State v. Van Huizen

2017 UT App 30, 392 P.3d 933, 832 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2017 WL 656582, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 16, 2017
Docket20140602-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2017 UT App 30 (State v. Van Huizen) 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. Van Huizen, 2017 UT App 30, 392 P.3d 933, 832 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2017 WL 656582, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 32 (Utah Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge:

¶1 Cooper John Anthony Van Huizen was involved in an aggravated robbery when he was sixteen years old. The State charged him in juvenile court under the Serious Youth Offender Act. After a hearing, the juvenile court bound Van Huizen over to stand trial as an adult in district court as provided by the Act, and he appeals. We vacate and remand for further proceedings.

*936 BACKGROUND 2

¶2 In late 2013, Van Huizen committed a robbery with a friend and some acquaintances. At sixteen, Van Huizen was the youngest of the group; his friend was also a juvenile and their three acquaintances were adults. Although Van Huizen did not orchestrate the robbery, he agreed to it and facilitated the plan by providing guns from his family home.

¶3 In search of drugs, the group drove to the house of someone they knew would possess marijuana. They knocked on the back door, gained entry to the house and, brandishing the guns taken from Van Huizen’s home, proceeded to rob the occupant of a cell phone, some cash, and a “little bit of weed.” Though Van Huizen did not carry a firearm or other weapon, he was part of the group that entered the home and committed the robbery.

¶4 The State charged Van Huizen under the then-current Serious Youth Offender Act (the Act). See generally Utah Code Ann. § 78A-6-702 (LexisNexis Supp. 2013) (outlining the process by which a juvenile could be “bound over and held to answer in the district court in the same manner as an adult”). 3 The Act required that the State charge any minor accused of certain serious felony offenses by filing a criminal information in juvenile court. Id. § 78A-6-702(l). Once filed, the Act directed the court to undertake a two-pronged analysis. First, the State had “to establish probable cause” that the defendant committed the crime. Id. § 78A-6-702(3)(a). If the State proved probable cause, the burden shifted to the defendant to establish by clear and convincing evidence that “it would be contrary to the best interest, of the minor and the best interests of the public to bind the defendant over.” Id. § 78A-6-702(3)(d), (e).

¶5 In making the ultimate determination on whether to bind the juvenile over to dis-triet court, the Act directed that “the judge shall consider only” five factors:

(i) whether the minor has been previously adjudicated delinquent for an offense involving the use of a dangerous weapon which would be a felony if committed by an adult;
(ii) if the offense was committed with one or more other persons, whether the minor appears to have a greater or lesser degree of culpability than the codefendants;
(ni) the extent to which the minor’s role in the offense was committed in a violent, aggressive, or premeditated manner;
(iv) the number and nature of the minor’s prior adjudications in the juvenile court; and
(v) whether public safety is better served by adjudicating the minor in the juvenile court or in the district court.

Id. § 78A-6-702(3)(c).

¶6 Under that framework, the Weber County Attorney’s Office, acting on behalf of the State, charged Van Huizen in juvenile court with two counts of aggravated robbery and one count of aggravated burglary, all first degree felonies. Unbeknown to Van Huizen and his parents, the juvenile court judge assigned to his case was married to the then-Chief Criminal Deputy in the Weber County Attorney’s Office.

¶7 The juvenile court determined that the State had met its initial burden of proof and that there was probable cause to bind Van Huizen over to the district court as an adult. In response, Van Huizen put on evidence that both his and the public’s interests were both best served by remaining in the juvenile system. Van Huizen and the State stipulated to factors one and four, namely that he had no prior offenses and therefore no offenses involving a dangerous weapon. On the other factors, Van Huizen adduced testimony from *937 Ms mother and father relating to the stability of Ms home life, Ms generally good nature, and Ms bright future.

¶8 The juvenile court considered the evidence and determined that Van Huizen had oMy carried half of Ms burden. While Van Huizen had shown that his best interest was served by remaining in juvenile court, he had not shown by clear and convincing evidence that the public interests also favored retention. The court bound Van Huizen over to district court. Van- Huizen did not timely appeal the bindover decision.

¶9 In district court, the same deputy county attorney that had handled the juvenile proceedings continued to prosecute Van Huizen, and the attorney received at least some assistance from the juvenile judge’s husband, the CMef Criminal Deputy in the prosecutor’s office. Van HMzen eventually pleaded guilty to two reduced counts of robbery, both second degree felomes. The district court sentenced Mm to concurrent prison terns of one to fifteen years. He was paroled in November 2014.

¶10 While he was serving his prison sentence, Van Huizen retained new counsel and moved in district court to reinstate Ms time to appeal the juvenile court’s bindover order under Manning v. State, 2005 UT 61, 122 P.3d 628. He supported the motion by alleging that he had been denied Ms right to appeal the bindover order through ineffective assistance of counsel, asserting that trial counsel had “misinformed [Mm] that the time for appeal had run” when it in fact had not. The State stipulated to Van Huizen’s motion, and the district court reinstated Ms time to file an appeal. On that basis, Van Huizen now appeals the juvenile court’s bindover order that mitially transferred him into district court. 4

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶11 Van Huizen árgues that the juvenile judge who bound Mm over was required to recuse herself under the Code of Judicial Conduct. “Determining whether a trial judge committed error by failing to recuse Mmself or herself under the Utah Code of Judicial Conduct ... is a question of law, and we review such questions for correctness.” State v. Alonzo, 973 P.2d 975, 979 (Utah 1998). Van Huizen also argues that the judge’s “risk of bias” in his case was so strong that it '‘violated due process” under the Urnted States Constitution. “Constitutional issues, including questions regarding due process, are questions of law that we review for correctness,” In re E.K.S., 2016 UT 56, ¶ 5, 387 P,3d 1032 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

¶12 Additionally, Van Huizen asserts that ineffective assistance of counsel and the doctrine of plain error require that we reverse the bindover order. Because we resolve tMs ease on the disqualification issue, we do not address Van Huizen’s other arguments.

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Related

State v. Vict. Asta
2018 UT App 220 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2018)
R.B. v. State
2017 UT App 210 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2017)
State v. Van Huizen
400 P.3d 1044 (Utah Supreme Court, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT App 30, 392 P.3d 933, 832 Utah Adv. Rep. 37, 2017 WL 656582, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-van-huizen-utahctapp-2017.