State v. Montoya

887 P.2d 857, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 68, 1994 Utah LEXIS 94, 1994 WL 701318
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1994
Docket930508
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 887 P.2d 857 (State v. Montoya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Montoya, 887 P.2d 857, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 68, 1994 Utah LEXIS 94, 1994 WL 701318 (Utah 1994).

Opinion

ON CERTIORARI TO THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

ZIMMERMAN, Chief Justice;

Eugene Montoya seeks review of a court of appeals decision vacating his conditional plea of no contest to a charge of incest. Montoya’s plea was expressly conditioned upon the preservation of his right to appeal “the narrow legal question of whether the State correctly charged [him] and recited the elements of Incest in the Amended Information.” The court of appeals concluded that the trial court erred in accepting Montoya’s conditional plea because “the condition purportedly preserved for appeal will not necessarily end the prosecution of this case.” State v. Montoya, 858 P.2d 1027, 1029 (Ct.App.1993), cer t. granted, 878 P.2d 1154 (Utah 1994). In so doing, it placed a limiting construction on State v. Sery, 758 P.2d 935 (Utah Ct.App.1988). We granted certiorari and now reverse the decision of the court of appeals. The matter is remanded to the court of appeals to consider the merits of Montoya’s “improper charge” arguments.

In April of 1991, Montoya was charged by information with aggravated sexual assault, a first degree felony, in violation of section 76-5-405 of the Utah Code, 1 and incest, a third *858 degree felony, in violation of section 76-7-102. 2 In September of 1991, Montoya moved “to compel the State to elect which charge [it] intendfc] to proceed on prior to trial,” arguing that “these charges are mutually exclusive and the same facts cannot support both allegations because they cannot both be true.” At a hearing on Montoya’s motion, Montoya also argued that the charge of incest was defective in that it omitted the statutory limitation of that crime to “circumstances not amounting to rape, rape of a child or aggravated sexual assault.” Following the hearing, the trial court granted the State fifteen days’ leave to amend the information to correctly charge incest and to plead it in the alternative to aggravated sexual assault. Although the State did file an amended information charging Montoya alternatively with aggravated sexual assault and incest, the incest charge appeared as it did in the original information without including the limiting statutory language.

Montoya moved to dismiss in February of 1992, again arguing that the charge of incest failed to include the limiting statutory language and that the information was duplicitous in that it alleged both “rape” and “not rape.” Montoya also requested a bill of particulars and again moved the court to require the State to elect one of the two charges. On March 2, 1992, although the court had not ruled on his motion to dismiss, Montoya entered a conditional plea of no contest to the incest charge, preserving his right to appeal “the narrow legal question of whether the State correctly charged [him] and recited the elements of Incest in the Amended Information.” 3 The court accepted the proffered plea, and Montoya appealed.

Without addressing the merits of Montoya’s “improper charge” arguments, the court of appeals vacated his conditional plea. Montoya, 858 P.2d at 1030. Interpreting its prior decision in Sery, the court of appeals concluded that under Sery, a conditional plea is proper and may be accepted by a trial court only if resolution of the issue preserved for appeal will necessarily end the prosecution of the case. Id. After determining that resolution of Montoya’s “improper charge” arguments would not necessarily end the prosecution, the court of appeals held that the trial court erred in accepting Montoya’s conditional plea. 4 Id.

We first state the appropriate standard of review. A court of appeals interpretation of the effect of a prior judicial decision, whether one of its own or one of another court, constitutes a conclusion of law to which we accord no particular deference. Review is for correctness. See Amtix Magnesium Corp. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 874 P.2d 840, 842 (Utah 1994). We apply this correction-of-error standard in considering the court of appeals’ interpretation of the decision in Sery and the resultant conclusion that the trial court erred in accepting Montoya’s conditional no-contest plea.

The court of appeals decision under review here read Sery as having established a “dispositiveness” requirement, i.e., a pre *859 requisite to the acceptance of a conditional plea that the preserved issue be dispositive of the prosecution. Montoya, 858 P.2d at 1030. However, we find that Sery contains no such requirement.

In Sery, the defendant was charged with possession of a controlled substance. The only physical evidence against him was cocaine which police officers found in a bag he was carrying. After the trial court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress, the defendant entered a conditional plea of no contest in which he reserved his right to appeal the denial of his suppression motion. Sery, 758 P.2d at 937. In the ensuing appeal, the state argued that the trial court improperly accepted the defendant’s conditional plea because “a defendant who pleads no contest waives the right to appeal all pre-trial rulings.” Id. In rejecting the state’s argument, the court of appeals reasoned that “forcing the parties to go through an entire trial merely to preserve the suppression issue is a pointless and wasteful exercise.” Id. at 939. Therefore, the court concluded, “[T]he use of such conditional pleas by criminal defendants — if agreed to by the prosecution and accepted by the trial court — is a sensible and sound practice.” Id. at 938.

Contrary to the Montoya court’s interpretation of Sery, we find nothing in that decision which supports the conclusion that a dispositiveness requirement was necessary to the holding there. Although the issue preserved for appeal in Sery was, in fact, dispos-itive of the prosecution, that fact was not held to be a prerequisite to a trial court’s acceptance of a conditional plea. 5

Moreover, certain language in Sery is inconsistent with a dispositiveness requirement. Although the Sery panel recognized that conditional pleas are accepted “ ‘at the reasonable expense of any state interest in obtaining finality in the proceedings,’ ” it noted that such pleas continue to serve a “partial” state interest in finality because “ ‘proceedings come to an end if the reserved issue is ultimately decided in the government’s favor.’ ” Id. at 939 (quoting Jon D. Botsford, Comment, Conditioned Guilty Pleas: Post-Guilty Plea Appeal of Nonjurisdictional Issues, 26 UCLA L.Rev. 360, 378 (1978)). The only way the

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887 P.2d 857, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 68, 1994 Utah LEXIS 94, 1994 WL 701318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-montoya-utah-1994.