State v. Melancon

2014 UT App 260, 339 P.3d 151, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 269, 2014 WL 6065624
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 14, 2014
Docket20120508-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 UT App 260 (State v. Melancon) 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. Melancon, 2014 UT App 260, 339 P.3d 151, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 269, 2014 WL 6065624 (Utah Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

PEARCE, Judge:

11 Paul Melancon set fire to his brother's house. After his arrest, he met with a prosecutor and accepted a plea deal. As part of that deal, Paul Melancon agreed to testify that he had enkindled the house as part of a plan his brother, Michael Melancon (Defendant), had devised to collect the proceeds of an insurance policy. Before Defendant's trial, Defendant sought to disqualify the prosecutor, claiming he needed to call the prosecntor as a witness to testify concerning the plea negotiations. The trial court denied the disqualification motion. Defendant was convicted of both aggravated arson as an accomplice and criminal solicitation. After trial, the court merged the eriminal-solicitation convietion into the aggravated-arson conviction. The trial court also denied Defendant's Shon-del motion, by which he sought to be sentenced only for criminal solicitation.

12 Defendant challenges his conviction, contending that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion to disqualify the prosecutor and also erred by sentencing him for aggravated arson rather than criminal solicitation. Because the prosecutor was not a necessary witness and because Defendant was not entitled to confront the prosecutor, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's denial of the disqualification motion. Because the elements of the two offenses differ, we conclude that the Shondel doctrine did not apply and that the trial court correctly sentenced Defendant for aggravated arson. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

13 We recite the facts from the ree-ord in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict, supplementing them as necessary to understand the issues raised on appeal. State v. Marchet, 2014 UT App 147, ¶ 2 n. 3, 330 P.3d 138.

1 4 After his arrest, Paul Melancon (Brother) met with a police investigator and a prosecutor. Brother agreed to plead guilty to second-degree felony arson and to testify against Defendant. At trial, Brother testified that Defendant had asked for his help in *154 setting fire to Defendant's house so that Defendant could collect the insurance proceeds. Brother testified that they prepared the house for the fire by removing tools from the garage, placing firearms in a fireproof room, backing up computers, and stashing important documents in a fireproof safe. Defendant instructed Brother on how to ignite the fire. Defendant then took his family to Las Vegas while Brother stayed behind to carry out the plan.

15 Brother further testified that he followed Defendant's instructions by removing property from the house, disconnecting the house's circuit breakers, disabling smoke detectors, and perforating the sheetrock in the basement. Brother also spread accelerants throughout the house. Brother set fire to a pillow and threw it into a downstairs media room to ignite the blaze. The fire spread more quickly than he had anticipated, and Brother suffered extensive and severe burns while escaping from the house.

T6 Defendant denied much of Brother's story. Defendant testified that they had not planned to burn down his house, that he had not asked Brother to set his house on fire, and that he had never instructed Brother on how to do so. Defendant sought to discredit Brother's testimony as the result of a plea deal that permitted Brother to plead guilty to a lesser offense. Defendant believed that the prosecutor, Scott Garrett, was a necessary witness to testify concerning the plea negotiations leading to Brother's testimony. Defendant therefore moved to disqualify Garrett from serving as prosecutor in the apparent hope of calling him as a witness. The State noted that the plea negotiations had been recorded and agreed to the admission of the recording to settle any dispute about the content of the negotiations. The State also noted that the police investigator who had been present during the negotiations would testify at the trial and could be cross-examined by Defendant The trial court denied Defendant's disqualification motion after ruling that an alternative source existed for the impeachment evidence Defendant sought and that Defendant's Confrontation Clause rights would not be violated.

T7 A jury convicted Defendant of criminal solicitation and of aggravated arson under an accomplice-liability theory. Before sentencing, Defendant filed a Shondel motion, seeking to be sentenced solely for the eriminal-solicitation conviction. See State v. Shondel, 22 Utah 2d 343, 453 P.2d 146, 148 (1969); State v. Wolf, 2014 UT App 18, ¶ 37, 319 P.3d 757 (explaining that, under the Shondel doe-trine, when the elements of two crimes are wholly duplicative, the defendant may be sentenced only to the lesser punishment). In the alternative, Defendant asked the court to merge the charges and enter his conviction only for first-degree-felony aggravated arson. The State conceded that the convictions should be merged but argued that Defendant was not entitled to the lesser penalty under the Shondel doctrine, because the elements of accomplice liability and eriminal solicitation did not overlap completely. The trial court ruled that Defendant was not entitled to the lesser penalty, because the elements of the two crimes differed. The trial court did, however, merge the second-degree-felony criminal-solicitation conviction into the first-degree-felony aggravated-arson conviction. The trial court then sentenced Defendant to a five-years-to-life prison term on the aggravated-arson conviction.

18 Defendant appeals the denial of his disqualification and Shondel motions.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

19 Defendant first contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the disqualification motion, because the prosecutor was a necessary witness to the plea negotiations and his testimony could have been used to impeach Brother. We review a disqualification decision for an abuse of discretion. Snow, Christensen & Martineau v. Lindberg, 2013 UT 15, ¶ 18, 299 P.3d 1058.

110 Defendant also contends that the trial court erred by failing to apply the Shon-del doctrine and sentence him for criminal solicitation only. We review a trial court's application of the Shondel doctrine for correctness. State v. Jensen, 2004 UT App 467, ¶ 8, 105 P.3d 951.

*155 ANALYSIS

I. Defendant's Motion to Disqualify Garrett

{ 11 Defendant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion to disqualify Garrett. The trial court ruled that it was too late in the proceedings to disqualify a prosecutor, that it was not "likely" that Garrett would be called as a necessary witness, and that there was no Confrontation Clause violation because Brother's testimony could be impeached by the recorded plea negotiations.

A. Garrett was not a necessary witness.

1 12 Defendant sought to discredit Brother's testimony by explaining to the jury that it "was given in hopes of gaining a favorable plea agreement, and it was given based upon promises made directly by Scott Garrett and his involvement in that interview." To do so, Defendant argued that he might need to call Garrett as a witness "to talk about what his promises were, why he promised it, and why he proceeded to believe" Brother's testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 UT App 260, 339 P.3d 151, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 269, 2014 WL 6065624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-melancon-utahctapp-2014.