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Johnson v. State

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2000-03-29
Citations: 725 N.E.2d 864
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ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT            ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Patricia Caress McMath            Jeffrey A. Modisett
Indianapolis, Indiana             Attorney General of Indiana

                                        Janet L. Parsanko
                                        Deputy Attorney General
                                        Indianapolis, Indiana





                                   IN THE

                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA



MICHAEL JOHNSON,                  )
                                        )
      Appellant (Defendant Below),      )
                                        )
            v.                          )  No. 49S00-9903-CR-191
                                        )
STATE OF INDIANA,                       )
                                        )
      Appellee (Plaintiff Below). )








                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                      The Honorable Tanya Walton Pratt
                        Cause No. 49G01-9703-CF-42739



                               March 29, 2000

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.


      Appellant Michael Johnson appeals  his  conviction  and  sentence  for
murder, attempted murder, and carrying a  handgun  without  a  license.   He
presents two issues:
        I. Whether error occurred when the  jury  heard  some  evidence  of
           Johnson’s prior criminal history, and

       II. Whether Johnson’s sentence was manifestly unreasonable.


                        Facts and Procedural History

      On March 17, 1997, Johnson and Damone Carter (“Damone”)  went  to  the
home of Gary Davenport.  There is conflicting testimony about the nature  of
the visit, although it was either to purchase drugs  from  Davenport  or  to
rob him.  (See R. at 339-40, 600-01.)  Ronald Carter  (“Ronald”),  a  friend
of Davenport, was also at the house; he was watching television  and  trying
“to program a radio.”  (R. at 261.)

      When Johnson and Damone arrived at the house, Davenport  came  outside
and spoke with Damone.  Then, Ronald called out to Davenport that he  had  a
phone call, so the three entered the house.  At first, Damone,  Ronald,  and
Johnson sat in the living room while Davenport went  into  a  back  room  to
hang up the phone.  Damone and Ronald  had  previously  met  in  prison  and
began getting reacquainted.  After Davenport hung  up  the  phone,  he  went
into the kitchen area, which was visible from the living room.  Johnson  and
Damone walked in between the living room  and  the  kitchen,  speaking  with
Davenport and with each other.

      Eventually, Ronald looked up from fixing the radio  and  noticed  that
both Johnson and Damone were in the doorway facing him.   Johnson  pulled  a
gun out of the waistband of his pants.  Ronald tried to run toward  a  patio
door to his left, but a shot hit him in the back of the leg.   Ronald  fell,
but managed to pull himself up  and  attempted  to  throw  a  television  at
Johnson, who was still standing in the doorway.  By  now,  however,  Johnson
had turned and was shooting at Davenport, who  was  still  in  the  kitchen.
When Ronald threw the television, Johnson turned and again shot  at  Ronald,
hitting him in the arm.  This shot caused Ronald to fall through  the  patio
door.


      When the  police  arrived,  Ronald  was  still  lying  on  the  patio.
Davenport was found dead, with gunshot wounds, in a utility room off of  the
kitchen.  Ronald was taken to the hospital and required surgery.


      The day after the shootings, Damone met with several police detectives
and revealed that Johnson had shot Ronald and Davenport.  At  trial,  Ronald
identified Johnson as the man who shot him and Davenport.

      The trial court sentenced Johnson to  concurrent  sentences  of  sixty
years for murder, forty  years  for  attempted  murder,  and  one  year  for
carrying a handgun without a license.


                   I.  Evidentiary Error is Not Preserved

      Johnson first says  the  jury  improperly  heard  evidence  about  his
previous incarceration on an unrelated charge.  The  State  introduced  into
evidence a tape and transcript of Johnson’s statement  to  an  investigating
officer in which Johnson refers to being on parole.[1]  (R.  at  492,  608.)
The prosecutor twice mentioned Johnson’s  parole  during  closing  argument.
(Supp. R. at 111, 113.)


      Defense counsel did not object to this portion of Johnson’s  statement
or request that the references to  parole  be  redacted.   Nor  did  counsel
object to the prosecutor’s statements during closing.  Failure to object  to
the admission of evidence waives an error for  appellate  review.   Townsend
v. State, 632 N.E.2d 727 (Ind. 1994).  Similarly, a claim  of  prosecutorial
misconduct is waived if there  is  no  objection.   Stevens  v.  State,  691
N.E.2d 412 (Ind. 1997), cert. denied, 119 S. Ct. 550 (1998).[2]


      Johnson  also  claims  error  occurred  when  the   State   asked   an
investigating officer, Detective Forrest, whether he  had  “any  information
with respect to Michael Johnson.”   (Appellant’s  Br.  at  6,  R.  at  357.)
Because  Forrest  had  just  finished  discussing   Damone   Carter’s   drug
activities, Johnson  argues  that  the  question  left  the  jury  with  the
impression that “Detective Forrest knew about Michael  because  Michael  was
involved in the drug trade.”  (Appellant’s Br. at 6-7.)

      Defense counsel objected to the question before Forrest  was  able  to
respond, and the court  admonished  the  jurors  and  instructed  them  that
questions were not evidence.  We find  this  reference  to  Johnson’s  prior
misconduct fragmentary at best.  See  Schlomer  v.  State,  580  N.E.2d  950
(Ind.  1991).   The  probable  persuasive  effect  of   the   question   was
negligible.


                  II. Five-Year Enhancement Was Reasonable

      Johnson next claims that his concurrent sentences of sixty  years  for
murder and forty years for attempted murder were manifestly unreasonable.


      In imposing a sentence, a court should  1)  identify  the  significant
aggravators and mitigators, 2) relate the specific facts  and  reasons  that
lead the court to find those aggravators and mitigators, and 3)  demonstrate
it has balanced the aggravators  against  the  mitigators  in  reaching  its
sentence.  Gregory  v.  State,  644  N.E.2d  543  (Ind.  1994).   Sentencing
decisions rest within the sound discretion of the trial court and we  review
them only for abuse of discretion.  Archer v. State, 689  N.E.2d  678  (Ind.
1997).


      The trial court here found three  statutory  aggravating  factors:  1)
Johnson’s history of criminal and delinquent activity, 2)  that  Johnson  is
in need of  correctional  or  rehabilitative  treatment  that  can  best  be
provided in a penal facility, and  3)  that  the  imposition  of  a  reduced
sentence or probation would depreciate the seriousness of  the  crime.   (R.
at 683-84.)  As mitigating factors, the court listed Johnson’s  remorse  and
his strong family support.  (Id.)  It then determined that  the  aggravating
factors outweighed the mitigating factors.  (Id.)

      The trial court properly found that Johnson’s criminal history was  an
aggravating factor.  See Ind. Code  Ann.  §  35-38-1-7.1(b)(2)  (West  Supp.
1997).  The court appropriately noted that Johnson  was  on  parole  at  the
time of the incident and had a prior conviction  for  criminal  recklessness
as a Class C felony and  a  true  finding  of  criminal  recklessness  as  a
juvenile.


      The court  also  properly  determined  that  Johnson  is  in  need  of
correctional and rehabilitative treatment best provided by a penal  facility
based on the fact that he had previously, and  unsuccessfully,  been  placed
on juvenile probation and adult probation, had been to prison,  and  was  on
parole when he committed the crime.  (R. at 684); see also Ind. Code Ann.  §
35-38-1-7.1(b)(3) (West Supp. 1997).


       As  for  finding  that  a  given  sentence  might   “depreciate   the
seriousness” of a crime, courts speak about this  factor  in  two  different
ways.   Indiana  Code  §  35-38-1-7.1(b)(4)  says  it  is   an   aggravating
circumstance that the “[i]mposition of  a  reduced  sentence  .  .  .  would
depreciate the seriousness of the crime.”  Stated this way,  the  aggravator
may only be used  when  mitigators  might  otherwise  call  for  a  sentence
shorter than the presumptive one.  See Ector  v.  State,  639  N.E.2d  1014,
1016 (Ind. 1994).  By contrast, judges sometimes say that  a  sentence  less
than an enhanced  term  sought  by  the  prosecution  would  depreciate  the
seriousness of the crime, and this is an appropriate aggravator.  Id.

      Here, the trial court said that  imposition  of  a  “reduced  sentence
below the presumptive would depreciate the seriousness of the  crime.”   (R.
at 684.)  It did not appear that the judge was considering a sentence  below
the standard term, however, so this  finding  was  either  inappropriate  or
entitled to very little weight.


      Still, only one valid aggravating circumstance is necessary to support
an enhanced sentence.  Hollins  v.  State,  679  N.E.2d  1305  (Ind.  1997).
Since the  trial  court  found  two  valid  aggravating  circumstances,  the
inappropriate use of this one aggravator did not make the enhanced  sentence
manifestly unreasonable.


      Johnson also claims the court should have found additional  mitigating
circumstances:  1) that Damone Carter initiated the crime – not Johnson,  2)
that Johnson committed the crime at a young age, and 3) that  Johnson  is  a
father who supports his child.  (Appellant’s Br. at 12.)


       “The finding of mitigating factors is not mandatory and rests  within
the discretion of the trial court.”  Wingett v. State, 640 N.E.2d  372,  373
(Ind. 1994).  “Only when  the  trial  court  fails  to  find  a  significant
mitigator that is clearly supported by the  record  is  there  a  reasonable
belief that it was improperly overlooked.”  Legue v. State, 688 N.E.2d  408,
411 (Ind. 1997).


      Age.  Johnson was twenty years old at the time of  the  incident.   We
have previously held a court sentencing a twenty-one  year  old  for  murder
could legitimately decide not to  find  age  as  a  mitigator.   Herrera  v.
State, 679 N.E.2d 1322 (Ind. 1997).  In light of that holding and  a  record
demonstrating that the court was well aware of Johnson’s age,[3]  we  cannot
say the court erred by not finding youth a mitigator.[4]


      Fatherhood.  Dependent children are properly considered  a  mitigating
factor under Ind. Code § 35-38-1-7.1(c)(10).  Because Johnson  would  likely
be in prison throughout the minority of his child, even under  the  standard
sentence,[5] we cannot attach significant  weight  to  the  mitigator.   See
Battles v. State, 688 N.E.2d 1230, 1237 (Ind. 1997).


      Instigator.  Finally, we address  Johnson’s  contention  that  it  was
Damone Carter, and not Johnson, who initiated the  crime.   Inasmuch  as  it
was Johnson who shot both victims, we are not surprised the trial court  did
not find this a significant mitigating factor.


      On a more general level, we note that the trial court added only  five
years to the murder sentence and ten years to attempted murder.   She  could
have enhanced the sentence  ten  years  for  murder  and  twenty  years  for
attempt.[6]  Moreover, she ran Johnson’s sentences  concurrently.   This  is
not manifestly unreasonable.


                                 Conclusion


            We affirm the judgment of the trial court.


Dickson, Sullivan, Boehm, and Rucker, JJ., concur.
-----------------------
[1] Specifically, Johnson states, in reference to carrying a handgun:

      I been having the gun for years, I been having the gun for years . . .
       and like when I had got out in 96, July of 96, it was just sitting
      there and like I said I don’t carry it or nothing, it’s just there for
      protection, I don’t know why, knowing I was on parole I wasn’t
      suppose[d] to have a gun but it was just there, I just kept it full
      and kept it loaded, I ain’t never carried the gun.


(R. at 608.)
[2] Johnson claims these events are fundamental error, namely, a “blatant
violation of basic principles rendering the trial unfair to the defendant.”
 (Appellant’s Br. at 7.)  They are not.
[3] It is clear from the record that the trial judge considered Johnson’s
age in sentencing stating:  “You will be 52 years old if you get all of
your good time when you get out of prison.”  (R. at 684.)
[4] For sentencing purposes, maturity may be a better way of thinking of
mitigating circumstances.
[5] The presumptive sentence for murder is fifty-five years, to which the
court added five.  Ind. Code Ann. § 35-50-2-3 (West 1998).
[6] See Ind. Code Ann. § 35-50-2-3 (West 1998); Ind. Code Ann. § 35-50-2-4
(West 1998).