Guidelines
must be considered
Supreme
Court defers requirement until Sept. 1
By
David Ziemer
david.ziemer@wislawjournal.com
July
9, 2007
| What
the court held Case:
State v. Grady, No. 2005AP2424-CR. Issue:
Must sentencing courts consider any applicable sentencing guidelines? Must
the sentencing hearing reflect actual consideration of the guidelines? Holding:
Yes. The statutes
require that a court “shall consider” them. Yes.
But the requirement is deferred until Sept. 1, 2007. Attorneys:
For Appellant:
Hintze, Donna L., Madison; For Respondent: Loebel, Karen A., Milwaukee; Pray,
Eileen W., Madison |
Effective
Sept. 1, circuit courts will have to explicitly reference the applicable guideline
when imposing sentence, under a June 29 decision by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Vincent
T. Grady pleaded guilty to two counts of armed robbery with use of force, and
was sentenced to 10 years for the first count, with 7 years confinement and 3
years extended supervision, and a consecutive 20-year sentence for the second,
with 13 years confinement and 7 years extended supervision.
Although
a sentencing guideline existed for armed robbery, the sentencing court did not
refer to it. The record also did not include a guideline worksheet, and no one
at the hearing, including the parties, mentioned the guideline for armed robbery.
Grady
later moved for resentencing based on the courts failure to consider the
guidelines.
At
the postconviction hearing, the court stated that, although there was no mention
of it during the sentencing, she had considered the sentencing guideline, and
denied the motion.
Grady
appealed, but the court of appeals affirmed, concluding that sec. 973.017(10)
precluded appellate review of a courts failure to consider the guidelines.
State v. Grady, 2006 WI App 188, 296 Wis.2d 295, 722 N.W.2d 760.
The
Supreme Court granted review and affirmed, in a decision by Justice Jon P. Wilcox,
but on different grounds.
The
court first held that defendants can appeal a sentence based on failure to apply
the guidelines.
Section
973.017(10) provides, in relevant part, there is no right to appeal a courts
sentencing decision based on the courts decision to depart in any way from
any guideline.
The
court concluded that, although the statute precludes using a departure from the
guidelines as a basis for appeal, nothing precludes an appeal based on the sentencing
courts failure to consider the guidelines at all.
The
court noted that a previous decision of the court stated that appellate review
is not precluded if the circuit court fails to consider the guidelines at all.
State v. Speer, 176 Wis. 2d 1101, 1122-23, 501 N.W.2d 429 (1993).
However,
that part of the decision was joined only by three justices, with three justices
not joining that part, and one not participating. Thus, the language was not binding
precedent.
Here,
the court wrote, Up to this point, there has not been a holding that sec.
973.017(10) or sec. 973.012 precluded appellate review of a circuit courts
consideration of an applicable sentencing guideline. In this case, the court is
unanimous. Wisconsin Stat. Sec. 973.017(10) does not preclude appellate review
to determine whether a circuit court considered a sentencing guideline.
Turning
to how a circuit court satisfies its obligation to consider the guidelines, the
court found that consideration is mandatory, because sec. 973.017(2)(a) states
that the court shall consider the applicable guideline.
Accordingly,
the court concluded that the record of the sentencing hearing must demonstrate
that the court actually considered them and stated so on the record. However,
the court added that there are no magic words the court must state
to satisfy its obligation.
In
Gradys case, there was nothing in the record at sentencing to demonstrate
consideration of the guidelines, only the after-the-fact statements of the sentencing
court at the post-conviction hearing that it did consider them.
The
court concluded that this was sufficient in this case, but would not suffice in
the future: Hereafter, supplementing the record with evidence beyond the
sentencing hearing will be insufficient.
The
court noted that, while the guidelines have existed for over 25 years, there
has been uncertainty about their use.
Recognizing
that its decision will require many circuit courts to change their sentencing
practices, the court deferred effectiveness of the new rule until Sept. 1.
Finally,
the court issued guidance to sentencing courts, stating that they are neither
obligated to complete a sentencing worksheet, nor explain how the guideline fits
the objectives of sentencing or how the guideline influences the sentence actually
imposed.