Iowa case law observes a one-death, one-homicide rule — prohibiting a trial court from entering judgments and imposing sentences for multiple homicide offenses if the defendant was convicted for killing only one person. Our supreme court’s two applications of the rule have followed jury verdicts. See State v. Wissing,
Finding Fix did not relinquish his right to invoke the one-homicide rule by entering his guilty pleas, we annul and set aside the judgment and sentence entered upon his conviction for involuntary manslaughter.
1. Background Facts and Proceedings
On November 18, 2009, Stephanie Klop-penborg left her three children in the overnight care of her boyfriend Bryan Fix. Fix was the biological father of her two older children, but not the father of C.K., who was born in September 2009. Kloppen-borg fed C.K., changed his diaper, and then left for work at 8:30 p.m. When she returned home the next morning, Fix met her on the stairs, telling her there was something wrong with the baby. C.K. was limp and gasping for air.
Doctors at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics diagnosed C.K. with a large, hyperacute subdural hematoma, diffuse multilayered retinal bleeds, and eight rib fractures. The doctors opined the head injury occurred immediately before the infant became symptomatic, the morning of November 19, 2009. The doctors believed three of the eight rib fractures were inflicted two to three weeks earlier. C.K. died after being removed from life support on November 25, 2009. An autopsy showed the cause of death to be complications from head injuries sustained on November 19.
On December 9, 2009, the State prepared a three-count trial information charging Fix with murder in the first degree, in violation of Iowa Code sections 707.1, 707.2(2), and 707.2(5) (2009); child endangerment resulting in death, in violation of section 726.6(4); and child endangerment, multiple acts, in violation of section 726.6A.
Eight months later, the State and Fix entered a written memorandum of plea agreement, outlining the following charging concessions: count one was amended from first-degree murder, a class “A” felony, to involuntary manslaughter, a class “D” felony, which carried a five-year sentence; count two remained child endangerment resulting in death, a class “B” felony, which carried a fifty-year penalty; and count three was amended from multiple acts of child endangerment, a class “B” felony, to child endangerment resulting in serious injury, a class “C” felony, which carried a ten-year sentence. The parties agreed “the sentences are to run consecutively, for a total of 65 years.” The court’s
The court held a plea hearing on August 4, 2010. Fix personally acknowledged his understanding of the plea agreement, including the recommendation for consecutive sentences. Fix entered pleas of guilty to all three offenses, admitting that he “forcibly handled the child in a manner that resulted in the child receiving a sub-dural hematoma that resulted in the child's death.” Fix also acknowledged engaging in “physical action toward the child that resulted in the child sustaining fractures to the child’s ribs.”
The district court signed a calendar entry on the same day, accepting the guilty pleas and indicating it would “embody in the judgment and sentence the disposition provided for in the Plea Agreement or another disposition more favorable to the Defendant than that provided for in the Plea Agreement.”
At the September 2, 2010 sentencing hearing, the defense counsel told the court that “the plea agreement is pretty clear as to what the parties’ position was with regard to sentencing.” Fix told the sentencing court he had nothing to say. The court noted the plea agreement called for consecutive sentences and both the State and the defendant agreed to that result. Based on the plea agreement, the court imposed consecutive terms for a total indeterminate sentence of sixty-five years.
On April 30, 2012, Fix filed a pro se motion to correct an illegal sentence, alleging count one (involuntary manslaughter) and count three (child endangerment resulting in serious- injury) should have merged into count two (child endangerment resulting in death). The motion discussed the “impossibility test” for lesser included offenses, but did not mention the one-homicide rule. The State filed a resistance on May 3, 2012, alleging the three counts were for “three specific and different acts” and resulted from a favorable plea agreement. The court denied the motion on May 10, 2010, finding the offenses were “separate and distinct” and did not merge. Fix filed a pro se notice of appeal on May 31, 2012.
II. Standards of Review
We review Fix’s sentencing claim for legal error. See State v. Ruesga,
III. Analysis
A. Arguments on Appeal
Under Iowa law, when a defendant is convicted of separate homicide counts involving a single victim, judgment can be entered and sentence can be imposed for only one homicide offense. Wissing,
In this appeal, Fix alleges the entry of judgment and imposition of sentence on both involuntary manslaughter and child endangerment resulting in death violated the one-homicide rule recognized in Wiss-ing and Gilroy. He asks us to annul and set aside the judgment and sentence- on his involuntary manslaughter conviction for unintentionally killing C.K. Because his actions resulted in only one death, he contends imposition of consecutive terms under the plea agreement was an illegal sentence. Fix also contends an illegal sentence is not subject to the usual requirements of error preservation.
The State does not contest-error preservation, agreeing alleged sentencing errors need not be raised in the trial court. The State lobbies for an exception to the one-homicide rule in this plea-bargain case where Fix agreed to consecutive sentences and “received a benefit — a substantial charging concession — as a result.” The State asserts Fix waived the Gilroy rule by entering a voluntary plea agreement. The State relies on State v. Birkestrand,
In his reply brief, Fix contends even if Birkestrand stands for the proposition that the Gilroy rule can be waived, waiver is an intentional relinquishment of a known right, and the prosecution bears the burden of affirmatively showing he intended to relinquish his protection from double punishment for a single homicide. Fix notes he did not have specific information about the potential waiver of the one-homicide rule before entering his guilty plea. Fix argues under State v. Woody,
At oral argument, the State disagreed with. Fix on the proper remedy if we determine the plea agreement did not waive the protections of the one-homicide rule. The State believes it should be allowed to reinstate -the original chargé of first-degree murder or negotiate a new plea with Fix.
B. History of Iowa’s Single-Homicide Rule
In analyzing the parties’ positions, it makes sense to start with the origin of our state’s one-homicide rule. Gilroy appears to be the first Iowa case to adopt the principle that a court may not impose multiple judgments and sentences for homicide offenses arising from one death. That case, which predated Iowa’s 1978 criminal code revision, involved one conviction for murder in the preparation of robbery and one conviction for premeditated murder for the same death. Gilroy,
Those sources do not shed a great deal of light on the origins of the one-homicide rule. The American Jurisprudence compilation for criminal law generally discussed the prohibition against multiple penalties for several counts arising from the commission of the same offense, noting: “[F]or separate offenses charged in one indictment to carry separate punishments, they must rest on distinct criminal acts.” 21 Am.Jur.2d Criminal Law § 546, at 522 (1965). Similarly, the restatement of the criminal law in the Corpus Juris Secundum provided: “If several counts of the indictment on which accused stands convicted in effect charge only one offense, ... it is erroneous for the court, on a finding of a general verdict or a plea of guilty, to impose separate penalties for the several counts.... ” 24 C.J.S. Criminal Law § 1567(5) (1961).
Iowa’s second application of the one-homicide rule came more than two decades later when the supreme court decided in Wissing that judgments and sentences for both vehicular homicide and involuntary manslaughter, while not constituting the same offense under the double jeopardy test in Blockburger v. United States,
From what we can tease out of the spartan analyses in Gilroy and Wissing, we conclude Iowa’s one-homicide rule is a creature of common law. And while the one-homicide rule undoubtedly guards against like excesses in sentencing, it is not technically rooted in either the constitutional double jeopardy clauses or the merger statute at Iowa Code section 701.9. Because its protection is sui generis, it is difficult to tell how broadly our supreme court intended to apply the one-homicide rule.
We do think it is significant that in both Wissing and Gilroy, the supreme court applied the one-homicide rule without a claim being raised by the parties. See id. (“Although Wissing has not challenged on appeal the two convictions arising from only one homicide, we believe this issue should be addressed.”); Gilroy,
But the appeals in Gilroy and Wissing— both following jury verdicts — do not address two important questions that must be answered in this appeal. First, what crimes may be called homicides? Second, may a defendant waive the protection from double punishment afforded by the one-homicide rule by entering guilty pleas to two homicide offenses on a factual record showing only one death? We will address each of these questions in turn.
To decide if the one-homicide rule applies here, we must determine whether child endangerment resulting in death, in violation of Iowa Code section 726.6(4),
In legal parlance, a homicide is “[t]he killing of one person by another.” Black’s Law Dictionary 739 (7th ed.1999). An “offense” is another word for a crime. Id. at 1108. “Kill” means “to put to death.” American Heritage Dictionary 701 (2nd ed.1985). It follows that a homicide offense would include any crime that involved one person putting another person to death. Because section 726.6 requires proof of a knowing, intentional, or willful act of endangerment that results in the death of a child (see Iowa Code § 726.6(l)(a)-(h)), we conclude it constitutes a homicide offense as contemplated by the Wissing court. Our conclusion is bolstered by the fact that the legislature deemed child endangerment resulting in death so grave an offense that it designated the crime as a class “B” felony and assigned a fifty-year prison term. Cf. State v. Halliburton,
D. Did Fix’s Guilty Pleas Waive the One-Homicide Rule?
Having determined that child endangerment resulting in death is a homicide offense, we turn to the key question: Did Fix waive the protection of the one-homicide rule by voluntarily entering a plea agreement that provided for consecutive terms for child endangerment resulting in death and involuntary manslaughter?
The State stakes its waiver argument on Birkestrand. There, our supreme court considered a defendant’s claim that he was “unconstitutionally subjected to double punishment.” Birkestrand,
In the years following Birkestrand, the United States Supreme Court has provided guidance on the question whether a defendant’s guilty plea waives a claim of double jeopardy. In Menna v. New York,
Federal circuit courts have read Broce as establishing the principle that a defendant who pleads guilty to a criminal charge may subsequently assert a claim of multiple punishment if the violation is apparent on the face of the indictment or plea record. See United States v. Ehle,
But other state courts have rejected-double punishment challenges where sentences have been “voluntarily accepted by the defendant as part of a mutually advantageous agreement with the state.” See, e.g., Novaton v. State,
We acknowledge the State’s position has some allure. Fix willingly embraced the sixty-five year sentence in the plea agreement in return for not risking life imprisonment following a guilty verdict at trial. His challenge here “seeks to transform what was a favorable plea bargain in the district court to an even better deal on appeal.” Cf. State v. Walker,
But, all things considered, this case is more akin to State v. Mapp,
Our courts commonly reiterate that a guilty plea waives all defenses and objections not intrinsic to the plea. See State v. Utter,
As part of the negotiated plea bargain, the State and Fix agreed to consecutive sentences that violated the common law one-homicide rule. It-is likely neither the prosecutor nor defense counsel realized the violation. But the inadvertence does not change the calculus. Our supreme court has not allowed double punishment for a single homicide to stand, even when the issue has not been raised by the parties. Wissing,
Finally, we turn to the question of the remedy. Fix contends his judgment and sentence for involuntary manslaughter should be annulled and set aside, leaving the remainder of his plea agreement intact. The State counters that the entire plea agreement should be set aside, returning the-parties to their respective positions before the guilty plea and leaving the county attorney the option of reinstating the original charges. • Because the situation in Mapp presents a close analogy to this case, we adhere to the procedure followed there. We annul the judgment and sentence on Fix’s conviction for involuntary manslaughter and remand for resen-tencing to eliminate the sentence for that offense. See Jordan,
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
Notes
. A minority of jurisdictions have held that variations of murder can support multiple convictions even though the defendant killed only one person. See, e.g., Steckel v. State,
. "A person who commits child endangerment resulting in the death of a child or minor is guilty of a class "B” felony. Notwithstanding section 902.9, subsection 2, a person convicted of a violation of this subsection shall be confined for no more than fifty years.” Iowa Code § 726.6(4).
. The State does not challenge the supposition that child endangerment resulting in death qualifies as a homicide offense for purposes of this appeal.
. Some state courts have determined the rule of relinquishment applied to the guilty pleas in Broce is a procedural bar under federal common law and does not control their determinations whether a guilty plea acts as a waiver under state law. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Negron,
