Sivertsen v. State

963 P.2d 1069, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 515711
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 21, 1998
Docket1600
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 963 P.2d 1069 (Sivertsen 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
Sivertsen v. State, 963 P.2d 1069, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 515711 (Ala. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

STEWART, Judge.

Rod A. Sivertsen appeals his convictions for second-degree burglary 1 and second-degree theft. 2 He argues that Superior Court Judge Larry R. Weeks committed various errors during trial when he admitted certain evidence and denied Sivertsen’s motions for a mistrial and a judgment of acquittal on one count. But we conclude that Judge Weeks did not abuse his discretion and that he did not err by denying the acquittal motion. Therefore, we affirm Sivertsen’s conviction. However, we find that we must vacate Siv-ertsen’s sentence.

Facts and proceedings

On July 31,1996, Sergeant Chuck Perry of the Ketchikan Police Department called the Juneau Police Department and spoke to Officer Ben Cornell. Perry told Cornell that Sivertsen was flying to Juneau that evening and that he was a suspected burglar. A photograph of Sivertsen was faxed to the Juneau police.

Sivertsen arrived as expected. A contingent of Juneau police and a couple of members of the Juneau Citizens Patrol tailed him from the airport to the downtown area and attempted to maintain surveillance, but occasionally lost track of him. About 2:10 A.M. on August 1, 1996, Officers Wrightson and Van Sickle saw Sivertsen in a second-story window of the Merchant’s Wharf, a building subdivided into multiple offices and stores. Sivertsen shattered a glass door but could not get out. He broke out a nearby window and stepped out of the building with a hammer in his hand. He was arrested. The police found over six hundred dollars in cash and a putty knife in his possession.

Inside Merchant’s Wharf, the office of Cruise Line Agency of Alaska had been forcibly entered. Six hundred dollars in cash was missing from the office. Donald Habeger, Cruise Line’s operations manager, told the police that the hammer and putty knife came from the Cruise Line office.

Sivertsen was indicted for second-degree burglary of the Cruise Line office, second-degree burglary of Merchant’s Wharf, second-degree theft of the cash from Cruise Line, and second-degree criminal mischief for breaking the glass door and window. The jury found Sivertsen guilty of both burglary counts and the theft count but could not agree on the criminal mischief charge. Prior to sentencing, Judge Weeks merged the burglary counts, and the state dismissed the criminal mischief charge.

At trial, Sivertsen sought to exclude reference to the warning received by the Juneau police that Sivertsen was heading their way. He argued that the evidence was irrelevant to the charges, and, under Alaska Rule of Evidence 403, was more prejudicial than probative. Judge Weeks permitted testimony about the phone call to explain the officers’ interest in Sivertsen, but did not allow testimony detailing the basis for the concern by Ketchikan police that Sivertsen was an active burglar. Judge Weeks provided a limiting instruction to the jury on the uses they could make of that evidence: “To the extent that the call from Ketchikan was made, you’re not to consider that as evidence that the defendant did what he was charged with doing. It’s to explain to you why the police did what they did and is offered for no other reason.”

On appeal, Sivertsen argues that the limiting instruction did not cure the violation of Alaska Evidence Rule 404(b). Sivert-sen assumes that the evidence of the warning phone call is evidence of a prior bad act. But we analyze that evidence differently. The evidence actually admitted was not direct evidence of a prior bad act by Sivertsen but was evidence from which a factfinder could *1071 infer that Sivertsen was an individual who had engaged in a prior bad act. Judge Weeks foreclosed impermissible uses of that evidence by the jury with his limiting instruction. His instruction narrowed the jury’s consideration of the phone-call evidence to “explain why the police did what they did and is offered for no other reason.” A jury is presumed to follow a court’s limiting instruction on the purpose for which they can consider evidence. 3

Given the strict limitations placed on the jury’s use of the phone call evidence, we conclude that Judge Weeks did not abuse his discretion by limiting the jury’s use of the warning and admitting the evidence. 4

Even if the admission of that evidence was error, we conclude the error was harmless because the evidence did not appreciably affect the jury’s verdict. 5 The evidence that Sivertsen committed the offenses was strong. He was caught in the act of breaking out of Merchant’s Wharf carrying tools that came from the Cruise Line office and possessing cash consistent with the cash missing from the Cruise Line office.

Sivertsen’s next point concerns Ha-beger’s testimony identifying the hammer and the putty knife. Following that testimony, Sivertsen claimed a discovery violation and moved for a mistrial. Although he conceded Habeger was identified in the police reports, he argued that the absence of Ha-beger’s identification of the hammer and the putty knife in the reports entitled him to a mistrial. Counsel for Sivertsen did not interview Habeger prior to trial.

The prosecutor told the court he did not realize there was no reference in the police reports to Habeger’s identification of the tools. He said that he learned of the identification of the tools the week before trial because he interviewed Habeger as part of his trial preparation. Judge Weeks denied the motion for a mistrial. Sivertsen then moved to exclude the testimony that had been received, or in the alternative, for a one-day continuance. Judge Weeks denied the motion to exclude the evidence and indicated he would take the motion for a continuance under advisement. The issue of a continuance did not come up again during trial.

On appeal, Sivertsen claims that this fact pattern establishes a violation of Alaska Criminal Rule 16 and that Judge Weeks should have granted his motion for a mistrial because of that violation. We disagree with both assertions.

We do not understand Criminal Rule 16(b)(l)(i) to require disclosure by the prosecutor of- Habeger’s oral statements made during pre-trial preparation shortly before trial. We reach that conclusion by analyzing three subsections of Criminal Rule 16(b)(1):

(b) Disclosure to the Accused.
(1) Information Within Possession or Control of Prosecuting Attorney. (A) Except as is otherwise provided ..., the prosecuting attorney shall disclose the following informa tion within the prosecuting attorney’s possession or control to defense counsel ...:
(i) The names and addresses of persons known by the government to have knowledge of relevant facts and their written or recorded statements or summaries of statements;
(ii) Any written or recorded statements and summaries of statements and the substance of any oral statements made by the accused;
(iii) Any written or recorded statements and summaries of statements and the substance of any oral statements made by a co-defendant[.]

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

Related

Young v. State
331 P.3d 1276 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2014)
Starkweather v. State
244 P.3d 522 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2010)
State v. Savo
108 P.3d 903 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
963 P.2d 1069, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 39, 1998 WL 515711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sivertsen-v-state-alaskactapp-1998.