this case contravenes this Court’s customarily restrained
practice of waiting for cases in which the answers that we provide are responsive to the
questions asked and supported by focused legal debate between the parties. Rather
than using this case as a vehicle to go beyond the issues presented for review 3 and
3 The Majority takes issue with this characterization. The Majority claims that my
premise is faulty, insisting that the question presented in this case necessarily implicates
a comprehensive reconsideration of Batts II. See Maj. Op. at 19-20 n.14. Indeed, the
Majority asserts that, “at bottom,” Felder framed his claim as “whether he is entitled to
relief under Batts II.” However, this conclusion finds merit only if one focuses non-
contextually upon the clause that is bolded by the Majority and by ignoring that which the
Majority elects not to bold. The non-bolded language asks whether “a sentence of 50
years to life imposed upon a juvenile constitute[s] a de facto life sentence.” Felder, 187
A.3d at 909 (Pa. 2018) (per curiam). The Majority now ignores that initial clause and
reframes the case as one focusing merely upon whether Batts II remains good law. It is
correct that Felder mentions Batts II in a subsequent clause, but that does not mean that
we are free to ignore the primary clause and to construe the case however we may see
fit. Felder’s passing reference to Batts II as the prevailing law at the time in his question
presented in no way “baked” a comprehensive review of that precedent into this case.
Proof of the true character of this case is in the briefing. If reconsideration of Batts
II was “baked” into the case, and tethered to our review, one would expect to see at least
one of the parties argue that. No one does in either the initial briefing or in the post-Jones
briefing. In fact, Felder neither questions Batts II, nor contemplates its continued
existence. Rather, Felder sets forth the basic premises of that decision as the governing
law, and then spends the vast majority of his argument urging this Court to define the
point at which a sentence becomes de facto life sentence. The only fair reading of
Felder’s principal brief is consistent with my premise: that his question for this Court
[J-53-2019] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 8
injecting consideration of a case that the lower courts did not anticipate and that the
parties do not meaningfully address, and in the absence of any development of an
independent basis to evaluate Batts II, the Court should allow the impact of Jones to be
resolved in the normal course—with developed advocacy, reasoned opinions by the lower
courts, and petitions for allowance of appeal. Restraint demands that we refrain from
transforming this case beyond its legal circumstances into a vehicle to resolve even the
most pressing questions.
I would wait for an appropriate case in which the Court might address these
important and complicated matters, and I would dismiss the instant appeal as
improvidently granted. Because the Majority presses on in the face of these patent
deficiencies, I respectfully dissent.
focused entirely upon establishing the point in time at which the sentence violated (what
we believed were) the mandates of Miller and Montgomery. Notably, the Majority points
to no place in the initial briefing supporting its after-the-fact reconstruction of this case.
The parties have never asked this Court to reconsider Batts II, either expressly or
implicitly. It is the Majority that takes this case to places uncharted by the parties in their
arguments.
The Majority also decides—again, on its own—that, even if the issue were moot,
the case might “surely qualify” for an exception. Maj. Op. at 19-20 n.14. Respectfully,
much like the rest of the Majority’s analysis, this, too, is untethered to the parties’
arguments, and a conclusion that I prefer to make only after those involved in the case
have provided their respective positions.
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