State v. Moya

815 P.2d 1312, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 103, 1991 WL 132023
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 17, 1991
Docket890608-CA, 900445-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 815 P.2d 1312 (State v. Moya) 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. Moya, 815 P.2d 1312, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 103, 1991 WL 132023 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).

Opinions

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

Defendant Joseph F. Moya appeals from an order revoking probation and reimposing a sentence of zero to five years in the Utah State Prison. Defendant also appeals from an order for correction of a clerical error, granted pursuant to Utah R.Civ.P. 60(a), revising the wording of his original sentence. We reverse the order revoking probation and vacate the order revising defendant’s sentence.

FACTS

The facts critical to resolution of this appeal are unusually convoluted. The procedural history of the case is tangled with defendant’s turnstile entries and exits from Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona, in whose jails and prisons he has been a frequent resident over the past several years. The state concedes its position on appeal “has problems” and would welcome a determination of mootness and dismissal of the appeal. However, the potential for further mischief resulting from the sentence imposed upon defendant denies us that luxury.1

On August 10, 1984, defendant pled guilty to a charge of burglary, a third-degree felony. On September 13, 1984, he was sentenced to a suspended prison term of zero to five years, and an eighteen-month probation was imposed. The eighteen-month period following imposition of sentence expired on March 13, 1986. The intent and effect of that probation order poses the crucial question in this appeal. Four days after the order was entered, the court ordered defendant’s extradition to New Mexico to face pending criminal charges. In October, defendant was escorted to New Mexico, where he remained in custody for several months, until the New Mexico charges were dismissed.

On January 9, 1985, while defendant was still in custody in New Mexico, the Utah Office of Adult Probation and Parole (AP & P) filed an incident report with the court, informing the court that defendant failed to report to his probation officer. Unaware of defendant’s excellent excuse for not meeting with his probation officer in [1314]*1314Utah, i.e., that Utah authorities had escorted him to New Mexico where he remained in custody, AP & P requested that a no-bail, nationwide arrest warrant be issued for defendant, which the court authorized. On April 17, 1985, after learning of defendant’s extradition to and custody in New Mexico, AP & P requested that the nationwide warrant be withdrawn and a “domestic,” i.e., statewide, warrant be substituted. A few weeks later, the court withdrew the nationwide warrant and issued another warrant, authorizing defendant’s arrest only if he was found in Utah.

Defendant was released from custody in New Mexico and shortly thereafter, on August 8, 1985, perpetrated a forgery in New Mexico. On September 23, 1986, he pled guilty to forgery and was granted probation by the New Mexico court in lieu of further incarceration. Defendant managed to estrange himself from the courts for the next two years, until AP & P learned of his return to Utah. On October 21, 1988, over four years after sentencing on the burglary conviction, and two and one-half years after defendant’s Utah probation term had seemingly expired, AP & P filed its first affidavit in support of an order to show cause, seeking to revoke defendant’s probation on the grounds defendant had failed to execute a probation agreement, failed to appear for probation, and failed to complete restitution payments.2 AP & P filed an amended affidavit upon learning of defendant’s forgery conviction in New Mexico. The amended affidavit also alleged commission of a burglary in Utah during the summer of 1988.

At a hearing on the order to show cause to revoke defendant’s probation, held on November 10, 1988, the court stated it was revoking defendant’s probation for the reasons stated in AP & P’s amended affidavit, and reimposed the original prison term. Defendant was committed to the Utah State Prison, where he remained until February 16, 1989, when he was extradited for a second time to New Mexico. On February 3, 1990, defendant was granted parole on the initial Utah burglary charge. Defendant’s parole period remains in effect through November of this year. Defendant’s alleged violation of probation in New Mexico, subsequent commission of a burglary in Utah, and his probationary status in Utah remain unresolved.

Defendant continues to challenge the revocation of his Utah probation, claiming revocation was improper as the probation period had long since terminated by its own terms before probation was purportedly revoked. Meanwhile, on July 7, 1990, the trial court granted the state’s motion seeking an order under Utah R.Civ.P. 60(a)3 to “correct a clerical error” in the original sentence. Defendant's sentence thereafter clearly stated that the commencement and conditions of probation were to have been stayed pending defendant’s return from New Mexico. Nonetheless, it is not altogether clear when, if ever, this revised order would have started his Utah probationary period of eighteen months, although the state suggested at oral argument it would not begin until defendant returned to Utah and signed a probation agreement.

IMPOSITION AND TOLLING OF PROBATION

Defendant claims probation was originally imposed at sentencing on September 13, 1984. Defendant points out that unless it was imposed at that time, AP [1315]*1315& P’s concerns over his not reporting for probation, its securing warrants as a result, and its ultimate efforts to have probation revoked would be quite anomalous. Given AP & P’s course of conduct, defendant suggests the state should not now be heard to contend that probation was not “really” imposed at the time of sentencing. Defendant maintains that the court lost probation jurisdiction eighteen months after initial imposition of his sentence by operation of law.4

While conceding before this court that probation was imposed, effective upon the entry of sentence, the state counters that probation was never executed, arguing both that the court stayed probation and that defendant failed to sign a probation agreement.5 Although the trial court later purported to dissolve the stay and impose probation, the state argues before this court that defendant remains subject to a full eighteen-month term of probation on the original burglary charge until he presents himself before AP & P officials and signs a probation agreement.6 Acknowledging the conceptual difficulty of a parolee being placed on probation concerning the very charge which landed him in prison, the state asks that the order revoking defendant’s probation be reversed and the case remanded for execution of probation.

At the time defendant was sentenced, Utah Code Ann. § 77-18-l(10)(a) (Interim Supp.1984) provided:

Upon completion without violation of 18 months probation in felony or class A misdemeanor cases, or six months in class B misdemeanor cases, the offender shall be terminated from sentence and the supervision of the Division of Corrections, unless the person is earlier terminated by the court.

This same provision was recently construed by the Utah Supreme Court in State v. Green, 757 P.2d 462 (Utah 1988). The Court stated that the Legislature holds the power to fix the limits of sentencing and probation.

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State v. Moya
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
815 P.2d 1312, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 18, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 103, 1991 WL 132023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moya-utahctapp-1991.