Miller v. State

312 P.3d 1112, 2013 WL 6145554, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 22, 2013
DocketNos. A-10891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 312 P.3d 1112 (Miller 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
Miller v. State, 312 P.3d 1112, 2013 WL 6145554, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 113 (Ala. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Judge MANNHEIMER.

Dessie Ford Miller IV was charged with one count of second-degree assault and one count of fourth-degree assault for attacking Ida Stricker, a woman who was visiting his boat. The second-degree assault charge was based on the allegation that Miller strangled Stricker with his hands, and the fourth-degree assault charge was based on the allegation that Miller inflicted injuries to Stricker-scrape marks on her back-when he pushed her against the wall to strangle her.

According to Stricker, she lost consciousness while Miller was strangling her. When she regained awareness, she was lying on the floor, and Miller was standing over her with his foot on her chest. Miller removed his foot, and Stricker got up, gathered her belongings, and left Miller's boat.

At trial, the jury acquitted Miller of see-ond-degree assault (the strangulation allegation), but the jury convicted Miller of fourth-degree assault (the allegation that he inflict, ed serape marks on Stricker's back).

In this appeal, Miller contends that the jury's verdicts are inconsistent. He also contends that the superior court committed error by classifying his fourth-degree assault conviction as a "crime of domestic violence". Finally, Miller contends that the superior court should not have ordered him to pay restitution for medical expenses arising from emergency room treatment that the victim received several days after the assault.

For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that Miller forfeited his right to attack the verdicts as being inconsistent, because he did not raise this issue in the superior court before the jury was discharged. We further conclude that the superior court violated Alaska Criminal Rule 32(e) by classifying Miller's offense as a "crime of domestic violence" without making an express ruling on this issue-and we direct the superior court to reconsider this matter. Finally, we conclude that the restitution order was appropriate, given the superior court's express finding that Miller's assault caused the medical condition for which the victim was treated.

Miller's argument that the jury's decision to convict him of fourth-degree assault is logically inconsistent with the jury's decision to acquit him of second-degree assault

In his brief to this Court, Miller argues that there was "insufficient evidence" to support his conviction for fourth-degree assault (the allegation that Miller inflicted the serape marks onStricker’s back).

[1] However, the gist of Miller's argument is not a claim that the evidence presented at his trial was legally insufficient to support his conviction. Indeed, the evidence clearly was sufficient-because the victim, Stricker, testified that she sustained the injuries to her back when Miller pushed her against the wall. This testimony, if believed, [1115]*1115was sufficient to warrant the fourth-degree assault conviction.

Miller's real argument (as clarified by the text of his brief) is that the jury's decision to convict him of fourth-degree assault is logically inconsistent with its decision to acquit him of second-degree assault.

According to Miller, his alleged act of strangling Stricker was part and parcel of the same event that allegedly caused the injuries to Stricker's back. In support of this characterization of the evidence, Miller quotes a portion of the prosecutor's argument to the jury:

Prosecutor: [The charge of] assault II [refers] to the [act of] strangulation against the wall. The [charge of] assault IV [refers] to the wounds to [Stricker's] back that occurred while she was being pushed up against the wall. It's obvious it came from a single course of conduct.... Both of [these offenses] happened at the same time, essentially, or within moments of each other.

Thus, Miller contends, the jury could not logically acquit him of strangling Stricker but at the same time conviet him of inflicting the serape marks on her back.

[2] Miller did not raise the issue of inconsistent verdicts in the superior court. Because of this, we conclude that he forfeited this issue.

[3,4] The Alaska Supreme Court has declared that logically inconsistent verdicts can be attacked on appeal as "plain error"1 But under Alaska law, a litigant who advances a claim of plain error must show that they had no tactical reason for failing to make a contemporaneous objection to the asserted error.2

This Court has previously noted-in Edwards v. State, 158 P.Bd 847, 857 (Alaska App.2007), and in Hansen v. State, 845 P.2d 449, 454-55 (Alaska App.19938)-that a defense attorney who believes that the jury's verdiets may be inconsistent has a powerful tactical reason to withhold any objection until the trial judge accepts the verdicts and discharges the jury. If the attorney alerts the trial judge to the problem, the trial judge would normally advise the jurors that their verdicts are inconsistent and can not be accepted, and the judge would then direct the jurors to return to their deliberations-leaving open the possibility that the jurors would resolve the inconsistency in the State's favor. Or, in a case like Miller's, a timely objection might prompt the trial judge to ask the jury to clarify the basis of its decision by means of a special verdict. ©

Instead, by withholding an objection until the jury is discharged and. the matter is beyond remedy, a defense attorney gains a new trial on any charges of which the defendant was convicted, while. at the same time precluding a new trial on any charges of which the defendant was acquitted (because of Alaska's guarantee against double jeopardy)3

Under these circumstances, a claim of plain. error must fail. We accordingly reject Miller's claim that the jury's verdicts are inconsistent.

The superior court's designation of Miller's assault on Stricker as a crime of domestic violence >

When the State filed the charges against Miller, it alleged that both offenses were "erimes of domestic violence" as defined in AS 18.66.990(8) and (5). Miller never challenged this allegation. Indeed, at the sentencing hearing, the parties and the superior court openly discussed the fact that, because Miller's offense was a crime of domestic violence and because Miller had a prior convietion for assault, he faced a minimum sentence of 30 days' imprisonment under AS 12.55.135(g)4 The defénse attorney never [1116]*1116voiced any objection to this characterization of the situation. When the superior court issued its written judgement, the court labeled the fourth-degree assault conviction a crime of "domestic violence".

Now, on appeal, Miller argues that the superior court committed error by designating his fourth-degree assault conviction a "crime of domestic violence", and by sentene-ing him under the mandatory minimum sentencing provisions of AS 12.55.185(g).

The State argues that, because Miller failed to object to the "domestic violence" designation of his offense during the sentencing proceedings, he should not be allowed to attack that designation now.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 P.3d 1112, 2013 WL 6145554, 2013 Alas. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-state-alaskactapp-2013.