Legal Research AI

Saylor v. Indiana

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2004-05-21
Citations: 808 N.E.2d 646
Copy Citations
29 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
Attorneys for Appellant                            Attorneys for Appellee
Susan K. Carpenter                                 Steve Carter
Public Defender of Indiana                         Attorney General of
Indiana

Thomas C. Hinesley                                 Arthur Thaddeus Perry
Deputy Public Defender                             Deputy Attorney General

Emily Mills Hawk                             Stephen R. Creason
Special Assistant to the State                           Deputy Attorney
General
    Public Defender
Indianapolis, Indiana                              Thomas D. Perkins
                                             Deputy Attorney General
                                             Indianapolis, Indiana
__________________________________________________________________
                                   In the
                            Indiana Supreme Court
                      _________________________________

                            No. 48S00-9712-PD-647

Benny Saylor,
                                             Appellant (Petitioner below),

                                     v.

State of Indiana,
                                             Appellee (Respondent below).
                      _________________________________

        Appeal from the Madison Superior Court, No. 48D03-9206-CF-185
              The Honorable Fredrick R. Spencer, Special Judge
                      _________________________________

                          On Petition for Rehearing
                      _________________________________

                                May 21, 2004

Boehm, Justice.


      In 1992, Benny Saylor was sentenced to death despite a unanimous  jury
recommendation to the contrary.  In 2002, Indiana  law  was  changed  in  an
important respect by requiring a  unanimous  jury  recommendation  of  death
before the death penalty can be imposed.  Appellate  courts  are  to  review
and revise sentences that are inappropriate.  We conclude  that  it  is  not
appropriate to execute a person who was convicted and  sentenced  through  a
procedure that has now been substantially revised so the  same  trial  today
would no longer render the defendant eligible for  the  death  penalty.   At
the time of Saylor’s crime, life without parole could not be  imposed  under
Indiana law.  Accordingly, we revise Saylor’s sentence  to  a  term  of  one
hundred years.


                      Factual and Procedural Background


      The factual background surrounding Benny Saylor’s  conviction  is  set
forth in other opinions of this Court.  Saylor  v.  State,  765  N.E.2d  535
(Ind. 2002); Saylor v. State, 686 N.E.2d 80 (Ind. 1997).  On June 18,  1992,
Judy VanDuyn’s body was found in her van  parked  in  a  cornfield  after  a
night of heavy  rainfall.   Witnesses  had  observed  Saylor’s  car  in  the
parking lot of the laundromat where VanDuyn had  gone  to  do  her  laundry.
When the police arrived to question Saylor, they found  blood  on  his  arms
and forehead, shoes matching the  prints  found  at  the  crime  scene,  wet
clothes, and a wet billfold.  At a lineup, a  farmer  identified  Saylor  as
the man he had seen in the van with VanDuyn.  A  jury  convicted  Saylor  of
murder, robbery and confinement.


      The circumstances of Saylor’s  sentencing  and  changes  in  Indiana’s
death penalty statute raise the issue before  us  today.   Although  Indiana
law now provides for the possibility of a sentence of life  without  parole,
Saylor’s  crime  was  committed  at  a  time  when   the   only   sentencing
alternatives in a death  penalty  case  were  death  or  a  term  of  years.
Despite a unanimous recommendation against  the  death  penalty,  the  trial
judge nevertheless imposed death.  Saylor is one of  only  three  people  in
this  state  currently  under  a  sentence   of   death   despite   a   jury
recommendation against it.[1]  None of those have been executed.


      At the time of Saylor’s trial and direct appeal  Indiana  law  clearly
authorized the judge to “override” a jury recommendation if the judge  found
the  statutory  aggravating  circumstances  to   outweigh   any   mitigating
circumstances.   Minnick  v.  State,  544  N.E.2d  471,  482  (Ind.   1989).
Consistent with  that  authority,  in  1997  this  Court  affirmed  Saylor’s
sentence.  Saylor, 686 N.E.2d at 89.  In 2000,  the  United  States  Supreme
Court decided Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), which  held  that
a jury must determine beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  any  fact  necessary  to
enhance a sentence.  In the 2002 session of the  Indiana  General  Assembly,
in response to Apprendi, and anticipating that that decision might apply  to
the death penalty despite the contrary holding in  Walton  v.  Arizona,  497
U.S. 639 (1990), legislation was introduced to cure the perceived  “Apprendi
problem” in the Indiana death penalty statute.  In the meantime  Saylor  had
been denied post-conviction relief,  and  on  March  20,  2002,  this  Court
affirmed the denial of relief.  Saylor, 765 N.E.2d at 535.  Six days  later,
on March 26, 2002, the General  Assembly  amended  Indiana’s  death  penalty
statute to remove the express authority to impose death  even  if  the  jury
recommended against it.  Act of March 26, 2002, 2002  Ind.  Acts  117;  Ind.
Code § 35-50-2-9(e) (2002).  On June 24, 2002,  the  United  States  Supreme
Court decided Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584 (2002), which  overruled  Walton
and applied Apprendi to capital cases.  The result  is  that  under  current
Indiana law a jury recommendation against death  would  preclude  imposition
of the death penalty.


      Saylor now seeks rehearing, citing the new  statute  as  well  as  the
logic of Apprendi.[2]  He makes four  claims:   1)  his  death  sentence  is
unconstitutional in light of Apprendi and Ring, 2)  the  amendments  to  the
death penalty statute should apply to him, 3) he was  denied  a  fair  trial
because of undisclosed  juror-witness  relationships,  and  4)  his  counsel
failed to properly investigate the State’s case.  We resolve Saylor’s  claim
on the basis of his first two issues, and deny rehearing  on  the  remaining
issues.


         Review of Saylor’s Sentence in Light of Changes in the Law


   Saylor  seeks  rehearing  of  our  decision  affirming  denial  of  post-
conviction relief.  He points to the changes in both federal  constitutional
jurisprudence and in our state’s death penalty  statute.   For  the  reasons
given below, we revise Saylor’s sentence to a term of one hundred years.


      Both parties address the issue in  part  as  whether  Ring  is  to  be
applied retroactively.  In Daniels v.  State,  561  N.E.2d  487,  489  (Ind.
1990), we adopted for Indiana state law the federal  retroactivity  analysis
outlined in Teague  v.  Lane,  489  U.S.  288  (1989).   Teague  deals  with
retroactivity on collateral review, and begins with  the  premise  that  the
court should apply a “newly declared constitutional rule to  criminal  cases
pending on direct review.”  Id. at 304 (citations omitted).   On  collateral
review the threshold question is whether  the  new  rule  is  procedural  or
substantive.  If it is procedural, it “is generally not applicable to  those
cases on collateral review, that is, those which have  become  final  before
the new rule was announced.”  Daniels, 561 N.E.2d  at  489  (citing  Teague,
489 U.S. at 288).  Saylor’s conviction and sentence  became  final  in  1997
when this Court affirmed his direct  appeal.   This  general  rule  has  two
exceptions:  1)  rules  which  place  “certain  kinds  of  primary,  private
individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority  to
proscribe,” and 2) those which require the observance of “procedures that  .
. . are ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’”  and  “without  which
the likelihood of an accurate conviction is seriously diminished.”   Id.  at
490 (citing Teague, 489 U.S. at 307, 313) (internal citations omitted).


      The majority of courts to have considered the  issue  have  held  that
Ring is an application of the procedural rule announced in Apprendi, and  as
such does not apply retroactively to cases on  collateral  review.   Lambert
v. McBride, No. 03-1015, 2004 U.S.  App.  LEXIS  6658  (7th  Cir.  April  7,
2004); Turner v. Cosby, 339 F.3d 1247 (11th Cir. 2003);  Cannon  v.  Mullin,
297 F.3d 989 (10th Cir. 2002); State v. Lotter, 664 N.W.2d 892 (Neb.  2003);
Colwell v. State, 59 P.3d 463 (Nev. 2002).  Summerlin v. Stewart,  341  F.3d
1082 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc), cert granted sub nom, Schriro v.  Summerlin,
124  S.Ct.  833,  is  the  only  case  we  have  found  that  applies   Ring
retroactively.  The  United  States  Supreme  Court  granted  certiorari  in
Summerlin on December 1, 2003.   At  this  writing  we  have  no  definitive
decision on the retroactive application  of  Ring  under  Teague.   For  the
reasons given below we do not need  to  await  resolution  of  this  federal
constitutional issue, and also do not address whether, even if there  is  no
federal  requirement  that  Ring  be  applied  retroactively,  Indiana   may
nevertheless choose to apply it to  pre-Ring  convictions  as  a  matter  of
state law.


      Article VII, Section 4  of  the  Indiana  Constitution  provides  that
“[t]he Supreme Court shall have, in  all  appeals  of  criminal  cases,  the
power to . . . review and revise  the  sentence  imposed.”   Appellate  Rule
7(B)  implements  that  authority:   “The  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.”


      Sentencing decisions are highly case sensitive and are  for  the  most
part best left to the discretion of the trial court as long as the  sentence
comports  with  applicable  statutes  and  is  imposed  in  accordance  with
applicable procedural requirements.  Nevertheless, the power to  review  and
revise was  expressly  conferred  by  the  1970  amendment  to  the  Indiana
Constitution.  In Serino v. State, 798 N.E.2d 852 (Ind.  2003),  this  Court
recently reviewed the history of Indiana  appellate  review  of  sentencing.
In brief, the Indiana Constitution was amended  in  1970  to  recognize  the
desirability of encouraging  consistency  in  sentencing  in  similar  cases
despite differences of time, place, and sentencing judge.   In  taking  this
approach,  Indiana  expressed  a  preference  for  the  British  tactic   of
appellate review of sentences, and did  not  pursue  the  much  more  severe
restrictions on sentencing discretion imposed on federal courts  at  roughly
the same time in our nation’s history by the Federal Sentencing  Guidelines.
 See  generally  Walker  v.  State,  747  N.E.2d  536,  537-38  (Ind.  2001)
(addressing prior version  of  Indiana  Appellate  Rule  7(B));  Charles  J.
Ogletree, Jr., Commentary:  The Death  of  Discretion?  Reflections  on  the
Federal Sentencing Guidelines, 101 Harv.  L.  Rev.  1938,  1940-42,  1957-58
(1988);  Joel  M.  Schumm,  Survey:  Criminal  Law  and  Procedure:   Recent
Developments in Indiana Criminal Law and Procedure, 34  Ind.  L.  Rev.  645,
670-71 (2001).


      We have long explained that review of a death sentence  must  be  more
intensive than that required for a term of years.  We reaffirm our  goal  of
assuring “evenhanded operation of the death penalty  statute”  by  reviewing
death sentences “in light of other death penalty cases.”  Cooper  v.  State,
540 N.E.2d 1216, 1218 (Ind. 1989) (quoting Judy  v.  State,  275  Ind.  145,
169,  416  N.E.2d  95,  108  (1981)).   Indeed,  we   have   stated   “[t]he
thoroughness and relative independence of this Court’s review is a  part  of
what makes Indiana’s capital punishment  statute  constitutional.”   Cooper,
540 N.E.2d at 1218.


      Before 2002, Appellate Rule 7(B) appellate review called for  revision
of a sentence only if  it  was  “manifestly  unreasonable.”   The  rule  now
provides  that  an  appellate  court  may  revise  a  sentence  if   it   is
“inappropriate.”   On  direct  appeal,  we  reviewed  Saylor’s  claim  under
Article VII, Section 4 and concluded that the death penalty was  appropriate
under the statute.  Saylor v. State, 686 N.E.2d 80, 89 (Ind.  1997).   Since
that time the legal landscape has significantly changed.  Even if the  Sixth
Amendment does not bar Saylor’s execution for a pre-Ring crime, as a  matter
of Indiana state law Saylor, if tried  today,  could  not  be  sentenced  to
death without a jury recommendation that  death  be  imposed.   Under  these
circumstances we conclude that  his  death  sentence  is  inappropriate  and
should be revised.


      Exercise of our Article VII powers to revise a death sentence in light
of changes in the legal  landscape  is  not  unprecedented.   In  Cooper  v.
State, this Court revised Paula Cooper’s sentence from death to  a  term  of
years because she would have been the only fifteen-year-old defendant to  be
executed.   In  Cooper’s  case,  after  she  was  sentenced  to  death   two
significant events occurred.   First,  the  legislature  amended  the  death
penalty statute so that it applied only to  persons  sixteen  years  old  or
older at the time of the crime.  Cooper, 540 N.E.2d at 1219.  The  effective
date of this amendment made it inapplicable to  Cooper.   Id.   Second,  the
United States Supreme Court had recently decided Thompson v.  Oklahoma,  487
U.S. 815 (1988), where, in a plurality opinion, the Court held it  would  be
cruel and unusual punishment to execute a fifteen year old.


      Cooper is  not  squarely  controlling  precedent  for  Saylor’s  case.
First, Cooper was a direct appeal and Saylor seeks  collateral  review.   It
is also true that Cooper would  have  been  both  the  first  and  the  last
Indiana convict to be sentenced to death for a crime committed  at  the  age
of fifteen.  Saylor cannot claim  he  would  be  the  only  person  executed
despite a jury recommendation to the contrary,  but  he  comes  very  close.
Currently two other inmates are on death row after  a  judge  overruled  the
jury’s recommendation against death, but no execution has been  carried  out
in Indiana where the jury recommended against death.  There is one  instance
where the jury was unable  to  agree  on  a  recommendation  and  the  death
penalty was carried out, Burris v. State, 642 N.E.2d 961  (Ind.  1994);  and
another defendant sentenced  in  that  circumstance  remains  on  death  row
today.  Holmes  v.  State,  671  N.E.2d  841  (Ind.  1996).   Despite  these
differences both Paula Cooper and Benny Saylor present situations  in  which
the legislature, after their sentences  were  imposed,  enacted  significant
changes in the requirements for the death penalty  that  would  render  them
ineligible for a death  sentence  in  a  trial  conducted  today.   Even  in
dealing with the death penalty not every change in the law  affects  earlier
trials.  But we conclude  it  is  not  appropriate  to  carry  out  a  death
sentence that was the product of a procedure that has since been revised  in
an important aspect that renders the  defendant  ineligible  for  the  death
penalty.


      In sum, Saylor is one of only  three  individuals  currently  under  a
death sentence despite a jury’s recommendation to the contrary.   By  virtue
of the 2002 amendments to the death penalty statute,  no  future  executions
will take place without a jury recommendation.  Under  these  circumstances,
it is inappropriate to carry out a death sentence that could not be  imposed
today.  Accordingly, we revise the sentence to a term of  imprisonment.   It
remains to fix that term.


      Saylor was charged and convicted of murder, murder in  the  commission
of a robbery, robbery, and confinement.  The two  murder  convictions  merge
into one.  At the time of  Saylor’s  1992  crime,  the  punishment  of  life
without parole was not available  in  Indiana.   As  we  noted  in  Saylor’s
direct appeal, life without parole was available only for  crimes  committed
after June 30, 1993.  Saylor, 686 N.E.2d at 83-84.  Sentencing  options  for
murders committed before that date were either a term  of  years  or  death.
Ind. Code § 35-50-2-3 (1988).  The maximum term of years for murder  at  the
time of Saylor’s crime was forty years, with up to twenty  years  added  for
aggravating circumstances.  Id.  Saylor was also convicted  of  robbery  and
confinement, both Class B felonies  carrying  a  presumed  sentence  of  ten
years, and up to ten years added for aggravating circumstances.  I.C. §  35-
50-2-5.


      As we noted in Saylor’s direct appeal, the trial  court,  in  imposing
death, found that  the  State  had  proved  two  death  penalty  aggravating
circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt: 1) Saylor intentionally killed  the
victim while attempting to commit a robbery; and 2) at the time  the  murder
was committed, Saylor was  on  probation  after  receiving  a  sentence  for
burglary.  Saylor, 686 N.E.2d at 85.  In the  sentencing  order,  the  trial
court noted each of the eight mitigating  circumstances  listed  in  Indiana
Code section 35-50-2-9(c).  After discussing each  circumstance  in  detail,
the court expressly found that “none  of  the  mitigating  circumstances  in
I.C. § 35-50-2-9 were proven or established  in  this  case.”   Saylor,  686
N.E.2d at 85.


      Saylor  does  not  challenge  the  court’s  finding   of   aggravating
circumstances,  but  instead  argues  that  there  were  several  mitigating
circumstances supported by the record that should have  been  considered  by
the court.  As we held in  Saylor’s  direct  appeal,  the  other  mitigating
circumstances—that he would respond affirmatively to  confinement,  that  he
was intoxicated at the time of the offense,  and  that  he  had  a  troubled
childhood—were not clearly supported by  the  record  and  are  entitled  to
little weight.  Id. at 86, 89.  Accordingly, we  sentence  Saylor  to  forty
years for murder, enhanced by twenty  years  reflecting  the  trial  court’s
conclusion that the  maximum  penalty  should  be  imposed.   For  the  same
reason, we revise the sentences for robbery and confinement to twenty  years
in each case, with all these sentences  to  be  served  consecutively.   The
result is a total sentence of one hundred years.


                                 Conclusion


      This case is remanded to the trial court with instructions to enter  a
sentence of sixty years for murder, twenty  years  for  robbery  and  twenty
years for confinement, all to be served consecutively.

Dickson, Sullivan, and Rucker, JJ., concur.

Shepard, C.J., dissents with opinion.


SHEPARD, Chief Justice, dissenting.


      As we did when the Court considered the  appropriateness  of  Saylor’s
sentence during his direct appeal, we have always  approached  the  question
by examining all of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances.


      Saylor’s case presented two aggravating circumstances.  One  was  that
he “intentionally” killed Judy VanDuyn, whose only offense  was  taking  her
clothes to  the  laundromat  late  in  the  evening.   The  weight  of  this
aggravator, measured by the level of  Saylor’s  intentionality,  has  always
seemed substantial.  Saylor stabbed Ms.  VanDuyn  forty-five  times,  aiming
half of these blows at her left breast.


      The second aggravating circumstance  was  that  Saylor  committed  the
murder at a moment when the judicial system had offered  him  grace  on  the
promise of good behavior:  he was on probation when he killed a human  being
over the $22 she was carrying.


      As Justice Boehm notes, both the sentencing judge and this Court  have
rejected  most  of  Saylor’s  claims  concerning  mitigating  circumstances.
Until today, only a few  of  these  have  been  found  viable:   a  troubled
childhood, consuming drugs and alcohol at the time of  the  offense,  and  a
history of substance abuse.  We  earlier  declared  that,  individually  and
collectively, these  were  entitled  to  low  “if  any”  mitigating  weight.
Saylor, 586 N.E.2d at 89.


      To these mitigating circumstances, the Court now adds the  changes  in
the death penalty statute prompted by Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530  U.S.  466
(2000).  These changes had little to do with defendants situated like  Benny
Saylor, whose jury, after all, found beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  both  the
aggravating circumstances that render him eligible for  the  death  penalty.
I thus do not regard these amendments, even if one  can  plausibly  describe
them as a “mitigating circumstance”,  as  adding  enough  to  make  Saylor’s
sentence inappropriate.  The high level of culpability reflected in the  two
aggravators still more than outweigh the modest mitigators.


      But so it will be.  Saylor will be relieved  of  the  penalty  imposed
for his 1992 crime.  And, it  is  clear  enough,  so  will  others  who  are
presently sitting on death row.

-----------------------
[1] The two others are William Minnick and Christoper  Peterson,  now  known
as Obadyah Ben-Yisrayl.  This Court affirmed Minnick’s conviction on  direct
appeal in Minnick v. State, 544 N.E.2d 471, 482 (Ind. 1989).   His  petition
for habeas corpus is currently pending in the Northern District of  Indiana.
 Ben-Yisrayl was convicted and sentenced to death in two separate trials  in
Lake County and Porter County.  In Lake  County,  the  trial  court  imposed
death despite the jury’s recommendation against it.  That  was  affirmed  on
direct appeal.  Peterson v. State, 674 N.E.2d 528 (Ind.  1996).   Denial  of
post-conviction relief was affirmed, Ben-Yisrayl v. State,  729  N.E.2d  102
(Ind. 2000), and the district court denied his habeas petition.  His  appeal
of denial of federal habeas is pending  in  the  Seventh  Circuit.   In  the
Porter County case, the  jury  recommended  death  and  we  affirmed.   Ben-
Yisrayl v. State, 690 N.E.2d 1141 (Ind. 1997).  We also affirmed the  denial
of post-conviction relief.  Ben-Yisrayl  v.  State,  753  N.E.2d  649  (Ind.
2001).  The Northern District  of  Indiana  recently  granted  Ben-Yisrayl’s
petition for habeas corpus in the Porter County  case,  and  the  State  has
appealed.  Ben-Yisrayl v. Davis, 277 F. Supp. 2d 898, 907 (N.D. Ind.  2003).


[2] Saylor sought rehearing on April 19, 2002.   At  that  time  the  United
States Supreme Court had  granted  certiorari  but  not  yet  decided  Ring.
After Ring was decided, both parties submitted supplemental briefs.