State v. Sisneros ( 2020 )


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    2020 UT App 60
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    LANDON COLE SISNEROS,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20181002-CA
    Filed April 9, 2020
    Second District Court, Ogden Department
    The Honorable Joseph M. Bean
    No. 171901921
    Emily Adams and Cherise M. Bacalski, Attorneys
    for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Lindsey L. Wheeler, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES JILL M. POHLMAN and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.
    ORME, Judge:
    ¶1     Appellant Landon Cole Sisneros challenges his conviction
    for aggravated robbery, arguing that the district court should
    have dismissed the charge as part of a single criminal episode
    because a different district court had already convicted him for
    theft by receiving stolen property arising from the same incident.
    We agree and vacate Sisneros’s conviction for aggravated
    robbery.
    State v. Sisneros
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     In August 2017, a seller (Son) advertised his car for sale in
    North Ogden, located in Weber County. After Son posted the
    advertisement, Sisneros began “blowing up [Son’s] phone to
    come and test drive it right then,” telling Son he “had the money
    and wanted to buy a car right then.” Son explained that he was
    out of town and could not show him the car that day, but
    Sisneros persisted, so Son arranged for his father (Father) to
    show Sisneros the car and take him on a test drive.
    ¶3     At the conclusion of the test drive, both Sisneros and
    Father exited the car, but Sisneros left the car running with the
    driver’s door open. Father and Sisneros walked around to the
    front of the car and Father heard Sisneros talking “on his phone
    saying how much he wanted the car.” “[T]he next thing [Father
    knew, Sisneros] jumped back in the car and proceeded to leave.”
    Father “ran out in the road,” “got on the hood,” and “yelled at
    him ‘don’t do it.’” Father then got off the hood and stood in front
    of the car and Sisneros “rev-ed it up and bumped [Father],”
    “leaving some bruising on [his] knee.” At this point, Father got
    out of the way and let Sisneros leave because he decided it was
    not “worth it.” Father subsequently called the North Ogden
    Police Department, which broadcast an alert that Son’s car had
    been stolen “so that officers throughout any city or county
    [could] be on the lookout for the vehicle.” As soon as Father told
    him what had happened, Son also posted notices on social media
    that his car had been stolen.
    ¶4     Sisneros drove the car over 70 miles, through Weber,
    Davis, and Salt Lake counties, to his home in Utah County,
    where he met up with friends “and told them to look at his new
    car.” Fortuitously, one of these friends had seen Son’s social
    media post and recognized Sisneros’s “new car” as the one that
    had been stolen. This friend then called the local police. The
    following day, officers from the Orem Police Department in
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    State v. Sisneros
    Utah County found Son’s car abandoned in Orem, and they later
    located and arrested Sisneros.
    ¶5     In the probable cause statement justifying Sisneros’s
    arrest in Utah County, the Orem police officer who arrested
    Sisneros stated that Sisneros confessed that he had stolen the car
    and that while “talking to [Father in front of the car] he noticed
    the door was open, jumped in and drove away . . . [and Father]
    attempted to grab the door but was unable to because the door
    was locked.” Sisneros also told the officer “that he had thrown
    the keys out the window on 800 North near the overpass.” The
    police recovered the keys at that location.
    ¶6      On August 16, 2017, the Utah County Attorney’s Office
    charged Sisneros in fourth district court with theft by receiving
    stolen property and obstruction of justice. The probable cause
    statement on the charging document detailed, among other
    things, that Sisneros “admitted that he had gone to North Ogden
    to test drive a car that was for sale, and that when the test drive
    was over, he jumped back in the car and drove away.” Sisneros
    made his initial appearance the next day.
    ¶7    Five days later, on August 22, the Weber County
    Attorney’s Office charged Sisneros in second district court with
    aggravated robbery for “intentionally tak[ing] or attempt[ing] to
    take personal property in the possession [of Father] from his . . .
    person . . . against his . . . will, by means of force or fear, and
    with a purpose or intent to deprive [Father] permanently or
    temporarily of the personal property.”
    ¶8     Nine days later, on August 31, Sisneros pled guilty to
    theft by receiving stolen property and obstruction of justice in
    fourth district court. And two weeks after that, on September 15,
    Sisneros made his initial appearance in second district court on
    the aggravated robbery charge. Sisneros moved to have his
    charge in second district court dismissed. He argued that Utah
    Code section 76-1-403 prohibited the charge for aggravated
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    robbery in second district court because the statute “bars
    multiple prosecutions of offenses that arise out of the same
    criminal episode.” The district court denied the motion, ruling
    that
    the crime of Theft by Receiving Stolen Property . . .
    is a separate and distinct offense from Robbery . . .
    and was not part of a single criminal episode.
    [Sisneros] committed the robbery in Weber
    County, demonstrated an intent to retain
    possession of the property where he transported
    the property across two counties and represented
    to others that he owned the vehicle. Furthermore,
    there were two separate victims, [Father] (robbery)
    and [Son] (theft by receiving).
    The state is not prohibited from prosecuting
    [Sisneros] for the separate and distinct crime of
    robbery as a separate criminal act during a separate
    criminal episode.
    ¶9     Following this ruling, Sisneros entered into a conditional
    plea agreement in which he pled guilty to the aggravated
    robbery charge but reserved his right to appeal the district
    court’s denial of his motion to dismiss. See generally Utah R.
    Crim. P. 11(j). Sisneros now exercises that right.
    ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶10 Sisneros raises one issue on appeal. He contends that the
    second district court erroneously denied his motion to dismiss
    the aggravated robbery charge under Utah Code section
    76-1-403. “A trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to
    dismiss presents a question of law, which we review for
    correctness.” State v. Selzer, 
    2013 UT App 3
    , ¶ 14, 
    294 P.3d 617
    (quotation simplified).
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    ANALYSIS
    ¶11 “The Double Jeopardy Clause of the U.S. Constitution
    insulates a defendant from multiple prosecutions or multiple
    sentences for the same offense.” State v. Ririe, 
    2015 UT 37
    , ¶ 6,
    
    345 P.3d 1261
    . Utah Code section 76-1-403, however, “takes the
    matter a step further” and “adopts a species of res judicata or
    claim preclusion for criminal cases—barring prosecutions for
    different offenses committed as part of a single criminal episode
    and otherwise meeting the terms of the statute.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis in
    original). Section 403(1) states, in relevant part, as follows:
    If a defendant has been prosecuted for one or more
    offenses arising out of a single criminal episode, a
    subsequent prosecution for the same or a different
    offense arising out of the same criminal episode is
    barred if:
    (a) the subsequent prosecution is for an offense
    that was or should have been tried under
    Subsection 76-1-402(2) in the former prosecution;
    and
    (b) the former prosecution
    ...
    (ii) resulted in conviction.
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-403
    (1) (LexisNexis 2017). Section 402(2),
    in turn, provides:
    Whenever conduct may establish separate offenses
    under a single criminal episode, . . . a defendant
    shall not be subject to separate trials for multiple
    offenses when:
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    (a) The offenses are within the jurisdiction of a
    single court; and
    (b) The offenses are known to the prosecuting
    attorney at the time the defendant is arraigned on
    the first information or indictment.
    
    Id.
     § 76-1-402(2). Finally, a single criminal episode is defined as
    “all conduct which is closely related in time and is incident to an
    attempt or an accomplishment of a single criminal objective.”
    Id. § 76-1-401.
    ¶12 Overall,        this   statutory      scheme   “impose[s]    a
    one-bite-at-the-apple rule for multiple offenses arising out of a
    single criminal episode,” Ririe, 
    2015 UT 37
    , ¶ 8, the purpose of
    which is “(1) to protect a defendant from the governmental
    harassment of being subjected to successive trials for offenses
    stemming from the same criminal episode; and (2) to ensure
    finality without unduly burdening the judicial process by
    repetitious litigation,” State v. Selzer, 
    2013 UT App 3
    , ¶ 22, 
    294 P.3d 617
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶13 In summary, for Sisneros to prevail, he must prove that
    four conditions are satisfied: (1) the prior charge and the
    subsequent charge arose from “a single criminal episode,” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-401
    ; (2) the prior charge and subsequent
    charge were “within the jurisdiction of a single court,”
    
    id.
     § 76-1-402(2)(a); (3) at the time of his arraignment on the prior
    charge, the prosecuting attorney knew of the other potential
    charge, id. § 76-1-402(2)(b); and (4) under the facts of this case,
    the prior charge resulted in a conviction, id. § 76-1-403(1)(b)(ii).
    ¶14 In the present case, it is undisputed that Sisneros was
    convicted of the prior charge—theft by receiving—as a result of
    his plea in fourth district court, and thus the final condition has
    been met. We now consider the first three conditions.
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    I. Single Criminal Episode
    ¶15 For two or more offenses to be considered part of a single
    criminal episode, they must be (1) “closely related in time” and
    (2) “incident to an attempt or an accomplishment of a single
    criminal objective.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-401
     (LexisNexis
    2017). In determining whether multiple offenses were part of a
    single criminal episode, courts undertake a “totality of the
    circumstances” analysis, viewing the “facts and circumstances
    . . . objectively.” State v. Strader, 
    902 P.2d 638
    , 642 (Utah Ct. App.
    1995).
    A.     Time
    ¶16 The State argues that the two offenses “were not close in
    time” because Sisneros “committed aggravated robbery in
    Weber County” and “then committed his theft by receiving
    stolen property in Utah County when he drove 74 miles” to his
    home in Orem. The State then likens this case to State v. Ireland,
    
    570 P.2d 1206
     (Utah 1977). In that case, the defendant committed
    robbery by forcibly taking a revolver from a police officer and
    then locking the police officer in the trunk of his patrol car. Id. at
    1206. The defendant then drove 65 miles in his own vehicle,
    where he committed a kidnapping offense against two
    hitchhikers in a different county. Id. Our Supreme Court held
    that these two crimes were not part of a single criminal episode
    because they were “totally disconnected in time” due to the fact
    that the “robbery conviction was based on the theft of a revolver
    which was a completed offense at the time it was taken from the
    patrolman.” Id.
    ¶17 The State insists that this case is on the same legal footing
    as Ireland. We disagree. Unlike in Ireland, there was not a distinct
    difference in time between the two offenses at issue in this case.
    In Ireland, the defendant committed the crime of robbery against
    one victim by taking the victim’s revolver and then driving 65
    miles, in his own vehicle, to another county where he committed
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    the crime of kidnapping against completely unrelated victims.
    
    Id.
     The State argues that because Sisneros formed the intent to
    deprive Son of the car only in Utah County, these crimes are
    separate in time, akin to the crimes in Ireland. The State contends
    that Sisneros formed the intent to deprive Son of the car and
    committed the crime of theft by receiving only when he told his
    friends in Utah County to come look at his “new car.” We are
    not persuaded.
    ¶18 While Sisneros’s statement to his friends in Utah County
    is certainly evidence of his intent and thus of where he could
    have committed the theft crime, there is also clear evidence that
    he intended to deprive Son of the car the moment he took it from
    Father in Weber County. When Father and Sisneros ended the
    test drive, and right before Sisneros took the car, Sisneros was
    “on his phone saying how much he wanted the car.” He then
    proceeded to take the car and drive it away from Father, who
    attempted to stop him, and in so doing Sisneros committed
    aggravated robbery. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-302
    (1)(c)
    (LexisNexis 2017) (“A person commits aggravated robbery if in
    the course of committing robbery, he . . . takes or attempts to
    take an operable motor vehicle.”). But this evidence also shows
    that Sisneros, at that moment, had formed the intent to deprive
    Son of the car, thereby committing the offense of theft by
    receiving. See 
    id.
     § 76-6-408(2) (Supp. 2019) (stating that a person
    commits the crime of theft by receiving when he receives stolen
    goods “intending to deprive the owner of the property”).1 There
    is no suggestion in the record that Sisneros was merely going for
    a joy ride, intending to return the car.
    1. Because the relevant portions of the current version of Utah
    Code section 76-6-408(2) have not been materially altered from
    the version in effect at the time of Sisneros’s actions, we cite the
    current code for convenience.
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    ¶19 Unlike the offenses in Ireland, these offenses were not
    disconnected in time. The factual nexus of both crimes was in
    Weber County, and there was no “pause in events between” the
    two crimes. See State v. Selzer, 
    2013 UT App 3
    , ¶ 25, 
    294 P.3d 617
    .
    And, unlike in Ireland, where the defendant committed two
    distinct crimes separated by time, the crimes here were
    interwoven and committed at virtually the same time, i.e., when
    Sisneros took the car from Father and drove away. Therefore,
    Sisneros’s offenses of aggravated robbery and theft by receiving
    were “closely related in time” for purposes of Utah Code section
    76-1-401.
    B.    Single Criminal Objective
    ¶20 When analyzing whether the crimes were part of a single
    criminal objective, courts “consider, among other things, the
    location where the crimes were committed, the nature of the
    offenses (both the similarity in conduct and the extent to which
    one offense advances the accomplishment of another), whether
    the crimes involved different victims, and whether the defendant
    had the opportunity to deliberately engage in the next-in-time
    offense.” State v. Rushton, 
    2017 UT 21
    , ¶ 35, 
    395 P.3d 92
    .
    Generally, none of these factors alone are dispositive, but “if any
    one of the factors has a strong presence, it can dispositively
    segregate an extended criminal enterprise into a series of
    separate and distinct episodes.” Id. ¶¶ 36, 40 (quotation
    simplified).
    1.    Location
    ¶21 “First, we consider whether the offenses arose in different
    geographic locations.” Id. ¶ 36 (quotation simplified). The State
    again argues that the locations of the crimes were different.
    However, as discussed above, the aggravated robbery was
    committed in Weber County at essentially the same time that the
    crime of theft by receiving was first committed. See 
    Utah Code Ann. §§ 76-6-301
    , -302 (LexisNexis 2017); 
    id.
     § 76-6-408 (Supp.
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    2019). Thus, Sisneros began the theft at the same location as the
    aggravated robbery when he took the car, and the two crimes
    did not necessarily “occur[] in different places,” as the State
    argues. That Sisneros may also have committed theft by
    receiving in Salt Lake, Davis, and Utah counties should not
    obscure the fact that he first committed that crime in Weber
    County, where he stole the car. Thus, this factor weighs in favor
    of concluding that the two offenses were part of a single criminal
    episode.
    2.    Nature of the Offenses
    ¶22 “Second, we consider whether the nature of the offenses
    was substantively different.” Rushton, 
    2017 UT 21
    , ¶ 37
    (quotation simplified). When examining this factor, we consider
    whether the offenses have different “bodies of proof,” whether
    they entail different concepts, and the defendant’s conduct for
    each offense. 
    Id.
    ¶23 The State argues that Sisneros’s “theft by receiving
    offense involved different criminal objectives, concepts,
    conduct, and proof.” Objectively viewing the evidence
    underlying the offenses, we disagree. Sisneros’s end goal in
    committing the robbery was not to harm Father; it was to take
    the car from Father’s possession with the “intent to deprive
    [Father] permanently or temporarily of the [car],” see 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-301
    (a) (2017), and the end goal of the theft by
    receiving was to “receive[], retain[], or dispose[] of the [car]”
    with the “inten[t] to deprive [Son] of the [car],” see
    
    id.
     § 76-6-408(2) (Supp. 2019). Therefore, Sisneros’s overarching
    criminal purpose in committing both offenses was to steal the
    car. And while aggravated robbery and theft by receiving have
    some different elements, the main body of proof is still the
    same—the State had to prove that Sisneros unlawfully took and
    retained the car. Furthermore, Sisneros’s conduct in committing
    both crimes overlapped. As previously discussed, the crimes of
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    aggravated robbery and theft by receiving began at essentially
    the same moment when Sisneros took the car from Father after
    the test drive had ended. Given that both crimes were
    committed through substantially similar conduct and furthered
    Sisneros’s criminal objective—to unlawfully gain possession of
    the car—we conclude that Sisneros’s theft by receiving and
    aggravated robbery crimes were not substantively different from
    each other. Therefore, this factor also weighs in favor of
    concluding that the two offenses were part of a single
    criminal episode.
    3.     Victims
    ¶24 “Third, we consider whether each offense involved
    different victims.” Rushton, 
    2017 UT 21
    , ¶ 38 (quotation
    simplified). Sisneros argues that the district court incorrectly
    ruled that the victim of the robbery was Father and the victim of
    the theft by receiving was Son. He argues that Son was also a
    victim of the robbery “because the stolen car was his” and under
    the Crime Victim’s Restitution Act, “[h]e could recover
    ‘pecuniary damages’ for the loss of his car.” See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38a-102(6), (14)(a) (LexisNexis 2017).
    ¶25 A strict reading of the robbery statute would indicate that
    Sisneros is incorrect in this proposition because the statute
    “requires that the victim suffer force or fear,” and thus “it
    follows that only [Father], and not [Son], could be a robbery
    victim” because Son was not present to experience force or fear.
    See State v. Irvin, 
    2007 UT App 319
    , ¶ 17, 
    169 P.3d 798
    . See also 
    id.
    (“The fear constituting an element of robbery is the fear of
    present personal peril from violence offered or impending.”)
    (quotation simplified). But in analyzing whether his crimes were
    part of a single criminal episode, Sisneros is correct that Son was
    also a victim of the aggravated robbery because it was his car
    that was stolen and he would have been able to recover financial
    restitution for loss of, or damage to, the car as a “victim” under
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    the Crime Victim’s Restitution Act. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 77
    -38a-102(6), (14)(a). Thus, while only Son was a victim of the
    theft offense, both Father and Son were victims of the
    aggravated robbery, and this factor, too, points to a single
    criminal episode.
    4.    Next-In-Time Offense
    ¶26 “The final factor we consider is whether [Sisneros]
    had the opportunity to make a conscious and knowing
    decision to engage in the next-in-time offense.” See Rushton,
    
    2017 UT 21
    , ¶ 39 (quotation simplified). Here, Sisneros did
    not have the opportunity to make a conscious and knowing
    decision to engage in the next-in-time offense because both
    the aggravated robbery and theft by receiving offenses
    were committed at, or nearly at, the same time. When Father
    and Sisneros ended the test drive, and right before he took
    the car, Sisneros was “on his phone saying how much he
    wanted the car.” Sisneros then proceeded to take the car
    and drive it away from Father, who attempted to stop him.
    This evidence shows that at this moment Sisneros (1)
    committed aggravated robbery because he stole a motor
    vehicle in the presence of Father, see 
    Utah Code Ann. §§ 76-6-301
    ,
    -302 (LexisNexis 2017), and (2) committed theft by receiving
    because he retained the car and displayed an intent to deprive
    Son of the car, i.e., by saying that he wanted the car and then
    driving off in the car, see 
    id.
     § 76-6-408 (Supp. 2019). Therefore,
    Sisneros did not have time to make a conscious and knowing
    decision to commit the next offense—there was not a distinct
    break in time between the two offenses—because both offenses
    were committed nearly simultaneously. Cf. Rushton, 
    2017 UT 21
    ,
    ¶ 39 (holding that the defendant “would have had the
    opportunity to make a conscious and knowing decision to
    engage in the next-in-time offense” because the two offenses
    were “committed at a different point in time”) (quotation
    simplified).
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    ¶27 In conclusion, Sisneros’s crimes were part of a single
    criminal episode because they were (1) “closely related in time”
    and (2) “incident to an attempt or an accomplishment of a single
    criminal objective,” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-401
     (2017), due to the
    fact that the crimes were committed in the same location, the
    nature of the offenses was similar, both Father and Son were
    victims of the aggravated robbery, and Sisneros did not have
    “the opportunity to deliberately engage in the next-in-time
    offense,” see Rushton, 
    2017 UT 21
    , ¶ 35.
    II. Within the Jurisdiction of a Single Court
    ¶28 Next, Sisneros must show that both offenses were “within
    the jurisdiction of a single court,” see 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-402
    (2)(a) (LexisNexis 2017), i.e., that both charges could
    have been brought in the same district court. Every “district
    court [in the state of Utah] has original jurisdiction in all matters
    civil and criminal, not excepted in the Utah Constitution and not
    prohibited by law.” 
    Id.
     § 78A-5-102(1) (2018). Therefore, both the
    second and fourth district courts technically had original
    jurisdiction over both offenses in this case. However, this is not
    the end of the analysis. Utah Code section 78A-5-102(1) gives
    any district court original jurisdiction only when it is otherwise
    “not prohibited by law.” Id. In that regard, Utah Code section
    76-1-202, titled “Venue of actions,” gives further guidance on
    what cases a district court can hear. It states, “Criminal actions
    shall be tried in the county, district, or precinct where the offense
    is alleged to have been committed.” Id. § 76-1-202(1) (2017)
    (emphasis added). It continues, in relevant part, that “[i]n
    determining the proper place of trial, the following provisions
    shall apply”:
    (b) When conduct constituting elements of an
    offense or results that constitute elements, whether
    the conduct or result constituting elements is in
    itself unlawful, shall occur in two or more counties,
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    trial of the offense may be held in any of the
    counties concerned.
    ....
    (g) When an offense is committed within this state
    and it cannot be readily determined in which
    county or district the offense occurred, the
    following provisions shall be applicable:
    ....
    (iii) A person who commits theft may be tried in
    any county in which he exerts control over the
    property affected.
    
    Id.
     § 76-1-202(1)(b), (g) (emphases added). We therefore read the
    jurisdictional statute in conjunction with the venue statute to
    determine whether the offenses were “within the jurisdiction of
    a single court.” Id. § 76-1-402(2)(a). 2
    2. “When interpreting statutes, our object is to evince the will of
    the Legislature. And we start with the statute’s plain language.”
    Mackin v. State, 
    2016 UT 47
    , ¶ 25, 
    387 P.3d 986
    . But in doing so,
    “we should read the plain language in a fashion that prevents
    other statutory language from becoming inoperative.” 
    Id.
     If we
    were to read the language of “within the jurisdiction of a single
    court,” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-402
    (2)(a) (LexisNexis 2017), to
    simply entail that the district court need only have the original
    jurisdiction granted to it by Utah Code section 78A-5-102(1) to
    establish that both offenses occurred within the jurisdiction of a
    single court, then it would eviscerate the requirement that both
    offenses occur “within the jurisdiction of a single court,” 
    id.
     This
    is so because a single district court would then have jurisdiction
    over every offense committed in Utah regardless of its particular
    (continued…)
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    ¶29 Citing Utah Code section 76-1-202(1), the State argues that
    “criminal actions are ‘tried in the county, district, or precinct
    where the offense’ was allegedly committed” and thus, it argues,
    the second “district court did not have jurisdiction over the theft
    by receiving stolen property [offense]” and the fourth “district
    court did not have jurisdiction over the aggravated robbery
    [offense].”
    ¶30 But the second district court did have jurisdiction over the
    theft offense. Under Utah Code section 76-1-202(1)(g)(iii), both
    district courts were appropriate venues and had jurisdiction
    over the theft offense. Sisneros “commit[ted] theft” and
    “exert[ed] control over” the stolen car in Weber County when he
    stole it and continued to exert control over it in Utah County
    when he drove it to his home in Orem. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-202
    (1)(g)(iii). Thus, Sisneros could have been tried for that
    offense in the district court of “any county in which he exert[ed]
    control over the [car],” including both Weber and Utah counties.
    See 
    id.
    ¶31 And Weber County could also have charged—and did
    charge—Sisneros for aggravated robbery, because that crime
    was committed and completed entirely within Weber County.
    Thus, because Sisneros could have been charged for both crimes
    in the second district court, both crimes were “within the
    jurisdiction of a single court.” See 
    id.
     § 76-1-402(2)(a).
    (…continued)
    location because every district court “has original jurisdiction in
    all matters civil and criminal.” Id. § 78A-5-102(1) (2018). Thus,
    the language requiring both offenses to be “within the
    jurisdiction of a single court,” id. § 76-1-402(2)(a) (2017), must
    also take into account the venue provisions found in Utah Code
    section 76-1-202, or this statutory requirement would be
    rendered meaningless.
    20181002-CA                     15                
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    State v. Sisneros
    III. Prosecutor’s Knowledge of the Subsequent Offense
    ¶32 Finally, “[w]hether the single criminal episode statute
    applies depends on whether the first prosecuting attorney knew,
    at the time of the first arraignment, about the conduct
    underlying the charges that were later brought in the second
    prosecution.” Salt Lake City v. Josephson, 
    2019 UT 6
    , ¶ 22, 
    435 P.3d 255
    . See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-402
    (2)(b) (LexisNexis 2017).
    ¶33 Here, the relevant question is whether the prosecutor in
    Utah County knew about the conduct underlying the subsequent
    charge of aggravated robbery at the time Sisneros was arraigned
    in Utah County. The State argues that “the Utah County
    prosecutor was not aware of all the conduct underlying
    [Sisneros’s] Weber County aggravated robbery charge,” because
    the prosecutor “only knew . . . that [Sisneros] committed a theft
    in Weber County, not an aggravated robbery.” Sisneros counters
    that “[w]hen the Utah County Attorney filed his Information
    against [him], he knew from the police officer’s probable cause
    statement that [he] had stolen a car from Father . . . with some
    sort of force.”
    ¶34 In the probable cause statement justifying the arrest,
    which the Utah County prosecutor had in his possession, the
    Orem police officer who arrested Sisneros stated that Sisneros
    confessed that he had stolen the car and that while “talking to
    [Father in front of the car, Sisneros] noticed the door was open,
    jumped in and drove away . . . [and Father] attempted to grab
    the door but was unable to because the door was locked.” A
    robbery is committed when a person “unlawfully and
    intentionally takes or attempts to take personal property in the
    possession of another from his person, or immediate presence,
    against his will, by means of force or fear, and with a purpose or
    intent to deprive the person permanently or temporarily of the
    personal property,” or “the person intentionally . . . uses force or
    fear of immediate force against another in the course of
    20181002-CA                     16                
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    State v. Sisneros
    committing a theft.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-301
    (1). And relevant
    here, to be guilty of aggravated robbery, a person only has to
    “take[] or attempt[] to take an operable motor vehicle.” 
    Id.
    § 76-6-302(1)(c).
    ¶35 From the probable cause statement, the Utah County
    prosecutor “knew about . . . the conduct underlying” the charge
    of aggravated robbery “that [was] later brought in the second
    prosecution.” Josephson, 
    2019 UT 6
    , ¶ 22. The statement informed
    the prosecutor that Sisneros’s conduct constituted aggravated
    robbery because (1) Sisneros “unlawfully and intentionally
    [took] . . . [the car] in the possession of [Father] from his person,
    or immediate presence,” (2) it was “against [Father’s] will,”
    (3) Sisneros used “force or fear,” (4) Sisneros had the “intent to
    deprive [Father] permanently or temporarily of the [car]” by
    driving off with it, 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-301
    (1)(a), and (5) the
    robbery involved the taking of “an operable motor vehicle,”
    
    id.
     § 76-6-302(1). The fact that the Utah County prosecutor may
    not have known that Sisneros bumped Father with the car and
    bruised his knee is inconsequential because injury is not an
    element of aggravated robbery when a vehicle is taken. 3 Because
    3. Sisneros was not arraigned in fourth district court until
    August 31, 2017. Before that date—which is the relevant date for
    purposes of determining what the Utah County prosecutor
    knew, see Salt Lake City v. Josephson, 
    2019 UT 6
    , ¶ 22, 
    435 P.3d 255
    —Sisneros had already been charged by the Weber County
    Attorney’s office in second district court with aggravated
    robbery. In the probable cause statement filed in second district
    court, the Weber County prosecutor alleged that Sisneros had
    threatened to “run [Father] over” and that Sisneros “accelerated
    quickly almost hitting [Father] such that [Father] had to jump
    out of the way to avoid being struck.” Thus, by the time Sisneros
    was arraigned in fourth district court, it is entirely possible that
    the Utah County prosecutor actually did know the full extent of
    (continued…)
    20181002-CA                     17                 
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    State v. Sisneros
    Sisneros took the car in Father’s presence while Father attempted
    to open the door to stop him, the Utah County prosecutor knew
    that Sisneros’s conduct satisfied the element of using force or
    fear to take the vehicle. See State v. Featherhat, 
    2011 UT App 154
    ,
    ¶¶ 30, 32, 
    257 P.3d 445
     (holding that regardless of the
    defendant’s use of a shotgun in stealing the car, he committed
    aggravated robbery “because he took an operable motor vehicle”
    in the presence of the victim); State v. Irvin, 
    2007 UT App 319
    ,
    ¶ 20 n.4, 
    169 P.3d 798
     (stating that an “operable motor vehicle . . .
    taken from the victim's person or immediate presence . . .
    constitute[s] an aggravated robbery”).
    ¶36 Thus, as of Sisneros’s arraignment in fourth district court,
    the Utah County prosecutor knew of the conduct underlying the
    charge of aggravated robbery that had been brought in second
    district court.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶37 The State was barred from bringing a charge of
    aggravated robbery against Sisneros in second district court
    because that charge and the previously charged theft by
    receiving arose out of a single criminal episode; the offenses
    were both within the jurisdiction of second district court; the
    Utah County prosecutor knew about the conduct underlying the
    subsequently charged aggravated robbery; and Sisneros was
    convicted of the prior charge of theft by receiving in fourth
    district court, foreclosing the Weber County prosecutor from
    pursuing another charge arising from the same criminal episode.
    We therefore vacate Sisneros’s conviction for aggravated
    robbery.
    (…continued)
    the actions Sisneros was alleged to have committed at the time
    he stole the car.
    20181002-CA                     18                 
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Document Info

Docket Number: 20181002-CA

Filed Date: 4/9/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2021