STATE of Minnesota, Appellant, v. Carl Lee NODES, Respondent.
No. A13-1772.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
May 6, 2015.
Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Saint Paul, MN, for respondent.
OPINION
LILLEHAUG, Justice.
Appellant Carl Lee Nodes pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal sexual conduct arising from separate behavioral incidents with separate victims. At Nodes‘s sentencing hearing, the district court adjudicated Nodes guilty of both charges but held that Nodes was not subject to lifetime conditional release under
I.
On March 19, 2013, a Grand Rapids police officer was dispatched to a residence in response to a report of a possible sexual assault of S.R.W., a 3-year-old girl. The officer encountered respondent Nodes, who said that he was the one to whom she needed to speak. Nodes said that he “did it,” and when the officer asked whether he did something to S.R.W., Nodes said “yes.” The officer then spoke to S.R.W.‘s mother and grandmother. The grandmother reported that S.R.W. told her that Nodes had licked her vaginal area. The mother and grandmother told the officer that they confronted Nodes about sexually touching S.R.W., and Nodes admitted he had done so.
In a subsequent interview with police, Nodes admitted that he had touched and licked S.R.W.‘s vaginal area, and that he had made her touch his penis. He also admitted that, after that incident, he touched 5-year-old J.J.D.‘s vagina with his hand. The State charged Nodes with three counts of criminal sexual conduct. Count one charged Nodes with criminal sexual conduct in the first degree,
Nodes pleaded guilty to count one (involving S.R.W.) and count three (involving J.J.D.), pursuant to a plea agreement that called for a 172-month sentence for count one and a concurrent 72-month sentence for count three, with stays of execution for both sentences. The district court did not formally accept the pleas at the plea hearing, but ordered a presentence investigation and a sex offender evaluation.
At Nodes‘s sentencing hearing, the district court formally accepted the guilty pleas, adjudicated Nodes guilty of the two offenses to which he pleaded guilty, and
I will now formally accept the pleas, and on count one adjudicate him guilty of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree, a felony, in violation of Minnesota Statute 609.342, [s]ubd. 1(a) and [s]ubd. 2(a), on or about February 26, 2013, and also on count three, criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, a felony, in violation of Minnesota Statute 609.343, [s]ubd. 1(a) and [s]ubd. 2(a) on or about March 19, 2013.
The court stayed execution of the sentences.1
Near the end of the sentencing hearing, the State suggested that, should Nodes‘s sentences be executed, he would be subject to a 10-year conditional-release period on count one, and lifetime conditional release on count three. The district court disagreed, stating, “being sentenced on two of them on the same day doesn‘t get you the lifetime.” The court therefore set the conditional-release period at 10 years for each count.
The State appealed, arguing that Nodes‘s conviction of first-degree criminal sexual conduct under count one was a “prior sex offense conviction” for the purpose of determining the length of the mandatory conditional-release period for his sentence for second-degree criminal sexual conduct under count three. As a result, the State argued, Nodes would be subject to mandatory lifetime conditional release under
II.
Nodes pleaded guilty to two sex offenses under
when the court commits an offender to the custody of the commissioner of corrections [for such a violation] and the offender has a previous or prior sex offense conviction, the court shall provide that, after the offender has been released from prison, the commissioner shall place the offender on conditional release for the remainder of the offender‘s life.
The parties agree that Nodes is subject to mandatory conditional release for each of the convictions if his sentence is execut-
Statutory interpretation is a question of law that is subject to de novo review. Christianson v. Henke, 831 N.W.2d 532, 535 (Minn.2013). First, we must determine whether the statute is ambiguous. State v. Jones, 848 N.W.2d 528, 535 (Minn.2014). A statute is ambiguous “when the statutory language is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation.” State v. Fleck, 810 N.W.2d 303, 307 (Minn.2012). If a statute is susceptible to only one reasonable interpretation, we interpret the statute according to its plain meaning. State v. Nelson, 842 N.W.2d 433, 436 (Minn.2014).
Under the statutory definition, an offender has a ” ‘prior sex offense conviction’ if the offender was convicted of committing a sex offense before the offender has been convicted of the present offense, regardless of whether the offender was convicted for the first offense before the commission of the present offense, and the convictions involved separate behavioral incidents.”
A.
As to the requirement that a plea be “recorded” before it is a conviction, Nodes argues, based on State v. Pflepsen, 590 N.W.2d 759 (Minn.1999) and State v. Hoelzel, 639 N.W.2d 605 (Minn.2002), that a plea is not recorded until the district court has prepared and filed a written judgment.
But in Pflepsen and Hoelzel, we decided whether the defendant had been formally convicted of a particular offense, not when that conviction occurred. Moreover, the statements on which Nodes relies were simply descriptions of best practices. More recently, in addressing the timing of a “conviction” in the context of an earlier version of the statute requiring conditional release for sex offenders,
Because we have held that a guilty plea is “recorded” when a court adjudicates a defendant guilty on the record, that holding is part of the “conviction” definition as though written therein. Caldas v. Affordable Granite & Stone, Inc., 820 N.W.2d 826, 836 (Minn.2012). Further, this interpretation is consistent with
Here, the district court accepted the guilty plea and the acceptance was recorded.3 Therefore, under
B.
Next, we must determine whether Nodes‘s conviction on count one occurred “before the offender ha[d] been convicted of the present offense.”
The adjective “present” is defined as “now existing or in progress.” Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged 1793 (2002). The court of appeals noted that, under
Nothing in the statute suggests that a conviction entered at the same hearing as a subsequent conviction cannot function as a “prior sex offense conviction” for the purpose of
Reversed and remanded.
