Knarich v. State

Decision Date09 September 2005
Docket NumberNo. 2D04-4141.,2D04-4141.
PartiesCurtis Harold KNARICH, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and Richard J. Sanders, Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.

Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Danilo Cruz-Carino, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.

WALLACE, Judge.

In this guidelines sentencing case, Curtis Harold Knarich challenges the fifteen-year upward departure sentence imposed on him after his conviction for handling and fondling a child under the age of sixteen years, a violation of section 800.04(1), Florida Statutes (1997). The trial court imposed the upward departure sentence on account of Knarich's prior military convictions for offenses that could not be scored as prior record under the sentencing guidelines because there was no analogous or parallel Florida crime when Knarich committed the military offenses. Knarich argues that his prior military convictions were not a valid legal ground for the upward departure sentence. We agree. Accordingly, we reverse the departure sentence, and we remand this case to the trial court for Knarich to be resentenced within the guidelines.

BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Knarich has twenty-five convictions under the Uniform Code of Military Justice that predate his conviction for the current offense. This circumstance has led to complications in sentencing Knarich for the crime that he committed more than eight years ago. After a jury trial, Knarich was convicted of handling and fondling a child under the age of sixteen years, in violation of section 800.04(1), a second-degree felony. According to the information, the offense occurred between July 5 and August 11, 1997. Because Knarich's offense was committed before October 1, 1998, the Criminal Punishment Code is inapplicable.1 Therefore, Knarich must be sentenced under the sentencing guidelines.2

Initially, the trial court sentenced Knarich to forty years in prison. The last fifteen years of the sentence were to be suspended, and Knarich was to be placed on fifteen years of sex offender probation. This court reversed the original sentence after concluding that the trial court had improperly scored Knarich's prior military convictions. Knarich v. State, 766 So.2d 404 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000) (Knarich I). We held that the trial court had erred by scoring Knarich's military convictions as prior record without comparing the elements of the military offenses to the specific elements of a comparable offense. Id. at 405.

On remand for resentencing, the trial court imposed a thirty-five-year prison sentence. The last ten years of the sentence were to be suspended, and Knarich was to be placed on ten years of sex offender probation. This court reversed the sentence imposed on remand and again remanded for resentencing. Knarich v. State, 866 So.2d 165 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004) (Knarich II). We held that the trial court had erred by comparing Knarich's military offenses committed from 1982 to 1984 to offenses that were prohibited under Florida law when Knarich committed his 1997 Florida offense. Id. at 170. This court directed the trial court on remand to resentence Knarich after comparing the military offenses "to offenses that were contained in the Florida Statutes that were in effect at the time the military offenses were committed." Id.

On the second remand for resentencing, the State conceded that Knarich's prior military offenses could not be scored as prior record under the guidelines because there was no Florida offense analogous to the military convictions when those offenses occurred.3 Without scoring Knarich's military convictions as prior record, the guidelines range for Knarich's current offense was for a prison term ranging from four years and three months to seven years. However, the State urged the trial court to impose an upward departure sentence based on the nonscoreable military convictions. The trial court agreed, and it resentenced Knarich to the current fifteen-year sentence. In an order providing its reason for imposing the upward departure sentence, the trial court said "that the Defendant [Knarich] had prior unscoreable adult offenses of a similar nature to the offense committed herein." Knarich has appealed the upward departure sentence.

THE ISSUE

Knarich raises two points on appeal. We need address only Knarich's argument that his prior nonscoreable military convictions did not constitute a valid legal ground for a departure sentence. This is a question of law that we review de novo. See Banks v. State, 732 So.2d 1065, 1067 (Fla.1999); Daniels v. State, 884 So.2d 220, 222 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004).

Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.703(d)(15) defines "prior record" for the purpose of determining the defendant's sentence points to be assessed on account of his or her prior criminal convictions. In pertinent part, the rule provides:

"Prior record" refers to any conviction for an offense committed by the offender prior to the commission of the primary offense, excluding any additional offenses pending before the court for sentencing. Prior record shall include convictions for offenses committed by the offender as an adult or as a juvenile [and] convictions by ... military ... courts .... [M]ilitary ... convictions are scored at the severity level at which the analogous or parallel Florida crime is located.

(A) Convictions for offenses committed more than 10 years prior to the date of the commission of the primary offense are not scored as prior record if the offender has not been convicted of any other crime for a period of 10 consecutive years from the most recent date of release from confinement, supervision, or other sanction, whichever is later, to the date of the commission of the primary offense.

(B) Juvenile dispositions of offenses committed by the offender within 3 years prior to the date of the commission of the primary offense are scored as prior record if the offense would have been a crime if committed by an adult....

....

(D) Any uncertainty in the scoring of the offender's prior record shall be resolved in favor of the offender[.]

In accordance with the rule, military convictions are to be scored "at the severity level at which the analogous or parallel Florida crime is located." Id. In determining whether a conviction from another jurisdiction is analogous to a Florida crime for the purpose of calculating sentencing points, the elements of the crime committed in the foreign jurisdiction, and not the underlying facts, must be considered. Dautel v. State, 658 So.2d 88, 91 (Fla.1995); Knarich II, 866 So.2d at 168. If Florida has no statute containing elements of the offense analogous to the statute from another jurisdiction under which the defendant was convicted, no points may be scored for that conviction as prior record. See Mohammed v. State, 561 So.2d 384, 387 (Fla. 1st DCA 1990).

On the second remand of Knarich's case for resentencing in the trial court, the State conceded that Knarich's prior military convictions could not be scored as prior record because there was no analogous or parallel statute in effect when Knarich committed his military offenses. The trial court agreed that the military offenses were not scoreable as prior record but relied on them as its sole basis for imposing an upward departure sentence. Thus the issue presented is whether Knarich's nonscoreable military convictions constitute a valid legal ground for an upward departure sentence.

NONSCOREABLE OFFENSES AND UPWARD DEPARTURES

The sentencing guidelines do not answer the issue posed by the unusual facts in Knarich's case. Section 921.0016(2), Florida Statutes (1997), does provide that a departure sentence is discouraged unless there are circumstances or factors which reasonably justify the departure. Section 921.0016(3) sets forth a list of aggravating circumstances under which a departure from the guidelines is reasonably justified. The statutory list of aggravating circumstances does not include prior convictions from other jurisdictions for which there was no analogous or parallel Florida crime when the foreign offense was committed. However, the list contained in the statute is illustrative rather than exclusive. Id.; see also Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.703(d)(30). In support of the sentence imposed by the trial court, the State relies on three circumstances in which nonscoreable offenses can be used as a basis for an upward departure sentence. We turn now to an examination of these three instances of departures based on nonscoreable offenses.

Nonscoreable Capital Convictions

The first of these circumstances involves nonscoreable capital convictions. Our supreme court has previously held that a trial court may depart from the sentencing guidelines based on a contemporaneous unscored capital conviction. See Bunney v. State, 603 So.2d 1270, 1271 (Fla.1992); Livingston v. State, 565 So.2d 1288, 1292 (Fla.1988); Hansbrough v. State, 509 So.2d 1081, 1087 (Fla.1987). A rule authorizing a departure based on a contemporaneous unscored capital felony was added to the guidelines in 1993 with the addition of the following language to rule 3.701(d)(12): "Where the offender is being sentenced for a capital felony and other noncapital felonies that arose out of the same criminal episode or transaction, the sentencing court may impose any sentence authorized by law for the noncapital felonies." Amendments to Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, 613 So.2d 1307, 1308 (Fla.1993).

Our supreme court's decision in Smith v. State, 515 So.2d 182, 184 (Fla.1987), suggests that a prior nonscoreable capital conviction will also support a departure sentence. Under the 1995 amendments to the guidelines, a prior nonscoreable capital felony triples the points the defendant receives for the primary offense and any additional offense. Ch. 95-184, § 6, Laws of Fla., ...

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    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Northern District of Florida
    • December 27, 2016
    ...1270 (Fla. 1992) as a legal basis for the court to depart above the guidelines maximum. Mr. Stuckey relies upon Knarich v. State , 932 So.2d 257, 261 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005) for the proposition that the departure rule codified a limited basis for a departure for "other noncapital felonies that a......
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    • April 30, 2021
    ...that have no comparable provision in Florida criminal law cannot be used to depart upward from the pre-CPC guidelines. Knarich v. State, 932 So. 2d 257 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005) Fourth District Court of Appeal The court may not depart upward from the guidelines recommended sentence on a VOP based ......

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