Court Opinion

ID: 4017600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-20 21:10:18.494084+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:19:23.796954
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT JACKSON
                           Assigned on Briefs May 3, 2016

                STATE OF TENNESSEE v. RONNIE INGRAM

                   Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
                        No. 10-01607    Chris Craft, Judge

                No. W2015-01527-CCA-R3-PC - Filed July 20, 2016

The defendant, Ronnie Ingram, appeals his sentencing by the Shelby County Criminal
Court to twelve years as a career offender for attempted criminal exposure to human
immunodeficiency virus (“HIV”), which was imposed upon remand after this court
reduced his original conviction of criminal exposure to HIV, a Class C felony, to
attempted criminal exposure to HIV, a Class D felony. The defendant argues that the
trial court erred by relying on facts from the original sentencing hearing in determining
that he was a career offender. Following our review, we affirm the sentencing imposed
by the trial court and remand for entry of a corrected judgment to reflect the defendant‟s
conviction offense, which was omitted.

 Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
               and Remanded for Entry of a Corrected Judgment

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN
and J. ROSS DYER, JJ., joined.

Terrell L. Tooten, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ronnie Ingram.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thornton, Senior
Counsel; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Carla Taylor, Assistant District
Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
                                        OPINION

                                         FACTS

      This case arises out of the HIV-infected defendant‟s deliberately spitting in the
face of a Memphis police officer who captured him after the officer interrupted the
defendant‟s burglary of a home. A Shelby County jury convicted the defendant of
aggravated burglary, theft of property valued at more than $500 but less than $1,000,
criminal exposure to HIV, evading arrest, and resisting arrest. The trial court
subsequently sentenced him to a total effective sentence of thirty-two years plus eleven
months, twenty-nine days. See State v. Ronnie Ingram, No. W2011-02595-CCA-R3-CD,
2012 WL 5355694, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. Oct. 31, 2012).

        On direct appeal, this court reversed the criminal exposure to HIV conviction on
the basis that there was insufficient proof that the defendant‟s actions in spitting in the
officer‟s face presented “a significant risk of HIV transmission,” one of the essential
elements of the offense. Id. at *5. We found, however, that there was sufficient proof to
support the defendant‟s conviction for attempting to expose the officer to HIV. Id.
(“Based on the circumstances of (1) the officer‟s description of the defendant‟s
intentional spitting at the officer, (2) the defendant‟s statement, accompanying the
expectorating, that he was infected with HIV, and (3) the defendant‟s statement that he
hoped the police dog contracted „AIDS‟ or HIV from biting the defendant, we hold that
the evidence sufficiently established that the defendant, acting with intent to cause a
result of exposing the officer to HIV, an element of the greater offense charged, believed
the conduct would cause the result without further conduct on his part.”). Accordingly,
we remanded the case to the trial court for resentencing on that conviction.

       At the July 10, 2015 sentencing hearing, the trial court relied on facts presented at
the previous sentencing hearing to sentence the defendant as a career offender to twelve
years in the Department of Correction, to be served consecutively to the sentences for his
other convictions. Thereafter, the defendant filed a timely appeal to this court in which
he raises the issue of whether the trial court erred by sentencing him as a career offender.

                                       ANALYSIS

       The defendant argues that the trial court erred in sentencing him as a career
offender because the State failed to file a new notice of enhanced punishment or to
present any evidence at the new sentencing hearing to support a finding that he had the
requisite prior felonies to be classified as a career offender. The State responds by
arguing that the defendant was on notice from the first trial of the State‟s intent to seek

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enhanced punishment and that the trial court was entitled to rely in sentencing on its
previous findings of fact. We agree with the State.

        A career offender is a defendant who has received “[a]t least six (6) prior felony
convictions of any classification if the defendant‟s conviction offense is a Class D or E
felony.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-108(a)(3). A defendant who has been found by the
trial court “beyond a reasonable doubt to be a career offender shall receive the maximum
sentence within the applicable Range III.” Id. at § 40-35-108(c).

       At the sentencing hearing, the trial court referred to the presentence report on
which it had based its original sentencing determinations in the case. When defense
counsel argued that the defendant should be sentenced as a Range I offender if “all we
have before us is this presentence report, and nothing further,” the trial court replied that
it was adopting the same proof that was offered in the first sentencing hearing with
respect to the defendant‟s prior convictions, which had already been proven.

        We find no error in the trial court‟s reliance on facts presented at the prior
sentencing hearing to classify the defendant as a career offender. As the State points out
in its brief, it is well-established that a court may take judicial notice of factual findings
made in prior proceedings in the same case. See Pruitt v. State, 460 S.W.2d 385, 395
(Tenn. Crim. App. 1970) (“The rule has long since been firmly established in this State
that a Court may take judicial knowledge of facts which it has learned in an earlier
hearing of the same case and of what it has done at a previous hearing of that case.”); see
also State v. Ernest Gentry Burton, No. M2008-00431-CCA-R3-CD, 2009 WL 2382284,
at *15 (Tenn. Crim. App. Aug. 3, 2009), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Dec. 14, 2009) (noting
that the “trial court may take judicial notice of any fact that is capable of accurate and
ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
questioned[,]” including facts from “an earlier proceeding in the same case”) (citing
Tenn. R. Evid. 201; Pruitt, 460 S.W.2d at 395). We also agree with the State that it was
not required to duplicate its notice of enhanced punishment after remand from this court
for resentencing for the lesser-included offense of attempted criminal exposure to HIV
because the defendant was on notice from the first sentencing proceeding of the State‟s
intent in that regard. See State v. Livingston, 197 S.W.3d 710, 714-15 (Tenn. 2006).
We, therefore, affirm the sentencing determinations of the trial court.

                                      CONCLUSION

        Based on our review, we conclude that the trial court did not err in considering
facts from the original sentencing hearing in finding that the defendant had the requisite
felonies to be sentenced on remand as a career offender. Accordingly, we affirm the
sentencing imposed by the trial court and remand for entry of a corrected judgment to
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reflect the defendant‟s conviction offense of attempted criminal exposure to HIV, which
was omitted on the original judgment.

                                               _________________________________
                                               ALAN E. GLENN, JUDGE

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