Shubert v. Ada County

461 P.3d 740, 166 Idaho 458
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2020
Docket46403
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 461 P.3d 740 (Shubert v. Ada County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shubert v. Ada County, 461 P.3d 740, 166 Idaho 458 (Idaho 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 46403

NATALIE SHUBERT, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) ADA COUNTY, a political subdivision of the ) State of Idaho; ALAN TRIMMING, an ) Boise, November 2019 Term employee of Ada County in his ) personal/individual and official capacities as ) Opinion Filed: March 12, 2020 the Ada County Public Defender; MICHAEL ) WARREN LOJEK, an employee of Ada ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk County in his personal/individual and official ) capacities as Deputy Ada County Public ) SUBSTITUTE OPINION. THE Defender, ) COURT’S PRIOR OPINION ) DATED FEBRUARY 12, 2020 IS Defendants-Appellants, ) HEREBY WITHDRAWN. ) and ) ) JOHN and JANE DOES I to XX, whose true ) identities are unknown, ) ) Defendants. ) _______________________________________ )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Ada County. Samuel A. Hoagland, District Judge.

The district court’s order denying summary judgment is affirmed and the case is remanded.

Jan M. Bennetts, Ada County Prosecuting Attorney, Boise, for appellants. Catherine Freeman argued.

Seiniger Law, Boise and Giles & Thompson Law, PLLC, Boise, for respondent. Breck Seiniger argued.

Rainey Law Office, Boise, amicus curiae brief for Idaho Trial Lawyers Association Foundation.

1 Michael Kane & Associates, PLLC, Boise, amicus curiae brief for Idaho Association of Counties.

Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Public Defense Commission. _____________________

BRODY, Justice. This case arises from Natalie Shubert’s negligence claim against her former public defender, Michael Lojek, former Ada County chief public defender Alan Trimming, and Ada County (collectively the “Ada County Defendants”). In 2008, Shubert was charged with two felonies and pleaded guilty to both charges. Her sentences were suspended in each case, and she was placed on probation. After a probation violation in 2011, the Ada County district court entered an order extending Shubert’s probation beyond the time period allowed by law. The mistake was not caught. After Shubert’s probation should have ended in both cases, she was charged and incarcerated for a subsequent probation violation in 2014. Thereafter, in 2016, Shubert was charged with a new probation violation. Shubert was assigned a new public defender, who discovered the error that unlawfully kept Shubert on probation. Shubert’s new public defender filed a motion to correct the illegal sentence, raising the error that had improperly extended her probation. The district court granted Shubert’s motion to correct the illegal sentence and released Shubert from custody. Shubert then sued her original public defender, the Ada County Public Defender’s Officer, and other unknown Ada County employees alleging false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence per se, negligence, and state and federal constitutional violations. The district court dismissed all of Shubert’s claims except for negligence. In denying the Ada County Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Shubert’s negligence claim, the district court held that public defenders are not entitled to common law quasi-judicial immunity from civil malpractice liability, and two provisions of the Idaho Tort Claims Act (ITCA) do not exempt public defenders from civil malpractice liability. The Ada County Defendants bring this permissive appeal under Idaho Appellate Rule 12. We affirm the district court’s order denying summary judgment and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Factual Background.

2 1. Shubert’s criminal cases In 2008, Shubert was appointed a public defender after being charged in two separate Ada County criminal cases. She was charged with grand theft in Ada County Case No. CR-MD- 2008-0601 (GT-601). She was charged with a felony for writing checks with insufficient funds in Ada County Case No. CR-MD-2008-2880 (NSF-2880). Ada County district court judge Patrick Owen presided over both cases. In November 2008, Shubert signed a “Guilty Plea Advisory” form for both GT-601 and NSF-2880. Shubert wrote on that form that the maximum sentence for the GT-601 case was “14 years max” and the maximum sentence for the NSF-2880 case was “3 years max.” Shubert also signed an acknowledgement on that form that her guilty plea was the result of a plea agreement. Shubert also wrote on the form her understanding of the plea agreement as “2+4=6 probation up to 120 days in [j]ail” and “concurrent – 2+1=3 up to 120 days in [j]ail[.]” Shubert alleges that Ada County deputy public defender Michael Lojek represented her from the time she was charged in GT-601 and NSF-2880 through 2016. However, the record indicates that Ada County deputy public defender Eric Rolfson signed her initial “Guilty Plea Advisory” form in 2008. Lojek does not dispute that he represented Shubert in GT-601 and NSF- 2880, and began appearing with Shubert in court in 2011. 2. 2009 sentencing On February 27, 2009, Shubert appeared in front of Judge Owen for sentencing in both cases. In GT-601, the district court sentenced Shubert to six years in prison, with the first two years fixed. The district court then suspended Shubert’s sentence and placed her on probation for six years, expiring at midnight on February 26, 2015. In NSF-2880, the district court sentenced Shubert to three years in prison with the first two years fixed, to be served concurrently with her GT-601 sentence. Like in GT-601, the district court suspended Shubert’s sentence in NSF-2880 and placed her on probation for three years, expiring on February 26, 2012. The district court subsequently entered a Judgment of Conviction, Suspended Sentence, Order of Probation and Commitment in the NSF-2880 case. Shubert signed the bottom of the document after a certification statement which read: This is to certify that I have read or had read to me and fully understand and accept all the conditions, regulations and restrictions under which I am being granted probation. I will abide by and conform to them strictly and fully understand that my failure to do so may result in the revocation of my probation

3 and commitment to the Board of Correction to serve the sentence originally imposed. 3. 2011 probation violations On February 1, 2011, Ada County prosecutors filed a motion for a bench warrant and a probation violation in both GT-601 and NSF-2880, alleging Shubert violated the terms of her probation. An arrest warrant was issued on February 7, 2011, and Shubert was subsequently arrested on March 29, 2011. Shubert later admitted to the alleged probation violations. Judge Owen held a disposition hearing regarding Shubert’s probation violations on May 20, 2011. Lojek appeared as Shubert’s public defender at the hearing. On May 25, 2011, Judge Owen issued an order reinstating and amending probation in both GT-601 and NSF-2880. The orders contained an express finding that Shubert willfully and knowingly violated the terms of her probation. The orders also reinstated her probation upon the same terms and conditions originally entered but amended probation to impose a 120 day sentence in Ada County Jail with 54 days credited for time served. In issuing these orders, Judge Owen did not extend the length of probation in either of Shubert’s cases. However, the orders mistakenly provided that Shubert’s probation would now expire at midnight on May 19, 2017. At a March 2016 hearing, Judge Owen clarified that this order was a mistake, and that any orders extending probation beyond February 26, 2012 in NSF-2880—the case that ultimately led to her unlawful incarceration—was entered illegally. Despite the mistaken probation end date, Shubert signed a certification accepting her probation on June 13, 2011.

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Bluebook (online)
461 P.3d 740, 166 Idaho 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shubert-v-ada-county-idaho-2020.