Hall v. State

145 P.3d 605, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 168, 2006 WL 2924939
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 13, 2006
DocketA-9437
StatusPublished

This text of 145 P.3d 605 (Hall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. State, 145 P.3d 605, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 168, 2006 WL 2924939 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In early 2004, Christopher Michael Hall and his girlfriend tried to pass five checks, totaling almost $8000, on bank accounts that Hall knew were either closed or frozen. For this conduct, Hall was charged with five counts of issuing a bad check, AS 11.46.280(a).

While Hall was awaiting trial on these charges, Hall wrote a new series of more than 100 bad checks-checks backed by insufficient funds, or drawn on closed accounts-totaling approximately $65,000. These checks involved eleven different accounts at eight financial institutions, and Hall defrauded more than two dozen victims.

For this new conduct, Hall was charged with scheme to defraud, AS 11.46.600(2)(@2). He was also charged with violating the conditions of his release in the pending bad check case, AS 11.56.757(a).

Scheme to defraud is a class B felony. 1 Hall's act of violating the conditions of his release was a class A misdemeanor because he was on release from felony charges. 2

To resolve these charges, Hall reached a plea bargain with the State. Under the terms of this agreement, Hall pleaded no contest to the two new charges (scheme to defraud and violation of conditions of release), and the State dismissed the pending 2004 bad check case. There was no agreement concerning the sentences that Hall should receive for the two crimes of scheme to defraud and violating the conditions of his release.

*607 Hall was a first felony offender. Hall had one prior misdemeanor conviction, a 2001 conviction for issuing a bad check, but Hall received a suspended imposition of sentence for this crime, and his conviction was set aside at the end of a year's probation.

Hall served in the Army for a year and a half (from August 2001 until March 2003), and he then received a general discharge for "unsatisfactory performance"-in part, because he wrote bad checks during his military service.

(While Hall was awaiting trial on the 2004 bad check charges, he attempted to obtain a continuance of a court proceeding by submitting a forged document. This forged doeument purported to be a memorandum from the Army stating that Hall was about to be deployed to Japan. In fact, as noted above, Hall had been discharged from the Army at the end of March 2008.)

At Hall's sentencing hearing in the present case, his attorney argued that Hall was an immature, youthful offender who deserved another chance. The defense attorney urged the superior court to suspend imposition of Hall's sentence, conditioned on his serving 1 year in jail. See AS 12.55.085-086.

Superior Court Judge Larry D. Card concluded a suspended imposition of sentence would be inconsistent with the Chaney sentencing criteria-the sentencing criteria first announced by the supreme court in State v. Chaney 3 and later codified in AS 12.55.005.

Judge Card noted that Hall did not simply write a bad check or two, involving a small amount of money. Rather, Hall engaged in a lengthy scheme to defraud-a scheme that involved numerous victims, and that involved bad checks totaling over $60,000. Judge Card further noted that, because of the greater societal harm caused by such schemes to defraud, the legislature has classified this type of behavior as a higher degree of felony, and sentencing courts are obliged to view this type of behavior as a serious offense.

Judge Card acknowledged that Hall was a youthful offender and that, for this reason, Hall's rehabilitation was an important sentencing goal. However, Judge Card concluded that Hall's sentence had to adequately express the community's condemnation of this type of eriminal behavior.

Judge Card also concluded that another important aim of Hall's sentence should be to deter Hall from future criminal behavior. The judge noted that "it was not good" that Hall had previously been convicted of writing a bad check, even though that prior convietion was ultimately set aside after Hall completed his probation.

For these reasons, Judge Card sentenced Hall to 4 years' imprisonment with 2 years suspended-4i.e, 2 years to serve-for the offense of scheme to defraud. For Hall's separate offense of violating the conditions of his release from the now-dismissed 2004 bad check case, Judge Card imposed a consecutive 6 months to serve (1 year's imprisonment with 6 months suspended). Thus, Hall's composite sentence is 5 years with 2% years suspended.

In this appeal, Hall argues that Judge Card- was clearly mistaken when he rejected Hall's request for a suspended imposition of sentence. Hall relies primarily on the Alaska Supreme Court's decision in Leuch v. State, 683 P.2d 1006 (Alaska 1981). In Leuch, the supreme court declared:

[When] an offense is against only property, involving no physical threats or violence; [when] it is the offender's first felony conviction; [and when the offender has] no background of unsuccessful paroles or pro-bations which would indicate that probation is unsuitable to protect the public [and] to deter the offender, ... probation, coupled with restitution, is the appropriate sentence unless other factors militate against it.

Leuch, 688 P.2d at 1018-14 (footnotes omitted). Hall argues that he fits within this description and that, for this reason, Judge Card was clearly mistaken when he declined to give Hall a suspended imposition of sentence.

Hall's argument misapprehends the Louch decision on several levels.

*608 First, Leuch does not counsel giving all property offenders a suspended imposition of sentence. For purposes of Leuch, a sentence of "probation" is any sentence that involves less than 90 days of imprisonment. See Leuch, 683 P.2d at 1014 n. 22; State v. Monk, 886 P.2d 18315, 1317 n. 4 (Alaska App.1994); State v. Jackson, 776 P.2d 320, 326-27 (Alaska App.1989).

Second, Leuch does not create a hard-and-fast rule that defendants who meet the above-quoted description should receive probationary sentences.

The Leuch decision itself says that, even when a defendant has committed a nonviolent property offense, and even when the defendant has no record of failed probations or paroles, a sentence of incarceration will nevertheless be justified by "a finding that a [probationary] sentence would fail to deter the defendant ... to the requisite degree". Leuch, 683 P.2d at 1011.

Even though Hall apparently satisfactorily completed the probation from his 2001 bad check case, Hall's history justifies Judge Card's conclusion that a probationary sentence would not adequately deter Hall. After being convicted of issuing a bad check in 2001, and after completing a year's probation, Hall returned to this same eriminal behavior in early 2004; he and his girlfriend uttered five bad checks totaling almost $8000.

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Related

State v. Walker
683 P.2d 1006 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1984)
State v. Jackson
776 P.2d 320 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1989)
State v. Chaney
477 P.2d 441 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)
Comegys v. State
747 P.2d 554 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1987)
Leuch v. State
633 P.2d 1006 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1981)
Karr v. State
686 P.2d 1192 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1984)
Brown v. State
12 P.3d 201 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.3d 605, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 168, 2006 WL 2924939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-state-alaskactapp-2006.