State v. Santoro

2019 MT 192, 446 P.3d 1141, 397 Mont. 19
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 2019
DocketDA 17-0454
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2019 MT 192 (State v. Santoro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Santoro, 2019 MT 192, 446 P.3d 1141, 397 Mont. 19 (Mo. 2019).

Opinion

Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

***20¶1 Appellant Charles Geoffrey Santoro (Santoro) appeals from the jury verdict finding him guilty of negligent homicide and subsequent written judgment entered by the Ninth Judicial District Court, Toole ***21County, thereon on June 6, 2017. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

¶2 We restate the issues on appeal as follows:

1. Whether Santoro's trial counsel provided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to serve a subpoena upon or otherwise preserve the testimony of a crucial defense witness for trial.
2. Whether the District Court erred in failing to deduct funds paid by Santoro's insurance to Justin Gallup and Tiffany Rowell from their restitution awards.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Santoro was charged with negligent homicide and two counts of felony criminal endangerment in connection with an incident occurring outside the VFW bar in Sunburst on August 18, 2013. At conclusion of his jury trial in August 2016, Santoro was convicted of all three offenses. On June 6, 2017, the District Court issued its written judgment in which it sentenced Santoro to 20 years MSP, 5 suspended on the negligent homicide offense and 10 years MSP, 5 suspended on each criminal endangerment offense. The District Court ran the criminal endangerment sentences concurrent with each other but consecutive to the negligent homicide sentence. The District Court also imposed restitution in the amount of $917,428.37-comprised of $57,640 to Justin Gallup (Gallup) and $859,788.37 to Tiffany Rowell (Tiffany). Santoro appeals only the negligent homicide conviction, and also asserts the District Court erred by failing to deduct the $50,000 paid by his insurance-$25,000 to each Gallup and Tiffany-from each's restitution award.

¶4 On August 18, 2013, Santoro and Richard Potter went to the VFW bar in Sunburst. While there he encountered Levi Rowell (Rowell), Levi's wife Tiffany, and Levi's friend Gallup. Santoro and Rowell knew each other as Santoro previously worked for Rowell for a brief time and they are neighbors-they lived across the road from one another. Santoro and Rowell had a couple drinks together and participated in the good-natured banter of those in the bar. Santoro's participation became crude and he was asked to leave the establishment. When he and Potter left, he commented something to the effect that none of the other patrons in the bar were veterans to which Rowell responded that neither was Santoro. This offended Santoro such that as he went to his truck, he slammed a beer bottle on the walkway.

¶5 Rowell, hearing the bottle smashing outside, became convinced Santoro had done something to Rowell's vehicle. He got up to follow Santoro, but his wife and Gallup precluded him from leaving by ***22blocking the door. When Tiffany thought sufficient time had passed for Santoro to leave, she permitted Rowell to go outside and she and Gallup followed. When they got outside, Tiffany realized Santoro had not yet driven away but *1144remained parked next to their vehicle. Santoro was sitting in the driver's seat, Potter was in the passenger seat, and the vehicle was running. Rowell, with Tiffany and Gallup trailing approached Santoro's vehicle-Santoro's driver's door was either open or Rowell opened it-and Santoro and Rowell began yelling at each other. Santoro asserts Rowell then grabbed him by the neck and began choking him. Santoro asserts he was starting to lose consciousness and as he could not drive forward because the bar was in front of his truck, he gassed the truck in reverse. The reversing truck's open door caught Rowell as well as Tiffany and Gallup. Rowell was dragged and pulled under the truck and Tiffany and Gallup were cast outward from the door. Santoro felt a bump as he reversed and turned the steering wheel to the right and then put the truck in forward gear and turned to the left and sped away.

¶6 Santoro consistently maintained a justifiable use of force defense, asserting his response of swiftly reversing was justified to get away from Rowell choking him. The State's theory of prosecution at trial was that Santoro drove over Rowell two times-once while reversing and again while going forward. The State did not present any testimony of investigating law enforcement officers or an accident reconstructionist in support of its theory, but instead relied on pictures taken of the scene and the testimony of Rowell's family and friends who were present during the incident. At trial, these witnesses-Tiffany, Billy Jean Scarbrough, and Sandra Owens-testified to Santoro running Rowell over both while backing up and again while going forward. Each, however, either admitted this to be inconsistent with what they related to law enforcement immediately after the incident or admitted on cross-examination that they really had not seen Rowell hit when Santoro drove forward.

¶7 On closing, the State argued extensively in promotion of its theory that regardless of whether Santoro was justified gassing his truck in reverse to get away from Rowell, he was not justified in then putting it in gear and driving over Rowell a second time:

• "Levi was dragged and then run over. As Sandy Owens said, she saw the defendant run Levi over in reverse and then run him over going forward. He never hesitated. He just boom and went forward."
• "Tiffany, as she was coming to her feet, looked out and saw Levi about 12 feet in front of the defendant in the headlights, and she ***23said he put it in forward and gunned it forward and ran over Levi."
• "Jeah Scarbrough saw the pickup run over Levi as the defendant drove forward."
• "He peeled out in reverse and forward, never once slowed down. He used lethal, deadly force against all three."
• Defense claim of photos showing where Santoro's vehicle went don't match "eyewitnesses' reports."
• "The testimonial evidence and the physical evidence show he ran Levi over going backward and forward. But the defendant insinuates, No, you shouldn't trust the eyewitnesses."
• "Whatever excuse he's given for going backward, he's got no reasonable or rational explanation for why he went forward at all. Why is that? Because there isn't one."

¶8 Trooper Christopher Garza (Garza), then with the Montana Highway Patrol, responded to the scene shortly after the incident. Garza was the law enforcement individual responsible for investigation of the scene and reconstruction of the accident. Garza marked tire tracks as well as the location of items of physical evidence, took measurements, and prepared an accident reconstruction report. The ultimate findings of this report appear to be inconsistent with the State's theory of prosecution-based on the physical evidence of the scene, the report indicates that Rowell had been dragged under Santoro's truck while it was traveling in reverse and does not indicate that Rowell had been run over a second time when Santoro pulled forward.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 MT 192, 446 P.3d 1141, 397 Mont. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-santoro-mont-2019.