Lead Opinion
According to Bergman, starting in 2008, the Isanti County Sheriff had consistently granted him a permit to carry a pistol (carry permit). On December 18, 2017, Bergman applied to renew his carry permit. A newly elected county sheriff, respondent Isanti County Sheriff Christopher Caulk, denied Bergman's application because of his 1996 domestic-assault conviction. Bergman sought reconsideration by the sheriff, and the sheriff refused to reconsider his application. Bergman then petitioned the district court to issue a writ of mandamus to compel the sheriff to issue him a carry permit. In September 2018, the court denied Bergman's petition, concluding that he is disqualified from possessing a firearm because his domestic-assault conviction was not expunged under
This appeal follows.
Is a conviction expunged within the meaning of
ANALYSIS
An appellate court "review[s] de novo a decision on a writ of mandamus based solely on a legal determination." Madison Equities, Inc. v. Crockarell ,
Under Minnesota law, a person, "who carries, holds, or possesses a pistol in a motor vehicle, snowmobile, or boat, or on or about the person's clothes or the person, or [is] otherwise in possession or control [of a pistol] in a public place" is guilty of a gross misdemeanor, unless that person first obtains a permit to carry, hold, or possess a pistol.
Under
A person shall not be considered to have been convicted of such an offense ... if the conviction has been expunged or set aside, or is an offense for which the person has been pardoned or has had civil rights restored (if the law of the applicable jurisdiction provides for the loss of civil rights under such an offense) unless the pardon, expungement , or restoration of civil rights expressly provides that the person may not ship, transport, possess, or receive firearms.
In October 2007, the district court ordered the expungement of judicial records relating to Bergman's arrest and conviction and ordered the court administrator and county corrections depаrtment to seal the records related to the conviction. No party appealed the order. From 2008 until the Isanti County Sheriff denied Bergman's renewal application, Bergman had a carry permit. In its September 2018 order denying Bergman's writ of mandamus to comрel the sheriff to issue him a carry permit, from which this appeal is taken, the district court stated that
[Bergman]'s conviction was not ordered removed from executive or judicial branch records ; the expungement exception under18 U.S.C. § 921 (a)(33)(B)(ii) therefore does not apply. The firearms prohibition based on the prior convictiontherefore remains, and the request for an Order mandating approval of the permit must be denied.
(Emphasis added.)
Bergman argues that his 1996 domestic-assault conviction was expunged within the meaning of
Appellate courts "review matters of statutory construction de novo." Minn. Dеpt. of Nat. Res. v. Chippewa/Swift Joint Bd. of Comm'rs ,
Here, in 2007, the district court ordered that the judicial records related to Bergman's conviction "be expunged" and directed the court administrator to "seal" the case file, "including records related to [the expungement] order, and remove the case ... records open to public examination, and refrain frоm disclosing or revealing the file contents without a court order or specific statutory authority," and the court directed the county corrections department to "seal or otherwise remove references from its records" related to Bergman's аrrest and court proceedings. Federal law does not require that the expungement be statutory or result in the sealing of records in every branch of government. See
While not binding on this court, analogous federal case law supports our conclusion. In U.S. v. Laskie , when a defendant received an honorable discharge from probation under state law, the Ninth Circuit concluded that a defendant had his conviction "set aside" for purposes of possessing a firearm under
The county sheriff argues that because Bergman did not qualify for statutory expungement under Minn. Stat. §§ 609A.01 -.04, "he remainеd ineligible to possess a firearm," notwithstanding the district court's 2007 expungement order. The county sheriff cites no authority to support this position, and we reject it. The fact that Minnesota law allows for both statutory expungement and expungement based on a district сourt's inherent authority does not lead us to conclude that expungement under a court's inherent authority does not constitute expungement within the meaning of
DECISION
Bergman's domestic-assault conviction was expunged within the meaning of
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting, Worke, Judge
Dissenting Opinion
Because the October 2007 order sealing the judicial records of Bergman's January 1996 conviction for misdemeanor domestic assault pursuant to the district court's inherent authority had no effect upon executive branch records of the conviction, I respectfully dissent on the basis that Bergman's conviction was not exрunged within the meaning of state law.
Under the canons of statutory construction, technical words and phrases are construed in accordance with their special meaning.
However, Minnesota caselaw distinguishes statutory expungements under chapter 609A from expungements pursuant to a court's inherent judicial authority. "[T]he authority the judiciary has to control its own records does not give the judiciary inherent authority to reach into the exeсutive branch to control what the executive branch does with records held in that branch, even when those records were created in the judiciary." State v. M.D.T. ,
When Bergman petitionеd for expungement in 2007, the district court determined that he was ineligible
Here, all evidence of Bergman's prior conviction was not erased as if it never occurred. Even though the judicial records of Bergman's offense were sealed by court order in 2007, the offense still appeared on a background check in January 2018, which provided the basis for the Isanti County Sheriff's denial of Bergman's firearm permit application. If the offense were truly expunged, the conviction would not show up on a routine background check. To adopt the majority's reasoning and overlook the fact that evidence of Bergman's conviction is readily obtainable negates the legislative intent to deny permits to carry to individuals convicted of domestic violence crimes.
Because Bergman was excluded from possessing a firearm under federal law due to his un-expunged misdemeanor domestic violence conviction,
Notes
In 2014, the legislature amended Minn. Stat. § 609A.02, subd. 3(a)(3), to allow for statutory expungement of a misdemeanor conviction. 2014 Minn. Laws сh. 246, § 6, at 812. Therefore, Bergman is at least eligible to petition for statutory expungement, which, if granted, would afford him the relief he seeks. While the 2014 amendments to section 609A.02 contained a subdivision 3(c), which excluded domestic assault from expungement under Minn. Stat. § 609A.02, subd. 3(a)(3), by its own terms that section expired on July 15, 2015.
