State v. Guill

2011 MT 32, 248 P.3d 826, 359 Mont. 225, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 33
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 2011
DocketDA 09-0048
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 2011 MT 32 (State v. Guill) 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. Guill, 2011 MT 32, 248 P.3d 826, 359 Mont. 225, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 33 (Mo. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE NELSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 This is an appeal from the Twentieth Judicial District Court, Sanders County. A jury found Nicole Guill guilty of sexual intercourse without consent, sexual intercourse without consent by accountability, and incest by accountability. The District Court sentenced her to three concurrent terms of 25 years at the Montana Women’s Prison with 10 years suspended. The court also imposed a number of terms and conditions.

¶2 Nicole raises two issues on appeal, both of which relate to her sentence:

1. Is the condition requiring her to continue being responsible for the victim’s counseling, treatment, or therapy costs illegal?
2. Is the restriction on contact with her husband illegal and unreasonable?

We reverse and remand as to Issue 1, and affirm as to Issue 2.

BACKGROUND

¶3 The circumstances surrounding Nicole’s convictions and sentence are intertwined with the crimes of her husband, Douglas, who was convicted of five counts of sexual misconduct against his daughter, Sarah, during the years 1992 to 2006. We affirmed those convictions in State v. Douglas Guill, 2010 MT 69, 355 Mont. 490, 228 P.3d 1152. Douglas and his previous wife, Candace, have also been to this Court in a prior appeal concerning their divorce. Douglas Guill v. Candace Guill, 2008 MT 279N. As we noted in that decision, this is factually one of the more bizarre cases to reach this Court.

¶4 The Honorable Deborah Kim Christopher presided over both Douglas’s criminal trial and Nicole’s criminal trial. After hearing extensive testimony regarding Nicole’s mental health and the history of the relationships in the Guill family, Judge Christopher determined that it was necessary and appropriate to restrict contact between Nicole and Douglas as part of Nicole’s sentence. Specifically, the judge ordered Nicole not to have any contact with Douglas of any sort (even through intermediaries), with one exception: if Nicole’s therapist determines that limited contact for therapeutic purposes would benefit Nicole’s rehabilitation. In imposing this restriction, Judge Christopher *227 cited Nicole’s unhealthy bond with Douglas and the degree of control that he exerted over family members. To fully understand this power dynamic and the extent of Nicole’s devotion to Douglas, it is necessary to describe the relationships in some detail.

Pre-Arrest Background

¶5 Douglas and Candace met in Boise, Idaho, on Christmas Eve 1972 and were married 12 days later. He was 20; she was 18. The couple followed an itinerant course during the 1970s and 1980s, living at various times in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and Oklahoma. Financially, as Candace described it, ‘We never really got ahead. We’d make the bills, but that was just about it.” They had their first child (Sarah) in 1984 and their second child (Jacob) two years later. In 1991, the family finally settled in Heron, Montana, where Douglas started a successful heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning business with help from Nicole’s older brother, Rick Christensen.

¶6 Douglas had known Rick, at this point, for 15 years. They first met in 1976 when Candace got a job at a Boise drugstore managed by Rick and Nicole’s father. Nicole was five or six years old at the time, and Rick was in high school. Douglas and Candace became friends with the Christensen family, and Douglas hired Rick to work for his painting business. Douglas and Candace left Boise in 1979 but returned six years later and reconnected with the Christensens. By this time, Nicole was in her mid-teens, and Rick was married and had three children. Rick soon divorced his wife, however, and joined the Guills when they moved to Wyoming and then to Heron.

¶7 Meanwhile, Douglas did not hold any strong religious views in the early years of his marriage to Candace, but in the early 1980s he claimed to have had some sort of religious epiphany. He told Candace that he had begun “a communication with God” and that God spoke to him. Over the ensuing years, he justified many of his decisions and actions as being God’s will. Douglas became “Lord of the house,” and Candace became submissive to him. He told her that “God’s head of man, man’s head of woman, and you’re supposed to do what I tell you.” Similarly, as Sarah got older, Douglas told her “that God had given him an understanding [of] the Bible and that God had chosen him to be like his son, the son of God, Jesus, and that he was pure and holy.” Douglas wrote an inscription on the inside of a Bible given to Sarah, “You are mine now and forever, I love you, rejoice,” and signed it ‘Your Lord Jesus.” He convinced her that he could decide who goes to heaven and who goes to hell.

¶8 When the Guills moved to Heron in 1991, Nicole was married and *228 living in Idaho, working for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. She and her husband had met while in high school, and the two were married in 1990. In early July 1992, Nicole took a trip to Heron and stayed with the Guills for three to five days. This was the first time that she had significant interaction with Douglas. Shortly thereafter, Douglas called Nicole and the two of them agreed to meet in McCall, Idaho, where her parents owned a condominium. They spent nine days there in late July and began an intimate relationship. Douglas told Candace beforehand that God wanted him to go to McCall; and upon returning to Heron, he told her that a “miraculous thing” had happened between him, Nicole, and God. He announced to the family that he and Nicole were in love.

¶9 Nicole packed up her belongings in Idaho and moved to Heron. She was 21 years old at the time. Douglas explained to eight-year-old Sarah that he had brought Nicole to live with them because Candace “wasn’t good enough anymore for him” and “didn’t really love him like Nicole loved him.” At Douglas’s insistence, Nicole divorced her husband and cut ties with her family in Idaho. Although Douglas remained legally married to Candace, he quit spending time with her and instead spent all of his time with Nicole, who essentially supplanted Candace as Douglas’s wife. Nicole had her last name changed to “Guill,” began signing checks as “Nicole Guill,” and had a credit card issued to her under that name. Douglas instructed Sarah and Jacob to refer to Nicole as “mom,” and the public perception was that he and Nicole were married.

¶10 When Nicole moved in with the Guills, the family was living in a two-bedroom trailer house situated on two acres they had purchased on the outskirts of Heron (“the Heron property”). 1 Initially, for the first night or two, Nicole, Douglas, and Candace all slept in the same bed. However, Douglas ultimately exiled Candace to a detached storage building, which had electricity and a wood stove but no plumbing. For the next several years, Candace spent her nights in this outbuilding while Douglas and Nicole slept in the trailer’s master bedroom and Sarah and Jacob shared the other bedroom.

¶11 Douglas eventually had a house built on the Heron property. The construction proceeded in two phases: half of the basement and two levels on top of that, followed by the other half of the basement and two levels on top of that.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 MT 32, 248 P.3d 826, 359 Mont. 225, 2011 Mont. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guill-mont-2011.