Guyer v. State

Decision Date05 October 1982
Citation453 A.2d 462
PartiesStephen R. GUYER, Defendant Below, Appellant, v. STATE of Delaware, Appellee. . Submitted:
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of Delaware

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. Affirmed.

Stephen R. Guyer, pro se.

J. Patrick Hurley, Deputy Atty. Gen., Wilmington, for appellee.

Before QUILLEN, HORSEY and MOORE, JJ.

MOORE, Justice:

Stephen R. Guyer appeals his convictions of Receiving Stolen Property, 11 Del.C. § 851, 1 and Conspiracy in the second degree, 11 Del.C. § 512. 2 We address two principal issues raised by the defendant. First, when there has been a merger of certain charges upon which the defendant was previously convicted and sentenced, may the sentencing judge without increasing the defendant's total term of imprisonment reassign the sentences earlier imposed to different charges? 3 Second, the applicability of 11 Del.C. § 521(c), prohibiting a conviction of conspiracy to commit a crime when the person with whom the defendant is alleged to have conspired is necessarily involved in the commission of the offense. 4 Upon consideration of the facts and legal principles pertinent to these issues, we affirm.

I.

In October, 1976, Guyer and an associate, Paul Bless, were purportedly in the business of securing loans and second mortgages for persons in need of such financing. Another cohort, James McCartney, was at that time employed by Bryn Mawr Hospital. McCartney's duties included the deposit of tuition checks received from persons in the hospital's student nursing program.

On August 8, 1978, Guyer was indicted on three counts each of Receiving Stolen Property, 11 Del.C. § 851, and Conspiracy Second Degree, 11 Del.C. § 512. At trial before a jury, McCartney testified that: (i) he stole three checks from the hospital, taking them to Guyer to "launder" them through Guyer's checking account; (ii) McCartney and Guyer had earlier discussed both this scheme and possible explanations if it was discovered; (iii) on this occasion Guyer gave McCartney three checks for $500 each in return for three $750 checks from McCartney; and (iv) McCartney told Guyer the three $750 checks were stolen by him from Bryn Mawr Hospital.

The jury found Guyer guilty as charged. Later, he was tried and convicted on an unrelated indictment before a different judge and jury. With Guyer's consent, the second trial judge sentenced him on both sets of convictions.

At sentencing, the judge made it clear that he intended to impose an aggregate of two years incarceration for all convictions. The State advised the court of the possibility that certain of the offenses had merged. The court then sentenced the defendant to one year imprisonment each on two of the Receiving Stolen Property convictions, six months probation for the remaining Receiving offense and six months probation for each of the three Conspiracy convictions.

After the defendant began his term of imprisonment, and upon motion by the State, the court ordered the above sentences corrected, merging the three Receiving charges into one offense and the three Conspiracy charges into a second. Accordingly, the court struck the earlier sentences reassigning to the newly-merged Conspiracy offense the sentence of one year incarceration originally imposed for one of the Receiving offenses. As reassigned, the sentence thus included terms of one year imprisonment for the Receiving offense and one year for Conspiracy.

II.

Guyer first argues that the sentencing judge's reassignment of the original sentences of incarceration to different charges, following a determination of merger, violated his constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy, because it effectively increased the sentence in one of the Conspiracy offenses from six months probation to one year in prison. He contends that the reassignment was virtually a resentencing in violation of Fullman v. State, Del.Supr., 431 A.2d 1260 (1981) and Davis v. State, Del.Supr., 400 A.2d 292 (1979), because his sentence was increased after he had begun serving it. We disagree.

The sentence correction that occurred here is clearly authorized by statutory and decisional law of Delaware. Superior Court Criminal Rule 36; Gibbs v. State, Del.Supr., 229 A.2d 502 (1967).

Criminal Rule 36 empowers the Superior Court to correct clerical mistakes or errors in the record resulting from "oversight or omission". 5 In Gibbs, this Court applied the Rule to affirm a sentencing judge's correction of his ambiguous or erroneous recording of a sentence. 229 A.2d at 504. There, the sentencing judge expressed his intent to impose five consecutive five-year sentences, to be served concurrently with a sentence for life imprisonment. The sentence entered in the docket, however, was ambiguous, if not erroneous, stating in part: "[i]mprisonment for five (5) years on each charge. Sentence to be concurrent with the one for life imprisonment." The docket entry thus created the mistaken impression that the five-year sentences were to run concurrently with one another, not consecutively as intended.

In affirming the judge's Rule 36 order of correction, this Court looked to both the judge's recollection of the event and contemporaneous notations in his handwriting which appeared on the presentence report. Here, too, we must examine the court's expressed intent at the time of sentencing and any tangible evidence of that intent. Indeed, a letter from the judge to defense counsel is dispositive on this point. It shows that at the time of sentencing the judge knew that the sentences of two years incarceration may later have to be reassigned to different indictment numbers because of merger. The sentence ultimately imposed, therefore, merely manifested his original intent.

Fullman v. State, Del.Supr., 431 A.2d 1260 (1981) and Davis v. State, Del.Supr., 400 A.2d 292 (1979), relied upon by the defendant, are not controlling here. Davis and Fullman each involved post-appeal resentencing. Hunter v. State, Del.Supr., 420 A.2d 119 (1980), decided after Davis but prior to Fullman, completes the decisional trilogy that gives shape to this State's standard for post-appeal resentencing.

In Fullman, the trial court initially sentenced the defendant to ten years incarceration on convictions of Attempted Robbery First Degree, 11 Del.C. § 832(b), and Possession of a Deadly Weapon During the Commission of a Felony, 11 Del.C. § 1447(a). Upon the defendant's motion for post-conviction remedy, the weapons charge was declared invalid. On resentencing, the trial court imposed an increased sentence on the Attempted Robbery conviction, i.e., a sentence which equaled the two sentences imposed earlier on both convictions. The defendant appealed, arguing that increasing the attempted robbery sentence was violative of double jeopardy. 431 A.2d at 1263. This Court disagreed.

Citing Davis v. State, 400 A.2d 292 (1979), this Court ruled that in granting post-conviction relief the trial judge was not limited to the actual sentence imposed initially for the attempted robbery conviction, but that the new sentence must not exceed the total of the two terms originally imposed for both offenses. 431 A.2d at 1263; see Davis, 400 A.2d at 297. Fullman noted a further refinement of the resentencing rule in Hunter v. State, Del.Supr., 420 A.2d 119 (1980):

"Thus, any post-appeal sentence imposed in a Davis -type case may not exceed the sentence originally imposed for the conviction which remains, if the defendant has begun to serve the sentence."

431 A.2d at 1263, quoting Hunter, 420 A.2d at 132 (emphasis added in Fullman ). The Court then held Hunter inapplicable to the Fullman facts, since Fullman had not begun to serve his sentence on the attempted robbery charge at the time of his resentencing. 6 Moreover, this Court found that the imposition of the increased term of imprisonment posed no double jeopardy problems. 431 A.2d at 1263; see United States v. Busic, 3d Cir., 639 F.2d 940, 953, cert. denied, 452 U.S. 918, 101 S.Ct. 3055, 69 L.Ed.2d 422 (1981).

The Fullman post-appeal resentencing standard is not applicable to this case, which involves a virtually contemporaneous reassignment. Indeed, the defendant fails to meet the Fullman test, since, at the time of the reassignment, he had not even begun to serve the sentence of six months probation for the Conspiracy offense.

III.

Turning to the challenged Conspiracy conviction, Guyer asserts that 11 Del.C. § 521(c) prohibits this conviction since the receipt of stolen property 7 necessarily involves another person who transfers the property. We find this argument untenable because Guyer's position is not based on what § 521(c) actually provides.

Section 521(c) is a codification of Wharton's Rule: "an agreement between two persons to commit an offense does not constitute conspiracy when the target offense is so defined that it can be committed only by the participation of two persons ..." 4 Wharton's Criminal Law § 731, at 545 (14th ed. 1981). See 16 Am.Jur.2d, Conspiracy, § 6 (1979). The classic offenses subject to the Rule are crimes characterized by a general congruence between the agreement and the completed offense, e.g., adultery, incest, bigamy, and dueling. These crimes are crimes in which the parties are the only ones involved, and the immediate consequences fall on the parties themselves, not on society as a whole. Iannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770, 95 S.Ct. 1284, 43 L.Ed.2d 616 (1975). The theory behind the Rule is "that the offense itself requires concerted action, and that therefore conspiracy between the same parties to commit the same offense adds nothing." Annot., 104 A.L.R. 1430, 1431 (1936).

Efforts have been made to extend the Rule beyond its traditional limits to crimes such as the sale of drugs or receiving stolen property. In such instances, it becomes necessary to consider the statutory requirements of the underlying substantive offense. See State v. DeMartin, Conn.Supr., 171...

To continue reading

Request your trial
17 cases
  • Johnson v. State
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Delaware
    • September 9, 1989
    ...application of 11 Del.C. § 521(c) held that it did not apply to the offense of receiving stolen goods (11 Del.C. § 851). Guyer v. State, Del.Supr., 453 A.2d 462 (1982). The offense described in the statute did not on its face require agreement with another person, because "one may receive p......
  • Parker v. State
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Delaware
    • January 14, 2019
    ...defendant for two counts of assault).36 Spencer , 868 A.2d at 823.37 349 A.2d 745, 747 (Del. 1975).38 Id. ; see also Guyer v. State , 453 A.2d 462, 463 n.3 (Del. 1982) (describing "the single theft rule adopted by this Court in Reader " as "when property belonging to different owners is tak......
  • Stroik v. State, s. 137
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Delaware
    • October 11, 1995
    ...defendant should not be convicted of both crimes. Wharton's Rule has been codified in Delaware as 11 Del.C. § 521(c). See Guyer v. State, Del.Supr., 453 A.2d 462 (1982). As the State correctly points out, Stroik's and Biddle's claim is wholly without merit. Violation of 11 Del.C. § 1503(a) ......
  • Bland v. State, No. 221, 2006 (Del. 10/17/2006)
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Delaware
    • October 17, 2006
    ...1965) (holding that because oral pronouncement of sentence was unambiguous it controlled over written sentence). 3. See Guyer v. State, 453 A.2d 462, 464 (Del. 1982) and SUPER. CT. CRIM. R. 36, "Clerical mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of the record and errors in the record ari......
  • Request a trial to view additional results
3 books & journal articles
  • §29.09 DEFENSES
    • United States
    • Carolina Academic Press Understanding Criminal Law (CAP) 2018 Title Chapter 29 Conspiracy
    • Invalid date
    ...v. State, 587 A.2d 444, 452-53 (Del. 1991).[180] . State v. Cavanaugh, 583 A.2d 1311, 1314 (Conn. App. Ct. 1990).[181] . Guyer v. State, 453 A.2d 462, 466 (Del. 1982).[182] . In (1), it takes only one person to possess a controlled substance, and actual delivery (as distinguished from the i......
  • § 29.09 Defenses
    • United States
    • Carolina Academic Press Understanding Criminal Law (CAP) 2022 Title Chapter 29 Conspiracy
    • Invalid date
    ...v. State, 587 A.2d 444, 452-53 (Del. 1991).[180] State v. Cavanaugh, 583 A.2d 1311, 1314 (Conn. App. Ct. 1990).[181] Guyer v. State, 453 A.2d 462, 466 (Del. 1982).[182] In (1), it takes only one person to possess a controlled substance, and actual delivery (as distinguished from the intent)......
  • TABLE OF CASES
    • United States
    • Carolina Academic Press Understanding Criminal Law (CAP) 2018 Title Table of Cases
    • Invalid date
    ...307 Guilliot, State v., 22 P.3d 1266 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001), 345 Guinn, State v., 453 S.W.2d 846 (Mo. App. 2014), 283, 284 Guyer v. State, 453 A.2d 462 (Del. 1982), 431 Ha v. State, 892 P.2d 184 (Alaska Ct. App. 1995) , 220, 231 Hack, People v., 556 N.W.2d 187 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996), 439, 440......

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT