State of Iowa v. Joseph D. Ceretti ( 2014 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 13-1573
    Filed November 26, 2014
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    JOSEPH D. CERETTI,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Glenn E. Pille, Judge.
    Joseph Ceretti appeals following his pleas of guilty to attempt to commit
    homicide, voluntary manslaughter, and willful injury causing serious injury.
    AFFIRMED.
    Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Melinda J. Nye, Assistant
    Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Darrel Mullins, Assistant Attorney
    General, John P. Sarcone, County Attorney, and Jaki M. Livingston, Assistant
    County Attorney, for appellee.
    Heard by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and Potterfield, JJ.
    2
    POTTERFIELD, J.
    Joseph Ceretti appeals following his pleas of guilty to attempt to commit
    murder, voluntary manslaughter, and willful injury causing serious injury, and the
    consecutive sentences imposed. He contends the three convictions should have
    merged.    Ceretti’s claims are based upon the premise that an element of
    voluntary manslaughter is the specific intent to kill.        Because voluntary
    manslaughter does not include the element of a specific intent to kill, the
    defendant’s merger claims fail, and we affirm.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    According to the minutes of testimony, sometime after midnight on
    November 26, 2012, Loretta Atwood and her daughter discovered Eric Naylor
    bleeding in the street near East 17th and Walnut in Des Moines, Iowa. They
    stopped to help and determined he was still alive but could not speak. Several
    other people in the area came over to help and called 911. Atwood and her
    daughter told police that right before they found Naylor, they saw a man running
    away from the scene.
    Naylor suffered “stab wounds to the left upper chest just below the nipple
    and to the left back.” Although medics attended to him, Naylor died on the
    scene. Over the next few days, police investigation revealed that Naylor had
    been with three others on the night of November 25 to 26, including his
    roommate David Tumea, Joseph Ceretti, and another acquaintance, Joseph
    Loterbouer Jr. Earlier in the evening, Ceretti and Loterbouer came to Naylor’s
    house. Ceretti and Naylor had a disagreement about whether Ceretti had taken
    Naylor’s wallet. They spoke privately, and then Naylor told his girlfriend he was
    3
    going to get some money to buy marijuana. The four men left at the same time—
    Tumea and Naylor in Tumea’s car, and Ceretti and Loterbouer in Loterbouer’s
    truck. Tumea told police that they made a few stops, and finally Naylor got out of
    his car near East 16th and Walnut. Tumea left the area, and when he returned
    he heard people talking about a “CPR in progress.” He saw police and decided
    to drive home. Once there he told Naylor’s girlfriend that he thought Naylor might
    be hurt.
    Loterbouer told police the four of them drove to the east side to visit
    Naylor’s friend and that he did not know anything about a drug deal. He said that
    he dropped Ceretti off in the area of East 17th and Walnut around 12:30 a.m. and
    then left to take his child to his girlfriend. When he returned, he found Ceretti and
    drove him to Susan Bishop’s house, where they stayed the night. He told police
    that he did not witness a stabbing but that he believed Ceretti killed Naylor. He
    said he had overheard Ceretti tell someone on the phone that Naylor attacked
    him with a chain and made a reference about needing a new knife “in case I get
    in the same predicament that I got into the other night.”
    Brandon Farrell told police that he lives near where Naylor was found and
    that on the night at issue, he looked out his kitchen window and saw two men in
    the road, a smaller one and a bigger one who was staggering around.               He
    assumed the bigger man was intoxicated. When he looked out again, he saw the
    same two men, but the bigger one was lying on the ground bleeding.
    Susan Bishop told police that Ceretti stayed at her house on November
    26, 2012. When police searched her trash cans, they found bloody clothes.
    Another friend of Ceretti told police that when he heard about Naylor’s death, he
    4
    asked Ceretti if he had heard about it and Ceretti changed the subject quickly,
    causing him to speculate that Ceretti was involved somehow.
    Ceretti was arrested.     When questioned by police, he made several
    references to self-defense, but police ceased further questioning because Ceretti
    requested an attorney.     Police seized his shoes when he was booked and
    observed what looked like blood on them.
    The State charged Ceretti with first-degree murder in Naylor’s stabbing
    death. A conviction of first-degree murder carries a mandatory sentence of life
    without the possibility of parole. Ceretti and the State reached a plea agreement.
    Ceretti agreed to plead guilty to an amended trial information charging him with
    three counts—attempt to commit murder, in violation of Iowa Code section
    707.11 (2011); voluntary manslaughter, in violation of section 707.4; and willful
    injury causing serious injury, in violation of section 708.4(1)—and that the
    sentences would be served consecutively for a term of imprisonment not to
    exceed forty-five years.
    At the plea proceeding, to support the voluntary manslaughter plea,
    Ceretti admitted that on November 26, 2012, he was in an altercation with Eric
    Naylor. During the altercation he pulled out a knife and intentionally stabbed
    Naylor due to serious provocation and a sudden passion, and as a result of that
    stab wound, Naylor died.
    5
    In support of the willful injury plea, Ceretti admitted that on November 26,
    2012, he was in an altercation with Naylor and he intentionally stabbed Naylor.1
    As a result of being stabbed, Naylor suffered a serious injury. The State clarified
    with Ceretti that when he stabbed Naylor, he “intended to at least cause him a
    serious injury.”
    With respect to the charge of attempt to commit murder, Ceretti entered
    an Alford plea.2 The district court stated it had reviewed the minutes of testimony
    and determined a factual basis existed for the plea of guilty to the charge.
    The court accepted Ceretti’s pleas after finding they were knowingly and
    voluntarily entered, and that a factual basis existed for each charge, relying on
    the defendant’s statements at the hearing and the contents of the minutes of
    testimony. Ceretti does not challenge the factual bases on this appeal.
    Ceretti waived his time for sentencing, his right to file a motion in arrest of
    judgment, and the use of a presentence investigation report. Though not bound
    by the plea agreement, the district court imposed consecutive sentences of
    twenty-five years for attempt to commit murder, ten years for voluntary
    manslaughter, and ten years for willful injury.
    On appeal, Ceretti contends all three of his convictions are based on the
    same acts of stabbing and killing Naylor. He argues that because it is impossible
    to commit voluntary manslaughter without also committing attempt to commit
    murder, and because willful injury causing serious injury is a lesser-included
    1
    In State v. Walker, 
    610 N.W.2d 524
    , 526-27 (Iowa 2000), the defendant argued that
    willful injury is a lesser-included offense to voluntary manslaughter. The court did not
    hold the two offenses merge but rather decided the case on another issue.
    2
    An Alford plea allows a defendant to consent to the imposition of a sentence without
    admitting to participating in the crime. North Carolina v. Alford, 
    400 U.S. 25
    , 37 (1970).
    6
    offense of voluntary manslaughter, that the entry of judgment upon all three
    violates his right not to be subjected to double jeopardy and the convictions and
    sentences should merge.3         He contends his convictions and sentences for
    attempted murder and willful injury should be reversed and this case remanded
    for resentencing on the voluntary manslaughter conviction only.
    II. Scope and Standard of Review.
    Claims of an illegal sentence may be raised at any time; Ceretti’s pleas of
    guilty in the district court do not prevent him from claiming on appeal that his
    sentences violate Iowa’s merger statute. See State v. Halliburton, 
    539 N.W.2d 339
    , 343 (Iowa 1995). We review a claim of an illegal sentence for correction of
    errors of law. State v. Hoeck, 
    843 N.W.2d 67
    , 70 (Iowa 2014). To the extent
    Ceretti raises a constitutional claim, our review is de novo. State v. Oliver, 
    812 N.W.2d 636
    , 639 (Iowa 2012).
    III. Discussion.
    Ceretti maintains that attempt to commit murder4 is a lesser-included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter. He also contends willful injury is a lesser-
    included offense of voluntary manslaughter.          He argues the convictions and
    sentences should merge into the voluntary manslaughter conviction. The State
    argues the defendant should not be allowed to vacate the sentences he
    affirmatively sought below, contending Ceretti waived the double jeopardy and
    3
    Ceretti argues that if we find error was not properly preserved with respect to his
    double jeopardy claim, we should review the issue as one of ineffective assistance of
    counsel.
    4
    While the statutory heading given to the offense by the Code Editor is “attempt to
    commit murder,” the State notes the offense is attempt to commit homicide because the
    offense lacks the element of malice aforethought. See State v. Kehoe, 
    804 N.W.2d 302
    ,
    312 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011) (observing that the label is “no part of the statutory law of the
    State”).
    7
    merger challenges by pleading guilty. The State asks that if we set aside the
    plea agreement because it violates merger principles, we should restore the
    parties to their original positions.
    Iowa Code section 701.9—our merger statute—provides that “[n]o person
    shall be convicted of a public offense which is necessarily included in another
    public offense of which the person is convicted.”5 This provision “codified the
    double jeopardy protection against cumulative punishment.” State v. Anderson,
    
    565 N.W.2d 340
    , 344 (Iowa 1997). The purpose of the merger statute is to
    prevent a court from imposing a greater punishment than that contemplated by
    the legislature. State v. Lambert, 
    612 N.W.2d 810
    , 815 (Iowa 2000).
    To ascertain legislative intent, the court utilizes the legal elements test for
    lesser-included offenses. Halliburton, 
    539 N.W.2d at 344
    . The test to “determine
    whether a crime is a lesser included offense of a greater crime generally inquires
    ‘whether the greater offense cannot be committed without also committing all
    elements of the lesser offense.’” State v. Miller, 
    841 N.W.2d 583
    , 587-88 (Iowa
    2014) (citation omitted); see also State v. Caquelin, 
    702 N.W.2d 510
    , 511 (Iowa
    Ct. App. 2005) (noting that in comparing the elements of both offenses, we must
    “determine if the greater can be committed without also committing the lesser”).
    If the greater offense cannot be committed without also committing all elements
    of the lesser, the lesser offense will merge with the greater—absent legislative
    intent to impose multiple punishments for a sole transgression. Halliburton, 
    539 N.W.2d at 344
    .
    5
    If a defendant is found guilty of two offenses, but one is an included offense of the
    other, “the court shall enter judgment of guilty of the greater of the offenses only.” 
    Iowa Code § 701.9
    .
    8
    To determine what elements comprise a particular offense, the court looks
    to the statute defining the offense. State v. Wales, 
    325 N.W.2d 87
    , 88 (Iowa
    1982) (“The elements of an offense are determined by the statute defining it
    rather than by the charge or the evidence.”). We compare the statutory elements
    of the challenged crimes as an aid in applying the impossibility test (i.e., the
    “strict statutory-elements approach”).6 See Miller, 841 N.W.2d at 588; State v.
    Jeffries, 
    430 N.W.2d 728
    , 736 (Iowa 1988). A “lesser offense must be composed
    solely of some but not all elements of the greater offense.” State v. Jackson, 
    422 N.W.2d 475
    , 478 (Iowa 1988) (rejecting claim that solicitation to commit murder
    was lesser included offense of attempt to commit murder).
    Iowa Code section 707.4(1) provides:
    A person commits voluntary manslaughter when that person
    causes the death of another person, under circumstances which
    would otherwise be murder, if the person causing the death acts
    solely as the result of sudden, violent, and irresistible passion
    resulting from serious provocation sufficient to excite such passion
    in a person and there is not an interval between the provocation
    and the killing in which a person of ordinary reason and
    temperament would regain his or her control and suppress the
    impulse to kill.
    In support of the plea of guilty to voluntary manslaughter, Ceretti admitted
    he was in an altercation with Eric Naylor, during which he pulled out a knife and
    intentionally stabbed Naylor due to serious provocation and a sudden passion,
    and as a result of that stab wound, Naylor died.
    6
    This test is coextensive with the United States Supreme Court’s test in Blockburger v.
    United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    , 304 (1932), for determining whether two offenses are the
    same for constitutional purposes. State v. Aguiar–Corona, 
    508 N.W.2d 698
    , 701–02
    (Iowa 1993).
    9
    At the same proceeding, Ceretti entered an Alford plea to the offense of
    attempt to commit murder, which is defined by section 707.11:
    A person commits a class “B” felony when, with the intent to
    cause the death of another person and not under circumstances
    which would justify the person’s actions, the person does any act
    by which the person expects to set in motion a force or chain of
    events which will cause or result in the death of the other person.
    Finally, Ceretti pled guilty to willful injury causing serious injury, stating he
    was in an altercation with Naylor and he intentionally stabbed Naylor, intending to
    cause him a serious injury. See 
    Iowa Code § 708.4
     (“Any person who does an
    act which is not justified and which is intended to cause serious injury to another
    commits . . . (1) A class “C” felony, if the person causes serious injury to
    another.”).
    Here, we compare the elements of the three offenses:
    Attempt to commit murder7       Voluntary manslaughter8         Willful injury9
    An overt act                    An act                          An act
    Specific intent to cause        Person acts solely as the       Intent to cause
    the death of another            result of sudden, violent, or   serious injury
    irresistible passion
    resulting from serious
    provocation
    Death results                   Serious injury results
    Ceretti’s claims are based upon the premise that an element of voluntary
    manslaughter is the intent to kill. Certetti argues that because the intent to kill is
    7
    
    Iowa Code § 707.11
     (a class “B” felony); see State v. Young, 
    686 N.W.2d 182
    , 185
    (Iowa 2004) (noting the statute defines the type of overt act required to be one “by which
    the person expects to set in motion a force or chain of events which will cause or result
    in the death of the other person” and concluding “‘will cause’ refers to the actor’s
    expectation of the consequences . . . not the probability of the act’s success”).
    8
    
    Iowa Code § 707.4
    (1) (a class “C” felony). Statutorily, voluntary manslaughter is an
    included offense of first or second degree murder. 
    Id.
     § 707.4(3)
    9
    
    Iowa Code § 708.4
     (a class “C” felony if the person causes serious injury, see 
    id.
    § 708.4(1)). Willful injury is not a lesser-included offense of attempted murder because
    willful injury requires proof of a serious injury. State v. Clarke, 
    475 N.W.2d 193
    , 195-96
    (Iowa 1991).
    10
    an   element    of   voluntary    manslaughter,     one    cannot    commit    voluntary
    manslaughter without also having committed an attempt to commit murder—
    which has as an element the intent to cause the death of another, and one
    cannot intend to cause the death of another without necessarily intending to
    cause serious injury.10
    Ceretti finds support for his premise in State v. Hellwege, 
    294 N.W.2d 689
    (Iowa 1980), a case in which our supreme court was required to determine that
    voluntary manslaughter was a forcible felony as that term is defined by statute.
    The definition of “forcible felony” includes “any felonious assault [or] murder.”
    
    Iowa Code § 702.11
    . The narrow question presented in the case was “whether
    voluntary manslaughter necessarily includes an assault.” Hellwege, 
    294 N.W.2d at 690
    . The court concluded it did, explaining:
    Although no intent element is specified, a requirement of
    intent to kill may be inferred from the language of section 707.4.
    “707.4 does not state that its application should be confined to
    intentional killings, but its references to sudden, violent and
    irresistible passion, and the impulse to kill, inevitably lead to that
    conclusion.” J. Yeager & R. Carlson, 4 Iowa Practice: Criminal Law
    and Procedure § 145 (1979).
    Assault is defined in section 708.1 in part as “without
    justification” doing “(a)ny act which is intended to cause pain or
    injury to . . . another, coupled with the apparent ability to execute
    the act.” We are satisfied that an individual cannot intentionally kill
    someone, even though instigated by the heat of passion, without
    10
    Here, Ceretti cites State v. Rhode, 
    503 N.W.2d 27
    , 40 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993), where we
    stated: “We construe death to be the most serious of injuries and in no way to be
    exclusive of serious injury.”
    He also cites State v. Mapp, 
    585 N.W.2d 746
    , 749 (Iowa 1998), where the
    supreme court concluded conspiracy to commit willful injury merged with conspiracy to
    commit first-degree murder, stating, “It seems quite apparent that a showing of the
    elements of willful and premeditated murder necessarily includes the elements of willful
    injury.” See also Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.22(3) (allowing the jury to find the defendant guilty
    of “any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which the
    defendant is charged”). But these citations are of no import unless we agree with the
    premise that voluntary manslaughter has as an element the intent to kill.
    11
    also doing an act intended to cause injury accompanied by the
    apparent ability to execute the injurious act.
    Id. at 691. Ceretti argues that because voluntary manslaughter has an inferred
    intent to kill, it shares that element with attempt to commit murder, and thus, the
    offenses merge.
    We acknowledge the Hellwege language that “a requirement of intent to
    kill may be inferred.” However, the intent to kill is not a statutory element of the
    offense.11   Indeed, the statute defines an act that negates any intent to kill.
    Rather, the statutory elements of the offense are (1) an act, (2) which is the result
    of sudden, violent, and irresistible passion resulting from serious provocation,
    and (3) the victim died as a result of that act.          See Uniform Criminal Jury
    instruction 700.15.12
    Because attempt to commit murder and willful injury each has an element
    different from voluntary manslaughter, the offenses do not merge.
    Ceretti argues the factual bases established during the plea proceeding
    and the minutes of testimony “do not indicate Ceretti did anything other than stab
    11
    The statute requires that there not be sufficient time “in which a person of ordinary
    reason and temperament would regain his or her control and suppress the impulse to
    kill,” 
    Iowa Code § 707.4
    , and recent case law discusses what interval is adequate to
    “suppress the impulse to kill.” See State v. Thompson, 
    836 N.W.2d 470
    , 477 (Iowa
    2013) (emphasis added) (noting voluntary manslaughter passes the “legal test” to be
    considered a lesser offense of first- and second-degree murder because Iowa Code
    section 707.4 defines it as such).
    12
    Instruction 700.14 provides:
    1. On or about _____ day of ____________, [20]___, the
    defendant intentionally [shot] [struck] [appropriate word or phrase]
    (victim).
    2. (Victim) died as a result of being [shot] [struck] [appropriate
    word or phrase].
    3. The [shooting] [striking] [appropriate word or phrase] was done
    solely by reason of sudden, violent and irresistible passion resulting from
    serious provocation.
    12
    Naylor or that Naylor suffered any injuries in addition to the stab wounds that
    caused his death.” But he does not challenge that a factual basis for each
    offense has been shown. His argument is really one of overlapping proof, which
    we find unconvincing because the test compares the statutory definitions of each
    offense rather than the facts presented in a particular case. See Clarke, 
    475 N.W.2d at 195
     (“It is this “overlap in the proof” that is really at the heart of
    defendant’s argument.”); State v. Clark, No. 10-1767 
    2011 WL 6076540
    , at *4
    (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 7, 2011) (rejecting defendant’s argument because “the test
    compares the statutory definitions of each offense rather than the facts presented
    in a particular case”).
    Because voluntary manslaughter does not include the element of a
    specific intent to kill, the defendant’s merger claims fail. We affirm.
    AFFIRMED.