Schouten v. State

77 P.3d 739, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 184, 2003 WL 22220952
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 26, 2003
DocketA-8432, A-8433
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 P.3d 739 (Schouten 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
Schouten v. State, 77 P.3d 739, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 184, 2003 WL 22220952 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Wayne Schouten and Roy Roberts were charged (by citation) with taking a moose out of season; Schouten was also charged (by citation) with hunting without a valid license. 1 When no prosecutor or police officer appeared on behalf of the State at the defendants' scheduled arraignment, Magistrate Monte L. Brice dismissed the charges against the two defendants:

The Court: [TJhere is no one here representing the State. And it appears to me that if the State was interested in prosecuting these matters, they would have had somebody here. And since they don't appear interested enough in prosecuting these cases to have someone here in court, I'm going to dismiss [these] cases for failure to prosecute.
Now, that doesn't mean that you're going to get away with it again, because when [the authorities] learn that they lose their cases by not showing up, the next time they cite you, they're going to make sure [that] they're going to be here. So you folks need to understand that.

The defendants apparently understood Magistrate Brice to have dismissed the charges "with prejudice"-i.e., with no possibility of re-filing. But later events cast doubt on the defendants' understanding of the magistrate's ruling.

Four days after the defendants' arraignment, after the State learned that the charges against the two defendants had been dismissed, the State again charged the defendants with taking the same moose out of season. The two defendants asked Magistrate Brice to dismiss the renewed charges. When he refused, the defendants entered Cooksey pleas of no contest, reserving their right to contest the State's re-filing of the charges. 2

The defendants' argument that Magistrate Brice dismissed the charges with prejudice

The defendants first argument is that Magistrate Brice dismissed the original charges with prejudice when no one from the State appeared at the arraignment. But when the defendants presented this contention to Magistrate Brice, the magistrate declared that he had not intended to dismiss the charges with prejudice:

[My] remarks [at the defendants' original arraignment] were intended to constitute nothing other than a dismissal for failure to prosecute.... Nothing [said] at the original arraignment or set forth in the [later] written dismissals indicate[s] a clear *741 intent ... to bar ... future prosecution. [This was] exactly the opposite of [my] actual intent, which was to dismiss without prejudice. ©

"Memorandum and Order Denying Motions to Dismiss" (July 10, 2002), page 2 (emphasis in the original).

On appeal, the defendants argue that we must not take Magistrate Brice at his word. The defendants contend that the magistrate's original remarks clearly reveal his intention to dismiss the charges with prejudice-and that the remarks we have just quoted are simply the magistrate's "[after-the-fact] rationalization", an attempt to avoid the consequences of his original decision.

We do not agree. Magistrate Brice's remarks at the defendants' original arraignment are, at best, ambiguous on the issue of whether he intended to dismiss the charges with prejudice. Given this ambiguity, it was not improper for the magistrate to clarify what he meant.

Moreover, if Magistrate Brice had in fact intended to dismiss the charges with prejudice, this would have been an abuse of his discretion. Judges are authorized to dismiss criminal charges in the furtherance of justice. See Alaska Criminal Rule 48(c). But not every misstep or act of inattention on the part of the prosecuting authorities warrants dismissal. - Although Magistrate Brice was properly concerned with the State's failure to send a representative to the defendants' arraignment, the State's inaction did not result in actual legal prejudice to the defendants.

Had the defendants wished, they could have gone forward with the arraignment, entered "not guilty" pleas, and asked the court to schedule a trial date. Instead, the defendants chose to accept the windfall of dismissal. But the State's failure to appear at the arraignment, and the consequent delay of a few days' time, did not prejudice the defendants' ability to defend the charges or disadvantage the defendants in any other substantive way. Under our decision in State v. Jones, 751 P.2d 1379 (Alaska App.1988), it would have been an abuse of discretion for Magistrate Brice to dismiss the charges with prejudice. Id. at 1382-83.

For these reasons, we conclude that the charges against the defendants were not dismissed with prejudice, at least not by judicial decision. But the defendants also argue that the charges were dismissed with prejudice by operation of law.

The defendants' argument that, by reason of AS 12.20.020 and AS 12.20.050, Magistrate Brice's dismissal of the charges barred the State from re-filing the charges

The defendants' second argument is that, regardless of whether Magistrate Brice intended to dismiss the charges with prejudice, his act of dismissing the charges had that effect as a matter of law. The defendants' argument is premised on two statutes, AS 12.20.020 and AS 12.20.050(a).

The first statute, AS 12.20.020, declares:

When acquittal or dismissal is not a bar. If ... the charge [against a defendant] is dismissed upon an objection to its form or substance, or discharged for want of prosecution, without a judgment of acquittal or in bar of another prosecution, it is not an acquittal of the crime and does not bar a subsequent prosecution for the same crime.

At first reading, this statute seemingly undercuts the defendants' argument that the State was barred from re-filing the charges against them. The statute declares that when a criminal charge is dismissed "for want of prosecution" (which was Magistrate Brice's stated basis for dismissing the charges against the defendants), the dismissal "does not bar a subsequent prosecution for the same crime" unless the dismissal is accompanied by "a judgment of acquittal or [a judgment] in bar of another prosecution". We have just concluded that Magistrate Brice did not issue a judgement "in bar of another prosecution" when he dismissed the charges at the defendants' original arraignment-and that, even had he intended to do so, his action would have constituted an abuse of discretion. Thus, AS 12.20.020 seems to say that, under the circumstances of this case, the State was empowered to refile the charges.

*742 But the defendants argue that the phrase "[judgment] in bar of another prosecution" is meant to constitute a cross-reference to another statute, AS 12.20.050(a)-a statute that specifies certain situations in which dismissal of a criminal charge does bar renewed prosecution as a matter of law. AS 12.20.050(a) reads:

Dismissal as bar. (a) It is a bar to another prosecution for the same crime if the crime is a misdemeanor, but it is not a bar if the crime charged is a felony when a person is

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

Related

Hurd v. State
107 P.3d 314 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 P.3d 739, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 184, 2003 WL 22220952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schouten-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.