State v. Jimenez-Wiss

2015 UT App 36, 345 P.3d 743, 780 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 2015 WL 737115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 20, 2015
Docket20130546-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 36 (State v. Jimenez-Wiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jimenez-Wiss, 2015 UT App 36, 345 P.3d 743, 780 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 2015 WL 737115 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

PEARCE, Judge:

11 Eileen Jimenez-Wiss appeals her conviction for driving under the influence (DUI). The district court enhanced Jimenez-Wiss's conviction to a third degree felony based on her two prior DUI convictions during the previous decade. Jimenez-Wiss argues that her second DUI conviction was obtained in violation of her right to counsel and that the district court erred when it relied on that conviction to enhance her offense. We conclude that the State did not meet its burden of establishing that Jimenez-Wiss knowingly and intelligently waived her right to counsel before pleading guilty to her second DUI charge. We therefore vacate Jimenez Wiss's felony conviction and remand this matter for further proceedings.

*745 BACKGROUND

{2 In 2003, Jimenez-Wiss pleaded guilty, in justice court, to her first DUI offense, a class B misdemeanor. Counsel represented her at the plea hearing. In 2008, Jimenez-Wiss pleaded guilty, again in justice court, to her second DUI offense, also a class B misdemeanor. She was not represented by counsel at the 2008 plea hearing, and her conviction resulted in a suspended fifty-day jail sentence. Jimenez-Wiss did not pursue a direct appeal in either case.

[3 In August 2012, Jimenez-Wiss was arrested for a third DUI offense after she sideswiped a moving vehicle. The other driver reported a hit-and-run. Several minutes later, an officer stopped Jimenez-Wiss and administered field sobriety tests, which she failed. A breath test determined that Jimenez-Wiss had a blood alcohol content of 33 grams of alcohol per deciliter of blood. The State charged Jimenez-Wiss with DUI, enhanced to a third degree felony because she had two prior DUI convictions within the previous ten years. 1 See Utah Code Ann. § 41-6a-508(2)(b) (LexisNexis 2014).

1 4 Jimenez-Wiss moved to strike the felony enhancement, arguing that her 2008 DUI conviction had been obtained in violation of her right to counsel. In support of the motion, Jimenez-Wiss submitted a copy of a document from her 2008 plea hearing: a preprinted form, which she had been given prior to entering her plea, entitled "Request to Call Case" (the Plea Document). Jimenez-Wiss argued that the Plea Document demonstrated that she had not waived her right to have counsel present when she entered her guilty plea.

T5 The first page of the four-page Plea Document was largely dedicated to establishing (1) whether an attorney represented Jimenez-Wiss; (2) whether she desired to have counsel appointed; and (8) whether she wanted to waive her right to counsel. Jimenez-Wiss wrote her name on the first page and checked a box indicating, "My case is scheduled to be heard today."

T6 The first page of the form provided Jimenez-Wiss with three options and directed her to "[clheck one." The first option stated, "I am represented by an attorney" and provided a line to write her attorney's name. The second option indicated, "I believe that I qualify for a court appointed attorney and request that the Court appoint an attorney to represent me" and included instructions to fill out an Affidavit of Indigen-cy. The third option provided, "I do not wish to be represented by an attorney" and instructed, "Sign Waiver of Counsel." Jimenez-Wiss did not check any of the options.

T 7 The next section of the first page was titled "Waiver of Counsel for Today's Hearing." Directly beneath the title was the instruction, "Fill out if you are not and/or do not wish to be represented by a lawyer." The next five paragraphs contained a number of sentences, most of which began, "I understand." These paragraphs included representations that "I understand that I have a right to consult with an attorney during each phase of my criminal case" and "I fully understand that there are risks associated with representing myself and acknowledge that I have been advised of those risks." At the end of the waiver section, which filled the remainder of the Plea Document's first page, there was a line for the defendant's signature. Jimenez-Wiss did not sign.

1 8 The second page of the Plea Document was titled, "Defendant's Waiver of Constitutional Rights." This section identified and described the constitutional rights that the defendant would need to waive to enter a guilty plea. The defendant was asked to acknowledge and waive each right individually by initialing next to each right.

T9 Among these rights was the right to counsel. Following the description of the right to counsel, the form requested additional information and gave the defendant two options for providing that information:

A) I waive my right to counsel, I have done so knowingly, intelligently, and volun *746 tarily for the following reasons: [three lines provided to allow the defendant to specify the reasons]
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B) If I have not waived my right to counsel, my attorney is [blank line to identify counsel]. My attorney and I have fully discussed this statement, my rights, and the consequences of my guilty (or no contest) plea(s).

Jimenez-Wiss initialed next to the language explaining her right to counsel, as she did next to each of the other enumerated rights. Jimenez-Wiss did not, however, describe any reason for waiving her right to counsel under subsection A, identify her counsel in subsection B, or make any other indication that she was selecting one option over the other.

1 10 The final two pages of the Plea Document explained the consequences of entering a guilty plea. The defendant could check a box next to her plea and "freely make [a] statement of specific facts comprising elements of each offense" in the space provided. Jimenez-Wiss checked the box indicating a guilty plea but did not provide any facts regarding the elements.

T11 The final section of the Plea Document was titled "Defendant's Certification of Voluntariness" and required Jimenez-Wiss to state her age and education level. This section also required her to certify, among other things, that she was "entering the plea of [her] own free will and choice" and was not under the influence of drugs or intoxicants that would impair her judgment. Jimenez Wiss indicated her age and that she had attended school through the "16" grade, with the parenthetical notation "B.S. degree." 2 The certification also stated that the defendant swore "under penalty of perjury that each statement [in the Plea Document] is true." Jimenez-Wiss signed the certification.

[12 Neither Jimenez-Wiss nor the State presented any evidence other than the Plea Document to support or oppose Jimenez, Wiss's motion to strike the enhancement. The district court entertained oral argument on the motion. Jimenez-Wiss argued that the unsigned waiver of counsel on the first page of the Plea Document indicated that she had not waived her right to have the assistance of counsel at the plea hearing. The State countered that the remainder of the form-and particularly Jimenez-Wiss's initial on the second page acknowledging her right to counsel-adequately demonstrated that her decision to proceed without counsel was knowing and intelligent.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 36, 345 P.3d 743, 780 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 2015 WL 737115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jimenez-wiss-utahctapp-2015.