State v. Hatfield , 304 Neb. 66 ( 2019 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    09/27/2019 09:08 AM CDT
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
    Cite as 
    304 Neb. 66
    State of Nebraska, appellee, v.
    Steven J. H atfield, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed September 13, 2019.   No. S-18-1107.
    1. Criminal Law: Courts: Appeal and Error. In an appeal of a criminal
    case from the county court, the district court acts as an intermediate
    court of appeals, and its review is limited to an examination of the
    record for error or abuse of discretion.
    2. Courts: Appeal and Error. Both the district court and a higher appel-
    late court generally review appeals from the county court for error
    appearing on the record.
    3. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing a judgment for errors
    appearing on the record, an appellate court’s inquiry is whether the deci-
    sion conforms to the law, is supported by competent evidence, and is
    neither arbitrary, capricious, nor unreasonable.
    4. Pretrial Procedure: Appeal and Error. Trial courts have broad dis-
    cretion with respect to sanctions involving discovery procedures, and
    their rulings thereon will not be reversed in the absence of an abuse of
    discretion.
    5. Criminal Law: Pretrial Procedure. Discovery in a criminal case is
    generally controlled by either a statute or court rule.
    Appeal from the District Court for Gage County: Julie D.
    Smith, Judge. Affirmed.
    Steven J. Mercure, of Nestor & Mercure, for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Nathan A. Liss
    for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, and
    Papik, JJ.
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
    Cite as 
    304 Neb. 66
    Heavican, C.J.
    INTRODUCTION
    Steven J. Hatfield was convicted of misdemeanor driving
    under the influence (DUI). His conviction and sentence were
    affirmed by the district court, sitting as an intermediate court
    of appeals. He appeals. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Hatfield was convicted in the county court for Gage County
    of DUI and appealed that conviction to the district court for
    Gage County. The district court reversed the county court’s
    judgment based not on the arguments made by Hatfield, but
    instead upon the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Birchfield
    v. North Dakota.1 This court reviewed that decision and con-
    cluded that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule
    applied to a pre-Birchfield warrantless blood draw and that the
    results of Hatfield’s blood test were therefore admissible.2 As
    such, we found that the district court, sitting as an appellate
    court, erred in reversing Hatfield’s conviction and vacating his
    sentence. We remanded the cause for the district court to con-
    sider Hatfield’s original errors.
    Upon remand, the district court considered Hatfield’s assign-
    ment of error alleging that the county court erred in failing to
    exclude evidence that was offered by the State in violation of
    both the court’s June 29, 2015, order of discovery and Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 29-1912 (Reissue 2016).
    The facts relating to this discovery dispute are as follows:
    The county court entered an order of discovery on June 29,
    2015. That order was in response to an oral motion made
    at a pretrial hearing. The State had already filed a notice on
    February 3, 2015, indicating that it had complied with discov-
    ery consisting of 51 pages of documents and that other evi-
    dence was available for review with law enforcement or at the
    Gage County Attorney’s office.
    1
    Birchfield v. North Dakota, ___ U.S. ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 2160
    , 
    195 L. Ed. 2d 560
    (2016).
    2
    State v. Hatfield, 
    300 Neb. 152
    , 
    912 N.W.2d 731
    (2018).
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
    Cite as 
    304 Neb. 66
    On November 4, 2015, Hatfield filed a motion entitled
    “Sixth Motion in Limine.” In that motion, Hatfield asserted
    that the State had failed to provide him with a witness list or
    with copies of “the Beatrice Community Hospital’s Clinical
    Laboratory Improvement Amendments” (CLIA) certificate.
    Hatfield also asserted that the State failed to provide him with
    a copy of title 177 of the Nebraska Administrative Code deal-
    ing with the testing of the alcohol content in blood and breath.
    Hatfield sought an order prohibiting the State from offering
    testimony of any witnesses and from offering as evidence the
    CLIA certificate or title 177.
    Jury selection was held on November 5, 2015. After the
    jury was empaneled, the county court took up Hatfield’s sixth
    motion in limine. At the hearing, Hatfield argued that he had
    not received a list of witnesses the State intended to call,
    which he claimed was required under § 29-1912, and that
    he had not received a list of the specific written exhibits the
    State intended to offer at trial. As was noted in his written
    motion, Hatfield argued that the witnesses the State apparently
    intended to call should not be permitted to testify, because
    those witnesses had not been disclosed.
    At no point during the course of this argument did Hatfield
    ask for a continuance. The State, however, did seek a con-
    tinuance in the event the court was inclined to grant the sixth
    motion in limine, because in the State’s view, a continuance
    was the proper cure for delay of notification of witnesses.
    The county court ultimately denied the motion in limine, and
    trial began.
    At the conclusion of the first day of trial, the county court
    indicated it wanted to revisit the sixth motion in limine. That
    issue was again addressed the morning prior to the second day
    of trial. Following arguments at which the parties offered case
    law in support of their respective positions, the court noted
    that it did not want to grant a continuance because the jury
    had already been empaneled and because in any case, barring
    the use of evidence was one remedy available but was not the
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
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    304 Neb. 66
    only remedy available, and that Hatfield had to show he was
    prejudiced by the failure to disclose. Because Hatfield was
    aware he was missing the information and could have sought
    it via a motion to compel rather than by a motion in limine
    filed just prior to trial (at 4:31 p.m. the day before trial was
    set to begin), he had not shown prejudice. As such, the county
    court noted its prior ruling on the sixth motion in limine
    stood. While the county court observed it was not going to
    continue the trial at that point, Hatfield did not ask for a con-
    tinuance at any time during the proceedings or seek any relief
    besides complete exclusion of the evidence.
    Hatfield also contends the State failed to disclose the con-
    viction upon which it was relying to support a second-offense
    charge against Hatfield. The district court rejected this claim,
    noting that Hatfield was aware the complaint charged a second
    offense and that Hatfield had been provided with his driv-
    er’s abstract identifying by case number the prior DUI case.
    Hatfield was offered, but declined, a continuance in connection
    with this objection.
    In this second appeal, the district court concluded that
    the county court had not erred, and it consequently affirmed
    Hatfield’s conviction and sentence. Hatfield now appeals that
    decision to this court.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Hatfield assigns that the district court (1) erred in affirm-
    ing the county court’s admission of evidence offered at trial
    that was not disclosed to him as was required by the court’s
    June 29, 2015, order and by § 29-1912 and (2) erred when
    sentencing him, because the prior conviction the court relied
    upon for a second offense was not disclosed to Hatfield prior
    to sentencing.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] In an appeal of a criminal case from the county court,
    the district court acts as an intermediate court of appeals, and
    its review is limited to an examination of the record for error
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
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    or abuse of discretion.3 Both the district court and a higher
    appellate court generally review appeals from the county court
    for error appearing on the record.4 When reviewing a judgment
    for errors appearing on the record, an appellate court’s inquiry
    is whether the decision conforms to the law, is supported by
    competent evidence, and is neither arbitrary, capricious, nor
    unreasonable.5
    [4] Trial courts have broad discretion with respect to sanc-
    tions involving discovery procedures, and their rulings thereon
    will not be reversed in the absence of an abuse of discretion.6
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Hatfield argues two separate incidents in which
    the State failed to disclose evidence. First, Hatfield contends
    the State failed to file witness and document lists despite being
    ordered to do so and that as such, its witnesses should not
    have been permitted to testify and certain documents—spe-
    cifically the CLIA certificate and title 177 of the Nebraska
    Administrative Code—should not have been admitted into
    evidence. Hatfield also argues that the State did not provide a
    copy of a prior conviction sufficient to support a finding that
    Hatfield had previously been convicted of DUI.
    [5] Discovery in a criminal case is generally controlled by
    either a statute or court rule.7 Nebraska’s principal discovery
    statute, § 29-1912, sets forth a list of evidence that may be
    subject to discovery at the discretion of the trial court. The list
    includes a defendant’s prior criminal record, the names and
    addresses of witnesses on whose evidence the charge is based,
    and documents, papers, books, accounts, photographs, objects,
    or other tangible things of whatsoever kind or nature which
    3
    
    Id. 4 Id.
    5
    
    Id. 6 State
    v. Russell, 
    292 Neb. 501
    , 
    874 N.W.2d 8
    (2016).
    7
    
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    could be used as evidence by the prosecuting authority.8 Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 29-1919 (Reissue 2016) sets forth various remedies
    the court may employ when there is a claimed violation of a
    discovery order: The court may (1) order such party to permit
    discovery or inspection of materials not previously disclosed,
    (2) grant a continuance, (3) prohibit a party from calling a wit-
    ness not disclosed or introduce evidence not disclosed, or (4)
    enter another order as it deems just under the circumstance. If a
    continuance would have been a sufficient remedy for a belated
    disclosure in violation of § 29-1912, a defendant who fails to
    request a continuance waives any rights he or she may have
    had pursuant to § 29-1912.9
    Hatfield’s arguments are without merit. The record shows
    that by the time the county court ordered the parties to engage
    in discovery, the State had, over 3 months prior, forwarded
    51 pages of documents to Hatfield and informed him that still
    other evidence was available for his review at its offices or
    with law enforcement. That notice did not include a witness
    list. By the time the order for discovery was made, discovery
    had already taken place. There was no indication from a pre-
    trial discussion about discovery, or the State’s notice, that the
    parties anticipated a forthcoming witness list.
    Hatfield filed his sixth motion in limine 9 months after
    discovery first commenced. In that motion, he made specific
    reference to the witnesses and documentation he believed to
    be missing. At least as of that date, it was clear Hatfield was
    aware of what discovery he had not received, yet our record
    does not indicate that he filed a motion to compel or sought
    a continuance. Instead, in the late afternoon of the day before
    trial, Hatfield filed a motion in limine seeking to prevent the
    State from offering this evidence at trial.
    While a court may order that a party not be permitted to offer
    evidence at trial which it failed to disclose, this court has stated
    8
    § 29-1912.
    9
    See State v. Smith, 
    292 Neb. 434
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 169
    (2016).
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    a preference for a continuance in such situations.10 Despite hav-
    ing 9 months to do so, Hatfield failed to seek a motion to com-
    pel or a continuance. The same holds true for Hatfield’s prior
    conviction. A copy of Hatfield’s driver’s abstract was included
    in the discovery material provided to him, and a certified copy
    was offered at trial. Hatfield objected and was offered a con-
    tinuance, but declined and stood on his objection.
    The fact that Hatfield’s driver’s abstract—which listed the
    challenged prior conviction—was disclosed placed Hatfield on
    notice of the conviction the State planned to use to enhance
    his sentence. Hatfield could have investigated the conviction in
    more detail; he apparently chose not to do so. At the time of
    sentencing, not only did Hatfield not seek a continuance, but he
    declined one offered by the county court. In addition, the State
    noted at the sentencing hearing that a certified copy of the
    conviction had been available for review at its offices should
    Hatfield have chosen to review it in person.
    We reject Hatfield’s claims due to his failure to seek a
    continuance, and we find no prejudice owing to any belated
    disclosures on the State’s part. Hatfield contends that because
    the State did not file a witness list, all its witnesses were
    effectively surprise witnesses. Specifically, Hatfield argues that
    Deputy Robert Sandersfeld and Investigator John Chavez of the
    Gage County sheriff’s office were surprise witnesses involved
    in the chain of custody of his blood sample test and that he
    was unable to prepare for these witnesses. But Hatfield does
    not show what different preparation he would have made or
    how that preparation would have changed the examination of
    Sandersfeld and Chavez, let alone the examination of all of the
    State’s witnesses. Moreover, we observe that the record shows
    that while a witness list was not provided, the identities of the
    witnesses the State ultimately called, including Sandersfeld
    and Chavez, were available in the discovery made or offered to
    Hatfield. This claim fails.
    10
    See 
    id. - 73
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    STATE v. HATFIELD
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    We also reject Hatfield’s assertion regarding both title 177
    of the Nebraska Administrative Code and the CLIA certificate.
    Hatfield was charged with DUI. Title 177 is a public record
    routinely applied in such cases, and CLIA certificates are rou-
    tinely referenced in cases involving laboratory testing. Hatfield
    exhibited that knowledge by referencing both in his motion in
    limine. Hatfield has not shown that he was prejudiced by the
    State’s belated disclosure of either.
    Finally, we reject the assertion that Hatfield was preju-
    diced by the State’s failure to disclose and provide a copy of
    his prior DUI conviction for enhancement purposes. Hatfield
    was charged with second-offense DUI. The information filed
    against him referenced the same conviction he now complains
    was not disclosed to him. As noted above, Hatfield was pro-
    vided with a copy of his driver’s abstract which included the
    now-challenged conviction.
    We have consistently held that in discovery disputes where
    a continuance can cure any prejudice caused by a failure to
    disclose, it is that remedy that should be utilized. We reject
    Hatfield’s invitation to overrule that authority.
    We review the lower court’s action for an abuse of discre-
    tion. Hatfield declined to ask for a continuance, declined to
    join in the State’s suggestion of a continuance at trial, and at
    sentencing declined to accept the court’s offer of a continu-
    ance. Hatfield has also failed to show that he was prejudiced
    by the State’s belated disclosures. Hatfield’s arguments on
    appeal are without merit.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the decision of the district court affirming the
    judgment and conviction of the county court.
    A ffirmed.
    Freudenberg, J., not participating.