Hurd v. State

107 P.3d 314, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2005 WL 327280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 11, 2005
DocketA-8112
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 P.3d 314 (Hurd 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
Hurd v. State, 107 P.3d 314, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2005 WL 327280 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

This case presents two significant issues. The first issue concerns the double jeopardy doctrine announced by our supreme court in Whitton v. State, 479 P.2d 302 (Alaska 1970). In Whitton, the supreme court held that even though a jury has found a defendant guilty of violating two separate criminal statutes, the sentencing court should impose only one conviction and sentence if the two statutory offenses are so closely related that there are no significant differences between them as to the conduct proscribed and the societal values protected. 1

The present appeal requires us to clarify the legal effect of a sentencing judge’s ruling that, under Whitton, one count against a defendant should be merged or dismissed because it is duplicative of another count for which the defendant will be convicted and sentenced. We hold that if a defendant pursues an appeal and succeeds in obtaining reversal of the count on which they were sentenced, but if the defendant does not attack the validity of the other count that was merged or dismissed on Whitton grounds, then the sentencing court is authorized to enter judgement and impose sentence on the remaining count that was previously merged or dismissed as duplicative (unless the defendant affirmatively shows that, for some reason, entry of judgement on the remaining count would be demonstrably unfair).

The second issue presented in this appeal concerns the legal doctrine that requires litigants to present all of their claims in a single legal proceeding, rather than litigating these claims piecemeal in different proceedings.

The defendant in this case, Leonard P. Hurd, was convicted of kidnapping and third-degree assault (in the sense that the jury found him guilty of both crimes), but the sentencing judge dismissed the assault charge as duplicative of the kidnapping charge under Whitton. Hurd then pursued an appeal to this court. In that previous appeal, Hurd attacked his kidnapping verdict on two grounds (insufficient evidence, and faulty jury instructions on the elements of kidnapping), but Hurd did not attack the third-degree assault verdict.

In that previous appeal, we concluded that the jury had not been properly instructed on the elements of kidnapping, and we therefore reversed Hurd’s kidnapping conviction. When Hurd’s case returned to the superior court, the State announced that it did not intend to pursue the kidnapping charge any further. Instead, the State asked the superi- or court to enter judgement against Hurd on the third-degree assault charge (the charge that had earlier been dismissed under Whit-ton as duplicative of the kidnapping charge). The superior court did this, and Hurd is now pursuing a second appeal.

In this second appeal, Hurd argues (on various legal theories) that the superior court had no authority to enter judgement against him on the assault charge, even though the jury had found him guilty of this offense at his trial. We address these contentions below.

But in addition, Hurd argues for the first time that the jury’s verdict on the third-degree assault charge is flawed in various ways. Specifically, Hurd asserts that the evidence at his trial was insufficient to establish two of the elements of third-degree assault, that the jury received incomplete instructions on one of these elements, and that the trial judge made an erroneous evidentiary ruling *318 that prevented Hurd from presenting evidence relevant to the assault charge.

For the reasons explained here, we hold that it is too late for Hurd to raise these attacks on the jury’s verdict. Hurd should have presented these claims in his first appeal — -and, because he did not, he is estopped from presenting them now.

Underlying facts: Hurd’s offenses, his sentencing, and his first appeal

Leonard P. Hurd was in debt to Dennis Schlotfeldt for several thousand dollars. Hurd invited Schlotfeldt to his house and then held him captive for thirty to forty-five minutes. Hurd refused to let Schlotfeldt leave the house until Schlotfeldt signed documents (1) acknowledging full satisfaction of Hurd’s debt, (2) transferring several parcels of land to Hurd, (3) agreeing to give Hurd $25,000 in cash, and (4) acknowledging that he had received a non-existent coin collection from Hurd valued at a quarter of a million dollars. Hurd threatened Schlotfeldt with immediate injury (by threatening to sic his Rottweiler dog on Schlotfeldt) if Schlotfeldt tried to leave the house without signing these documents.

Based on this episode, Hurd was indicted for three felonies: coercion (ie., compelling another person to engage in acts that they have a right to refrain from doing, by threatening to inflict physical injury on any person), kidnapping (i.e., restraining another person with intent to facilitate the commission of a felony, to wit, coercion), and third-degree assault (ie., threatening to imminently inflict serious physical injury by means of a dangerous instrument, to wit, the Rottweiler). 2 A jury found Hurd guilty of all three crimes.

Superior Court Judge Charles R. Pengilly ruled that, under the facts of Hurd’s case, the third-degree assault (Hurd’s act of threatening Schlotfeldt with a dog attack if he tried to leave) was so closely related to the restraint component of the kidnapping that, under the rule announced by our supreme court in Whitton v. State, 3 Hurd could not be separately convicted and sentenced for both offenses. Based on this Whitton ruling, Judge Pengilly entered a conviction on the kidnapping charge (the more serious offense 4 ), and he dismissed the third-degree assault charge “as duplicative of [the kidnapping charge]”. Thus, Hurd’s judgement reflected convictions for kidnapping and coercion, but not third-degree assault.

After Hurd was sentenced, he filed an appeal to this Court. See Hurd v. State, 22 P.3d 12 (Alaska App.2001). In that appeal, Hurd argued that the State presented insufficient evidence to justify his kidnapping conviction. Specifically, Hurd argued that, to the extent he restrained Schlotfeldt, that restraint was only incidental to the crime of coercion, and thus the restraint would not support a separate conviction for kidnapping. In the alternative, Hurd argued that even if the State’s evidence was legally sufficient to support the kidnapping conviction, his trial jury had not been properly instructed on the degree of restraint required to support a separate conviction for kidnapping. 5 We ultimately held that the State’s evidence established the type of restraint that would support a separate conviction for kidnapping, but we agreed that the jury had not been properly instructed on the type of restraint required to support a separate kidnapping conviction. (The State conceded error on this issue.) 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P.3d 314, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2005 WL 327280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-state-alaskactapp-2005.