State of Arizona v. Robert Arthur Ergonis ( 2010 )


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  •                                                                    FILED BY CLERK
    JUN 14 2010
    COURT OF APPEALS
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS                     DIVISION TWO
    STATE OF ARIZONA
    DIVISION TWO
    THE STATE OF ARIZONA,                       )
    )   2 CA-SA 2010-0021
    Petitioner,   )   DEPARTMENT B
    )
    v.                       )   OPINION
    )
    HON. RICHARD D. NICHOLS, Judge              )
    of the Superior Court of the State of       )
    Arizona, in and for the County of Pima,     )
    )
    Respondent,      )
    )
    and                       )
    )
    ROBERT ARTHUR ERGONIS,                      )
    )
    Real Party in Interest.   )
    )
    SPECIAL ACTION PROCEEDING
    Pima County Cause No. CR20074823
    JURISDICTION ACCEPTED; RELIEF GRANTED
    Terry Goddard, Arizona Attorney General
    By Kimberly H. Ortiz                                                         Tucson
    Attorneys for Petitioner
    Payson & Gattone
    By Paul Gattone                                                               Tucson
    Attorneys for Real Party in Interest
    B R A M M E R, Judge.
    ¶1            In this special action, the State of Arizona seeks relief from the respondent
    judge‟s order compelling a crime victim, J.C., to submit to a pretrial interview by defense
    counsel. At issue is an ambiguity in the definition of a “victim” in Arizona‟s Victims‟
    Bill of Rights (“VBR”), article II, § 2.1 of the Arizona Constitution.1 The question we
    must answer is whether, by excluding from the VBR‟s definition of a “victim” any
    person “in custody for an offense,” Arizona voters intended to deny victims‟ rights not
    only to inmates against whom a criminal offense has been committed while they are
    incarcerated but also, more broadly, to exclude those who, after having been victimized,
    subsequently are taken into custody and remain incarcerated for any reason when they
    otherwise could exercise a right or rights conferred on victims by the VBR.
    ¶2            We accept jurisdiction of this special action for several reasons. First,
    A.R.S. § 13-4437(A) and Rule 2(a)(2), Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions, expressly authorize
    victims to enforce their rights under the VBR in special action proceedings.
    Additionally, the challenged order is interlocutory in nature, and the state has no equally
    plain, speedy, or adequate remedy by appeal. See Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 1(a). And,
    the issue presented “is one of first impression, involves only questions of law[,] and is of
    1
    The VBR was added to the Arizona Constitution after voters in the
    November 1990 general election approved Proposition 104, which was based on a voter-
    initiative measure. See Ariz. Const. art. II, § 2.1, hist. note. “[T]he constitutional
    amendment contained in Proposition 104 became effective upon the November 27[,
    1990,] proclamation by the governor.” State v. Warner, 
    168 Ariz. 261
    , 263, 
    812 P.2d 1079
    , 1081 (App. 1990).
    2
    statewide importance to the criminal justice system . . . .” State v. Warner, 
    168 Ariz. 261
    ,
    262, 
    812 P.2d 1079
    , 1080 (1983). We conclude that J.C. retained his constitutional right
    to refuse to be interviewed by the defense, see art. II. § 2.1(A)(5), and that the respondent
    judge erred in compelling him to submit to an interview, see Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions
    3(c).
    FACTS AND PROCEDURE
    ¶3            Real party in interest Robert Ergonis is one of four codefendants indicted
    together in March 2008 in Pima County cause number CR20074823. The indictment
    charges Ergonis with five dangerous-nature felonies committed against J.C., who was
    kidnapped, robbed, and assaulted in Tucson on December 8, 2007. Shortly thereafter J.C.
    moved from Arizona to Massachusetts. There, he was arrested and later convicted of an
    unrelated weapons offense, for which he was incarcerated from October 30, 2008, until
    March 10, 2009.
    ¶4            In December 2008, while J.C. was in custody in Massachusetts, counsel for
    Kumari Fulbright, one of Ergonis‟s codefendants, requested a pretrial interview of J.C.
    In a motion to compel the interview filed on March 2, 2009, Fulbright‟s counsel argued
    that, because J.C. was in custody on criminal charges, he “no longer ha[d] the status of a
    victim” under the VBR and therefore could not refuse to be interviewed. Although
    tacitly agreeing with that position, the state argued the issue was moot because J.C. had
    been released on March 10, 2009. By implication, the state suggested J.C. had regained
    his status and rights as a victim under the VBR when released.
    3
    ¶5               At a hearing on November 9, 2009, Fulbright‟s counsel reargued his
    previously filed motion to compel an interview with J.C. Counsel reiterated Fulbright‟s
    position that, “if a named victim is incarcerated, he gives up his victim‟s right to the
    extent he cannot decline to be interviewed.” Again the state did not dispute Fulbright‟s
    interpretation of article II, § 2.1. Asked by the respondent judge if she “agree[d] that
    once a victim is in custody even on other charges, that they lose their constitutional right
    to refuse to be interviewed,” the prosecutor responded, “That‟s what [Stapleford v.
    Houghton, 
    185 Ariz. 560
    , 562, 
    917 P.2d 703
    , 705 (1996)] says, yes. That‟s what the
    statute says.”
    ¶6               The state opposed Fulbright‟s interview requests below based not on the
    meaning of the phrase “in custody,” but rather on the timing of Fulbright‟s requests in
    relation to the dates of Joshua‟s incarceration and release from custody in Massachusetts.
    With respect to Ergonis, the state additionally argued he never had made a sufficient
    request to interview J.C. because his counsel had not filed a separate, written motion but,
    instead, merely had replied in the affirmative when asked orally if he wished to join in
    Fulbright‟s motion.2 After the prosecutor agreed when the respondent judge asked if it
    was “purely as a practical matter that [counsel for Fulbright] wasn‟t able to interview
    2
    According to the state, Ergonis did not join in Fulbright‟s motion to interview
    J.C. until November 9, 2009, months after his release from custody. This assertion
    appears at least debatable, as Fulbright‟s counsel stated in the written “motion for
    sanctions to compel the interview of [J.C.]” he filed on March 2, 2009, that he had
    spoken to Ergonis‟s counsel “who indicates that not only does she join in the motion
    [but] requested that [Fulbright‟s counsel] advise the Court that she will be prepared for
    the interview, so that the timing of the interview is not an issue.”
    4
    [J.C.] because he was detained and then released too quickly,” the respondent granted the
    motion to compel the interview. The respondent found “the defense [had] file[d] a
    request to interview the victim at a time when the victim did not have the right to refuse
    to be interviewed because of his incarceration.” At the state‟s request, we have stayed
    the respondent‟s order compelling J.C. to submit to the interview and Ergonis‟s criminal
    trial pending our ruling in this matter.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶7            Crime victims‟ rights in Arizona are protected by our constitution, by
    statute, and by court rule. Even before the constitutional amendment that added the
    VBR, our supreme court had adopted Rule 39, Ariz. R. Crim. P., “to preserve and protect
    a victim‟s rights to justice and due process.” Ariz. R. Crim. P. 39(b), effective Aug. 1,
    1989. Then, in the November 1990 general election, voters approved Proposition 104,
    the VBR, which was based on a voter-initiative measure.3 See Ariz. Const. art. II, § 2.1,
    hist. note. The year following the adoption of the VBR, under the authority granted by
    § 2.1(D) of article II,4 our legislature enacted the Victims‟ Rights Implementation Act,
    see 1991 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 229, §§ 1-17, now codified as A.R.S. §§ 13-4401 through
    3
    “[T]he constitutional amendment contained in Proposition 104 became effective
    upon the November 27[, 1990,] proclamation by the governor.” 
    Warner, 168 Ariz. at 263
    , 812 P.2d at 1081.
    4
    Subsection 2.1(D) of article II provides in pertinent part: “The legislature, or the
    people by initiative or referendum, have the authority to enact substantive and procedural
    laws to define, implement, preserve and protect the rights guaranteed to victims by this
    section . . . .”
    5
    13-4440.5 See generally State v. Roscoe, 
    185 Ariz. 68
    , 70, 
    912 P.2d 1297
    , 1299 (1996)
    (providing historical overview).
    ¶8              Article II, § 2.1(C) of the Arizona Constitution defines “[v]ictim” for
    purposes of the VBR as
    a person against whom the criminal offense has been
    committed or, if the person is killed or incapacitated, the
    person‟s spouse, parent, child or other lawful representative,
    except if the person is in custody for an offense or is the
    accused.
    Section 13-4401(19) of the Victims‟ Rights Implementation Act provides a definition of
    “[v]ictim” containing additional language not included in the VBR.6 However, it is the
    constitutional definition that ultimately controls. See 
    Roscoe, 185 Ariz. at 72
    , 912 P.2d at
    1301 (neither implementing statutes nor court rules “„eliminate or narrow rights
    5
    As originally enacted, chapter 40 of title 13, A.R.S., consisted of A.R.S.
    §§ 13-4401 through 13-4437. See 1991 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 229, § 7. Sections
    13-4438, 13-4439, and 13-4440, A.R.S., were added sequentially later. See 1993 Ariz.
    Sess. Laws, ch. 235, § 1 (adding former § 13-3328, which later was amended and
    renumbered as A.R.S. § 13-610, see 2002 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 226, § 2); 2004 Ariz.
    Sess. Laws, ch. 131, § 1 (adding current § 13-4438); 2001 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 334, § 24
    (adding § 13-4439); 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 237, § 2 (adding § 13-4440).
    6
    Section 13-4401(19) provides:
    “Victim” means a person against whom the criminal
    offense has been committed, including a minor, or if the
    person is killed or incapacitated, the person‟s spouse, parent,
    child, grandparent or sibling, any other person related to the
    person by consanguinity or affinity to the second degree or
    any other lawful representative of the person, except if the
    person or the person‟s spouse, parent, child, grandparent,
    sibling, other person related to the person by consanguinity or
    affinity to the second degree or other lawful representative is
    in custody for an offense or is the accused.
    6
    guaranteed by the state constitution‟”), quoting State v. Lamberton, 
    183 Ariz. 47
    , 50, 
    899 P.2d 939
    , 942 (1995); Knapp v. Martone, 
    170 Ariz. 237
    , 240 n.5, 
    823 P.2d 685
    , 688 n.5
    (1992) (legislature has power to “„define, implement, preserve and protect‟” victims‟
    rights but not “to redefine the scope of those rights”), quoting Ariz. Const., art. II,
    § 2.1(D); Turley v. Bolin, 
    27 Ariz. App. 345
    , 348, 
    554 P.2d 1288
    , 1291 (1976) (rights
    created by initiative or referendum not subject to derogation by legislature; “„legislative
    authority, acting in a representative capacity only, [i]s in all respects intended to be
    subordinate to direct action by the people‟”), quoting Whitman v. Moore, 
    59 Ariz. 211
    ,
    220, 
    125 P.2d 445
    , 451 (1942).
    ¶9            In a reversal of the position it presented the respondent judge, the state now
    contends the phrase “in custody for an offense” refers only to the time when “the criminal
    offense [w]as . . . committed” against the “person,” who, if neither then “in custody” nor
    “the accused,” thereby became a victim for purposes of the VBR. Ergonis, on the other
    hand, maintains the phrase “in custody” connotes no such temporal restriction. Under his
    interpretation, a person against whom a crime was committed subsequently loses the
    rights conferred by the VBR if later taken into custody for any reason.
    ¶10           In all proceedings before the respondent judge, the state agreed—either
    implicitly or expressly—with the defense argument that J.C. had lost his rights under the
    VBR during the time he was in custody in Massachusetts.7 That the state now has
    abandoned that interpretation in favor of its present position—presumably having
    7
    Both parties appeared to assume implicitly that J.C. regained his status and rights
    as a victim under the VBR automatically upon his release.
    7
    advanced both views in good faith and thus having by turns deemed either construction
    plausible—well illustrates and aptly underscores the temporal ambiguity permitted by the
    phrase “in custody for an offense” as used in the definition of a “victim” in § 2.1(C) of
    the VBR.
    ¶11           We appreciate that the legal basis for our decision was not argued to the
    respondent judge below. We do not apply the customary rules of waiver in this instance,
    however, because it is not the state‟s rights but J.C.‟s that the VBR protects.         See
    generally A.R.S. § 13-4437(C) (“At the request of the victim, the prosecutor may assert
    any right to which the victim is entitled.”). And we decline to penalize him for the state‟s
    having urged a legal position below that it since has reconsidered and abandoned in its
    special action petition.
    ¶12           The proper interpretation of constitutional language presents a question of
    law this court reviews de novo. See Massey v. Bayless, 
    187 Ariz. 72
    , 73, 
    927 P.2d 338
    ,
    339 (1996). When the wording of a constitutional provision is clear and unambiguous,
    we apply it according to its plain meaning, without resort to other means of construction.
    Jett v. City of Tucson, 
    180 Ariz. 115
    , 119, 
    882 P.2d 426
    , 430 (1994). Ambiguity exists
    when, as here, the meaning or interpretation of a provision is uncertain. Heath v. Kiger,
    
    217 Ariz. 492
    , ¶ 6, 
    176 P.3d 690
    , 692 (2008). When a constitutional provision is
    ambiguous, “„we may consider the history behind the provision, the purpose sought to be
    accomplished, and the evil sought to be remedied.‟” 
    Id. ¶ 9,
    quoting 
    Jett, 180 Ariz. at 119
    , 882 P.2d at 430.
    8
    ¶13           Here, that purpose is stated clearly and succinctly in the opening language
    of the VBR: “To preserve and protect victims‟ rights to justice and due process.” As our
    supreme court elaborated in Champlin v. Sargeant, 
    192 Ariz. 371
    , ¶ 20, 
    965 P.2d 763
    ,
    767 (1998), the VBR and its implementing legislation were enacted “to provide crime
    victims with „basic rights of respect, protection, participation and healing of their
    ordeals.‟” 
    Id., quoting 1991
    Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 229, § 2.8 Since the adoption of the
    VBR, “the victim‟s right to decline an interview has been considered absolute.” 
    Roscoe, 185 Ariz. at 74
    , 912 P.2d at 1303; accord State v. O‟Neil, 
    172 Ariz. 180
    , 182, 
    836 P.2d 393
    , 395 (App. 1991) (“[T]he [VBR] abrogated a defendant‟s right under Rule 15[, Ariz.
    R. Crim. P.,] to interview or otherwise seek discovery from an unwilling victim.”); Day v.
    Superior Court, 
    170 Ariz. 215
    , 217, 
    823 P.2d 82
    , 84 (App. 1991) (“The [VBR] precludes
    the trial court from ordering the deposition of a victim who has indicated an
    unwillingness to be interviewed.”).
    ¶14           Despite both Ergonis‟s argument in his response to the petition for special
    action and the state‟s previous concurrence in that interpretation below, no Arizona case
    has held, even implicitly, that a victim loses his or her status and rights under the VBR if
    later taken into custody for an unrelated reason. Indeed, the principal case on which the
    parties have relied, Stapleford, stands only for the narrower interpretation of the phrase
    8
    In an earlier comment to Rule 39 following the enactment of the Victims‟ Rights
    Implementation Act in 1991, our supreme court observed, “„In general, it appeared that
    the definition of a victim should be a generous one.‟” 
    Roscoe, 185 Ariz. at 70
    , 912 P.2d
    at 1299, quoting Ariz. R. Crim. P. 39 1991 cmt. (emphasis in Roscoe).
    9
    “in custody” as meaning the victim was in custody when the criminal offense was
    committed.
    ¶15           The victim in Stapleford was a prisoner named Corso who had been
    assaulted by his 
    cellmate. 185 Ariz. at 561
    , 917 P.2d at 704. Reversing the trial court‟s
    ruling, and requiring Corso to submit to a pretrial interview, our supreme court concluded
    Corso was not a “victim” as defined in the VBR because he was in 
    custody. 185 Ariz. at 563
    , 917 P.2d at 706. Although nowhere in its discussion did the court expressly state
    that the words “in custody” meant “in custody when the offense was committed against
    him,” that is the only specific holding the facts of the case permit. It is also the only
    holding the case requires. Interpreting the words “in custody” to mean “subsequently in
    custody” or “in custody at any time” would broaden the holding of Stapleford beyond its
    facts, and nothing in the court‟s language expressly supports, much less compels, such an
    expansive interpretation of the phrase.
    ¶16           We evinced the same view, albeit in dicta, in State v. Carlos, 
    199 Ariz. 273
    ,
    ¶ 20, 
    17 P.3d 118
    , 124 (App. 2001). There, too, the underlying criminal charges had
    arisen from the alleged assault of one prison inmate by another. The defendant
    successfully argued on appeal that the trial court had abused its discretion in preventing
    him from calling the victim, F., to testify. In concluding the court had “denied Carlos his
    Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process by precluding him from calling F. as a
    witness,” 
    id. ¶ 22,
    we observed: “Because F. was incarcerated at the time of the assault,
    he was not entitled to the protections of the Victims‟ Bill of Rights, and thus had no
    10
    constitutional right to refuse an interview with Carlos under article II, § 2.1 of the
    Arizona Constitution.” 
    Id. ¶ 20.
    ¶17           Ergonis has cited no legal authority directly supporting his broad
    interpretation of the phrase “in custody.” Nor has he persuaded us that a victim‟s later
    incarceration on unrelated charges should divest that victim of constitutional rights
    previously acquired.9 As we observed in State v. Stauffer, 
    203 Ariz. 551
    , ¶ 9, 
    58 P.3d 33
    ,
    36 (App. 2002), “a crime victim‟s rights are specific to a crime committed upon that
    victim and arise . . . upon an arrest for or formal charging of that crime.” Ergonis has not
    urged, and we cannot conceive, a compelling reason why, in the absence of clear
    language in the VBR expressly so providing, accrued constitutional rights that are
    “specific to a crime committed upon” a victim should later be suspended or forfeited if
    the victim is taken into custody for an entirely unrelated reason.10
    9
    A subsequent arrest on “related” charges, on the other hand, could in some cases
    make the victim “the accused”—or, at least, “[an] accused”—who then presumably
    would no longer meet the definition of a “victim” for purposes of the VBR—a question
    neither presented nor addressed here.
    10
    Section 13-4402(A) of the Victims‟ Rights Implementation Act provides that the
    constitutional rights conferred by the VBR “arise on the arrest or formal charging of the
    person or persons who are alleged to be responsible for a criminal offense against a
    victim.” They remain enforceable until the “final disposition of the charges, including
    acquittal or dismissal of the charges, all post-conviction release and relief proceedings
    and the discharge of all criminal proceedings relating to restitution.” § 13-4402(A).
    Such rights cease to exist only “[a]fter the final termination of a criminal prosecution by
    dismissal with prejudice or acquittal.” § 13-4402(C); see also State ex rel. Romley v.
    Dairman, 
    208 Ariz. 484
    , ¶ 20, 
    95 P.3d 548
    , 554 (App. 2004). Neither § 13-4402, nor the
    VBR itself, provides for the interruption, suspension, or divestiture of a victim‟s rights
    should the victim subsequently be taken into custody.
    11
    ¶18           Clearly, the mere possibility that a victim later might be in custody for
    some suspected or actual wrongdoing is not alone disqualifying. In State v. Clinton, 
    181 Ariz. 299
    , 300, 
    890 P.2d 74
    , 75 (App. 1995), for example, Division One of this court held
    that an assault victim, partially at fault for her injuries, nonetheless was entitled to an
    award of restitution under the VBR. The court stated: “A crime victim retains victims‟
    rights even if the facts suggest that the victim might be culpable herself.” 
    Id. In reaching
    its conclusion, the court relied on 
    Knapp, 170 Ariz. at 239
    , 823 P.2d at 687, in which our
    supreme court found the protections of the VBR extended to the mother of two murdered
    children, even though she was suspected in their deaths, because she had not been
    charged or named in a charging document as a coconspirator and was “therefore not an
    accused” under the VBR.
    ¶19           Equally clearly, there are administrative considerations and logistical
    challenges that attend the exercise of a victim‟s rights if the victim is in custody.
    Rule 39, Ariz. R. Crim. P., illustrates our supreme court‟s accommodation of those
    constraints. Thus, Rule 39(a)(1) provides:
    If a victim is in custody for an offense, the victim‟s right to be
    heard pursuant to this rule is satisfied through affording the
    victim the opportunity to submit a written statement, where
    legally permissible and in the discretion of the court. A
    victim not in custody may exercise his or her right to be heard
    pursuant to this rule by appearing personally, or where legally
    permissible and in the discretion of the court, by submitting a
    written statement, an audiotape or videotape.
    Ultimately, of course, the procedure specified in Rule 39 is not dispositive of the issue
    before us. But, by recognizing that a victim who “is in custody for an offense” retains a
    12
    “right to be heard” in keeping with the rights conferred by the VBR, the rule‟s language
    nonetheless supports the conclusion we reach here.
    ¶20           We recognize that accepting Ergonis‟s interpretation of the phrase “in
    custody” as meaning “in custody at any time for any reason” eliminates the
    administrative challenges inherent in allowing incarcerated victims to exercise their rights
    under the VBR. But we can discern no other rationale—and certainly none consistent
    with the VBR‟s goals of respecting and protecting victims and facilitating their
    participation in the criminal prosecutions of their assailants—for interpreting the phrase
    “in custody” so broadly. The implications of such an interpretation would invite
    arbitrary, potentially unjust, and even absurd results.
    ¶21           As the record reflects, J.C. was released on bond shortly after his arrest in
    Massachusetts in December 2007.         Under Ergonis‟s interpretation of the VBR, J.C.
    would have been divested of his victim‟s rights for the duration of his initial, brief
    incarceration but would have reacquired them promptly upon his release; the same
    theoretical divestiture and reattachment would have occurred again when he later served
    and then completed his sentence. If, hypothetically, a victim were in and out of custody
    repeatedly while awaiting trial, what logical or principled argument suggests his or her
    rights under the VBR should be suspended and restored in successive, random cycles?
    What of victims who later are placed in custody and cannot afford to post bond? Or one
    who is arrested briefly but not formally charged, or unlawfully or wrongly detained? Or
    those who might violate conditions of probation or parole? Nothing in the purpose or the
    language of the VBR leads us to believe that Arizona voters in November 1990 imagined,
    13
    much less intended, that the constitutional rights they intended to create by passing the
    VBR could be so mechanistically lost and reacquired, perhaps multiple times in
    succession, depending on the endless variety of circumstances that may attend a person‟s
    being “in custody” at some point after having been the victim of a crime.
    ¶22              The clearest, simplest, and most logical interpretation of the phrase “in
    custody for an offense,” therefore, is the one reflected in Stapleford11 and Carlos12 and
    the one we endorse here: the VBR denies victim status and rights only to persons who
    are themselves “the accused” or who are already in custody when the criminal offense is
    committed against them. Having considered the consequences of the interpretation urged
    by Ergonis, we conclude that a crime victim‟s rights, which “are specific to a crime
    committed upon that victim,” Stauffer, 
    203 Ariz. 551
    , ¶ 
    9, 58 P.3d at 36
    , are not
    thereafter lost if the victim subsequently should be “in custody for an [unrelated]
    offense.” See also 
    Knapp, 170 Ariz. at 239
    , 823 P.2d at 687 (“The only victims excluded
    from the protection of the [VBR] are those „in custody for an offense‟ or those who are
    „the accused.‟”), quoting Ariz. Const. art. II, § 2.1(C).
    ¶23              Despite the state‟s failure to assist the respondent judge below with an
    appropriate legal argument, we nonetheless conclude the respondent‟s ruling rests on an
    erroneous interpretation of article II, § 2.1(C) of the Arizona Constitution. And, because
    an error of law amounts to an abuse of discretion, see Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 3(c);
    11
    185 Ariz. at 
    563, 917 P.2d at 706
    .
    12
    
    199 Ariz. 273
    , ¶ 
    20, 17 P.3d at 124
    .
    14
    Althaus v. Cornelio, 
    203 Ariz. 597
    , ¶ 4, 
    58 P.3d 973
    , 975 (App. 2002) (court abuses
    discretion by committing error of law), we accept jurisdiction of the special action, grant
    the relief requested, and vacate the respondent judge‟s order compelling J.C. to submit to
    a pretrial interview by the defense.
    /s/ J. William Brammer, Jr.
    J. WILLIAM BRAMMER, JR., Judge
    CONCURRING:
    /s/ Peter J. Eckerstrom
    PETER J. ECKERSTROM, Presiding Judge
    /s/ Garye L. Vásquez
    GARYE L. VÁSQUEZ, Judge
    15