State v. Huff

776 N.W.2d 498, 279 Neb. 68
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 2009
DocketS-09-286
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 776 N.W.2d 498 (State v. Huff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Huff, 776 N.W.2d 498, 279 Neb. 68 (Neb. 2009).

Opinion

776 N.W.2d 498 (2009)
279 Neb. 68

STATE of Nebraska, appellee,
v.
Herchel Harold HUFF, appellant.

No. S-09-286.

Supreme Court of Nebraska.

December 24, 2009.

*500 Charles D. Brewster, Kearney, and Jonathan R. Brandt, of Anderson, Klein, Swan & Brewster, and Richard Calkins, Alma, for appellant.

Jon Bruning, Attorney General, and Erin E. Tangeman for appellee.

HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, GERRARD, STEPHAN, McCORMACK, and MILLER-LERMAN, JJ.

STEPHAN, J.

Following a fatal motor vehicle accident, Herchel Harold Huff was charged with four criminal offenses, including manslaughter and motor vehicle homicide. After pleading guilty to manslaughter, Huff filed a plea in bar alleging that his continued prosecution on the motor vehicle homicide charge would constitute double jeopardy. Huff appeals from an order of the district court for Furnas County denying the plea in bar. We affirm, but for reasons different from those upon which the district court based its decision.

BACKGROUND

The accident occurred in rural Furnas County on October 3, 2007. A deputy sheriff who encountered Huff at the scene detected a strong odor of alcohol and arrested him. Huff admitted that he had been the driver of a vehicle involved in the accident, and this fact was confirmed by another person at the accident scene. Kasey Jo Warner died at the scene of the accident.

In an amended information, Huff was charged with motor vehicle homicide, predicated on third-offense driving under the influence,[1] and manslaughter,[2] which according to the information was predicated on the unlawful act of "operating a motor vehicle ... carelessly or without due caution so as to endanger a person or property." Huff was also charged with refusal to submit to a chemical test[3] and tampering with a witness.[4] He pled guilty to the manslaughter charge and not guilty to the remaining charges. The court deferred sentencing on the manslaughter conviction until after the resolution of the remaining three charges.

Huff then filed a plea in bar in which he alleged that because he had been found guilty on the manslaughter charge, prosecution on the motor vehicle homicide charge would subject him to double jeopardy in violation of his state and federal constitutional rights. He requested that the motor vehicle homicide charge be dismissed. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the district court determined that manslaughter and motor vehicle homicide are not the "same offense" for double jeopardy purposes and denied the plea in bar. Huff filed this timely appeal, which *501 we moved to our docket pursuant to our statutory authority to regulate the caseloads of the appellate courts of this state.[5]

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

Huff's sole assignment of error is that the district court erred in denying his plea in bar and "allowing his continued prosecution for Motor Vehicle Homicide after a previous conviction for Involuntary Manslaughter."

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Issues regarding the grant or denial of a plea in bar are questions of law.[6] On a question of law, an appellate court reaches a conclusion independent of the court below.[7]

ANALYSIS

Huff's plea in bar raises a colorable double jeopardy claim, and we therefore have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal.[8] We have previously examined the relationship between the offenses of manslaughter and motor vehicle homicide. Most recently, in State v. Wright,[9] we determined that when a defendant is charged with manslaughter, he or she is not entitled to have the jury instruction on the elements of motor vehicle homicide, because it is not a lesser-included offense of manslaughter. Wright overruled prior cases holding to the contrary. But Wright reaffirmed that where death results unintentionally from the operation of a motor vehicle, a prosecutor is free to choose whether to charge motor vehicle homicide or manslaughter, notwithstanding the fact that substantially different criminal penalties may be imposed depending upon which crime is charged.[10]

The prosecutor in this case avoided the choice by charging Huff with both offenses. The question that Huff asks us to decide is not whether one is a lesser-included offense of the other for purposes of jury instruction, but, rather, whether they are the same offense for purposes of double jeopardy. While both issues require a comparison of statutory elements, the applicable legal principles are not identical. In the context of jury instructions, one offense is a lesser-included offense of another if the elements of the lesser offense for which an instruction is requested are such that one cannot commit the greater offense without simultaneously committing the lesser offense.[11] In a double jeopardy analysis, where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to determine whether there are two offenses or one is whether each provision requires proof that the other does not.[12] Here, *502 involuntary manslaughter includes three statutory elements: (1) causing death, (2) unintentionally, (3) while in the commission of an unlawful act.[13] Motor vehicle homicide includes four statutory elements: (1) causing death, (2) unintentionally, (3) while engaged in the operation of a motor vehicle, (4) in violation of the law.[14] Huff argues that the two offenses are one for purposes of double jeopardy, because while motor vehicle homicide includes an element not included in the offense of involuntary manslaughter, i.e., operation of a motor vehicle, all of the elements of involuntary manslaughter are included in the offense of motor vehicle homicide, and thus it cannot be said that each offense includes an element that the other does not.

But there is a threshold issue regarding the point at which the constitutional safeguard against double jeopardy attaches. The Double Jeopardy Clauses of both the federal and the Nebraska Constitutions protect against three distinct abuses: (1) a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal, (2) a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction, and (3) multiple punishments for the same offense.[15] Huff argues that this is a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. The State counters that because both charges were included in the same information, along with other charges, there is only one prosecution, and no potential double jeopardy issue arises unless and until Huff is convicted of motor vehicle homicide and sentenced for that offense and the manslaughter offense for which he has already been convicted.

The State bases its argument on our 2006 decision in State v. Humbert.[16] In that case, the defendant was charged with two misdemeanor and four felony offenses arising from an alleged episode of domestic violence occurring over a period of several hours. The defendant pled no contest to the misdemeanor charges and then filed a plea in bar alleging that prosecution on two of the felony charges would constitute double jeopardy. Based upon the principles articulated by the U.S. Supreme Court in Ohio v. Johnson,[17]

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Bluebook (online)
776 N.W.2d 498, 279 Neb. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-huff-neb-2009.