Vickers v. State

175 P.3d 1280, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 13, 2008 WL 170039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 18, 2008
DocketA-9501, A-9502
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 P.3d 1280 (Vickers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vickers v. State, 175 P.3d 1280, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 13, 2008 WL 170039 (Ala. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

Nathaniel Vickers was convicted of violating a condition of his bail release by having contact with his domestic companion, Annette Jamestown. 1 During trial, Vickers ar *1282 gued that he was not guilty because he reasonably, though mistakenly, believed his conditions of release allowed him to have contact with Jamestown. The jury rejected that defense and convicted Vickers.

On appeal, Vickers claims the district court impermissibly limited his mistake defense. He also argues that the court violated his due process rights by allowing the State to use evidence of his earlier conviction for violating his conditions of release to show that he was not mistaken when he committed the present offense. And he argues that the district court erred by not instructing the jury to consider only written conditions of release and to disregard any evidence of oral no-contact orders. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that there is no merit to these claims.

Vickers also argues that the district court judge erred by not recusing himself when he realized he had presided over Vickers’s first bail hearing and therefore had personal knowledge that Vickers had been ordered to have no contact with Jamestown. But the trial judge did not have personal knowledge of any fact that was disputed in this case, and there was no significant possibility that the judge would be called as a witness. We therefore conclude that the judge did not err by failing to recuse himself sua sponte.

Vickers other claims are waived for inadequate briefing.

Facts and proceedings

On July 21, 2004, Vickers was indicted for, among other crimes, assaulting and attempting to murder Annette Jamestown. Vickers was released on bail to a third party custodian on July 19, 2004. One of the conditions of his release prohibited him from any direct or indirect contact with Jamestown.

Less than three months later, on October 9, 2004, Vickers was charged with violating the conditions of his release by having contact with Jamestown. He was convicted of that misdemeanor offense on January 14, 2005. Vickers’s sentence in that case included 5 years of probation, and one of the conditions of that probation prohibited him from contact with Jamestown unless Jamestown wrote a letter to the district attorney consenting to contact. Jamestown wrote such a letter on March 25,2005.

When Vickers was released from custody on that conviction he had another bail hearing in his felony ease. At that March 2, 2005, hearing, Superior Court Judge Larry D. Card stated that Vickers was to have no contact with Jamestown. Although Judge Card’s remarks appear to have been directed, at least in part, to Vickers’s third-party custodians, they were made in Vickers’s presence:

There will be no contact between Mr. Vick-ers and the alleged victim. Do you folks know who she is? All right. There will be no contact.

However, when the court issued its written order and conditions of release, the “no contact” box on the form order was inadvertently left blank. According to testimony in this case, form orders for conditions of release are normally filled out by defense counsel and given to the judge for his or her signature.

Some six weeks later, on April 15, 2005, another bail hearing was held in Vickers’s felony case to consider his request to travel to Angoon to attend a memorial service. Judge Card granted that request. At that hearing, the district attorney asked Judge Card to advise Vickers again that he was not to have any contact with Jamestown, because the State was getting reports that Vickers was having contact with her. The judge did not directly respond to that request, although the judge stated, in the context of a discussion about Vickers’s ankle monitoring, that “I have a problem with contact with the victim, direct or indirect.” But again, the written order and conditions of release left the relevant box unchecked — although the order did state that “all other conditions remain in effect.”

On April 23, 2005, Anchorage Detective Steve Lyons, the investigating officer in Vickers’s felony case, saw Vickers and Jamestown together, apparently en route to the airport to fly to Angoon. Based on this conduct, Vickers was again charged with violating his conditions of release by having contact with Jamestown.

*1283 At trial on that charge, Vickers argued that he reasonably believed, given the absence of cheek marks in the “no contact” boxes on the March and April orders, that his conditions of release allowed him to have contact with Jamestown. The jury rejected that defense and convicted Vickers. He appeals.

Discussion

The district court did not improperly limit Vickers’s mistake defense

Vickers’s primary claim on appeal is that the court improperly limited his argument to the jury that he reasonably, if mistakenly, believed he could have contact with Jamestown.

As noted earlier, at the time of this offense Vickers was on probation for violating the conditions of his release by having contact with Jamestown. One of his probation conditions barred him from contact with Jamestown — unless she wrote a letter to the district attorney permitting such contact, which she did. Vickers argues that the district court should have allowed him to argue to the jury that he reasonably relied on the sentencing order in that prior case, and the letter Jamestown wrote pursuant to that order, to believe he was permitted to have contact with Jamestown. The court disallowed that argument, ruling that it was an impermissible mistake-of-law defense.

In making this ruling, the district court relied on the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Strane. 2 That case involved facts similar to those presented here. Strane was convicted of violating a domestic violence protective order by contacting the woman who had obtained the protective order against him. 3 At trial, Strane sought to defend against that charge by claiming that he honestly, albeit mistakenly, believed the no-contact order did not apply if the woman consented to the contact. 4 The trial court ruled that even if Strane had a good-faith belief that his conduct did not violate the terms of the protective order, that belief did not entitle him to a mistake-of-law defense. 5

We reversed that decision, ruling that Strane had a right to defend against the charge of violating a domestic violence protective order by showing that he had an honest but mistaken belief that his conduct did not violate the order. 6 But the supreme court disagreed with our analysis. The court held that Strane’s subjective understanding of the effect or scope of the no-contact order was irrelevant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 P.3d 1280, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 13, 2008 WL 170039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vickers-v-state-alaskactapp-2008.