S.H. v. State

2008 UT 78, 197 P.3d 636
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2008
DocketNo. 20061106
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2008 UT 78 (S.H. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.H. v. State, 2008 UT 78, 197 P.3d 636 (Utah 2008).

Opinions

INTRODUCTION

DURRANT, Associate Chief Justice:

1 S.H. seeks to have his conviction for attempted rape vacated. S.H. claims he is entitled to relief under the Post-Conviction Remedies Act (the "PCRA") because he received ineffective assistance of counsel at a juvenile court retention hearing. As a result of that hearing, S.H. was bound over to the district court, tried, convicted, and sentenced as an adult. After unsuccessfully appealing his conviction, he petitioned the district court for post-conviction relief. The district court held a hearing and denied the petition. S.H. now appeals that denial, and we must resolve four issues:

1. Whether the district court correctly concluded that the PCRA applies to S.H.'s claim that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at a juvenile court retention hearing.
2. Whether the district court erred in interpreting State v. F.L.R. (State ex rel. F.L.R.)1 and in denying S.H.'s petition based on that interpretation.
3. Whether the district court correctly concluded that S.H. satisfied the two-prong Strickland test for proving he received ineffective assistance of counsel at his juvenile court retention hearing.
4. Whether this court may fashion an appropriate remedy under the PCRA.

T2 For the reasons detailed below, we grant S.H.'s petition and order that his record be made expungeable consistent with a juvenile court disposition. After reviewing the applicable background and facts, we will address each of the issues in the order established above.

BACKGROUND

I 3 Seventeen-year-old S.H. and fifteen-year-old Jessica attended high school together. On Saturday evening, November 8, 1997, S.H. and Jessica met at a mutual friend's house with several other teens. The group of teens began taking pain medication for recreational purposes, and S.H. and Jessica participated. S.H. and Jessica then began talking and ended up kissing in the bathroom. Jessica later agreed that she did not object to this. Following their encounter in the bathroom, the two left the party in S.H.'s car, and S.H. drove to a church parking lot and parked.

14 The parties disagree about what happened next. S.H. claims that the sexual acts that occurred in the car were consensual, while Jessica claims that they were not. Specifically, Jessica claims that she rejected S.H.'s attempt to perform oral sex on her and that S.H. then tried to force her to perform oral sex on him. Jessica also claims that when S.H. next penetrated her vagina with his fingers and then with his penis, she told him "no" and that the acts were causing her great pain.

11 5 The parties agree that after the sexual encounter, and while still in the car, S.H. saw something red on his pants and asked Jessica if it was lipstick. Jessica believed that it was her blood-based on the amount of pain she felt during the sexual act-but did not tell S.H.. Instead, she said she didn't know what the red stains were. S.H. then drove Jessica back to the party, and along the way, the two [639]*639agreed not to tell anyone about the sexual encounter.

T6 Later that evening, Jessica left the party with her friends, to whom she recounted her version of the night's events, including the fact that she had been injured enough during the sexual encounter to cause bleeding. A friend convinced Jessica to seek medical help and drove her to Orem Community Hospital, where a police officer interviewed Jessica. She was then sent to Utah Valley Medical Center in Provo where Dr. Stephen L. Barry conducted a full rape examination.

%7 During his examination, Dr. Barry found "several distinct injuries" consistent with a noneonsensual sexual encounter. As a result of Dr. Barry's examination and Jessica's statement to police, S.H. was charged by information with one count of aggravated sexual assault and one count of forcible sodomy, both first degree felonies. Aggravated sexual assault is one of the crimes enumerated in the Serious Youth Offender Act (the "SYOA").2 The purpose of the SYOA is to create a "strong presumption that cases involving inherently violent and aggressive offenses by juveniles sixteen years of age and older will be transferred to the district court." 3

8 Pursuant to the SYOA procedures, the juvenile court held a preliminary retention hearing to determine whether S.H. should be bound over to district court to answer the charges as an adult. At the hearing, S.H. was represented by his attorney, Michael Esplin. According to the SYOA, the State first had the burden of establishing "probable cause to believe that" S.H. committed aggravated sexual assault.4

T9 To meet this probable cause burden, the State first called Jessica to recount her version of events. The State then called Dr. Barry, who read from his "Code-R" rape exam report, showed photographs of Jessica's genital injuries, and testified that her injuries were "extremely consistent with a nonconsensual penetrating force." The State also called Dr. Delvin Seott Ensley, who had examined Jessica. He too testified that her "injuries ... were consistent with an injury related to an assault."

1 10 Because the State met its burden, the burden then shifted to S.H. to establish the three retention factors that would allow the juvenile court to retain jurisdiction over him. During the retention hearing, the parties stipulated that the first two retention factors were not at issue; therefore, S.H. had the burden of establishing only the third factor-that he did not commit the offense of aggravated sexual assault in a "violent, aggressive, or premeditated manner." 5

{11 To meet this burden, S.H.'s attorney, Esplin, presented only his seventeen-year-old client, who testified that he never made oral threats or used any kind of force on Jessica during the sexual encounter. Importantly, Esplin called no medical experts of his own, though he did eross-exam-ine the State's medical experts and questioned them about Jessica's injuries. And he did elicit from the experts an admission that the injuries Jessica suffered could have come from consensual sex, though neither expert would rule out nonconsensual sex as the more likely cause of the injuries.

{12 During closing arguments, which focused on the third retention factor, Esplin briefly reviewed the testimonies of Jessica and S.H.. He then correctly cited [640]*640the only case at the time to have interpreted the third retention factor, In re A.B.,6 for the proposition that even an aggravated crime can be committed with a "low level of violence and aggression," providing an opportunity for defendants to establish the third retention factor. Esplin then noted that during the sexual encounter, S.H. used no weapons, created no physical restrictions, and made no threats against Jessica. In attempting to establish the third retention factor, Esplin argued that the incident was "as non-violent a rape as you can have."

{1834 The juvenile court disagreed and found that the State met its burden of establishing probable cause that S.H. committed aggravated sexual assault and that S.H. failed to establish the third retention factor to avoid bindover to district court. The juvenile court then ordered S.H. bound over to district court to answer the charges as an adult.

T14 S.H.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 UT 78, 197 P.3d 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sh-v-state-utah-2008.