Morrow v. State

80 P.3d 262, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 212, 2003 WL 22753023
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 21, 2003
DocketA-8396, A-8405
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 P.3d 262 (Morrow 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
Morrow v. State, 80 P.3d 262, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 212, 2003 WL 22753023 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Eric Morrow appeals his conviction for failing to appear at his felony sentencing. 1 Morrow contends on appeal that Superior Court Judge Larry C. Zervos abused his discretion in (1) denying his motion to dismiss the indictment, (2) denying his motion to bifurcate his trial, and (3) admitting evidence of two prior incidents where Morrow had failed to appear. We conclude that Judge Zervos did not abuse his discretion.

The State cross-appeals, arguing that Judge Zervos erred in instructing the jury on the culpable mental state for failure to appear. We conclude that this issue is moot in light of Morrow’s conviction.

Factual background

On May 2, 2001, Morrow pleaded guilty to felony assault in Sitka Superior Court. Both Morrow and his attorney were present at this change of plea hearing. The court set July 12, 2001, as the sentencing date. Morrow failed to appear at the July 12th hearing. The court issued a warrant for Morrow’s arrest for failure to appear. Morrow was arrested on July 24, 2001, in Sitka.

A grand jury indicted Morrow on one count of failure to appear. At trial, Morrow testified that he had mistakenly written down the sentencing date as August 12, 2001, rath *264 er than July 12, 2001. A jury convicted Morrow of failure to appear. Morrow appeals.

Morrow’s motion to dismiss the indictment

Susan Roberson, the in-court clerk for the Sitka superior court, was the only witness called to testify before the grand jury. She testified that she was acting as the in-court clerk on the day that Morrow pleaded guilty to the assault charge. She also testified that, at this hearing, the court informed Morrow of the time and date of his sentencing.

Roberson further testified that she was the in-court clerk at the scheduled July 12th sentencing hearing. She testified that although the hearing started on time, Morrow was not present; however, his defense attorney was. The defense attorney offered no explanation for Morrow’s absence, and the court issued a warrant for Morrow’s arrest.

At one point during the grand jury hearing, the prosecutor offered the grand jury a certified copy of the conditions of release form which the court gave to Morrow prior to the change of plea hearing. This document did not say anything about the sentencing hearing date which the court later set after Morrow had changed his plea. The prosecutor apparently introduced the form to show the grand jury that the court had informed Morrow of his duty to appear at all scheduled court proceedings. A grand juror then asked how they could know that Morrow understood when his next court date was. The prosecutor responded as follows:

Prosecutor: I think you’re getting into deliberations. The state has presented the evidence that I’m going to rely on in this case. And again, it’s your decision whether all of that evidence taken together, unexplained or uncontradicted, would warrant a trial jury to return a verdict of guilty.

The following exchange then ensued regarding the conditions of release form:

Grand Juror: I have one more question on this. The exhibit that you gave me, there’s a section down here called agreement by defendant. I have reviewed the above order. I promise to appear at all court hearings and comply with all other conditions set. And it’s not signed. Prosecutor: I can tell you that it’s not the practice of this jurisdiction that those be signed, the copies of those. I think it indicates on the bottom the copies are distributed. Basically as copies are distributed. That is true. That it’s not signed. If you want further testimony on that I can recall Ms. Roberson. It is not the practice to have those signed in this jurisdiction.

The prosecutor later reviewed all of the elements of failure to appear under AS 12.30.060. The prosecutor told the grand jury that it needed to decide if Morrow acted knowingly when he failed to appear for his sentencing. The grand jury returned a true bill indicting Morrow for failure to appear.

Morrow moved to dismiss the indictment, arguing that the prosecutor’s statement that the practice in the jurisdiction was not to have defendants sign the form amounted to improper testimony. Although witnesses testified that the court often did not require defendants to sign the form, the State conceded that the prosecutor’s statement about local practice was improper because it amounted to testimony by the prosecutor. But the State argued that Morrow had not been prejudiced by this error.

Under Stem v. State, “when a defendant proves that the grand jury heard improper evidence, the superior court must engage in a two-part analysis.” 2 First, the court must remove the improper evidence from the case heard by the grand jury and decide whether the evidence that remains is legally sufficient to support the indictment. 3 If the indictment survives the first step of the analysis, the court must then examine the degree to which the improper evidence might have unfairly influenced the grand jury’s decision. 4 The question becomes whether “the *265 probative force of [the] admissible evidence was so weak and the unfair prejudice engendered by the improper evidence was so strong that it appears likely that the improper evidence was the decisive factor in the grand jury’s decision to indict.” 5

Judge Zervos applied the Stem standard. He concluded that, after striking the prosecutor’s improper comment, there was sufficient evidence to support the grand jury’s decision to indict. He then weighed whether the prosecutor’s comment could have prejudiced Morrow. He concluded that the prosecutor had responded “inappropriately and probably incorrectly ... about local practices.” But he concluded that the evidence which the State presented about Morrow’s knowledge of the date of his sentencing hearing was strong because Morrow was “present when the date was set.” Judge Zervos concluded that “[t]he prosecutor’s statement was such a small part of the [g]rand [j]ury presentation and on such a side issue that it could not have been ‘a decisive factor in the [g]rand [jjury’s decision to indict.’ ” 6

Our review of the record convinces us that Judge Zervos correctly applied the Stem analysis and did not err in refusing to dismiss the indictment. Morrow argues that the prosecutor’s comments constituted prose-cutorial misconduct and therefore required dismissal of the indictment. But, as Judge Zervos pointed out, although the supreme court has previously admonished prosecutors for making improper statements to the grand jury, it has not ordered indictments dismissed on this basis if the impropriety did not affect the grand jury’s decision. 7

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John Albert Scudero Jr. v. State of Alaska
496 P.3d 381 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2021)
ITTA v. State
191 P.3d 1013 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.3d 262, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 212, 2003 WL 22753023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.