Court Opinion

ID: 9965711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-05-03 14:02:12.510785+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:34.629897
License: Public Domain

Rel: May 3, 2024

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter.
Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue,
Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections
may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

                   Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
                               OCTOBER TERM, 2023-2024
                                _________________________

                                         CR-2023-0301
                                   _________________________

                                    Nicholas James Horton

                                                      v.

                                         State of Alabama

                        Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court
                                   (CC-19-4350)

McCOOL, Judge.

        Nicholas James Horton appeals the Jefferson Circuit Court's denial

of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea.

        On September 12, 2022, Horton pleaded guilty to first-degree

robbery, see § 13A-7-5, Ala. Code 1975, in exchange for the State's
CR-2023-0301

agreement to recommend a sentence of 20 years' imprisonment, which

would be split for him to serve 3 years' imprisonment. At the guilty-plea

hearing, the following colloquy occurred immediately after Horton

entered his guilty plea:

           "THE COURT: On your plea of guilty I find you guilty.
     At this time, I know you have asked for a turn-in date, and so
     I am going to allow you to actually turn in and set you down
     for a sentencing hearing on November 28[, 2022]. At that
     time, I will then sentence you.

          "I will say for the record purposes, Mr. Horton, if you are
     back on [November 28], and that's going to be at 9 o'clock, then
     I have every intention and will sentence you in accordance
     with the plea agreement, which is a 20-year sentence split 3
     years to serve, giving you credit for all jail time that you have
     previously served -- that you have earned. However, if you
     are not back on that date and I have to issue a writ and have
     you brought back or we have to actually have you arrested,
     then I will not sentence you in accordance with this plea
     agreement.

          "And I do want you to understand that the range of
     punishment at this point is not less than 20 years nor more
     than life in the case. And so if you are not back on that date,
     then that entire range of punishment is at my disposal.

           "THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir, Your Honor.

          "THE COURT: I'm giving you some time to wrap up
     some affairs.

           "THE DEFENDANT: Thank you, Your Honor.

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            "THE COURT: And, you know, say your goodbyes for a
      period of time to who you need to, but I fully expect and hope
      to see you back on [November 28] so that I don't have to go --

            "THE DEFENDANT: I'll be here.

            "THE COURT: -- somewhere within that range, okay?

            "THE DEFENDANT: Thank you."

(R. 7-9.)

      Horton did not appear for sentencing on November 28, 2022.

Instead, that same day Horton "emailed the [circuit] court, indicating

that some of his out-of-state family members were in town"; "advised the

court that he would not be … present at the sentencing hearing"; and

"requested an additional two days to turn in and be sentenced." (C. 44.)

The circuit court did not respond to Horton's email and instead issued a

warrant for his arrest. The circuit court did, however, "give Horton's

attorney until November 29 to … contact Horton and get him [to court]

without penalty or punishment," but Horton also did not appear in court

on that date or voluntarily appear in court on any subsequent date. (R.

12.) Horton was arrested on January 20, 2023.

      On February 23, 2023, the circuit court held a sentencing hearing,

at which Horton's counsel asked the court to sentence Horton in

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accordance with the parties' written plea agreement, i.e., 20 years'

imprisonment with the sentence split for Horton to serve 3 years'

imprisonment.     However, because Horton had not appeared for

sentencing on November 28, 2022, the circuit court refused to impose that

sentence and instead sentenced him to a straight sentence of 25 years'

imprisonment.

     Following the sentencing hearing, Horton filed a written motion to

withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that his failure to appear for sentencing

on November 28, 2022, did not authorize the circuit court to "sentence

him outside the negotiated 20-year sentence split 3 to serve." (C. 67.)

The circuit court denied that motion, and Horton filed a timely notice of

appeal, arguing that the court should have granted his motion to

withdraw his guilty plea because, he says, the court "sentenced him

outside of the range in the plea agreement due to his failure to appear at

sentencing." (Henderson's brief, p. 2.)

     This case is controlled by State v. Holman, 486 So. 2d 500 (Ala.

1986). In that case, Robert Holman and the State entered into a plea

agreement providing that the State would recommend a sentence of 15

years' imprisonment in exchange for Holman's guilty plea. At the guilty-

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plea hearing, the circuit court "agreed to defer … sentencing … so that

Holman might … get his affairs in order before going to prison." Id. at

501.    The circuit court noted, though, that "it was imposing some

additional conditions upon the sentencing agreement," including that

Holman "appear … for sentencing," id., and the court informed Holman

that, if he did not appear for sentencing, then "[t]he [15-year sentence]

w[ould] be off and [the court] could give [him] up to life." Id. at 502.

Holman did not appear for the sentencing hearing, and, when he was

ultimately sentenced following his arrest, the circuit court sentenced him

to life imprisonment.    Holman subsequently moved to withdraw his

guilty plea, and the circuit court denied that motion.

       In holding that the circuit court did not err by denying Holman's

motion to withdraw his guilty plea, the Alabama Supreme Court stated:

              "Although it is undisputed that an agreement was
       reached between Holman's counsel and the prosecutor, which
       provided for a recommendation of a sentence of 15 years in
       exchange for a guilty plea, it is apparent from … the record
       that Holman's guilty plea was made without objection to, and
       with full knowledge of, the added conditions set out by the
       trial judge. ….

            "….

            "In the present case, … the plea agreement, as amended
       by the trial judge, specifically contemplated the defendant's

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CR-2023-0301

     further violations; therefore, the trial judge sentenced
     Holman pursuant to the agreement. ….

           "….

            " … [I]n English v. State, [56 Ala. App. 704, 325 So. 2d
     211 (Ala. Crim. App. 1975)], the court held that 'if the trial
     court decides not to carry out the agreement reached between
     the prosecutor and counsel for the accused, the accused must
     be afforded the opportunity to withdraw his guilty plea on
     motion promptly made.' 56 Ala. App. at 708, 325 So. 2d at
     215. That case is distinguishable because the trial judge, in
     the present case, did not refuse to carry out the amended plea
     agreement. To the contrary, he sentenced Holman pursuant
     to it.

           "The purpose of the rule allowing a defendant to
     withdraw a guilty plea when the trial judge refuses to carry
     out an agreement reached between the prosecutor (or the trial
     judge) and defense counsel is to insure that such a plea is
     made voluntarily, which necessarily requires that it be made
     with full knowledge of the attendant consequences.

           "We hold, under the facts in this case, that the trial
     judge did not abuse his discretion in denying Holman's motion
     to withdraw his guilty plea. To hold otherwise would enable
     the defendant either to demand a lesser sentence that had
     been predicated upon a condition he failed to meet, or to
     withdraw a plea knowingly and voluntarily entered. This
     would set a dangerous precedent."

Holman, 486 So. 2d at 503-04 (first emphasis added). Thus, as this Court

observed in Taylor v. State, 677 So. 2d 1284, 1285 (Ala. Crim. App. 1996),

"the Holman court held that when that appellant failed to appear at the

sentencing hearing, he was sentenced to life in accordance with the plea

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agreement, as amended by the condition added by the trial court."

(Emphasis added.) See also Hydrick v. State, 337 So. 3d 1211, 1215 (Ala.

Crim. App. 2021) (noting that, "under Holman, a circuit court may add

conditions to a plea agreement and it may reject a plea agreement if a

defendant violates those additional conditions").

     In this case, the circuit court expressly informed Horton at the

guilty-plea hearing that it would impose the sentence recommended by

the State only if he appeared for sentencing on November 28, 2022;

otherwise, the court explained, the "entire [statutory] range of

punishment [was] at [the court's] disposal." 1 In other words, just as the

circuit court did in Holman, the circuit court amended the plea

agreement at the guilty-plea hearing, and Horton acknowledged the

sentencing condition imposed by the court and agreed to be bound by it.

Thus, when the circuit court sentenced Horton to 25 years' imprisonment

because he had failed to appear for sentencing on November 28, 2022, the

court did not deviate from the plea agreement; instead, the court

     1Horton does not argue on appeal that he did not understand the

sentencing range that could be imposed for his first-degree robbery
conviction.
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CR-2023-0301

sentenced Horton "in accordance with the plea agreement, as amended

by the condition added by the [circuit] court." Taylor, 677 So. 2d at 1285.

     Horton acknowledges that Holman authorized the circuit court to

orally amend the plea agreement, but he argues that his case is factually

distinguishable from Holman. In support of that argument, Horton notes

that the circuit court imposed the sentencing conditioning immediately

after it accepted his guilty plea, whereas in Holman the court imposed

the sentencing condition immediately before accepting Holman's guilty

plea. An appellate division of the New York Supreme Court addressed

this same situation in People v. Radek, 202 A.D.2d 847, 609 N.Y.S.2d 366

(1994).

     In Radek, the defendant entered a guilty plea, and, immediately

after the trial court accepted the plea, it informed the defendant that it

would not impose the State's recommended sentence unless he complied

with certain conditions, including "not 'becom[ing] involved with any

further difficulty with the law' prior to sentencing." Id. at 848. The

defendant acknowledged the trial court's conditions but was nevertheless

arrested five days before his sentencing hearing, and, as a result, the trial

court sentenced him to the harshest sentence allowed by law.            The

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CR-2023-0301

defendant then moved to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that the trial

court had not "sentence[d] him in accordance with the plea bargain," and

the court denied that motion. Id. On appeal, the Radek Court stated:

          "The only contention requiring comment is defendant's
     claim that [the trial court] erred in departing from the agreed-
     upon sentence because of defendant's noncompliance with a
     condition which had not been imposed until after his guilty
     plea was accepted. The argument is meritless.

          "Although technically [the trial court's] statement of the
     two conditions it chose to impose on the plea bargain was
     made after defendant entered his guilty plea, the record
     reveals that it was an integral part of the same proceeding
     and that defendant had ample opportunity to object to the
     requirements, or to ask to withdraw his plea, after the
     conditions were announced. Not having done so, he must be
     considered to have assented to the conditions as imposed."

Id. at 848-49, 367-68.

     We agree with the Radek Court. It is true that the circuit court did

not impose Horton's sentencing condition until after it accepted his guilty

plea, and perhaps our decision would be different if Horton had expressed

some dissatisfaction with the sentencing condition, had moved to

withdraw the guilty plea he had just entered, and had not been allowed

to do so, or if the court had imposed the sentencing condition at some

point after the guilty-plea hearing.    But that is not what occurred.

Instead, the circuit court imposed the sentencing condition immediately

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after accepting Horton's guilty plea, and Horton indicated that he was

satisfied with the condition and would comply with it as part of his guilty

plea. Thus, it is clear that the sentencing condition "was an integral part

of the same proceeding," i.e., the guilty-plea hearing, and that Horton

"assented to the conditions as imposed." Radek, 202 A.D.2d at 849.

Accordingly, there is no manifest injustice in holding Horton to the

sentencing condition that he willingly accepted in conjunction with his

guilty plea and then willfully chose to ignore. See Rule 14.4(e), Ala. R.

Crim. P. (providing that a court "shall allow withdrawal of a plea of guilty

when necessary to correct a manifest injustice"). See also Saulter v.

State, 334 So. 3d 526, 529 (Ala. Crim. App. 2020) (noting that a circuit

court may condition a defendant's sentence for a guilty-plea conviction

upon the defendant's appearance at the sentencing hearing, provided

that the condition is "expressly included in the written plea agreement

or stated in open court" at the guilty-plea hearing).

     "[W]hether to allow a defendant to withdraw his guilty plea rests

within the sound discretion of the [circuit] court, and this Court will not

overrule that decision on appeal absent an abuse of discretion." Waters

v. State, 155 So. 3d 311, 317 (Ala. Crim. App. 2013) (citations omitted).

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Based on the foregoing, we cannot say that the circuit court abused its

discretion by refusing to allow Horton to withdraw his guilty plea. Thus,

judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

     AFFIRMED.

     Windom, P.J., and Kellum and Cole, JJ., concur. Minor, J., concurs

specially, with opinion.

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MINOR, Judge, concurring specially.

     I concur fully in the Court's decision. I write separately to commend

the circuit court's conditioning its acceptance of the guilty-plea

agreement on the defendant's presence at sentencing.         Circuit court

judges take note: When you accept a guilty plea, do what this court did.

     I also write separately to recommend that "[t]he guilty-plea forms

included as an appendix to the Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure …

be revised to expressly state that the defendant's presence at sentencing

is a condition of any plea agreement. See Rule 36, Ala. R. Crim. P."

Saulter v. State, 334 So. 3d 526, 529 n.6 (Ala. Crim. App. 2020). As this

Court stated in Saulter, it would seem reasonable for a court to assume

"that the defendant's presence at sentencing is an implied condition of

every plea agreement. Indeed, other jurisdictions have adopted that

position." Id. at 528 (citing cases). Despite that common-sense

assumption, the law in Alabama is otherwise. See, e.g., Taylor v. State,

677 So. 2d 1284 (Ala. Crim. App. 1996). It is high time for that to change.

Judges need not waste more time stating the obvious. If a defendant

agrees to plead guilty, he or she should do so with the express

understanding that not showing up for sentencing means the deal is off.

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