Mickael Clemann v. Iowa District Court for Scott County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
Docket22-0863
StatusPublished

This text of Mickael Clemann v. Iowa District Court for Scott County (Mickael Clemann v. Iowa District Court for Scott County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mickael Clemann v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0863 Filed December 6, 2023

MICKAEL CLEMANN, Plaintiff,

vs.

IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR SCOTT COUNTY, Defendant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Stuart Werling, Judge.

A criminal defendant petitions for a writ of certiorari to review his simple-

misdemeanor conviction. WRIT ANNULLED.

Matthew Paulson of Paulson, Vandersnick & Bradfield Law, Rock Island,

Illinois, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Chicchelly and Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

In this case we are asked to decide a certiorari question prompted by an

unlikely chain of procedural events: When a criminal defendant is tried by jury for

an indictable offense, and the court enters judgment of acquittal on the greater

offense but not a lesser-included simple misdemeanor, is the defendant entitled to

adjudication by a different jury or a magistrate? We find that, on the peculiar facts

of this record, we need not answer whether the defendant was entitled to a simple-

misdemeanor jury trial. And we annul the writ of certiorari because the district

judge did not act illegally when adjudicating the simple misdemeanor.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The State charged Mickael Clemann with assault with intent to commit

sexual abuse, an aggravated misdemeanor in violation of Iowa Code

section 709.11(3) (2017), for molesting his fifteen-year-old niece E.F. In 2019,

E.F. dozed off at Clemann’s house while watching a movie and awoke to fingers

touching the skin of her left breast. E.F. started “freaking out” and the hand groping

her pulled away. E.F. “started to sit up” and saw Clemann sitting next to her. After

this, Clemann continued to stroke E.F.’s hair and hold her hand. E.F. “was scared

to death to move” and was afraid Clemann would touch her again.

E.F. disclosed the assault to her sister and her mother the night it happened.

E.F.’s mother immediately drove to get her from Clemann’s house. After E.F.’s

mother confronted Clemann, he asked his wife for forgiveness. In a police

interview, Clemann admitted touching E.F.’s upper-left chest area but claimed it

was not intentional. 3

After the close of the State’s evidence at trial, the district court denied

Clemann’s motion for judgment of acquittal, finding the State had generated a fact

question on all elements of the offense. The only evidence put on by Clemann

was testimony from his teenage son, who indicated he did not see the assault or

see E.F. react to the assault. Clemann then moved for judgment of acquittal a

second time, arguing fondling a breast “may involve a sexual purpose, but it is not

a sex act” and is not sufficient to prove the charge. The district court accepted

Clemann’s argument that assault with intent to commit sexual abuse required an

additional overt act beyond “merely fondling the breast” and granted Clemann

judgment of acquittal on the top-level charge.1 This left the court with only the

lesser-included offense of assault, a simple misdemeanor in violation of Iowa Code

sections 708.1 and 708.2(6), to resolve.

After judgment of acquittal on the greater offense, the parties entered an

area not clearly addressed by our rules of criminal procedure, leading to

fragmented and opaque exchanges in the transcript. The district court first

proposed that the lesser-included offense could be submitted to the jury that heard

the trial evidence, but Clemann rejected this proposal and instead urged that the

simple misdemeanor “needs to be tried in front of a different jury”—one which had

1 We express no opinion on the propriety of the second judgment-of-acquittal ruling. The State has not cross-appealed or otherwise sought review, and we decline to speculate on whether such a request would have been granted by our supreme court. See State v. Warren, 216 N.W.2d 326, 327 (Iowa 1974) (“An appeal by the State cannot affect a judgment in favor of the defendant. For this reason and others, a State appeal is permitted in criminal cases only when it involves questions of law, either substantive or procedural, whose determination will be beneficial to the bench and bar as a guide in the future.” (internal citations omitted)). 4

not heard the evidence or original trial information. Clemann then “mov[ed] for a

continuance” on this basis. The State resisted and urged submission to the trial

jury, analogizing to a domestic-abuse prosecution where the State had failed to

prove the domestic relationship. Clemann then withdrew his motion to continue,

and the court discharged the jury.

When the parties reconvened, the district court conveyed that the simple

misdemeanor should be tried to the court as factfinder. Clemann then requested

the “case be set down in front of a magistrate judge who handles the simple

misdemeanor assaults.” The court denied the request to transfer the matter to a

magistrate.

The same day—March 23, 2022—the district court found Clemann guilty of

simple-misdemeanor assault, imposed a thirty-day jail sentence to be served after

a thirty-day delay for Clemann to make arrangements, and issued a no-contact

order. Rather than appeal or move for a new trial under the simple misdemeanor

rules, Clemann filed a motion to reconsider on April 7, raising various rules-based

and constitutional claims. The court denied the motion on April 18. Clemann

petitioned the supreme court for a writ of certiorari and applied for discretionary

review on May 18.2 The supreme court granted certiorari and denied discretionary

review before transferring the matter to our court for resolution.

2 We note the petition for writ of certiorari is only arguably timely if deadlines are

calculated from resolution of the motion to reconsider filed pursuant to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2). Yet this petition for certiorari originated in a criminal action. If the civil-rule 1.904(2) motion failed to toll criminal appellate deadlines, this appellate action would be untimely. Because the parties did not brief timeliness, we assume without deciding the petition was timely filed. 5

II. Preservation of Error/Waiver

The State urges that Clemann waived his claim related to jury trial on the

simple misdemeanor. We agree. Following the judgment of acquittal, the court

was prepared to have the lesser-included offense “go to the jury.” Clemann’s

attorney rejected this proposal and asked for a “continuance” and a “different jury.”

This necessarily requested discharge of the trial jury, which the court granted. And

Clemann then requested trial in front of a magistrate. We find this waives or invites

any error related to the trial jury deciding the simple misdemeanor, as Clemann

turned down a jury-trial option before requesting a new trial with a new jury. See

State v. Sage, 162 N.W.2d 502, 504 (Iowa 1968) (“A party to a criminal proceeding

cannot assume inconsistent positions in the trial and appellate courts and, as a

general rule, will not be permitted to allege an error . . . in which he himself

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Mickael Clemann v. Iowa District Court for Scott County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickael-clemann-v-iowa-district-court-for-scott-county-iowactapp-2023.