LINDOFF v. State

224 P.3d 152, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2010 WL 481259
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 12, 2010
DocketA-10323
StatusPublished

This text of 224 P.3d 152 (LINDOFF 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
LINDOFF v. State, 224 P.3d 152, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2010 WL 481259 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Alaska Criminal Rule 11(c) contains a list of warnings and advisements that a judge must give to a criminal defendant, as well as questions that the judge must pose to the defendant, before the judge accepts the defendant's plea of guilty or no contest. This appeal requires us to examine and interpret the rules that apply when a defendant seeks to withdraw a plea of guilty or no contest based on the assertion that the judge who accepted their plea failed to comply with one or more of the provisions of Criminal Rule l1(c).

The defendant, Newton Lindoff, was indicted for attempted first-degree sexual assault, second-degree sexual assault, and two counts of first-degree burglary arising from an incident in Hoonah. Ultimately, Lindoff reached a plea bargain with the State; Lin-doff agreed to plead guilty to attempted see-ond-degree sexual assault, and the State agreed to drop the other charges.

Attempted second-degree sexual assault is a "sex offense" for purposes of Alaska's sex offender registration act. See AS 12.63.100(6)(C)@). Criminal Rule 1l1(c)(4) states that when a defendant is offering a guilty plea to a sex offense, the judge taking the defendant's plea must "inform [] ... the defendant in writing of the [registration] requirements of AS 12.63.010 and, if it can be determined by the court, the period of registration required under AS 12.63".

During Lindoffs change-of-plea hearing, Superior Court Judge Philip M. Pallenberg mentioned to Lindoff that, because he was going to be convicted of a sex offense, he would have to register as a sex offender. However, Judge Pallenberg did not alert Lindoff that defendants convicted of two or more sex offenses must register for life (as opposed to the fifteen-year registration requirement that applies to first-time sex offenders). 1 This omission was significant be *154 cause Lindoff already had a prior conviction for a sex offense.

After Lindoff entered his guilty plea, but before he was sentenced, Lindoff filed a motion seeking to withdraw his plea on various grounds. For purposes of the present appeal, only one of these grounds is pertinent: Lindoffs assertion that Judge Pallenberg failed to comply with Rule 11(c) by neglecting to alert Lindoff that he would have to register as a sex offender for life.

At the evidentiary hearing on Lindoffs motion to withdraw his plea, the parties conceded-and Judge Pallenberg acknowledged-that the judge had not warned Lin-doff about the lifetime registration requirement. The hearing then focused on two other issues: (1) whether Lindoff had had independent knowledge of the lifetime registration requirement when he entered his plea, and (2) if Lindoff had been ignorant of the lifetime registration requirement, whether this lack of knowledge affected his decision to plead guilty.

Based on the evidence presented at the hearing, Judge Pallenberg denied Lindoffs motion to withdraw his plea. Lindoff was then convicted based on his plea. He now appeals.

A discussion of the two different "substantial compliance" tests adopted by the Alaska Supreme Court in Lewis v. State and Joe v. State, and a discussion of which party bears the ultimate burden of persuasion when the superior court has violated Criminal Rule 11(c)

In two decisions issued on the same day in 1977 (June 20th), the Alaska Supreme Court addressed situations where the defendants alleged that the superior court judges who took their pleas failed to comply with one or more provisions of Criminal Rule 11(c).

The lead case was Lewis v. State, 565 P.2d 846 (Alaska 1977). In Lewis, the supreme court rejected the position that any violation of Rule 11(c) should automatically entitle the defendant to withdraw their previous plea of guilty or no contest. Id. at 851. Instead, the court adopted what it called the "substantial compliance" approach to violations of Rule llc) Id. at 852. However, a close reading of the Lewis case reveals that the supreme court was not using the phrase "substantial compliance" in its usual sense.

Normally, the phrase "substantial compliance" refers to situations where an official may not have followed the applicable statute or rule to the letter, but the official's actions sufficiently complied with the spirit or intent of the law. For example, in Lockwood v. State, 591 P.2d 969 (Alaska 1979), the supreme court held that a technical violation of the "knock and announce" statute, AS 12.25.100, will be excused if the police officers demonstrate "substantial compliance" with the statute-that is (in the words of the supreme court), if "police procedures fail to conform to the precise demands of the statute but nevertheless serve its policies". Id. at 972 (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).

If, for instance, a superior court judge fully advised the defendant of their duty to register as a sex offender, but failed to put this information in writing as required by Rule l1(c)(4), we might say that the judge substantially complied with the rule, even though the judge failed to follow the rule to the letter.

But the supreme court's analysis in Lewis was different from this. In Lewis, the court declared that it was adopting a "substantial compliance" approach to violations of Rule 11(c) because "we have determined to treat violations of Criminal Rule 11(c) in the same manner as other errors [which are] not of constitutional dimension-reversible only if they affect substantial rights of the defendant." 565 P.2d at 852.

This is not a "substantial compliance" test; rather, it is a harmless error test-and the supreme court applied it that way in Lewis. The court concluded that Lewis was not entitled to withdraw his guilty plea because Lewis failed to present any evidence that he would have declined to enter the plea if the superior court had given him all the warnings and advisements required by Rule 11(c). Id. at 852-53. In other words, Lewis failed to present any evidence that he was prejudiced by the superior court's failure to comply with Rule 11(c). Id.

*155 On the same day that the supreme court issued its decision in Lewis, the court issued its decision in Joe v. State, 565 P.2d 508 (Alaska 1977). In Jog, the court purported to apply the "substantial compliance" test that it had adopted in Lewis, but the facts of Joe did not present an issue of substantial compliance-either in the usual sense of "imperfect but satisfactory compliance" or in the Lewis sense of "harmless error".

The defendant in Joe asserted that the superior court failed to comply with various provisions of Rule 11(c) when the court accepted his no contest plea. 565 P.2d at 509-510. The problem presented in Joe was that, because of a malfunction of the courtroom audio recording equipment, no audio record was made of the defendant's change-of-plea hearing. Id. at 510. To solve this defect in the record, a second superior court judge held an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the judge who accepted Joe's plea had actually advised him of the things required by Criminal Rule l1(c). Id. at 510-11.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P.3d 152, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2010 WL 481259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindoff-v-state-alaskactapp-2010.