State v. C.L. ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                        11/16/2021
    DA 20-0155
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2021 MT 294
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    C.L.,
    A Youth.
    APPEAL FROM:      District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Cascade, Cause No. BDJ-18-048
    Honorable Elizabeth A. Best, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Chad Wright, Appellate Defender, Jeavon Lang, Assistant Appellate
    Defender, Helena, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Michael P. Dougherty,
    Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Joshua Racki, Cascade County Attorney, Valerie M. Winfield, Deputy
    County Attorney, Great Falls, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: September 29, 2021
    Decided: November 16, 2021
    Filed:
    'i lf-6tA.-if
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     Appellant C.L., a youth, appeals a December 24, 2019 order of the Montana Eighth
    Judicial District Court, Cascade County (Youth Court), which denied C.L.’s motion to
    dismiss the State’s July 2, 2019 petition to revoke C.L.’s probation. The Youth Court later
    relied on the findings from its December 24, 2019 order to grant two dispositional orders:
    a January 16, 2020 dispositional order—which granted the State’s July 2, 2019 petition to
    revoke C.L.’s probation and imposed a suspended sentence to the Montana Department of
    Corrections (DOC) for placement in a secure juvenile facility—and the Youth Court’s
    subsequent July 30, 2020 dispositional order—which granted a second February 27, 2020
    petition by the State to revoke C.L.’s probation and committed C.L. to Pine Hills Youth
    Correctional Facility (Pine Hills). As a result, C.L.’s consolidated appeal requests these
    two dispositional orders be vacated.      We reverse, vacating the Youth Court’s two
    dispositional orders and remanding this matter for an entry of order dismissing the State’s
    July 2, 2019 and February 27, 2020 petitions to revoke C.L.’s probation.
    ¶2     C.L.’s consolidated appeal presents the following single issue for review:
    Did the Youth Court err when it revoked C.L.’s probation under a consent decree
    without C.L.’s Youth Court Petition having been reinstated?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶3     On August 1, 2018, the State filed a youth court petition under § 41-5-1402, MCA,
    accusing then-13-year-old C.L. of one count of felony criminal mischief. The petition
    alleged that C.L. had broken several picture windows at a residence in Great Falls,
    Montana. C.L. denied committing the offense and the case was initially set for a jury trial.
    2
    However, C.L. and the State ultimately entered a consent decree under § 41-5-1501, MCA,
    which provided, among other conditions, that C.L. would obey all State and local laws,
    attend regular probation appointments, refrain from using drugs or alcohol, and be subject
    to random drug testing and searches. C.L. was to be on probation for one year.
    ¶4     On December 6, 2018, the Youth Court held a hearing on the consent decree and
    asked C.L. to “change [his] plea to true in order to finish up [and] . . . close the loop with
    this consent decree.” In response, C.L. entered an admission of “true” to the State’s
    allegations. On December 7, 2018, the Youth Court issued an order which approved the
    parties’ consent decree, ordered that the youth court petition against C.L. be “suspended,”
    and asserted that C.L. “shall be subject to the terms of the consent decree, pursuant to § 45-
    5-1501(1)(a), MCA.”
    ¶5     On July 2, 2019, the State filed a petition to revoke C.L.’s probation (July 2019
    petition), alleging that C.L. had consumed drugs and alcohol and had been cited for
    misdemeanor theft of alcohol. The State’s July 2019 petition requested that C.L. be
    committed to Pine Hills. Notably, the State’s petition to revoke C.L.’s probation did not
    seek to reinstate the State’s previous youth court petition against C.L. Instead, the State’s
    July 2019 petition requested that the Youth Court “proceed with disposition” under § 41-5-
    1512, MCA (titled “[d]isposition of youth in need of intervention or youth who violate
    consent adjustments”), and § 41-5-1513, MCA (titled “disposition—delinquent youth []”).
    ¶6     On December 2, 2019, C.L. filed a motion to dismiss the State’s petition, arguing
    that the State had not followed the proper procedure under the Montana Youth Court Act.
    Specifically, C.L. maintained that under the terms of § 41-5-1431(1), MCA (titled
    3
    “[p]robation revocation proceeding[s]”), probation revocation proceedings may only be
    initiated for youths that have been adjudicated as a “delinquent youth” or adjudicated as a
    “youth in need of intervention.” Thus, because C.L. had entered an alternative disposition
    in lieu of adjudication—i.e., a consent decree—C.L. claimed that he was not an
    “adjudicated” youth and, therefore, probation revocation proceedings could not be initiated
    under § 41-5-1431, MCA. Instead, C.L. contended that, under the terms of § 41-5-1501(4),
    MCA (governing “[c]onsent decree[s] with petition[s]”), the correct procedure was for the
    State to reinstate the suspended youth court petition in response to C.L.’s alleged failures
    to comply with the consent decree.
    ¶7     The State opposed C.L.’s motion to dismiss, arguing a consent decree was akin to a
    deferred imposition of sentence in criminal cases involving adults. The State further
    argued that C.L. had admitted to the allegation of felony criminal mischief during the
    parties’ consent decree hearing and, thus, the Youth Court had the authority to impose a
    disposition when the terms of the consent decree were violated. However, the State
    acknowledged that C.L. had entered a consent decree under § 41-5-1501, MCA, and that
    its petition to revoke C.L.’s probation was filed under § 41-5-1431, MCA.
    ¶8     On December 24, 2019, the Youth Court issued an order denying C.L.’s motion to
    dismiss. The Youth Court’s order effectively adopted the State’s argument and held that
    C.L.’s admission of “true” at the consent decree hearing constituted a “change of plea”—
    a term typically reserved for adult criminal proceedings.        Due to C.L.’s supposed
    “change of plea,” the Youth Court reasoned that it had “adjudicated [C.L.’s] guilt in the
    same way that it does in adult proceedings before it imposes a deferred imposition of
    4
    sentence,” and that “[a]t that point, the proceedings for disposition were suspended pending
    a determination that [C.L.] had successfully completed the period of the consent decree.”
    (Emphasis added.) As a result, the Youth Court claimed it had the authority to revoke
    C.L.’s probation. The Youth Court did not address C.L.’s argument that § 41-5-1501(4),
    MCA (“[c]onsent decree with petition”), provides the correct procedure that the State is
    obligated to follow when a youth violates the terms of his consent decree. Instead, the
    Youth Court’s order relied upon In re Appeal of Cascade Cnty. Dist. Ct., 
    2009 MT 355
    , ¶¶
    16-17, 
    353 Mont. 194
    , 
    219 P.3d 1255
    . However, Cascade Cnty. dealt with the statutory
    procedures the State may resort to when a youth violates the terms of a “consent
    adjustment” under § 41-5-1302, MCA—a similar, but statutorily distinct, procedure from
    that of a “consent decree” under § 41-5-1501, MCA.
    ¶9     On January 9, 2020, the Youth Court held an evidentiary hearing on the State’s July
    2019 petition to revoke C.L.’s probation.        Again, C.L. objected that the State’s
    recommended sentence of Pine Hills was not available as a possible disposition under a
    consent decree. However, the Youth Court denied C.L.’s objection and stated it did not
    “want to go around that horn again.”
    ¶10    On January 16, 2020, the Youth Court issued a dispositional order finding that C.L.
    had violated the terms of his probation. The Youth Court concluded that C.L. was both a
    “delinquent [y]outh” and “serious juvenile offender” under the definitions provided in §
    41-5-103, MCA (the definitional section of the Youth Court Act). The Youth Court’s order
    committed C.L. “to the Montana Department of Corrections until age [] 18 or sooner
    released, for placement in a secure state Youth correctional facility[.]” Notably, the Youth
    5
    Court ordered this commitment “pursuant to §§ 41-5-1512(1)(c) and 41-5-1513(1)(b),
    MCA”—two statutes which, respectively, prescribe the procedures available to a youth
    court when a youth violates a “consent adjustment” and when a youth is formally
    adjudicated as a “delinquent youth.” C.L. appealed this order on March 13, 2020, and
    asked the Youth Court to stay its imposition, which it did.
    ¶11    On February 27, 2020, the State filed a second petition to revoke C.L.’s probation
    (February 2020 petition), alleging C.L. had tested positive for marijuana and that the Great
    Falls Police Department found marijuana and drug paraphernalia during a search of C.L.’s
    residence. After conducting an evidentiary hearing on July 30, 2020, the Youth Court
    issued a dispositional order on that same date which revoked C.L.’s probation and
    committed C.L. to Pine Hills “until age [] 18, or sooner released.” The record reflects that,
    at the time of C.L.’s commitment to Pine Hills in July of 2020, the formal petition against
    C.L. had never been reinstated and C.L. had never received an adjudication on the merits
    of the charge of criminal mischief.
    ¶12    On August 25, 2020, C.L. appealed the Youth Court’s July 2020 dispositional order.
    As with its previous January 2020 dispositional order, the Youth Court stayed its
    imposition. On January 11, 2021, this Court consolidated C.L.’s two appeals. C.L.’s single
    argument in this consolidated appeal is that the Youth Court erred when it denied C.L.’s
    motion to dismiss because the youth court petition against C.L. was never reinstated, as
    required by the Youth Court Act. C.L. further notes that, should this Court decide that the
    Youth Court erred in denying C.L.’s motion to dismiss, both the Youth Court’s January
    2020 dispositional order and the Youth Court’s July 2020 dispositional order must be
    6
    vacated on the grounds that the Youth Court would not have had the proper statutory
    authority to issue either of these orders.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶13    “This Court reviews a youth court’s interpretation and application of the
    Youth Court Act for correctness.” Cascade Cnty., ¶ 10 (citing In re K.D.K., 
    2006 MT 187
    ,
    ¶ 15, 
    333 Mont. 100
    , 
    141 P.3d 1212
    ). See also In re T.H., 
    2005 MT 237
    , ¶ 35, 
    328 Mont. 428
    , 
    121 P.3d 541
     (citations omitted). When construing an act of the legislature, that act
    must be read as a whole, and no term should be isolated from the context of the statute.
    Eldorado Coop Canal Co. v. Hoge, 
    2016 MT 145
    , ¶ 18, 
    383 Mont. 523
    , 
    373 P.3d 836
    . The
    intent of the Legislature is to be determined from the plain language of the statute. In re
    J.J., 
    2018 MT 184
    , ¶ 13, 
    392 Mont. 192
    , 
    422 P.3d 699
    . If the intent can be determined
    from the plain language of the statute, a court may not go further and apply any other means
    of interpretation. In re J.J., ¶ 13 (citations omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶14 Did the Youth Court err when it revoked C.L.’s probation under a consent decree
    without C.L.’s Youth Court Petition having been reinstated?
    ¶15    C.L. argues that C.L. and the State were operating under a § 41-5-1501, MCA,
    “consent decree” and that the State was therefore subject to the procedures prescribed in §
    41-5-1501(4), MCA. Due to the Youth Court’s misinterpretation of the Youth Court Act,
    C.L. contends that the Youth Court did not have the authority to designate C.L. as a
    “delinquent youth” or commit him to Pine Hills. The State maintains that C.L.’s previous
    7
    admission to criminal mischief at the consent decree hearing authorized the Youth Court
    to impose its disposition.
    ¶16    In general, all youths facing criminal accusations in Montana must be adjudicated
    subject to the Youth Court Act, which is codified in Title 41, chapter 5, MCA. The Youth
    Court Act creates a statutory scheme separate from that of adult criminal prosecutions
    under Title 46, MCA, due to the unique goals of the juvenile justice system. When the
    language of the Youth Court Act is clear and unambiguous, youth courts must adhere to
    the procedures specifically provided in the Act’s text. See In re J.A., 
    2011 MT 132
    , ¶ 14,
    
    361 Mont. 16
    , 
    255 P.3d 150
     (citations omitted).
    ¶17    Under the Youth Court Act, proceedings can be either “formal” or “informal”
    depending on which section of the Montana Code those proceedings are initiated under.
    See § 41-5-1402, MCA (initiation of formal proceedings through a youth court petition); §
    41-5-1302, MCA (initiation of informal proceedings through a “consent adjustment
    without petition”). In an informal proceeding under Title 41, chapter 5, part 13, MCA, no
    formal youth court petition is filed, and a youth may enter a “consent adjustment” with a
    juvenile probation officer. Section 41-5-1302(1), MCA. If a youth violates a consent
    adjustment, the available dispositions for a youth court are provided by § 41-5-1512, MCA.
    ¶18    Conversely, under a “formal proceeding”—which is initiated by the filing of a
    youth court petition—a youth has two options: (1) the youth may proceed to an
    adjudication under § 41-5-1502, MCA, which can be done before a jury, judge, or through
    the youth’s own “valid admission” to the offenses contained in the youth court petition; or
    (2) the youth can enter into a special form of agreement uniquely available to youths known
    8
    as a “consent decree” under § 41-5-1501, MCA. Upon entering a consent decree, § 41-5-
    1501(1)(a), MCA, states that formal proceedings under the petition are “suspended” and
    the youth does not proceed to an adjudication. To enter a consent decree, § 41-5-1501(2),
    MCA, requires a youth to “admit[] guilt . . . and accept responsibility for” the offenses set
    forth in the youth court petition. However, this admission of guilt for the purposes of
    entering a consent decree is a separate and different procedure from admitting to an offense
    in a formal petition under § 41-5-1502(8), MCA, as a § 41-5-1502(8) admission waives the
    youth’s right to a jury trial, while a § 41-5-1501(2) consent decree admission does not.
    ¶19    For an accused youth, the benefits of entering a consent decree are clear. Once a
    consent decree is reached, a youth’s original youth court petition is suspended, and § 41-5-
    1501(5), MCA, further provides that a youth who complies with all the terms of a consent
    decree must have his suspended youth court petition “dismissed with prejudice” at the end
    of the consent decree period. Conversely, if a youth violates the terms of a consent decree,
    the correct procedure that a youth court must follow is provided by § 41-5-1501(4), MCA,
    which states:
    [I]f the youth fails to fulfill the expressed terms and conditions of the consent
    decree, the petition under which the youth was continued under supervision
    may be reinstated in the discretion of the county attorney in consultation with
    probation services. In the event of reinstatement, the proceeding on the
    petition must be continued to conclusion as if the consent decree had never
    been entered.
    (Emphasis added.) A review of the Youth Court Act in its totality establishes that
    reinstatement of the petition under § 41-5-1501(4), MCA, is the sole disposition available
    to the State when a youth violates the terms of a consent decree. Importantly, commitment
    9
    of a youth to the DOC for placement in a youth correctional facility is not immediately
    available to the State when operating under a consent decree; instead, the State must first
    reinstate the petition and then “proceed[] on the petition . . . to conclusion as if the consent
    decree had never been entered.” Section 41-5-1501(4), MCA.
    ¶20    Here, the State was required by § 41-5-1501(4), MCA, to move to reinstate its
    original August 2018 youth court petition against C.L. Instead, upon learning C.L. had
    violated the terms of his consent decree, the State filed a petition to revoke probation under
    § 41-5-1431, MCA, without ever moving to reinstate the original petition. C.L. was correct
    when he objected to the way his case was proceeding and the Youth Court erred in its
    December 2019 order when it denied C.L.’s motion to dismiss.
    ¶21    In particular, the Youth Court’s decision was premised upon two main errors. First,
    -
    the Youth Court incorrectly reasoned that when C.L. entered an admission of “true” at the
    consent decree hearing, this constituted an admission to the formal petition which waived
    C.L.’s right to a jury trial and gave the Youth Court the authority to “adjudicate[] [C.L.’s]
    guilt” and order a DOC commitment. Here, the Youth Court mistakenly confused C.L.’s
    admission of “true”—which is statutorily required to enter into a consent decree under §
    41-5-1501(2), MCA—with that of a formal “valid admission” to the charges contained in
    a youth court petition under § 41-5-1502(8), MCA.
    ¶22    While § 41-5-1501(2), MCA, requires all youths entering a consent decree to
    “admit[] guilt . . . and accept responsibility for” the allegations contained in a youth court
    petition before formal proceedings on that petition are suspended, the youth does not waive
    their right to later deny the offenses in the petition and invoke his right to a jury trial under
    10
    § 41-5-1502(1), MCA, in the event the petition is reinstated.          Conversely, a “valid
    admission” to the offenses under § 41-5-1502(8), MCA, constitutes a waiver of the youth’s
    right to a jury trial, thereby allowing a youth court to adjudicate the youth as a “delinquent
    youth” and commit that youth to the DOC. Here, the Youth Court mistakenly treated C.L.’s
    admission of “true” as a “valid admission” to the felony charges in his youth court petition
    under § 41-5-1502(8), MCA, when the context fully indicates that this was an admission
    for the purposes of entering a consent decree under § 41-5-1501(2), MCA. C.L. made this
    admission at the December 2018 hearing that was specifically called for the purpose of
    approving C.L.’s consent decree and suspending C.L.’s youth court petition. The record
    further reflects that, in asking C.L. to enter this admission, the Youth Court made no
    mention of whether this admission would involve the forfeiture of any of C.L.’s rights as
    an accused youth. As a result, contrary to the Youth Court’s assertion, C.L.’s admission
    of “true” was made under § 41-5-1501(2), MCA, meaning that C.L. retained his right to
    deny the allegations under § 41-5-1502(1), MCA, and to receive a jury trial if formal
    proceedings against him were reinstated.
    ¶23    The Youth Court additionally mischaracterized the proceedings as simply
    “adjudicat[ing] [C.L.’s] guilt in the same way that it does in adult proceedings before it
    imposes a deferred imposition of sentence.” This incorrect analogy led the court to assume
    that formal proceedings suspended by a consent decree are resumed automatically if a
    youth violates the terms of his or her consent decree—even though § 41-5-1501(4), MCA,
    specifically requires a motion by the State to reinstate formal proceedings. The Youth
    Court Act’s express purpose is to provide youth offenders with a separate statutory process
    11
    which reflects the unique treatment of youth offenders versus adult offenders. See In re
    S.M.K.-S.H., 
    2012 MT 281
    , ¶ 28, 
    367 Mont. 176
    , 
    290 P.3d 718
     (recognizing that a youth
    in the youth court system is “not similarly situated [to an adult] with respect to Montana’s
    sentencing laws”).    Indeed, the availability of a “consent decree” is one of several
    procedures unique to the juvenile justice system; as such, youth courts must interpret these
    procedures in accordance with text of the Youth Court Act and avoid interpretive analogies
    with the adult procedures present in Title 46 of the Montana Code. See In re T.M.R., 
    2006 MT 246
    , ¶ 16, 
    334 Mont. 64
    , 
    144 P.3d 809
     (noting that it was “not appropriate” to apply
    Title 46 adult criminal statutes to proceedings under the Youth Court Act unless expressly
    permitted by the Act).
    ¶24    The second main error in the Youth Court’s decision to deny C.L.’s motion to
    dismiss was its reliance on Cascade Cnty. and, by extension, § 41-5-512, MCA. In
    Cascade Cnty., ¶ 16, this Court held that “[b]y permitting the youth court to enforce the
    violation of informal consent adjustments without requiring a petition . . . [,]
    § 41-5-1512, MCA, has a reasonable and rational statutory relation to the express statutory
    purposes of the Youth Court Act.” (Emphasis added.) By relying on this language from
    Cascade Cnty., the Youth Court confused the statute for enforcing violations of a consent
    adjustment, § 41-5-1512, MCA, with the statute for enforcing violations of a consent
    decree, § 41-5-1501(4), MCA. Section 41-5-1512, MCA, which this Court addressed in
    Cascade Cnty., is the Youth Court Act’s exclusive statutory provision for enforcing
    violations of a consent adjustment—an informal proceeding that does not require filing a
    formal petition. Conversely, § 41-5-1501(4), MCA, which Cascade Cnty. does not discuss,
    12
    is the Youth Court Act’s exclusive statutory provision for enforcing violations of a consent
    decree, which involves the suspension of formal proceedings after a formal petition has
    already been filed. The agreement between C.L. and the State, which was approved by the
    Youth Court, is clear that it was approved as a “consent decree” under § 41-5-1501, MCA,
    which suspended the youth court petition that the State had originally filed against C.L.1
    Thus, neither § 41-5-1512, MCA, nor Cascade Cnty. was applicable to C.L.’s case, as a
    consent adjustment is a statutorily distinct procedure from that of a consent decree. Instead,
    the text of § 41-5-1501(4), MCA, governs, and the State was required to move to reinstate
    C.L.’s youth court petition if it wanted the dispositional option of a DOC commitment as
    provided in § 41-5-1513, MCA.
    ¶25    In continuation of this error, in its January and July 2020 dispositional orders, the
    Youth Court again cited its discretion to issue dispositional commitments under
    § 41-5-1512, MCA (titled “disposition of youth in need of intervention or youth who
    violate consent adjustments”), and, furthermore, invoked its authority to commit C.L. to
    the DOC under § 41-5-1513, MCA (titled “disposition—delinquent youth []”). However,
    neither statute was applicable in C.L.’s case. First, although § 41-5-1501(1)(a), MCA,
    requires a consent decree to conform to the “procedures and dispositions specified in
    [§§] 41-5-1302 through 41-5-1304 relating to consent adjustments”—none of which, we
    1
    In addition to the parties’ agreement being titled a “Consent Decree,” clear evidence that the
    parties’ agreement was indeed intended to function as a consent decree under § 41-5-1501, MCA,
    is provided on the final page of the agreement, which quotes the language of § 41-5-1501(4), MCA,
    nearly verbatim, stating that “[i]f the Youth violates any of the conditions or directions of this
    Consent Decree, the County Attorney may, in his discretion reinstate the petition suspended by
    this Decree and proceed against the youth as if this Consent Decree had never been entered.”
    13
    note, provides that a youth may be committed to the DOC for placement at Pine Hills—
    this language only pertains to what may be included in the consent decree and does not
    establish procedures or dispositions that may be imposed when a consent decree is alleged
    to have been violated. Instead, the exclusive mechanism to address alleged violations of a
    consent decree is set forth in subsection (4) of § 41-5-1501, MCA. As we have noted, §
    41-5-1501(4), MCA, specifically provides that “if [a] youth fails to fulfill the expressed
    terms and conditions of the consent decree, the petition under which the youth was
    continued under supervision may be reinstated in the discretion of the county attorney in
    consultation with probation services.” Second, the Youth Court’s dispositional orders also
    did not have any authority under § 41-5-1513, MCA, to designate C.L. as a “delinquent
    youth” and commit him to Pine Hills. By definition, a youth who is subject to a § 41-5-
    1501, MCA, consent decree has had formal proceedings against him suspended. As a
    result, that youth cannot be adjudicated as a “delinquent youth” or committed to any youth
    correctional facility until after the State reinstates formal proceedings and continues
    through to adjudication and disposition under the relevant statutes.
    ¶26    Here, the Youth Court’s December 2019 order denying C.L.’s motion to dismiss
    and its January and July 2020 dispositional orders contained the same singular error;
    specifically, under § 41-5-1501(4), MCA, the State was required to move to reinstate its
    youth court petition against C.L. if it sought to address violations of C.L.’s consent decree.
    The Youth Court’s error resulted in prejudice to C.L., as it led to C.L.’s commitment to
    Pine Hills without any actual § 41-5-1502(8), MCA, admission of guilt by C.L. and without
    an adjudication of the merits of his criminal mischief charge. As a result, we reverse C.L.’s
    14
    commitment to Pine Hills and remand this case to the Youth Court for further proceedings
    consistent with the Youth Court Act’s directives governing consent decrees.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶27    The Youth Court erred when it denied C.L.’s motion to dismiss the State’s July 2019
    petition to revoke C.L.’s probation, as the State failed to move to reinstate C.L.’s original
    youth court petition. The Youth Court failed to follow the appropriate statutory procedure
    for a violation of a consent decree, as prescribed by the Youth Court Act, § 41-5-1501(4),
    MCA. Accordingly, in the absence of the formal reinstatement of C.L.’s original youth
    court petition, the District Court did not have statutory authority to issue its January and
    July 2020 dispositional orders.
    ¶28    We reverse, vacating the Youth Court’s two dispositional orders, and remand for an
    entry of order dismissing the State’s July 2019 and February 2020 petitions to revoke
    probation.
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    15