State v. Solano

724 P.2d 42, 150 Ariz. 423, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 857
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 1, 1985
Docket1 CA-CR 8319, 1 CA-CR 8306
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 724 P.2d 42 (State v. Solano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Solano, 724 P.2d 42, 150 Ariz. 423, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 857 (Ark. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

OPINION

GRANT, Judge.

This is a consolidated appeal by Richard Solano and Vickie Hurst Solano of their convictions and sentences pursuant to plea agreements. On appeal they claim that their contingent plea bargains were illegal. We agree. Therefore we set aside their plea agreements, vacate the convictions and sentences and remand the cases for further proceedings.

On September 6, 1983, a search warrant was executed on a home and 1382 grams of [424]*42480% to 95% pure cocaine and 2 baggies of marijuana were confiscated. Three people, co-defendants Richard Solano, Vickie Hurst and Guy Shane Lindstrom, were arrested in the home.

After the arrest but before the indictment Solano and Hurst married. By indictment of March 22, 1984 a grand jury charged Vickie Hurst (now Mrs. Solano), Mr. Solano and Mr. Lindstrom each with one count of possession of a narcotic drug for sale with a value over $250, a class 2 felony, and one count of possession of marijuana, a class 6 felony. Prior to trial each of the defendants accepted negotiated plea agreements which were a “package-deal”: each defendant’s plea was made contingent upon the acceptance by the court of the pleas of the other two defendants.

Mr. Solano’s plea agreement provided that he would plead guilty to possession of a narcotic drug, cocaine, for sale with a value of over $250, a class 2 felony. It further stipulated that he would serve the minimum 5V# year term and would not be eligible for parole or probation for % of the term imposed by the court, but in any event not less than 5 years. Mr. Solano’s plea was made contingent upon the acceptance by the court of the pleas for Mrs. Solano and Mr. Lindstrom.

Mrs. Solano entered an Alford plea to possession of a narcotic drug, cocaine, a class 4 felony. See North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25, 91 S.Ct. 160, 27 L.Ed.2d 162 (1970). Her plea agreement stipulated that she would be sentenced for the maximum term of 5 years in prison. Under the crime to which she pled guilty probation would have been available-were it not for the stipulated sentence. Mrs. Solano’s plea was made contingent upon the acceptance by the court of the pleas for Mr. Solano and Mr. Lindstrom.

Pleas were entered in accordance with the plea bargains. The court deferred acceptance of the pleas until sentencing. At the hearing for sentencing and acceptance of the pleas the trial judge expressed concern regarding the stipulated sentence in the lesser cases of Mrs. Solano and Mr. Lindstrom:

THE COURT: Have you all had a chance to review the presentence report and notice that the presentence officer disagrees rather substantially with the stipulated sentence in the lesser two cases?
MR. [CHARLES] DONOFRIO [III], [Deputy County Attorney]: Yes, Your Honor.
THE COURT: I will tell you that that concerns me because the investigator here seems to feel that the participation of these two defendants, Lindstrom and Mrs. Solano, is so minimal that five year prison time is not justified.
MR. DONOFRIO: Your Honor, that’s not the state’s position.
THE COURT: Well, I understand.

The deputy county attorney advocated that the trial judge sentence the defendants in accordance with the plea agreements while the defense urged the trial judge to persuade the prosecution to be lenient on Mrs. Solano and Mr. Lindstrom. The trial judge responded to their argument in the following way:

THE COURT: Well, I think the distortion comes from the fact that what the Code really requires is that these people go to trial, the jury decide, and then if they’re guilty, that they go to prison for long flat time.
So, what we’re doing is disregarding the Code and doing an informal sentencing by juggling. What the Code does is just give the power in the system to the prosecution. I don’t know if it contemplates that. I don’t think that the Legislature was contemplating anything except that there would be regular jury trials and people go off to prison for extremely long times which are far beyond the sense of fairness in most of us who work in the system.
Therefore, then, we have these plea bargains in which the sentencing is done by the prosecution.
MR. ANDERSON: We’re not asking that Mr. Donofrio change anything. All [425]*425we’re saying is that we just would like you to manage Vickie Hurst. That’s all.
MR. KARASEK: And Shane Lindstrom.
THE COURT: I’m powerless.
Okay. Let us proceed.

Thereafter the trial judge proceeded to accept all pleas and sentence all three co-defendants according to the stipulated sentences in their respective plea agreements.

“PACKAGE-DEAL” PLEA BARGAINS

In consolidated appeals the Solanos argue that the contingent provision of their plea agreements was contrary to rule 17.-4(d), Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure, and thus illegal. They contend that by making all three co-defendants’ plea agreements contingent upon all being accepted by the court, the prosecutor frustrated the court from exercising its duty under rule 17.4(d) to reject a negotiated plea agreement at the time of sentencing because of inappropriateness of stipulated sentencing provisions as revealed by the pre-sentence investigation and report.

Rule 17.4(d) states:

Acceptance of Plea. After making such determinations, the court shall either accept or reject the tendered negotiated plea. The court shall not be bound by any provision in the plea agreement regarding the sentence or the term and conditions of probation to be imposed, if, after accepting the agreement and reviewing a presentence report, it rejects the provisions as inappropriate.

The Solanos argue that the trial court has a duty to review each presentence report and make an independent judgment as to the appropriateness of each plea agreement with respect to sentencing.1 In response the state advocates that the “package-deal” plea bargain was not improper because the trial court had the option of rejecting any or all of the plea agreements and did not do so.

The court has a duty to determine that each defendant entering a plea wishes to forego certain constitutional rights and is pleading voluntarily. The Arizona State Bar Committee on Criminal Law, and the Supreme Court’s Advisory Committee on Criminal Rules which proposed the Rules of Criminal Procedure for Arizona in 1972 considered that trial judges had the following obligations in this regard:

1. Protecting an innocent defendant from being convicted of offenses which he did not commit;
2. Protecting a defendant guilty of some wrongdoing from being convicted of a crime more serious than his actions justify;
3. Protecting the judicial system from the loss of respect and trust which such mistakes would engender;
4. Protecting the defendant from making an unintelligent plea; and
5. Promoting finality of judicial determinations.

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State v. Solano
724 P.2d 42 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
724 P.2d 42, 150 Ariz. 423, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-solano-arizctapp-1985.