State v. Baca

2013 NMCA 060, 4 N.M. 130
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2013
DocketNo. 34,120; Docket No. 31,442
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2013 NMCA 060 (State v. Baca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baca, 2013 NMCA 060, 4 N.M. 130 (N.M. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

VIGIL, Judge.

This case commenced as a criminal prosecution in the magistrate court. The question presented is whether double jeopardy bars a trial de novo in the district court when the arresting officer completed his testimony on direct examination, and the magistrate court suppressed the arresting officer’s testimony and dismissed the case with prejudice. We conclude that the magistrate court judge’s ruling constituted an acquittal and that a trial de novo in the district court would violate Defendant’s constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy. The district court having ruled otherwise, we reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

Sergeant Martin Trujillo arrested Defendant and filed a criminal complaint in the magistrate court charging Defendant with aggravated driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DWI) and illegally driving left of center on a roadway. NMSA 1978, §§ 66-8-102 (2010) and -7-313 (1978). Magistrate Judge Naranjo dismissed the criminal complaint without prejudice after the prosecutor failed to attend a pretrial conference.

The prosecutor subsequently filed a second criminal complaint in the magistrate court charging the same offenses, but failed to comply with the requirements of Rule 6-506A(C) NMRA for a refiled criminal complaint.1 A non-jury trial commenced before Judge Naranjo, and the State called Sergeant Trujillo as its first witness. While he was testifying on direct examination, Defendant attempted to conduct a voir dire about the criminal complaint he filed and the second criminal complaint filed by the prosecutor. Judge Naranjo halted the inquiry, explaining that he wanted to hear the direct testimony without interruption and that the voir dire would be heard and considered during cross-examination. Judge Naranjo further stated that he would reserve ruling on the admissibility and weight of the testimony until after the cross-examination of Sergeant Trujillo was completed.

During Sergeant Trujillo’s cross-examination, Defendant demonstrated that the second criminal complaint filed by the prosecutor did not comply with the requirements for a refiled criminal complaint mandated by Rule 6-506A. Defendant therefore moved for a finding that the State had violated Rule 6-506A(C) and for a sanction to suppress Sergeant Trujillo’s testimony. Judge Naranjo granted the motions, and he filed a final order dismissing the charges with prejudice. The order recites that upon Defendant’s motion, the officer’s testimony was suppressed, and the “case dismissed with prejudice of the following charge(s): aggravated driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs and driving left of center of road ways.”

The State appealed to the district court. See Rule 5-826(A) NMRA (stating that aparty who is aggrieved by the judgment or final order in a criminal action in magistrate court “may appeal, as permitted by law, to the district court”). After the State’s notice of appeal was filed, Judge Naranjo filed an amended final order on criminal complaint nunc pro tunc in the magistrate court. In pertinent part, this order states:

A motion was made by [Defendant] to suppress the testimony of Sergeant Martin Trujillo for violation of [Rule] 6-506-A(C)[, ](D). Sergeant Martin Trujillo was the arresting [ojfficer. A second motion was made by [Defendant] for a directed verdict of not guilty due to insufficient evidence to proceed. Motion to suppress and directed verdict of not guilty were granted.
THE DEFENDANT IS THEREFORE ACQUITTED.

The State’s appeal triggered a trial de novo to be held in the district court. See Rule 5-826(J) (“Trials upon appeals from the magistrate or municipal court to the district court shall be de novo.”). Contending that a trial de novo in the district court would violate his constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy, Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the State’s appeal. See U.S. Const, amend. V (stating that no person shall “for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy”); N.M. Const, art. II, § 15 (stating that no person shall “be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense”). The State responded, and the motion was set for an evidentiary hearing. The State also objected to the amended final order, and the district court ruled that the amended final order was not valid and would not be considered in ruling on Defendant’s motion to dismiss.

Judge Naranjo was subpoenaed to testify at the evidentiary hearing in district court. Judge Naranjo testified that after Sergeant Trujillo completed his direct testimony in the trial in magistrate court, Defendant asserted that the second criminal complaint did not comply with Rule 6-506A, and, for a sanction, asked that Sergeant Trujillo’s testimony be suppressed. After taking a recess, Judge Naranjo was in the process of announcing his decision when the prosecutor interrupted and said the State was going to dismiss the charges. Judge Naranjo said he responded that “I didn’t need to listen to her dismissing the case, that I would be dismissing the case.” Judge Naranjo said that after he announced that Sergeant Trujillo’s testimony would be suppressed, defense counsel made a motion for a directed verdict, and he granted that motion as well. Judge Naranjo explained that he was reminded by defense counsel that instead of dismissing the case, he should find Defendant not guilty. Agreeing, Judge Naranjo announced that Defendant was not guilty of the charges. He granted the motion for a directed verdict because after Sergeant Trujillo finished testifying, he determined that Defendant “was not guilty of the charges, and, consequently, I dismissed the charges against him.”

Referring to the original order dismissing the case with prejudice, Judge Naranjo testified that it did not correctly reflect what had happened because he did not dismiss the case, he granted Defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, and he found Defendant not guilty. Judge Naranjo said that the errors were likely made by his clerk in preparing the order, and when the errors were discovered, they were corrected in the amended order, which accurately reflects what actually occurred.

In cross-examination, Judge Naranjo acknowledged that other witnesses for the State were in the hallway when he dismissed the case and that the State had not finished presenting all of its evidence. Furthermore, he had no information on what evidence the other witnesses would have offered. Pressed how he could grant an acquittal without hearing these witnesses, Judge Naranjo answered:

[T]he evidence that had been presented was being presented by the chief or the main witness for the State, in this case, Sergeant Martin Trujillo.
[I]f the evidence was going to be suppressed where nothing could be heard from him, my opinion was that we should finish the case, terminate it.

He subsequently added that the most important evidence pertaining to the case “had and should have been given by Sergeant Trujillo,” and when Judge Naranjo granted the defense motion to suppress SergeantTrujillo’s testimony, “that, to me, as far as I was concerned, would stop the case from going further.”

Sergeant Trujillo also testified at the evidentiary hearing.

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Related

State v. Baca
2013 NMCA 60 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
2013 NMCA 060, 4 N.M. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baca-nm-2013.