State of Iowa v. Mercedes JoJean Damme

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 29, 2020
Docket19-1139
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Mercedes JoJean Damme (State of Iowa v. Mercedes JoJean Damme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Mercedes JoJean Damme, (iowa 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 19–1139

Filed May 29, 2020

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

MERCEDES JOJEAN DAMME,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Grundy County, Jeffrey L.

Harris, Judge.

Defendant appeals sentence imposed after conviction based on

guilty plea, and State argues lack of good cause to appeal under Iowa Code

section 814.6 (2019). AFFIRMED.

Anne K. Wilson of Anne K. Wilson Law Office, PLLC, Cedar Rapids,

for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Tyler J. Buller, Assistant

Attorney General, Erika L. Allen, County Attorney, and Kali Adams,

Assistant County Attorney, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

This case presents our first opportunity to adjudicate the “good

cause” requirement under Iowa Code section 814.6 (2019) to appeal from

a conviction based on the defendant’s guilty plea. This defendant pled

guilty to theft and was convicted and sentenced on July 1, 2019, the first

day the amendment to section 814.6 became effective. Her appeal

challenges the sentence imposed, not her guilty plea or conviction. The

State argues we must dismiss the appeal because the defendant fails to

show good cause as required under the amendment. This new statute

does not define good cause, and we retained the case to determine its

meaning in this context.

On our review, we determine this defendant satisfies the good-cause

requirement to proceed with her appellate challenge to the sentence

imposed. The legislature amended section 814.6 to curtail frivolous

appeals from guilty pleas and thereby enforce their finality. We conclude

that “good cause” means a “legally sufficient reason.” We hold that the

good-cause requirement is satisfied in this context when the defendant

appeals a sentence that was neither mandatory nor agreed to in the plea

bargain. We therefore decline to dismiss the appeal. On the merits, her

challenge fails, so we affirm her sentence.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

This case arises from two related thefts in Grundy Center. On

March 25, 2018, Kathy Grittman’s wallet was stolen off her kitchen table

while she was at home. Grittman called police and told investigating

officer Alissa Loew that her daughter’s friend had been over to play and

was picked up by Mercedes JoJean Damme, the sitter. No one else was in

the house when the wallet went missing, and Grittman suspected Damme

stole it. Damme had chatted with Grittman in the kitchen and asked for 3

a Band-Aid for a cut on her thumb, which Grittman retrieved from a

connected bathroom. Damme then asked for triple antibiotic ointment,

which Grittman fetched from an upstairs bathroom, leaving Damme alone

in the kitchen. Shortly after Damme departed, Grittman found a

Band-Aid wrapper on the table where the wallet had been. She phoned

Damme, who denied taking it.

The next day, after returning home from work, Christopher Conway

noticed items missing from his home, including his laptop, a lockbox that

contained tax information, a flash drive, keys to his 1994 Pontiac

Grand Am, and numerous rare coins. Conway had left his home unlocked

while he was at work between 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., and the items went

missing during that time. Like Grittman, Conway told police that he

suspected Damme, a family friend who had been providing in-home care

for Conway’s sister. Conway knew that Grittman’s wallet had been stolen

the day before and that Damme was a suspect. Conway provided Deputy

Kyle Wolthoff with Damme’s contact information.

Damme had borrowed the Conway family’s Ford Explorer. When

Conway retrieved that vehicle from Damme at her home the following day,

she gave him its keys on a ring that also held the stolen keys to his

Grand Am and another keychain that had been in the stolen lockbox.

Damme denied knowing what the stolen keys were for and claimed that

they were already on the Ford’s key ring when she borrowed it. Conway

notified Deputy Wolthoff, who obtained a warrant to search Damme’s

home in Waterloo.

Deputy Wolthoff, another investigator, and two Waterloo police

officers executed the search warrant. They recovered many of the stolen

items, including the lockbox, some of the coins, the flash drive, Conway’s

social security card, a laptop, and Grittman’s driver’s license. Damme 4

initially claimed the items were hers and then changed her story to claim

they were given to her by her ex-boyfriend. The officers also found

methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia, which Damme admitted

belonged to her. She was arrested on drug charges. Conway later

identified the items stolen from him.

On May 22, Damme was charged in two separate cases with theft in

the third degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 714.1(1) and 714.2(3).

Damme entered a plea of guilty in each case on March 18, 2019. The State

agreed to seek no more than a two-year sentence that would be suspended

if Damme was accepted into the program with the Waterloo Women’s

Center for Change. The State agreed to follow a recommended sentence in

the presentence investigation if it was more lenient.

The court conducted the sentencing hearing on July 1. Despite the

State’s recommendations that aligned with the plea agreement, the court

declined to impose a suspended sentence or one in the range stipulated in

the plea agreements. The sentencing court stated it “considered the

argument of [Damme’s] counsel and extenuation and mitigation” and

recited numerous facts from the presentence investigation that it

contemplated when determining the requisite sentence.

The court began with mitigating factors. The court stated it “was

saddened by the fact that” Damme had been sexually abused by her

stepfather when she was young, for which he served a prison term. “Also

in extenuation and mitigation,” the court noted that Damme has ongoing

mental health and substance abuse concerns, that her parental rights to

three of her four children had been terminated, and that she had been the

victim in numerous criminal reports. Additionally, the court considered

her family’s criminal history in mitigation, 5 [I]t is clear to this Court that your family stock is not good. You clearly have not had positive role models in your life. Your father has served four prior prison terms. Your stepfather has served ten years of prison on the sexual abuse convictions involving you. Your mother has prior convictions and probation but no prison. Your first half-sister has prior arrests but no prison. A half-brother – your first half-brother has prior felony convictions. Your second half-brother has multiple misdemeanor convictions and five separate prison terms, and a second half-sister has been put on probation for operating while intoxicated first.

The court next transitioned to aggravating factors, stating, “At the

outset[,] this Court would note that the presentence investigation [report

(PSI)] consisting of 20 pages is in no way flattering to [Damme].”

Continuing with aggravating factors, the court recited Damme’s own

criminal history in some detail, telling Damme,

[Y]ou are an agent of criminality. You are a train wreck. You have been for the last nine or ten years of your life. . . . I’m convinced that you’re going to be back in here again after you get out of prison.

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