This appeal arises from three cases involving forgery and checks issued with insufficient funds. The defendant, Timothy Lee Allen, contends that the State breached the plea agreement for the first two eases, that the district court abused its discretion in imposing the sentences in those cases, and that the district court erred in denying a Rule 35 motion to reduce his sentences in all three cases.
I.
FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This consolidated apрeal involves three separate but related criminal proceedings. The first two, Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097, although not formally consolidated, were handled together. In the spring of 2003, Allen attempted to purchase a vehicle for $12,118.70. He wrote three checks for the purchase price, but all three checks bounced. Allen ultimately returned the car to the seller but on August 12, 2003, was charged with three counts of issuing аn insufficient funds check greater than $250, Idaho Code § 18-3106. In September 2003, Allen forged a $507.15 cashier’s check to pay overdue rent, and two days later was charged with this forgery, I.C. § 18-3601. On October 25, 2003, Allen accepted a settlement offer regarding these two cases. He agreed to plead guilty to the forgery charge and to one count of issuing an insufficient funds check, and waived his right to appeal the conviction and sentence. The State agreed to dismiss the other two counts of issuing insufficient funds checks and to recommend concurrent determinate sentences of eighteen months, leaving the indeterminate portion to the judge’s discretion. However, the agreement also stated that the State’s sentence recommendation was conditioned upon “no new criminal offense before date of sentencing.” The district court accepted Allen’s guilty pleas on November 14, 2003, and set the matter for sentencing in February 2004.
On November 17, 2003, three days after his guilty pleas in the earlier cases, the State charged Allen with twelve additional counts of issuing insufficient funds checks and three more counts of forgery for activities that took place between February and September 2003 (Docket No. 31098). These crimes were committed more or less contemporaneously with those in the previous two cases and before the initial plea agreement. Allen committed the offenses when he attempted to acquire a business. To appease the seller, he forged several documents supposedly showing his assets, and issued more than $73,000 in cheeks that never cleared. He also wrote eight payroll cheeks totaling more than $15,000 that were rejected for insufficient funds. On January 30, 2004, Allen accepted a settlement offer in this third case. He agreed to plead guilty to three counts of issuing an insufficient funds check and one count of forgery, as well as waive his right to appeal. The State agreed to dismiss the remaining charges and a persistent violator enhancement, and to recommend that the sentence on the four counts run concurrent with each other and with the sentence in the previous forgery case. The district court accepted the pleas and scheduled all three cases for a single sentencing hearing.
During sentencing, without objection from Allen, the State recommended unified twelve-year terms of imprisonment with six years determinate on both the forgery counts and three-year determinate sentences on each of the counts for insufficient funds checks, with the sentences to run concurrently. The district court ultimately imposed a ten-year uni *270 fied sentence with three and one-half years determinate on both of the forgery charges. On each of the four counts for insufficient funds checks, the court imposed a three-year determinate term. The judge directed that all sentences run concurrently. Allen then filed Rule 35 motions to reduce his sentences in all three cases, which the court denied. Allen now contends that the State breached its plea agreement in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097, that the court abused its discretion in imposing the sentences in the first two cases, and that the court erred in denying the motions to reduce the sentences in all the cases.
II.
DISCUSSION
A. Breach of Plea Agreement
As a preliminary matter, before considering Allen’s arguments that the State breached thе first plea agreement, we must address the State’s contention that neither this issue nor any of the other issues raised by Allen should be considered by this Court because, as a term of the plea agreements, he waived his right to appeal. A defendant’s waiver of the right to appeal as a term of a plea bargain is generally valid and enforceable. Idaho Criminal 11(d)(1);
State v. Murphy,
Allen contends that the State was required, by the terms of the plea agreement in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097, to recommend no more than one and one-half years determinate regarding the initial counts of forgery and insufficient funds. He argues that the State’s general recommendation of six years fixed on both of the forgery counts and three years fixed on all four of the insufficient funds counts constituted a breach of the plea agreement. The State responds that the third set of charges, filed on November 17, was a “new criminal offense before the date of sentencing,” and thus the State was relieved of the sentence recommendation obligation in the initial plea agreement.
When a guilty plea “rests in any significant degree on a promise or agreement of the prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the inducement or consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.”
Santobello v. New York,
The State’s argument that it was relieved of its obligation under the agreement because of a new criminal offense is not so much a claim that Allen breached the plea agreement as an assertion that a condition to the State’s promised performance failed. As the Idaho Supreme Court has said, “[i]f the condition upon which the prosecution’s promised sentencing recommendation was based
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fails, the prosecution is not obligated to perform the agreement.”
Berg v. State,
The failure of a condition also may be caused by the defendant’s actions after the plea agreement was made. For example, in
State v. Tyler,
The fact that Allen did not object to the prosecutor’s sentencing recommendation or otherwise claim a prosecutorial breach of the plea agreement in the trial court does not, in itself, preclude consideration of the issue on appeal. It is generally true that if a party does not rаise an issue before the trial court, that issue is waived for purposes of appeal.
State v. Fodge,
It does not follow, however, that appellate review is appropriate in every case where a claim of breach of the plea bargain is first asserted on appeal. An appellate court can know only what is revealеd on the record and it is therefore incumbent upon the respective attorneys to clearly and unambiguously state the entire plea agreement on the record.
Banuelos,
Here, the аgreement at first blush appears to be clearly articulated, for its detailed terms were memorialized in writing and then reiterated by the district court. However, it contains an ambiguous provision that the State’s sentence recommendation is conditioned upon “no new criminal offenses before the date of sentencing.” Whether this
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plea agreement was violated hinges on this provision. The State argues thаt this clause removes the State’s obligation to make the sentencing recommendation if new criminal offenses are
filed
before sentencing, even if the State was already aware of the potential charges. That interpretation is unreasonable. Such a meaning of the clause would make the agreement illusory, allowing the State to avoid its obligation merely by filing additional charges. The State would be able to fraudulently induce a defendant to plead guilty in one case while holding other charges in reserve so the State could later file the additional charges and then claim that it was relieved of its obligations under the plea agreement. If the State was aware of the additional offenses when it entered into the plea agreement with Allen, the State may not be heard to contend that its own act in filing the additional charges constituted a breach of the plea agreement by Allen or the failure of a condition precedent to the State’s obligations.
See Fish v. Fleishman, 87
Idaho 126, 133,
The clause has at least two other possible meanings, however, either of which is reasonable. It could mean that the State was bound by its promise as long as no nеw criminal offenses were
committed or discovered by the State
before sentencing. This interpretation has the advantage of ensuring that the circumstances under which the bargain was made remain substantially the same. If this is the correct meaning, then the question whether the State breached the plea agreement by its sentencing recommendation turns upon whether agents of the State were aware of Allen’s offenses, subsequently charged in Doсket No. 31098, at the time he pleaded guilty in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097. If the new charges were discovered by the State after Allen’s first guilty plea, then no breach by the State would have occurred. On the other hand, the language could be interpreted as Allen proposes, to provide that Allen could lose the benefit of the plea agreement only if he
committed
a new offense prior to sentencing. If this is the ease, then the State breached the plea agreement. Both of these interpretations are plausible, and because the term is subject to conflicting interpretations, it is ambiguous.
State v. Claxton,
As previously stated, a plea agreement is contractual in nature and is generally measured by contract law standards.
See Rutherford,
In this circumstance, Allen’s claim cannot appropriately be determined on appeal. An evidentiary hearing before the district court is necessary to resolve the factual issues as to the meaning of the term, whether it was breached, and whether the first plea agreement was superseded. Consequently, we decline to render a decision on his claim that the State brеached the plea agreement, and the claim is preserved without prejudice to Allen’s opportunity to pursue it through ap
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propriate proceedings in the trial court.
See Kellis,
B. Sentence
Allen asserts that the district court abused its discretion in imposing total unified sentences of ten years with three and one-half years determinate in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097 in light of his remorse and the strong support he receives from his family. Although a question remains as to whether Allen waived his right to appeal these sentences, we conclude that the waiver issue ultimately will not be determinative of the outcome of the appeal concerning the reasonableness of the sentences and, in the interest of judicial efficiency, we therefore address it.
When a sentence is challenged on appeal, we examine the record, focusing upon the nature of the offense аnd the character of the offender, to determine if there has been an abuse of the sentencing court’s discretion.
State v. Young,
Allen’s sentences in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097 are not unreasonable. When he committed these offenses, Allen had just finished serving a Washington state sentence and was on federal prоbation for felony theft, forgery, and fraud charges related to stealing approximately $800,000 from client trusts accounts in his accounting business. The crimes in the present cases are similar, and he has re-offended. Although Allen has expressed remorse for the crimes in the present cases, he downplayed the impact that his actions had on his victims and their ability to do business; he instead focused on his own desperаtion brought on by his numerous illegal schemes. The district court appropriately crafted the sentence to balance a need for deterrence and rehabilitation with the need for restitution, allowing for the possibility of parole release in three and one-half years so that Allen can begin attempting to repay his victims. We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing the sentences for these two cases.
Allen also contends that the district court erred in denying his Rule 35 motions to reduce his sentences in all three cases, arguing that his sentences were excessive as initially imposed. A motion pursuant to Idaho Criminal Rule 35 is essentially a request for leniency which may be granted in the discretion of the sentencing court.
State v. Forde,
We have concluded above that the district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sentence in the first two cases, and Allen presented no new information with his Rule 35 motion that would alter that conclusion. Therefore, we hold that the district court properly denied the Rule 35 motion in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097.
As to the motion filed in the third case, Docket No. 31098, we hold that Allen’s appellate challenge to the denial of his Rule 35 motion has been waived by his plea agreement. That plea agreement, like the first one, cоntained a clause by which Allen *274 waived his right to appeal. Arguably, that waiver did not preclude Allen from filing a Rule 35 motion for reduction of his sentence in the trial court. However, because Allen filed no new evidence in support of that Rule 35 motion, an appeal from the order denying the motion would amount to nothing more than a challenge to the reasonableness of the sentences as originally imрosed. To allow an appellate challenge to the denial of the Rule 35 motion in these circumstances would allow Allen and similarly situated defendants to evade the appeal waiver in their plea agreements merely by filing an unsupported Rule 35 motion and appealing the subsequent denial order. Accordingly, we will not address his argument that the Rule 35 motion was improperly denied in Docket No. 31098, and we dismiss that portion of his appeal.
III.
CONCLUSION
Because no finder of fact has determined the meaning of an ambiguous material term in the plea agreement or resolved related factual issues, on appeal we are unable to determine whether the agreement was breached. We therefore decline to address the issue. As to the sentences, we hold that the district court did not err in initially imposing the sentences or in denying Allen’s Rule 35 motion to reduce the sentences in Docket Nos. 31096 and 31097. Therefore, the judgment of conviction and sentences, and the district court’s orders denying Allen’s Rule 35 motions in those cases, are affirmed. This affirmance is without prejudice to Allen’s ability to request relief in the trial court for an alleged breach of the plea agreement. Allen’s appeal in Docket No. 31098 is dismissed on the ground that his right to appeal was waived in that case.
Notes
. We therefore decline the State’s suggestion that we overrule this doctrine.
