Dehn v. State

895 S.W.2d 55, 1995 WL 6024
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1995
DocketWD 48343
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 895 S.W.2d 55 (Dehn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dehn v. State, 895 S.W.2d 55, 1995 WL 6024 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

ULRICH, Presiding Judge.

Frank Dehn appeals the denial of his Rule 24.035 posteonviction motion following his conviction pursuant to guilty pleas for attempted stealing, §§ 564.011 and 570.030, RSMo 1986, and for tampering in the first degree, § 569.080.1(2), RSMo 1986. He was sentenced to terms of 10 years and 15 years respectively. Mr. Dehn’s postconviction motion asserted that the state had agreed to a plea agreement that would have permitted a lesser penalty and that the state breached this agreement and required him to enter a plea agreement less favorable to him for his guilty plea. Additionally, Mr. Dehn’s post-conviction motion claimed that the trial court, in accepting his guilty plea and sentencing him for attempted stealing and tampering in the first degree, violated his United States Constitutional right against double jeopardy. *57 He asserts the motion court erred in denying his postconviction motion.

The judgment denying Mr. Dehn’s Rule 24.035 postconviction motion is affirmed.

Mr. Dehn was charged by Information filed on November 20, 1987, in the Circuit Court of Johnson County with one count of attempted stealing, § 564.011, RSMo 1986, and 570.030, RSMo 1986, and one count of tampering in the first degree, § 569.080.1(2), RSMo 1986. By Amended Information on December 4, 1987, Mr. Dehn was also charged as a prior offender, § 557.036.4, RSMo 1986 and § 558.016, RSMo 1986 and a persistent offender, § 557.036.4, RSMo 1986 and 558.016, RSMo 1986.

On January 13, 1988, Mr. Dehn moved to either dismiss the information or to allow him to plead guilty to a single count of attempted stealing in exchange for a 10-year sentence to be served concurrently with several state and federal sentences. Mr. Dehn asserted by motion that the ten year concurrent sentence in exchange for his guilty plea to a single count was a plea bargain previously agreed to by the prosecutor.

On January 25, 1988, the court denied Mr. Dehn’s motions. The court stated that even assuming the prosecutor had made the offer Mr. Dehn alleged her to have made, the court would not accept it and would not agree to allow the appellant to plead guilty to a single charge in exchange for a ten-year concurrent sentence.

After a change of venue, Mr. Dehn appeared in the Circuit Court of Cass County on March 11, 1988, where he entered guilty pleas to the attempted stealing and tampering charges. The guilty pleas were entered as part of a plea agreement in which the State agreed that, in exchange for his pleas of guilty, Mr. Dehn would be sentenced as a “persistent offender” to a 15-year term of imprisonment for tampering, and a concurrent 10-year sentence for attempted stealing, with the sentences to be served concurrently with several state and federal sentences.

On February 4, 1992, Mr. Dehn filed a pro se motion pursuant to Rule 24.035, alleging double jeopardy in that he had been subjected to punishment twice for the same act of attempted stealing and seeking to set aside his conviction and sentence for tampering. 1

He filed an amended motion on April 20, 1992, seeking to dismiss the amended information and alleging prosecutorial misconduct claiming the prosecuting attorney refused to make the sentencing recommendations originally offered.

The motion court held an evidentiary hearing on November 4,1992. Mr. Donald Petty, Mr. Dehn’s attorney while he was incarcerated at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas, testified the prosecuting attorney told him that she would recommend a ten-year sentence to run concurrently with other state and federal sentences. Mr. Dehn testified that his attorney stated the plea offer was for a single count of attempted stealing of a 1980 International Harvester road tractor, trailer, and eat highloader and that Mr. Dehn must agree to be extradited back to Johnson County.

Mr. Petty testified that Mr. Dehn accepted the plea offer and that a phone conversation Mr. Petty had with the prosecutor confirmed the offer of a 10-year sentence to run concurrently with Mr. Dehn’s other convictions. Mr. Petty further testified that in a later conversation with the prosecutor, the prosecutor told him the plea offer extended to Mr. Dehn was for a 10-year sentence to be served consecutively with Mr. Dehn’s other cases.

The prosecutor, however, testified that the original plea offer was for a 15-year sentence to run consecutively with Mr. Dehn’s federal sentence. The prosecutor testified that she wrote Mr. Perry a letter stating that an amended information would be filed against Mr. Dehn. She testified that she wrote another letter extending a plea offer of a 10-year sentence to run consecutively with Mr. Dehn’s other cases.

*58 After Mr. Dehn was extradited to Johnson County, Missouri, Mr. Perry told him about the amended information and the plea offer of imprisonment terms of 10 and 15 years on the charges of attempted stealing and tampering. Mr. O’Bannon, an assistant public defender, became Mr. Dehn’s attorney at this point. Mr. Dehn explained to Mr. O’Bannon that this last plea offer was not the same plea offer previously communicated. Consequently, the assistant public defender filed the motion to enter a guilty plea pursuant to the claimed plea agreement or alternatively to dismiss the pending information.

On August 18, 1993, the motion court in its findings of fact and conclusions of law found that no prosecutorial misconduct had occurred and that Mr. Dehn’s convictions did not violate the prohibition against double jeopardy. The court’s order properly denied Mr. Dehn’s Rule 24.035 postconviction motion.

From this final order, Mr. Dehn appeals.

Mr. Dehn claims the motion court erred in denying his motion and in finding the prosecution had not breached an earlier plea agreement by refusing to allow Mr. Dehn to plead guilty to a single charge of attempted stealing in exchange for a 10-year sentence running concurrently with other state and federal convictions. Mr. Dehn claims he pleaded guilty and was sentenced as a result of a subsequent plea agreement. Although Mr. Dehn raises another point, this point is dispositive.

Appellate review of the denial of a Rule 25.035 motion for post-conviction relief is limited to a determination of whether the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the hearing court are clearly erroneous. Leisure v. State, 828 S.W.2d 872, 873-74 (Mo. banc), cert. denied, 506 U.S.-, 113 S.Ct. 343, 121 L.Ed.2d 259 (1992); Rule 24.035®. Findings of fact and conclusions of law are clearly erroneous only if a review of the entire record leaves the court with a definite and firm impression that a mistake has been made. Hubbard v. State, 875 S.W.2d 221, 223 (Mo.App.1994).

Although both Mr. Dehn and his original attorney, Mr. Donald Petty, testified at the Rule 24.035 hearing that Ms. Mary Ann Young, Assistant Johnson County prosecutor, had originally offered Mr. Dehn a 10-year sentence in exchange for a 10-year concurrent sentence, Ms. Young denied the claimed offer.

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Bluebook (online)
895 S.W.2d 55, 1995 WL 6024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dehn-v-state-moctapp-1995.