State v. G'STOHL

2010 MT 7, 223 P.3d 926, 355 Mont. 43, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 9
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 2010
DocketDA 09-0327
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2010 MT 7 (State v. G'STOHL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. G'STOHL, 2010 MT 7, 223 P.3d 926, 355 Mont. 43, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 2010).

Opinion

JUSTICE LEAPHART

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Defendant Bryon G’Stohl appeals the ruling of the District Court for the Thirteenth Judicial District, Yellowstone County, denying G’Stohl’s motion to dismiss a charge of criminal endangerment and rejecting G’Stohl’s as-applied vagueness challenge to Montana’s criminal endangerment statute, § 45-5-207, MCA.

¶2 The sole issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred in holding that § 45-2-207, MCA, is not unconstitutionally vague as applied to G’Stohl.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 On the evening of December 6, 2006, after having consumed “a few alcoholic beverages,” G’Stohl crashed his pickup into the back of a woman’s minivan, propelling the minivan into another vehicle. Two young children were passengers in the minivan. Both the pickup and the minivan sustained damage and had to be towed from the scene. Both the woman in the minivan and the driver of the third vehicle complained of neck pain after the collision. The children were unharmed.

¶4 Police officers arriving at the scene of the collision spoke with G’Stohl and reported that he slurred his words and was difficult to understand. They also described his breath as boozy, his eyes glossy, and his walk unsteady. G’Stohl admitted to having a few drinks at a bar before driving home. The officers arrested G’Stohl and ferried him to the Yellowstone County Detention Center, where G’Stohl refused to submit to sobriety tests or a breathalyzer. G’Stohl did agree to recite the alphabet, which he accomplished without trouble.

¶5 The State charged G’Stohl with criminal endangerment and driving under the influence (DUI). G’Stohl moved to dismiss the former charge on the basis that the criminal endangerment statute, § 45-2-207, MCA, is unconstitutionally vague as applied to his case. The District Court denied the motion, reasoning that G’Stohl had not shown the statute to be unconstitutional as applied to him. Subsequently and pursuant to a plea agreement, G’Stohl pleaded no contest to criminal endangerment and guilty to DUI, reserving his *45 right to appeal the denial of the motion to dismiss. For criminal endangerment, the District Court sentenced G’Stohl to a five-year commitment to the Department of Corrections with three years suspended. For DUI, G’Stohl was sentenced to six months in jail with all but a day suspended. The District Court ordered the sentences to run concurrently.

¶6 G’Stohl now appeals the District Court’s order denying his motion to dismiss. G’Stohl argues that he was “never given notice or put on notice of what conduct was prohibited” and that § 45-2-207, MCA, does not contain sufficient guidelines to prevent arbitrary enforcement.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶7 This Court reviews a district court’s denial of a motion to dismiss de novo. State v. Samples, 2008 MT 416, ¶ 13, 347 Mont. 292, 198 P.3d 803. Our review of constitutional questions is plenary. Id. at ¶ 14. The party challenging a statute carries the heavy burden of demonstrating the statute’s unconstitutionality. Hernandez v. Bd. of Co. Commrs., 2008 MT 251, ¶ 15, 345 Mont. 1, 189 P.3d 638.

DISCUSSION

¶8 Whether the District Court erred in holding that §45-2-207, MCA, is not unconstitutionally vague as applied to G’Stohl.

¶9 A law that is so vague that it leaves ordinary people uncertain as to what conduct it prohibits or that it may authorize or encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement is repugnant to the Due Process Clauses of the Constitutions of Montana and the United States. Mont. Const, art. II, § 17; U.S. Const, amend. XTV, § 1; Samples, ¶ 16; GiaCcio v. Pennsylvania, 382 U.S. 399, 402-03, 86 S. Ct. 518, 520-21 (1966). The void-for-vagueness doctrine is premised on the principle that everyone is entitled to fair warning of what the law commands and forbids so he may conduct himself accordingly and the related principle that explicit legal standards are necessary to prevent policemen, prosecutors, judges, and juries from enforcing the law in arbitrary or discriminatory fashion. State v. Stanko, 1998 MT 321, ¶ 23, 292 Mont. 192, 974 P.2d 1132.

¶10 A statute is so vague as to deny due process of law if (1) the statute fails to give “a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice that [the person’s] contemplated conduct is forbidden” or (2) it fails to establish “minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement.” State v. Dixon, 2000 MT 82, ¶¶ 28, 30, 299 Mont. 165, 998 P.2d 544. When a defendant mounts an as-applied vagueness challenge to a statute, as *46 G’Stohl does here, our evaluation of the first criterion examines f conduct with which the defendant is charged in order to detero&, whether the defendant could have reasonably understood that A. conduct was proscribed.” Id. at ¶ 28. Similarly, in an as-appli6fc challenge, our evaluation of the second criterion may include whether a defendant’s conduct so “clearly falls within the proscriptions of the ... charge” that the enforcement could not be the result of unfettered discretion. See id. at ¶ 34.

¶11 Section 45-5-207, MCA, which G’Stohl here challenges as unconstitutionally vague as applied to him, reads in relevant part: “A person who knowingly engages in conduct that creates a substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury to another commits the offense of criminal endangerment.”

¶12 G’Stohl argues that § 45-5-207, MCA, is unconstitutionally vague both because it did not give him actual notice that his conduct-driving while sufficiently intoxicated that he crashed his pickup into an occupied vehicle, disabling both vehicles-amounted to criminal endangerment and because it encouraged arbitrary enforcement by the arresting officers.

¶13 G’Stohl first argues that “he was never given notice or put on notice of what conduct was prohibited by the statute,” so he could not have “knowingly engaged” in the proscribed conduct. G’Stohl supports this argument by distinguishing his case from State v. Smaage, 276 Mont. 94, 915 P.2d 192 (1996). In Smaage the defendant was convicted of knowing endangerment under § 45-5-207, MCA, for driving erratically through the streets of Helena with a blood-alcohol content of .250. Id. at 96, 915 P.2d at 193. The defendant, Smaage, had previously been charged six times for DUI, had been convicted at least five times for DUI, had pleaded guilty to negligent homicide for the death of a passenger in a car he wrecked, and had been warned by a judge that his drinking and driving was going to harm others. Id. at 96, 98, 915 P.2d at 193, 195. On appeal, the Court rejected the defendant’s as-applied vagueness challenge to § 45-5-207, MCA, reasoning: “With his history of convictions of DUI and negligent homicide, Smaage should reasonably have understood that his drunk driving created a substantial risk of serious bodily injury to others and was therefore proscribed.” Id. at 99, 915 P.2d at 195-96. Unlike

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Bluebook (online)
2010 MT 7, 223 P.3d 926, 355 Mont. 43, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gstohl-mont-2010.