Helm v. State of Wyoming

1 P.3d 635, 2000 Wyo. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 300560
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 2000
Docket99-21, 99-22, 99-23
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1 P.3d 635 (Helm v. State of Wyoming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helm v. State of Wyoming, 1 P.3d 635, 2000 Wyo. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 300560 (Wyo. 2000).

Opinion

LEHMAN, Chief Justice.

James Bryan Helm (Helm) appeals from his convictions for forgery and obtaining property by false pretenses. He claims he was denied his constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial because the trial court refused to order production of exeulpa-tory evidence, the prosecutor committed mis *637 conduct, and the court induced him to plead guilty by misrepresenting its sentencing authority. Finding no judicial error or prose-cutorial misconduct, we affirm.

ISSUES

Helm presents this statement of the issues:

I. Did the court deprive Appellant of his constitutional rights to exculpatory evidence by refusing to order production of the complainant's tax records?
II. Did the prosecution deprive Appellant of his due process right to a fair trial by urging the jury to convict Appellant because he was a professional while the complainant was not, since Appellant had not presented a handwriting expert of his own, and on a theory that the evidence precluded?
III. Did the court deprive Appellant of his constitutional right to due process by inducing him to plead guilty by falsely representing that it had the power to suspend sentences imposed by a California federal court?

The state presents the following arguments:

Argument I
Defense counsel abandoned any claim to the victim's tax records; the prosecution did not suppress the records in that the prosecution never possessed the records; the prosecution had no duty to seek out information not in its possession; and defense counsel had access to the tax returns before trial through the exercise of reasonable diligence.
Argument II
The state did not urge the jury to con-viet Appellant based on his status as a professional; nor did the state shift the burden of proof from the prosecution to the defense; nor did the state urge the jury to convict Appellant on a theory precluded by the evidence.
Argument IIH
The record of the change of plea and sentencing hearing has been corrected, there is no evidence that the district court deprived Appellant of his constitutional right to due process by inducing him to plead guilty by falsely representing that it had the power to suspend the defendant's federal sentence.

FACTS

In January 1995, a federal district court in California sentenced Helm on several felony counts. In June of that year, he was free on bond pending appeal and living in Wyoming. He started a business consulting firm called International Management Corporation, which he ran from his home and of which he was the sole employee.

The victim in this case owned a small business and hired Helm in June 1995 as a business consultant and bookkeeper. Helm's bookkeeping duties included paying the vice-tim's bills with checks drawn on the victim's account. Helm filled in the date, amount, and payee sections of the checks and then submitted them to the victim to be signed. He was also responsible for maintaining and balancing the victim's checkbook and keeping a computer record of the credits and debits to the checking account.

Helm and the victim agreed on a fee of $850 per month for Helm's services, but the first payment Helm received was in the amount of $1,200. The victim later explained: "I think I was going to pay him a little bit more to start off because the books were a little bit behind and getting the books going." The victim subsequently signed five $850 checks payable to Helm for his monthly fee. After becoming convinced that Helm was forging his signature on unauthorized checks, the victim fired Helm on December 23, 1995, and informed the county sheriff's office.

On July 12, 1996, the state charged Helm with five counts of forgery and five counts of obtaining property by false pretenses. The Information was later amended to include six counts of forgery and two counts of obtaining property by false pretenses. Those charges are identified as Case No. 1559. While Helm was awaiting trial on Case No. 1559, the state filed two more cases against him. In Case No. 1599, it charged Helm with nine counts of forgery involving another victim. In Case No. 1608, the state charged Helm *638 with a single count of forgery against yet another victim.

The trial court held a jury trial on Case No. 1559 on April 27 through May 5, 1998. The jury found Helm guilty on all eight counts. On August 7, 1998, pursuant to a plea agreement, Helm pleaded guilty to the charges in Case No. 1599 and Case No. 1603. In Case No. 1559, the trial court sentenced Helm to eight concurrent prison terms of eight to ten years, to run consecutively to his federal sentence. In Case No. 1599, Helm received nine prison terms of six to ten years, to run concurrently with each other but consecutively to that in Case No. 1559 and the federal sentence. For Case No. 1608, the court imposed a six- to ten-year prison sentence, to run consecutively to the other sentences. Helm appeals from his conviction and sentences to this Court.

DISCUSSION

Discovery Motion

Helm attempts to validate this claim of error on several bases. The gist of the asserted error is that Helm was not provided with certain of the victim's income tax returns and that those income tax returns might have demonstrated the victim treated Helm's alleged monetary crimes as legitimate business expenses rather than losses. Helm goes on to contend that the information would have been vital for him to demonstrate that the erimes he was accused of simply did not occur and the victim had acknowledged this in his tax returns.

First, Helm contends he was denied the right to cross-examine the witnesses against him-in particular, the victim of his crimes. For this proposition, he relies on State v. Salazar, 182 Ariz. 604, 898 P.2d 982, 987-88 (Ct.App.1995). In that case, the trial court granted a motion in limine prohibiting the defense from impeaching two of the principal witnesses against the defendant with their juvenile records. The appellate court held that grant of the motion in limine was an abuse of discretion, that the circumstances of the juvenile convictions and the presence of those two witnesses at the scene of the crime inclined them to testify favorably for the state in hopes of avoiding proceedings to revoke their probation, and that the error in disallowing the evidence in dispute could not be considered harmless because it was so central to the defense's theory of its case. Of course, none of those cireumstances appear in this case. Indeed, the record discloses that Helm was afforded a full opportunity to cross-examine the victim in this case.

Helm also claims that he was entitled to the tax returns pursuant to W.R.Cr.P. l6(a)(1)(C). Helm apparently contends the tax returns were discoverable under that rule.

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.3d 635, 2000 Wyo. LEXIS 63, 2000 WL 300560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helm-v-state-of-wyoming-wyo-2000.