State of Arizona v. Della Lisa Vermuele ( 2011 )


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  •                                                                  FILED BY CLERK
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF ARIZONA                       MAR -4 2011
    DIVISION TWO
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION TWO
    THE STATE OF ARIZONA,                    )
    )
    Appellee, )          2 CA-CR 2009-0395
    )         DEPARTMENT B
    v.                          )
    )         OPINION
    DELLA LISA VERMUELE,                     )
    )
    Appellant. )
    )
    APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY
    Cause No. CR20083043
    Honorable Paul E. Tang, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    Thomas C. Horne, Arizona Attorney General
    By Kent E. Cattani and Alan L. Amann                                      Tucson
    Attorneys for Appellee
    Robert J. Hirsh, Pima County Public Defender
    By Michael J. Miller                                                      Tucson
    Attorneys for Appellant
    E C K E R S T R O M, Judge.
    ¶1              A jury convicted appellant Della Vermuele of the first-degree murder of her
    son. The trial court sentenced her to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
    On appeal, she argues her natural life sentence is excessive and that the trial court erred
    when it failed to consider evidence in mitigation.1 For the following reasons, we affirm
    her sentence.
    ¶2              For a few months in the summer of 2008, Vermuele and her adult son,
    Spencer C., lived with Ora and Martha C. at their residence in Tucson. At the end of
    July, after Vermuele had returned to the home angry and upset following a visit to the
    hospital, she and Spencer had a loud, heated argument in a bedroom they shared at the
    residence. After about twenty minutes, Ora tried to calm them down and asked Spencer
    to go on a walk. While Spencer was putting on his shoes in the bedroom, Vermuele went
    into the kitchen, let out a “primal scream,” grabbed a knife, went back to the bedroom
    and slammed the door shut. Ora tried to stop her as she passed him. Moments later,
    Spencer came out of the bedroom holding his abdomen and bleeding. He stated, “[C]all
    911. My mom stabbed me.” He then collapsed in a chair in the living room. Vermuele
    entered the living room and told Spencer, “You fucking drove me to it.”
    ¶3              By the time Spencer was taken to the hospital, he had died from a stab
    wound that had penetrated his right lung and his heart. Spencer also had stab wounds on
    1
    Vermuele has raised several other issues that do not meet the criteria for
    publication, which we have addressed in a separate, contemporaneously filed
    memorandum decision. See Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. 111(b), (h). The facts set forth in this
    opinion are not directly relevant to the issue discussed here and have been provided
    mainly as context for our discussion.
    2
    his left arm, lower back, and the left side of his chin. Vermuele sustained a stab wound
    to her lower right abdomen and also was taken to the hospital, where she had surgery to
    repair her wound.
    ¶4            At trial, Vermuele testified she and Spencer had been arguing throughout
    the month of July about money and his methamphetamine use. Vermuele testified that,
    on the day of the killing, Spencer had threatened her so she had armed herself with a
    paring knife from the kitchen, but accidentally dropped it on her way to the bedroom.
    She claimed that she and Spencer had rushed to retrieve, and eventually struggled for
    possession of, a butcher knife on the entertainment center in the bedroom. Vermuele
    contended that she and Spencer had incurred their wounds during the struggle and that
    she did not know who had stabbed whom. Vermuele was convicted after a jury trial of
    first-degree murder and was sentenced to natural life in prison. This appeal followed.
    ¶5            Vermuele argues “natural life was an excessive sentence.”          She also
    contends the trial court erred when it failed to give weight to several categories of her
    mitigation evidence. Preliminarily, the state argues that Vermuele has forfeited these
    claims because she failed to raise them to the trial court and she has not contended on
    appeal that the alleged errors are fundamental. See State v. Moreno-Medrano, 
    218 Ariz. 349
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 
    185 P.3d 135
    , 140 (App. 2008) (declining to review for fundamental error
    when appellant failed to raise claim in trial court and failed on appeal to address whether
    alleged error was fundamental).
    3
    ¶6            Assuming arguendo that the state is correct that Vermuele did not raise at
    least one of her sentencing claims to the trial court, 2 the basis for those claims did not
    become apparent until the court‟s pronouncement of the sentence.3         Because a trial
    court‟s pronouncement of sentence is procedurally unique in its finality under our rules of
    criminal procedure, and because a defendant has no appropriate opportunity to preserve
    any objection to errors arising during the court‟s imposition of sentence, we cannot agree
    that Vermuele has forfeited or “waived” such claims here.4
    ¶7            “The judgment of conviction and the sentence thereon are complete and
    valid as of the time of their oral pronouncement in open court.” Ariz. R. Crim. P.
    26.16(a); see also Willmon v. State ex rel. Eyman, 
    16 Ariz. App. 323
    , 324, 
    493 P.2d 125
    ,
    126 (1972) (open court rendition of judgment is official act effective when announced
    notwithstanding defect in minute entry). Under our rules of procedure, a defendant is
    formally advised of his or her right to appeal immediately thereafter. Ariz. R. Crim. P.
    2
    Vermuele contends correctly that, at minimum, her counsel‟s argument to the trial
    court that she should receive a parole-eligible sentence preserved her appellate claim that
    the natural life sentence the court imposed was excessive.
    3
    Under Rule 26.10(b), Ariz. R. Crim. P., the entire “[p]ronouncement of
    [s]entence” process technically involves six steps beginning with the defendant being
    provided “an opportunity to speak on his or her own behalf.” Herein, however, we refer
    to the pronouncement of sentence as the portion of that process occurring after the
    defendant‟s allocution, during which the trial court advises the defendant precisely what
    aggravating and mitigating factors it has found; pronounces the sentence as a result of
    those findings; sets forth the commencement date of the sentence; and determines what, if
    any, time served will be credited against the sentence. See Ariz. R. Crim. P. 26.10(b)(3),
    (4).
    4
    As our supreme court observed in State v. Martinez, 
    210 Ariz. 578
    , n.2, 
    115 P.3d 618
    , 620 n.2 (2005), the failure to object does not technically “waive” an assignment of
    error but rather limits the scope of appellate review.
    4
    26.11(a). Once sentence is pronounced, the trial court has no jurisdiction to modify it
    unless the court concludes, within sixty days of its entry, that the sentence was either
    unlawful or unlawfully imposed and the defendant‟s appeal has not yet been perfected.
    State v. Thomas, 
    142 Ariz. 201
    , 204, 
    688 P.2d 1093
    , 1096 (App. 1984); see Ariz. R.
    Crim. P. 24.3.
    ¶8            Nor do our rules provide criminal defendants any express procedural
    opportunity, before the judgment and sentence become final and ripe for appeal, to
    challenge those alleged errors that do not become apparent until the trial court
    pronounces the sentence. Although an intrepid attorney could hypothetically voice an
    immediate objection during the trial court‟s pronouncement of sentence, our rules of
    criminal procedure make no provision for such an objection. And, we decline to impose
    a requirement that counsel interrupt what should be a solemn event, occurring after all
    parties have had an opportunity to address the court, simply to preserve the appellate
    record. See In re Parham, 
    6 Ariz. App. 191
    , 195, 
    431 P.2d 86
    , 90 (1967) (imposition of
    sentence a “solemn moment”). Counsel could also conceivably seize the opportunity to
    challenge the sentence immediately after its rendition but before the hearing has
    concluded. But, while our rules specify the sequence of events following pronouncement
    of sentence in considerable detail, they provide no opportunity for counsel to challenge
    the sentence at this stage, nor do they require the trial court to entertain such a challenge.
    See Ariz. R. Crim. P. 26.11.
    ¶9            Thus, Vermuele had no clear procedural opportunity to challenge the
    rendition of sentence before it became final. Because a defendant cannot forfeit an
    5
    opportunity that the defendant does not have, her failure to challenge the sentence at the
    sentencing hearing cannot be fairly characterized as a forfeiture or waiver. See Marsin v.
    Udall, 
    78 Ariz. 309
    , 312, 
    279 P.2d 721
    , 723 (1955) (“[B]efore one can be said to have
    waived [a] right, he must have had an opportunity to exercise it.”).
    ¶10           As our supreme court has emphasized, one of the purposes of imposing a
    more restrictive standard of appellate review when a defendant fails to raise an argument
    in the trial court is to prevent a litigant from securing a strategic advantage by saving the
    alleged error as a “„hole card‟” for appeal in the event of an adverse trial court result.
    State v. Henderson, 
    210 Ariz. 561
    , ¶ 19, 
    115 P.3d 601
    , 607 (2005), quoting State v.
    Valdez, 
    160 Ariz. 9
    , 13, 
    770 P.2d 313
    , 317 (1989). An untimely objection also deprives
    the trial court of the opportunity to correct any errors before they become procedurally
    burdensome to undo. See, e.g., State v. Davis, 
    226 Ariz. 97
    , ¶ 15, 
    244 P.3d 101
    , 105
    (App. 2010) (finding waiver in part because failure to object deprived trial court
    opportunity correct error before jury reached verdict).
    ¶11           Here a defendant secures no obvious strategic advantage by awaiting the
    next procedural step—appeal—to challenge errors arising during the pronouncement of
    sentence. The potential remedy, whether secured by successful appeal or by an
    extraordinary post-judgment objection, would simply be an eventual resentencing. See
    generally Ariz. R. Crim. P. 26.14 (specifying procedures when sentence set aside).
    Under such circumstances, the above rationales for our imposition of a less favorable
    standard of review do not apply.
    6
    ¶12           We acknowledge that Rule 24.3 provides an avenue by which a defendant
    may ask the trial court to correct certain sentencing errors even after the sentence has
    become final. But a trial court lacks jurisdiction under that rule to provide any relief
    unless the final sentence was “unlawful” or “imposed in an unlawful manner.” State v.
    Falkner, 
    112 Ariz. 372
    , 373, 
    542 P.2d 404
    , 405 (1975). And, we have previously held
    that analogous post-verdict challenges are insufficient to preserve issues for appellate
    review. See, e.g., Davis, 
    226 Ariz. 97
    , ¶ 12, 
    244 P.3d at 104
     (motion for new trial
    pursuant to Rule 24.1(c)(5), Ariz. R. Crim. P., does not preserve objection to trial error);
    State v. Mills, 
    196 Ariz. 269
    , ¶ 15, 
    995 P.2d 705
    , 709 (App. 1999) (same). Furthermore,
    our supreme court included no language in Rule 24.3 suggesting that sentencing claims
    not raised by that avenue would be forfeited on appeal. See State v. Gause, 
    112 Ariz. 296
    , 297, 
    541 P.2d 396
    , 397 (1975) (observing that former Rule 32.9(a) specifically
    required motion for rehearing before trial court to preserve appellate claims).
    ¶13           As noted above, criminal defendants are immediately advised of their right
    to appeal after sentence has been imposed pursuant to Rule 26.11(a), a right they must
    promptly assert or forever forfeit. See State v. Berry, 
    133 Ariz. 264
    , 266, 
    650 P.2d 1246
    ,
    1248 (App. 1982) (timely filing of notice of appeal essential to court‟s exercise of
    appellate jurisdiction). Thus, our rules contemplate that an appeal, not an extraordinary
    post-judgment motion, is the presumptive procedural remedy available to the defendant
    following the imposition of judgment and sentence. We cannot fault a defendant who
    7
    chooses to pursue the remedy of appeal and urge all of his or her claims in a single post-
    judgment procedure.5
    ¶14          For the foregoing reasons, we reject the state‟s contention that the
    defendant forfeited appellate review of alleged errors that did not become apparent until
    the trial court pronounced sentence. In doing so, we clarify that nothing about this
    limited ruling relieves litigants of the duty to challenge all other errors related to
    sentencing before the trial court. Indeed, our rules themselves provide an ordered process
    for challenging any errors in the presentence report. Ariz. R. Crim. P. 26.8. Those rules
    also provide a defendant the opportunity to speak immediately before pronouncement of
    sentence and thereby raise any other legal challenge to the propriety of the sentencing
    process that becomes apparent up to the moment the trial court pronounces sentence.
    Ariz. R. Crim. P. 26.10(b)(1).
    ¶15          We first address Vermuele‟s claim the sentence was excessive. In general,
    “[a] trial court has broad discretion to determine the appropriate penalty to impose upon
    conviction,” and we will not disturb a sentence that is within the appropriate statutory
    range unless the court has abused its discretion. State v. Cazares, 
    205 Ariz. 425
    , ¶ 6, 
    72 P.3d 355
    , 357 (App. 2003). If the trial court fully considers the factors relevant to
    imposing sentence, we will generally find no abuse of discretion. 
    Id.
     Although the trial
    court must give due consideration to all mitigating evidence, the weight to be given any
    5
    We do not address whether a defendant who instead chooses to challenge a trial
    court‟s pronouncement of sentence through Rule 24.3 must then raise all potential
    challenges at that juncture to avoid forfeiting appellate review of any unraised claims.
    8
    factor asserted in mitigation falls within the trial court‟s sound discretion. Id. ¶ 8.
    However, a court may abuse its discretion if it declines to consider potentially mitigating
    evidence on the erroneous assumption that it is statutorily barred from doing so. See
    State v. Thurlow, 
    148 Ariz. 16
    , 20, 
    712 P.2d 929
    , 933 (1986).
    ¶16           Here, other than arguments she presented to the trial court, Vermuele
    provides us no basis to conclude her sentence was excessive. The court indicated that it
    had presided over the trial and reviewed all the materials presented in both aggravation
    and mitigation. It then heard argument from counsel for both parties and provided an
    opportunity for Vermuele to speak.       Thereafter, it articulated those features of the
    homicide and Vermuele‟s background that it found most pertinent in determining the
    sentence: Vermuele‟s prior criminal record and the effect of Spencer‟s death on his
    family. Although Vermuele emphasizes non-trivial mitigating features of her difficult
    childhood and the apparent fact that she killed her son in the heat of an argument rather
    than as the product of calm deliberation, we must be mindful that the trial court is far
    better equipped to assess the defendant, who appears in person before it, than this court.
    See State v. Ferreira, 
    128 Ariz. 530
    , 532, 
    627 P.2d 681
    , 683 (1981). On the record
    before us, we cannot say that the trial court abused its considerable discretion in imposing
    the term of natural life.
    ¶17           Vermuele also contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law when it
    rejected certain mitigation evidence she offered. Specifically, the court stated:
    In mitigation, your counsel has suggested, among other
    factors, the following: your age, medical history, a difficult
    childhood, substance abuse, mental disorder, and remorse as
    9
    factors. . . . [T]he Court is not persuaded that any of these
    factors fit under our state‟s statutory definitions for mitigating
    factors except, perhaps, the remorse, which I do accept. And
    that is, of course, because, as to the remaining factors, none of
    these fit into an express factor in mitigation . . . .
    Although these remarks could reasonably be interpreted to reflect an erroneous
    conclusion by the court that it could not consider much of Vermuele‟s mitigation
    evidence because that evidence did not fall within certain statutory categories, we must
    assume the trial court knows the law and was aware that it could consider any mitigating
    factors which it might deem appropriate in the interests of justice. See 2005 Ariz. Sess.
    Laws, ch. 325, § 3 (requiring court to consider enumerated mitigating circumstances
    when deciding whether to impose life or natural life sentence for murder under former
    A.R.S. § 13-703.01(Q)(2)); see also 2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 148, § 1 (expressly
    authorizing court to consider “[a]ny other factor that is relevant to the defendant‟s
    character or background or to the nature or circumstances of the crime and that the court
    finds to be mitigating” under former § 13-702(D)(5)); State v. Williams, 
    220 Ariz. 331
    ,
    ¶ 9, 
    206 P.3d 780
    , 783 (App. 2008) (presuming court knows and follows law). We
    therefore assume that those comments conveyed, albeit inartfully, that the court did not
    find Vermuele‟s particular mitigation arguments of sufficient weight to constitute
    mitigating circumstances as set forth in the former § 13-702(D), rather than a belief that it
    could not categorically consider those types of mitigation at all.
    ¶18           Indeed, the trial court expressly found Vermuele‟s remorse as a mitigating
    factor, although the defendant‟s remorse is not enumerated in the former § 13-702(D) as
    a mitigating circumstance. And, the court discussed the evidence of Vermuele‟s mental
    10
    disorder at some length, suggesting that it was assessing the weight of that evidence
    rather than precluding consideration of it categorically. These discussions place the
    above comments in context and reinforce our conclusion that the court properly
    understood the breadth of its discretion in considering mitigating circumstances.
    Therefore, the court did not abuse its discretion when it considered, but did not find as
    mitigating factors, Vermuele‟s “age, medical history, . . . difficult childhood, substance
    abuse, [and] mental disorder.”
    Disposition
    ¶19          For the foregoing reasons, and for the reasons set forth in our separate
    memorandum decision, Vermuele‟s conviction and sentence are affirmed.
    /s/ Peter J. Eckerstrom
    PETER J. ECKERSTROM, Judge
    CONCURRING:
    /s/ Garye L. Vásquez
    GARYE L. VÁSQUEZ, Presiding Judge
    /s/ Virginia C. Kelly
    VIRGINIA C. KELLY, Judge
    11