State v. Red Kettle
State v. Red Kettle
Opinion
[¶1.] Twenty-eight years ago, this Court reversed a defendant's sentence and remanded the case for resentencing consistent with the Court's decision. For reasons not disclosed in this record, the defendant did not get resentenced until 2017. In a pro-se motion made before the 2017 sentence-correction hearing, the defendant requested court-appointed counsel and argued for his release because the State failed to timely proceed after remand. The circuit court did not address these additional requests; instead, it proceeded to resentence the defendant as directed in this Court's 1990 decision. The defendant now appeals, asserting he had a Sixth Amendment right to counsel in the 2017 sentence-correction proceeding. We disagree and affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[¶2.] In 1988, Byron Red Kettle pleaded guilty to kidnapping and assault. He was sentenced to life in prison for the kidnapping and thirty years for the assault. The circuit court ordered the sentences to run consecutively to corresponding federal sentences Red Kettle had previously received for the same kidnapping and assault.
[¶3.] Red Kettle appealed, claiming the sentencing court erred in ordering his state sentences to run consecutively to his federal sentences. This Court reversed and remanded the case for resentencing.
State v. Red Kettle
,
[¶4.] In September 2016, Red Kettle informed the Pennington County Clerk of Courts by letter that the circuit court had not resentenced him as directed in this Court's 1990 decision. He also filed a pro-se motion requesting the circuit court to order his release because the court had failed to resentence him in a timely manner. His motion included a request for court-appointed counsel.
[¶5.] The circuit court held a resentencing hearing on July 20, 2017, and Red Kettle appeared telephonically without counsel. The court indicated it intended to resentence him consistent with this Court's 1990 decision. The court subsequently entered an amended judgment of conviction, effective January 11, 1989, ordering Red Kettle's sentences to run concurrently (rather than consecutively) to the corresponding federal sentences. The court did not address any other matters, including Red Kettle's motion to be released and request for court-appointed counsel.
*395 [¶6.] Red Kettle now appeals. He argues that the circuit court's failure to provide court-appointed counsel in the sentence-correction proceeding violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Decision
[¶7.] The Sixth Amendment requires the appointment of counsel for an indigent defendant at every critical stage in a criminal proceeding.
United States v. Wade
,
[¶8.] Certainly, Red Kettle's sentences should have been corrected earlier than twenty-seven years after this Court's 1990 decision. However, the twenty-seven-year delay did not change the limited nature of the resentencing proceeding mandated by this Court's 1990 remand. Indeed, "[w]hen the scope of remand is limited, ... the lower tribunal is only authorized to carry out the appellate court's mandate."
State v. Bausch
,
[¶9.] Considering the limited scope of the sentence-correction proceeding, it was not a critical stage in which Red Kettle had a Sixth Amendment right to court-appointed counsel. Simply correcting the sentences from
consecutive
to
concurrent
did not require "the aid of counsel in marshaling the facts, introducing evidence of mitigating circumstances," or presenting a case as to sentencing.
See
Mempa
,
[¶10.] Red Kettle, however, argues that even if the circuit court's authority was limited on remand, he had a right to the assistance of counsel to present his additional argument for release from imprisonment because "the excessive delay in resentencing violated his Constitutional rights." But Red Kettle's requested relief is based on an allegation of a constitutional violation occurring after his conviction, and that type of relief requires a separate challenge to the legality of his current confinement. Red Kettle must pursue that type of collateral attack on the judgment of conviction using some kind of postconviction remedy such as habeas corpus. * See SDCL 21-27-1.
*396
[¶11.] We conclude Red Kettle had no Sixth Amendment right to counsel in the circuit court proceeding to correct his sentences as directed in
Red Kettle
,
[¶12.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, KERN, JENSEN, and SALTER, Justices, concur.
We note that if Red Kettle has a non-frivolous habeas corpus claim, a question on which we express no opinion, the habeas court may appoint counsel under SDCL 21-27-4 if Red Kettle can satisfy all other statutory requirements.
See
State v. Reed
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of South Dakota, Plaintiff and Appellee, v. Byron RED KETTLE, Defendant and Appellant.
- Status
- Published