State v. TOYNE

264 P.3d 418, 151 Idaho 779, 2011 Ida. App. LEXIS 93
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 2011
Docket35402
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 264 P.3d 418 (State v. TOYNE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. TOYNE, 264 P.3d 418, 151 Idaho 779, 2011 Ida. App. LEXIS 93 (Idaho Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

LANSING, Judge.

Peter L. Toyne was convicted of felony driving under the influence (DUI), with a sentence enhancement under Idaho Code § 19-2514 for being a persistent violator of the law. The district court imposed a unified sentence of fifteen years, with seven years fixed. Toyne appeals, contending that the district court erred at trial in admitting documentary evidence of Toyne’s previous DUI convictions over his objection. He also contends that the district court abused its sentencing discretion by misinterpreting Idaho Code § 19-2514 to require a five-year fixed term of imprisonment for a persistent violator and to prohibit a suspended sentence. We affirm the conviction, but vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.

I.

ANALYSIS

A. If a Judgment of Prior Conviction is Admissible Under I.R.E. 902(4), It Need Not Also Comply with the Provisions of Idaho Code § 9-312 to be Admissible

Toyne was charged with DUI for conduct on June 21, 2007, elevated to a felony because he had previously been convicted of felony DUI within the past fifteen years. I.C. §§ 18-8004, 18-8005(7) (2006). At trial, the State offered documents to prove that Toyne had three prior felony DUI convictions in other states. Toyne objected, contending that the documents were inadmissible because they were not properly authenticated under the provisions of Idaho Code § 9-312. The district court overruled the objection, holding that the documents were properly certified and authenticated under the provisions of the Idaho Rules of Evidence and that compliance with the statute was therefore unnecessary. On appeal, Toyne claims error, asserting that compliance with the statute is a prerequisite to admissibility.

The statute on which Toyne relies, Section 9-312, authorizes authentication of judicial records in the following manner:

A judicial record of this state, or of the United States, may be proved by the production of the original, or by a copy thereof, certified by the clerk or other person having the legal custody thereof. That of another state or territory may be proved by the attestation of the clerk and the seal of the court annexed, if there be a clerk and seal, together until a certificate of the chief judge or presiding magistrate, that the attestation is in due form.

(emphasis added). Idaho Rule of Evidence 902(4), however, provides that the following records are self-authenticating:

A copy of an official record or report or entry therein, or of a document authorized by law to be recorded or filed and actually recorded or filed in a public office, including data compilations in any form, certified as correct by the custodian or other person authorized to make the certification, by certificate complying until paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of this rule or complying with any law of the United States or of this State, or rule prescribed by the Idaho Supreme Court.

(emphasis added). Recently, in State v. Howard, 150 Idaho 471, 248 P.3d 722 (2011), the Idaho Supreme Court considered whether compliance with the strictures of Section 9-312 is necessary for admission of records that comply with the certification standards *781 of I.R.E. 902(4). The Court there rejected the same argument that is now presented by Toyne:

If I.C. § 9-312 was written to be the exclusive means of admitting and proving judicial records, I.C. § 9-312 would conflict with the I.R.E.’s authentication standards under 902(4) and, thus, I.C. § 9-312 would have no force or effect pursuant to I.R.E. 1102. However, I.C. § 9-312 may be read as merely providing an alternate way of admitting and proving judicial records, which would not conflict with the I.R.E. As stated in I.R.E. 902(4), a copy of a public record can be self-authenticated if it is certified in accordance with either I.R.E. 902(1), I.R.E. 902(2), I.R.E. 902(3) or “any law of the United States or of this State, or rule prescribed by the Idaho Supreme Court.” As a law of this State, I.C. § 9-312 provides one such means of certifying a public record. We hold that I.C. § 9-312 is not a separate, additional requirement for admitting and proving judicial records, as this would conflict with the I.R.E.; however, I.C. § 9-312 is one method by which a public record may be certified in accordance with I.R.E. 902(4).

Id. at 477-81, 248 P.3d at 728-29. In light of Howard, the district court’s evidentiary ruling here was correct and Toyne’s claim of error is without merit.

B. Idaho’s Persistent Violator Sentence Enhancement Statute, Idaho Code § 19-2514, Does Not Preclude Suspension of a Sentence and Mandates Only a Five-year Minimum Unified Sentence

In addition to being found guilty of felony DUI, Toyne was found by the jury to be a persistent violator subject to a sentence enhancement under Idaho Code § 19-2514, which provides:

Any person convicted for the third time of the commission of a felony, whether the previous convictions were had within the state of Idaho or were had outside the state of Idaho, shall be considered a persistent violator of law, and on such third conviction shall be sentenced to a term in the custody of the state board of correction which term shall be for not less than five (5) years and said term may extend to life.

Toyne contends that the district court abused its sentencing discretion by misinterpreting that statute as requiring a minimum of a five-year fixed sentence for a persistent violator and to prohibit suspension of the sentence.

At Toyne’s sentencing hearing, the district court responded to Toyne’s request that the court retain jurisdiction pursuant to Idaho Code § 19-2601(4) as follows:

Mr. Toyne, in your case there is a minimum mandatory sentence of no less than five years that the Court must impose. In addition, I understand [defense counsel’s] argument with regard to the rider program. But I believe that our legislature has expressed a policy with regard to minimum mandatory sentences. That those sentences are not to be what in their opinion is reduced by the use of riders or alternate sentencing. They believe that minimum mandatories are to be served in the State Penitentiary.

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Related

State v. Baay
478 P.3d 765 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 2020)
Miller v. People
67 V.I. 827 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2017)
State v. Sara Joann Fencl
Idaho Court of Appeals, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 P.3d 418, 151 Idaho 779, 2011 Ida. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-toyne-idahoctapp-2011.