State v. Michael G. Long , 153 Idaho 168 ( 2012 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 38578
    STATE OF IDAHO,                                 )     2012 Opinion No. 27
    )
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                    )     Filed: May 3, 2012
    )
    v.                                              )     Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    )
    MICHAEL G. LONG,                                )
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                     )
    )
    Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District, State of Idaho,
    Kootenai County. Hon. John T. Mitchell, District Judge; Hon. Eugene A.
    Marano, Magistrate.
    Appeal from order,        on   intermediate   appeal,   reversing   judgment   of
    acquittal, dismissed.
    Starr Kelso, Coeur d'Alene, for appellant.
    Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Kenneth K. Jorgensen, Deputy
    Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Kenneth K. Jorgensen argued.
    ________________________________________________
    GUTIERREZ, Judge
    Michael G. Long appeals from the district court’s intermediate appellate order reversing
    his judgment of acquittal for misdemeanor charges of recreational trespass and unlawful
    possession of wildlife. We conclude the appeal is moot and dismiss the appeal.
    I.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURE
    Officer Dave Overman of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game and another officer
    overheard shots being fired in an area they knew was posted as private property or archery only.
    Upon arriving in the area, which was part of approximately ninety-five, privately-owned acres,
    they found Long crouching in the bushes with a rifle near a dead whitetail buck. Behind Long
    was a “No Hunting” sign, which was visible from his location and from the road. Another sign
    near the area stated “No Hunting without Written Permission.” Long did not know the owner
    and had not been given permission to hunt on the property.         After being contacted by a
    1
    conservation officer, the landowner agreed to sign a complaint. Long was cited for recreational
    trespass, Idaho Code § 36-1603(a), and unlawful possession of wildlife, Idaho Code § 36-502(b).
    The case proceeded to trial and after completion of the evidentiary portion, the magistrate
    granted Long’s motion for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Idaho Criminal Rule 29(a). Based
    on the magistrate’s interpretation of the recreational trespass statute, it concluded insufficient
    evidence existed for the jury to conclude Long violated the statute. The State appealed. At the
    conclusion of oral argument, the district court indicated it disagreed with the magistrate’s
    interpretation of the statute, but would affirm the judgment of acquittal on an alternate
    ground--namely, that the recreational trespass statute was not a criminal statute and could not
    form the basis of a criminal charge. However, several days later, the district court issued a
    written memorandum decision and order, reversing the judgment of acquittal. The district court
    wrote that, in researching the issue, it came across Idaho Code § 36-1401(b), which makes it
    clear that recreational trespass is a criminal offense. Long appealed the district court’s order, on
    intermediate appeal, reversing the judgment of acquittal.
    While this appeal was pending, the Idaho Supreme Court issued State v. Howard, 
    150 Idaho 471
    , 
    248 P.3d 722
     (2011), holding that a trial court’s dismissal of a felony driving under
    the influence (DUI) enhancement following a bench trial constituted an “acquittal,” such that
    double jeopardy barred Howard from being retried, even though the trial court’s basis for the
    dismissal was erroneous.      In light of Howard, this Court ordered the parties to submit
    supplemental briefing on the effect of the judgment of acquittal in this case to the instant appeal.
    Both parties complied.
    II.
    ANALYSIS
    Although Long continues to assert his substantive issues on appeal, we conclude the
    effect of the judgment of acquittal is dispositive. Thus, we need not reach the remaining issues.
    In its supplemental brief, the State concedes that while review of the applicable law
    (presumably Howard) shows that Long cannot be retried, any claim that double jeopardy bars the
    appeal is waived and, even if this court reaches the merits of the issue despite the waiver,
    application of the relevant law shows there is no bar to the appeal. Even assuming the State’s
    assertions in this regard are correct, these arguments fail to address what we perceive to be the
    real issue in this case--whether, where the practical effect of a reversal or an affirmance by this
    2
    Court is the same, the issue is moot. In other words, the State focuses solely on whether double
    jeopardy itself precludes this appeal. However, even if the State is correct in its assertion that the
    appeal itself is not barred by double jeopardy, 1 the salient issue involves the combination of the
    double jeopardy principle, with an additional, separate principle applicable to appellate
    law--namely, the doctrine of mootness. See James A. Strazzella, The Relationship of Double
    Jeopardy to Prosecution Appeals, NOTRE DAME L. REV., Nov. 1997, at 1, 5. In this sense,
    double jeopardy is only relevant in our analysis to the extent that it precludes retrial of Long at
    the trial court level, with the key issue being whether the fact that Long cannot be retried on the
    charge renders the appeal moot.
    Under the mootness doctrine:
    This Court may dismiss an appeal when it appears that the case involves only a
    moot question. A case becomes moot when the issues presented are no longer
    live or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome. A case is moot
    if it presents no justiciable controversy and a judicial determination will have no
    practical effect upon the outcome.
    State v. Manzanares, 
    152 Idaho 410
    , 419, 
    272 P.3d 382
    , 391 (2012) (quoting Goodson v. Nez
    Perce Cnty. Bd. of Cnty. Comm'rs, 
    133 Idaho 851
    , 853, 
    993 P.2d 614
    , 616 (2000)). See also
    State v. Manley, 
    142 Idaho 338
    , 343, 
    127 P.3d 954
    , 959 (2005). There are three exceptions:
    (1) when there is the possibility of collateral legal consequences imposed on the
    person raising the issue; (2) when the challenged conduct is likely to evade
    judicial review and thus is capable of repetition; and (3) when an otherwise moot
    issue raises concerns of substantial public interest.
    Koch v. Canyon Cnty., 
    145 Idaho 158
    , 163, 
    177 P.3d 372
    , 377 (2008) (quoting Ameritel Inns,
    Inc. v. Greater Boise Auditorium Dist., 
    141 Idaho 849
    , 851-52, 
    119 P.3d 624
    , 626-27 (2005)).
    See also State v. Hoyle, 
    140 Idaho 679
    , 682, 
    99 P.3d 1069
    , 1072 (2004). Here, it is clear that no
    matter our decision on the merits of this case, Long could not be be retried on the charge, and
    therefore, any decision on the merits of the issues on appeal would have no practical effect.
    Thus, we conclude the issue is moot and proceed to an inquiry as to whether we should
    nevertheless address the substantive issues advanced by the parties.
    1
    Indeed, the applicability of double jeopardy to appellate proceedings is suspect. See
    James A. Strazzella, The Relationship of Double Jeopardy to Prosecution Appeals, NOTRE DAME
    L. REV., Nov. 1997, at 1, 2-3 (noting the appeal itself does not subject a defendant to a “second
    jeopardy”).
    3
    Idaho appellate courts have often declined to address the merits of an issue where the
    practical effect of the appellate opinion is merely advisory. Recently in Manzanares, 
    152 Idaho 410
    , 
    272 P.3d 382
    , Manzanares was charged with two felonies under Idaho’s Criminal Gang
    Enforcement Act: one alleging she had recruited a criminal gang member and the other alleging
    she had supplied a firearm to a gang member. In exchange for dismissal of the firearm charge,
    she pled guilty to the recruiting charge. On appeal, however, she challenged the constitutionality
    of both provisions. She contended the appeal regarding the firearm portion of the statute was not
    moot because if the Supreme Court was to hold in her favor on one of the issues related to the
    recruiting charge, she would be able to withdraw her guilty plea, in which case the State would
    be free to refile the firearm charge. While acknowledging the State could potentially refile the
    firearm charge, the Supreme Court concluded the firearm charge issues were moot and declined
    to consider them because any rulings on those issues would have no practical effect on the
    instant appeal and would constitute an impermissible advisory opinion. Id. at 419, 272 P.3d at
    391. The Court also rejected Manzanares’ argument that she had specifically reserved the right
    to appeal the firearm charge issues in her conditional plea agreement, holding that parties cannot
    agree to confer jurisdiction on a court, and therefore, even if the conditional plea agreement
    purported to reserve the issues for appeal, the Court was nevertheless without jurisdiction to
    consider the issues. Id. See also State v. Barclay, 
    149 Idaho 6
    , 9, 
    232 P.3d 327
    , 330 (2010) (“In
    effect, the State is asking this Court to issue an advisory opinion in order to avoid the issue in
    future cases; an exercise this Court will not undertake.”); State v. Hoffman, 
    104 Idaho 510
    , 512,
    
    660 P.2d 1353
    , 1355 (1983) (“Furthermore, the defendant has now been acquitted by reason of
    mental disease or defect of the charges contained in the information, thus rendering this matter
    moot.”). Cf. State v. Shelton, 
    692 N.E.2d 947
    , 949 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (noting that where a
    defendant has been acquitted, while the issue addressed on appeal is moot, the court would
    nonetheless address it pursuant to state statute allowing the court to address such issues “to
    provide guidance to the trial courts in future cases”); State v. Stewart, 
    763 P.2d 572
    , 576 (Kan.
    1988) (implicitly recognizing that such an appeal is moot, but noting that these appeals are
    specifically allowed by state statute to address a “question of statewide interest, the answer to
    which is essential to the just administration of criminal law”).
    On the other hand, the Idaho Supreme Court has addressed some moot issues, even where
    no exception to the mootness doctrine applied. In Howard, 150 Idaho at 475, 248 P.3d at 723,
    4
    the trial court dismissed the defendant’s felony DUI enhancement after finding that a previous
    judgment from California could not be given full faith and credit. When the State appealed,
    Howard argued the appeal should be dismissed because it (1) violated the double jeopardy
    clause, (2) was prohibited by the appellate rules, and (3) was moot.          Id.   However, even
    recognizing that Howard could not be retried, but without discussing whether the issue was
    moot, the Supreme Court proceeded to address the merits of the evidentiary issue, finding the
    district court had erred in excluding the evidence. Id. at 482, 248 P.3d at 733. Similarly, in State
    v. Huggins, 
    105 Idaho 43
    , 44, 
    665 P.2d 1053
    , 1054 (1983), the Supreme Court considered an
    appeal from this Court’s decision affirming a judgment of acquittal of a defendant charged with
    assault with intent to rape. The Court noted that the sole issue presented was whether, under the
    circumstances of that case, the State bore the burden of proving the absence of a marriage status
    between the victim and the defendant, and stated that it had granted review since the question
    was one of first impression in Idaho. While reversing, the Court noted that this Court had held
    the State was barred under double jeopardy principles from retrying the defendant and, since the
    State did not raise that ruling as error, the State was foreclosed from reprosecuting the defendant.
    Thus, the Court surmised, “In a sense, our opinion today is advisory,” id., but went on to address
    the issue. See also State v. Alanis, 
    109 Idaho 884
    , 887, 
    712 P.2d 585
    , 588 (1985) (proceeding to
    address the merits of the grant of the motion to suppress despite holding that the judgment of
    acquittal, granted after the motion to suppress was granted, could not be appealed).
    It is apparent from these cases that our Supreme Court has both issued, as well as
    declined to issue, advisory opinions largely without articulating its basis for doing so. Since we
    can ascertain no basis for this Court to issue such an advisory opinion, and where neither party
    has provided a basis for application of an exception to the mootness doctrine, we will not address
    the merits on appeal. The appeal from the district court’s intermediate appellate order reversing
    the judgment of acquittal is dismissed.
    Chief Judge GRATTON and Judge MELANSON CONCUR.
    5