Foote v. Young

2024 S.D. 41
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 2024
Docket30503
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 S.D. 41 (Foote v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foote v. Young, 2024 S.D. 41 (S.D. 2024).

Opinion

#30503-a-MES 2024 S.D. 41

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

BEAU FOOTE, SR., Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

DARRIN YOUNG, Warden of the South Dakota State Penitentiary, Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT STANLEY COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE BOBBI J. RANK Judge

LINDSEY L. RITER-RAPP of Riter, Rogers, LLP Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for petitioner and appellant.

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

MATTHEW W. TEMPLAR Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for respondent and appellee.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS JUNE 6, 2024 OPINION FILED 07/17/24 #30503

SALTER, Justice

[¶1.] Beau Foote Sr. is currently serving prison sentences for his convictions

of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer with a deadly weapon. Foote

filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleging his trial counsel rendered

ineffective assistance. After an evidentiary hearing, the habeas court denied Foote’s

request for habeas relief. It issued a certificate of probable cause, and Foote

appeals. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] In September 2017, law enforcement officers learned that Beau Foote

Sr., who had an outstanding arrest warrant for a parole violation, was in a trailer

home in Fort Pierre. Stanley County Deputy Sheriff Greg Swanson and Foote’s

parole officer, Agent Michael Stolley, went to the trailer home to execute the

warrant. While Deputy Swanson waited at the back door, Agent Stolley knocked on

the front door, announcing that officers were present and attempting to locate

Foote. Receiving no verbal response but hearing shuffling, the officers made entry

through the unlocked doors.

[¶3.] When they entered, Foote was lying on the ground. Agent Stolley

attempted to handcuff Foote, but Foote jumped up and tried to flee the home.

Deputy Swanson stopped him by pushing Foote onto the couch. The physical

contact between the men caused Deputy Swanson’s taser 1 to fall from its holster.

1. The term TASER is an acronym derived from the 1911 novel, Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle. Kiona N. Smith, Why is it Called a Taser?, Forbes (April 6, 2019, 2:16 AM), https://www.forbes.com/sites/kionasmith/2019/04/06/why-is- it-called-a-taser/?sh=4b53fd807628. Although it is used by a company of the (continued . . .) -1- #30503

The two men grabbed the taser and were struggling over it when its probes fired

into the nearby couch. Deputy Swanson got tangled in the wires, which delivered

an electrical shock to his arms, incapacitating him.

[¶4.] Next, Foote pushed the taser into Agent Stolley’s chest and pulled the

trigger. But due to Agent Stolley’s bullet-proof vest, he was not shocked. Finally,

Agent Stolley drew his firearm and ordered Foote to drop the taser. He did, and

officers handcuffed him.

[¶5.] Still, Foote continued to be combative after being handcuffed,

attempting to bite and trip officers and shouting obscenities at them. Once in the

back of the patrol vehicle, Foote intentionally hit his head against the window. To

keep Foote from hurting himself, the Stanley County sheriff rode in the back of the

vehicle with Foote to the jail. After Foote had been removed from the scene, both

Deputy Swanson and Agent Stolley discovered they had suffered injuries from the

encounter inside the trailer home.

[¶6.] Foote was charged with two counts of aggravated assault on a law

enforcement officer with a dangerous weapon and, in the alternative, two counts of

simple assault on a law enforcement officer. He was also charged with resisting

arrest. The State filed a part II information, alleging Foote had six prior felony

convictions, one of which included a crime of violence.

[¶7.] Attorney Brad Schreiber was appointed to represent Foote. For much

of the case, plea discussions were at the forefront, but an agreement was never

________________________ (. . . continued) same name, the word “taser” is also frequently used as a common reference to stun guns.

-2- #30503

reached. At one point, Foote indicated that he would accept the State’s plea offer,

but just before the change of plea hearing, he changed his mind and decided he

wanted to go to trial.

[¶8.] At the two-day jury trial, the State presented testimony through eight

witnesses, two of whom testified as to the function and operation of tasers. The first

was Jeff Hill who identified himself as a park ranger with the South Dakota

Department of Game, Fish, and Parks, and the other was Don McCrea, an

instructor at the South Dakota Law Enforcement Training Center. Both Hill and

McCrea were listed as potential witnesses in the State’s pretrial disclosures, which

described the subject of their prospective testimony as “[t]aser function and

operation.” The State also indicated that Hill would testify about the data report

obtained from Deputy Swanson’s taser after the encounter with Foote. They were

not specifically designated as expert witnesses, and the circuit court had not

ordered the disclosure of expert witnesses.

[¶9.] The jury found Foote guilty on both counts of aggravated assault

against a law enforcement officer and guilty of resisting arrest. Foote also admitted

to the part II information, and the circuit court sentenced him to fifteen years in the

South Dakota Penitentiary 2 with five years suspended on each of the aggravated

assault counts, ordered to run consecutively. The court imposed a jail sentence for

the resisting arrest conviction that has since been served.

[¶10.] Foote appealed, and we affirmed his convictions. See State v. Foote

(Foote I), 2019 S.D. 32, 930 N.W.2d 650. On direct appeal, Foote challenged his

2. Foote is now an inmate at the Mike Durfee State Prison.

-3- #30503

aggravated assault convictions with a textual argument relating to SDCL 22-1-

2(10), which defines a “dangerous weapon” as it is used in the aggravated assault

statute, SDCL 22-18-1.1(2). Foote argued that the State failed to present sufficient

evidence “to prove he possessed a dangerous weapon[,]” claiming “a Taser is not a

dangerous weapon because it was not calculated or designed to cause serious bodily

injury or death and it was not used in a manner that was likely to inflict death or

serious bodily harm.” Foote I, 2019 S.D. 32, ¶ 8, 930 N.W.2d at 652.

[¶11.] We rejected this argument, citing a different provision of SDCL 22-1-

2(10) that specifically designates a “stun gun” as a dangerous weapon. See SDCL

22-1-2(50) (defining a stun gun as a “battery-powered, pulsed electrical device of

high voltage and low or no amperage that can disrupt the central nervous system

and cause temporary loss of voluntary muscle control of a person”). Our conclusion

in this regard was supported by testimony from McCrea, who stated that “Deputy

Swanson’s Taser is a type of ‘stun gun’ because ‘it is [a] conductive electronic

weapon. . . . It sets up a major neurological interface, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
2024 S.D. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foote-v-young-sd-2024.