Washington v. State

John I. Purtle, Justice,

dissenting. I dissent because I believe the law of the case is controlling. Up until the majority opinion in this case we had not created any exceptions to this rule and I cannot see the necessity of doing so at this time. We have, in effect, given our word that this case would be tried upon the theory that the enhancement provisions of the Habitual Criminal Act would not be applicable to the case before us as to convictions where the offense was committed prior to the offense of the principal case. Now this court is going back on its word and saying we are not going to do what we said we would do.

In Washington v. State, 271 Ark. 420, 609 S.W.2d 33 (1980), we decided that the Habitual Criminal Act was based upon the theory that a persistent offender warranted an increase in the punishment for the offense because he had not been deterred by previous convictions and punishment. We flipflopped in the case of Conley v. State, 272 Ark. 33, 612 S.W.2d 722 (1981). In Conley, we decided that we should allow any prior convictions of an accused to be used when he was subsequently sentenced. In other words, we switched from the idea that the Habitual Criminal Act was a deterrent to the idea that it was punitive.

I cannot understand the reasoning in the majority opinion citing the case of Ferguson v. Green, 266 Ark. 556, 587 S.W.2d 18 (1979). Ferguson was decided on the question of the law of the case. There we stated:

Whatever this court decided in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction must be considered as finally settled. (Cites omitted) This court’s judgment or decree became the law of the case and the trial court could not have varied it or j udicially examined it for any purpose other than carrying it into execution. (Cite omitted) No matter how irregular the decision of a superior court may be or upon what misapprehension of the facts it may have been made, it is the law of the case to the inferior court, and must be obeyed.

The plain language in Ferguson supports the position that we should not abandon the established doctrine of “law of the case” in Arkansas.

There is no question but that an offense used for enhancement at appellant’s first trial fits the same category as the enhancement sentence used at the second trial. Therefore, it is clearly a violation of our holding in this case when it was before us in Washington I. The appellant was convicted in a case of Washington v. State, 273 Ark. 483, 621 S.W.2d 216 (1981), in an unrelated case. In the last-mentioned case we applied the rule that all prior convictions could be counted upon a subsequent conviction. Therefore, Washington has had it both ways. In Washington II, we made it quite clear when we stated:

We decided that Arkansas’s habitual criminal statute was not designed to act as a deterrent, as we had supposed in Washington, but is simply a punitive statute, which provides in clear language that in an appropriate case, a prior conviction, regardless of the date of the crime, may be used to increase punishment.

I am totally at a loss to understand why this court would go out of the way to overrule our prior decisions and create another loathsome exception to a rule of law.