State Sex Offender Registry v. Giovanelli

CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Sex Offender Registry v. Giovanelli (State Sex Offender Registry v. Giovanelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Sex Offender Registry v. Giovanelli, (Idaho Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 40884

STATE OF IDAHO, SEX OFFENDER ) 2014 Unpublished Opinion No. 425 REGISTRY, ) ) Filed: March 21, 2014 Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk v. ) ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED ALEX PAUL GIOVANELLI, ) OPINION AND SHALL NOT ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY Defendant-Appellant. ) )

Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District, State of Idaho, Kootenai County. Hon. Lansing L. Haynes, District Judge.

Judgment placing defendant on adult sex offender registry, affirmed.

John M. Adams, Kootenai County Public Defender; Christopher D. Schwartz, Deputy Public Defender, Coeur d’Alene, for appellant.

Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Stephanie A. Altig, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. ________________________________________________ LANSING, Judge Alex Paul Giovanelli appeals from the district court’s judgment granting the State’s Idaho Code § 18-8410 petition to transfer Giovanelli from the juvenile sex offender registry to the adult sex offender registry. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND The background of this case is described in this Court’s opinion in a prior case by which the State sought to transfer Giovanelli to the adult sex offender registry: Giovanelli was adjudicated as a juvenile with a crime that required him to register as a juvenile sex offender pursuant to I.C. § 18-8407. Giovanelli reached age twenty-one on October 13, 2009. On October 14, 2009, Giovanelli received a letter from the Idaho State Police sex offender registry unit informing him that his obligation to register as a juvenile sex offender expired on his twenty-first birthday, he was no longer required to register under I.C. § 18-8407, and his

1 registry information had been deleted from the central sex offender database. On December 2, 2009, the state filed a petition to transfer Giovanelli to the adult sex offender registry pursuant to I.C. § 18-8410. For reasons not explained by the record, the petition was filed in Giovanelli’s juvenile case and a hearing on the petition was held before a magistrate. The magistrate denied the petition, ruling that, because Giovanelli was twenty-one years old and pursuant to I.C. § 20-507, it no longer had jurisdiction to hear the petition. The state appealed to the district court. The district court affirmed the magistrate on different grounds. The district court determined that the magistrate had jurisdiction to decide the petition but that the petition was barred because it was not timely filed under I.C. § 18- 8410.

State v. Giovanelli, 152 Idaho 717, 718, 274 P.3d 18, 19 (Ct. App. 2012). In that appeal, we held that the district court erred in concluding that the petition was barred because it was not timely filed before Giovanelli reached the age of twenty-one. Id. at 719, 274 P.3d at 20. We also concluded, however, that the magistrate court was correct in its assessment that because Giovanelli was twenty-one years old before the petition was filed in the juvenile case, by terms of I.C. § 20-507, it no longer had jurisdiction to hear the petition. In a footnote, we suggested that “[t]he proper court in which to file would be the district court, as the court of general jurisdiction.” Id. at 719 n.1, 274 P.3d at 20 n.1. Following that opinion, on June 4, 2012, the State filed a new I.C. § 18-8410 transfer petition as a separate civil proceeding in district court. The district court set a trial date of February 28, 2013, and on October 30, 2012, issued a scheduling order. Following discovery, on February 15, 2013, the State filed a motion requesting that the court take judicial notice of certain documents from Giovanelli’s juvenile criminal case file. Giovanelli filed an objection to the motion on February 20, 2013. On February 25, the State filed an amended motion, and on the next day Giovanelli filed an amended objection. The motion was argued on February 28, 2013, just before commencement of the trial. Giovanelli objected to the motion on the merits and also on the ground that the motion should not be heard at all because it was not filed and heard within the time constraints established in the district court’s scheduling order. The district court overruled the latter objection, stating that the motion was “akin to a motion in limine” that “can be brought at any time” and that, in any event, Giovanelli had shown no prejudice because he had been provided adequate notice of the motion and had articulately argued against the propriety of taking judicial notice of the documents on the merits.

2 The district court granted the State’s motion in part, taking judicial notice of only a portion of the documents covered by the State’s request. The court took notice of an order and findings of fact dated December 22, 2008, from Giovanelli’s juvenile case file, but specifically held that it was taking notice only that the juvenile court judge made the particular findings in that order--not that the findings were true. The district court stated that Giovanelli could present evidence to rebut those findings if he wished. The court refused the State’s request to take judicial notice of facts set out in a “social investigation” from Giovanelli’s juvenile case. Rather, the court took judicial notice only that a social investigation existed in the juvenile file. The court also took judicial notice that a probation revocation request and warrant of apprehension was issued in the juvenile case but did not take judicial notice of the assertions of fact contained in those documents. Lastly, the court took notice of findings and conclusions dated October 9, 2009, from the juvenile case. That is, the court took notice that another judge had made particular findings and particular conclusions. At no point did the court state that it was taking judicial notice of any evidence underlying prior judicial findings or accepting those findings as established facts. Following the trial, the district court granted the State’s petition by ordering Giovanelli’s transfer to the adult sex offender registry. Giovanelli appeals from the judgment. II. ANALYSIS The precise nature of Giovanelli’s claims of error on appeal are not entirely clear. He does not contend that the documents of which the court took judicial notice were not properly noticeable under the Idaho Rules of Evidence. Rather, he contends that the State’s motion and amended motion to take judicial notice were untimely and also complains that the court’s action prejudiced Mr. Giovanelli and allowed the State “to establish several crucial facts without calling any witnesses.” According to his brief on appeal, Giovanelli contends that the district court’s findings that Giovanelli had “voluntarily admitted act(s) constituting the offense of lewd conduct with a minor,” and that “Magistrate Judge Barry Watson concluded that the defendant had violated the conditions of his court-ordered probation,” could not have been made if the district court had not granted the State’s motion to take judicial notice. He complains that “allowing the State to prove facts utilizing Idaho Rule of Evidence 201 in this manner “allows the majority of the facts to be proven without the Defendant being afforded an opportunity to contest the facts.”

3 A. Untimeliness of Motion Idaho Rule of Evidence 201(d) 1 expressly contemplates that a court may take judicial notice of records from a court file in the same or a separate case. If a party has requested judicial notice of a matter that is properly the subject of such notice, the court must grant the request if it has been supplied with the necessary information. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
State Sex Offender Registry v. Giovanelli, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-sex-offender-registry-v-giovanelli-idahoctapp-2014.