STATE OF UTAH, Petitioner, υ. HONORABLE ANN BOYDEN and BELA A. FRITZ, Respondents.
No. 20170936
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
Filed March 20, 2019
2019 UT 11
On Petition for Extraordinary Relief
Third District, Salt Lake
The Honorable Judge Ann Boyden
No. 16192620
Attorneys:
Sean D. Reyes, Att‘y Gen., John J. Nielsen, Asst. Solic. Gen., Salt Lake City, for petitioner
Brent M. Johnson, Nancy J. Sylvester, Salt Lake City, for respondent Judge Ann Boyden
Lori J. Seppi, Isaac E. McDougall, Salt Lake City, for respondent Bela A. Fritz
JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court in which ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE PETERSEN, JUDGE APPLEBY, and JUDGE POHLMAN joined.
Having recused themselves, CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT and JUSTICE HIMONAS did not participate herein.
JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
¶1 In this somewhat unconventional proceeding, the State seeks to overturn a conviction it recently obtained. The State appears convinced of the defendant‘s guilt but nevertheless claims it has convicted the wrong person and wants to correct that error. The person the State convicted—that is, the person who was sent to prison for the crime—opposes the State‘s efforts.
¶2 The district court rebuffed the State‘s attempt to fix the situation with a motion made under
BACKGROUND
¶3 The defendant1 was driving a vehicle that appeared to be unregistered and uninsured when Salt Lake City police pulled him over. During the traffic stop, police searched the vehicle and discovered drugs, drug paraphernalia, and a firearm.
¶4 The defendant allegedly identified himself as Bela Fritz. It is unclear what measures the State undertook to confirm the defendant‘s identity, but the State apparently followed his lead and believed he was Bela Fritz. The State charged and prosecuted the defendant under the name Bela Fritz.2 The defendant moved through the criminal justice proceedings as Bela Fritz, at all times representing himself to be that person.
¶5 The State charged Bela Fritz with several offenses: possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, a first degree felony, see
¶6 At sentencing, the district court reduced the judgment of conviction on the first offense to a third degree felony, applying
¶7 When the defendant arrived at the Prison, a Department of Corrections officer allegedly discovered that the defendant was not who he claimed to be. The problem, according to the officer, was that the two men did not look enough alike. During the intake process, the officer viewed a photo of Bela Fritz that the Department had on file and observed that it “did not resemble the person standing in [his] office.” The officer then asked the defendant to confirm personal information regarding his identity, and the defendant allegedly confessed that he had used Bela Fritz‘s identity rather than his own. The officer ran the issue up the chain of command, and eventually the State was notified that the Prison believed the defendant was not, in fact, Bela Fritz.
¶8 Less than a month after final judgment had been entered against Bela Fritz, the State returned to the district court claiming the defendant had misled it about his identity. The State moved under
¶9 The State noted that the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure “govern in any aspect of criminal proceedings where there is no other applicable statute or rule.”
¶10 The district court denied the motion. The court reasoned that following imposition of a valid sentence, a district court loses subject matter jurisdiction over the case. Accordingly, the court concluded it had no authority to “consider and decide the issues presented.” Even if it had jurisdiction, the court noted, “a [r]ule 60(b) set aside and declaration of misplea [would not be] warranted.” In the court‘s view, the PCRA “establishe[d] the sole remedy” for the State to challenge the conviction and sentence. See
¶11 The State moved the court to reconsider. The State pointed to language in the PCRA authorizing “a person who has been convicted and sentenced for a criminal offense [to] file an action.”
¶12 Again, the district court denied the motion, concluding that the State had neither asserted the court had jurisdiction nor directed the court to authority to support the exercise of jurisdiction. Undeterred, the State tried again, filing a motion to reconsider the denial of its motion to reconsider. The State asserted that rule 60(b) provided the court with jurisdiction to consider the issues the State had raised. And the State implored the court to act because “the Defendant‘s fraudulent act of obtaining a conviction in the name of another, real person” had resulted in an “innocent person now ha[ving] a record of conviction for enhanceable crimes, including a violent felony.”
¶13 The third time was not a charm. The district court again declined. Citing its earlier ruling, the court rejected rule 60(b) as a
¶14 The State then filed a petition for extraordinary relief in this court, invoking
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶15 An aggrieved person, or a person whose interests are threatened, may petition this court for relief if a lower court abuses its discretion or exceeds its jurisdiction and “no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy is available.”
¶16 When addressing a petition that asserts error in judicial proceedings, our review is limited to “determin[ing] whether the [lower court] has regularly pursued its authority.”
¶17 Before us, the district court asserts that a court does not abuse its discretion when it declines to apply a legal principle in a novel fashion. According to the district court, unprecedented applications of legal rules or principles would result in new law, and a court does not abuse its discretion when it refuses to create new law.
¶18 This misstates the discretion a district court possesses. Although we sympathize with a district court that finds itself ruling on a novel issue of law with little guidance, a district court‘s discretion does not extend to refusing to rule because the question presented is one of first impression. District courts are often called upon to play the role of legal frontiersmen and women. Such a role is undoubtedly a challenging one. But it is one district courts are constitutionally required to undertake. Full and fair adjudication of a matter necessitates that district courts wrestle with questions of first impression, identify the governing legal principles, and apply them to the facts of the case. Whether the court‘s conclusion would be reviewed deferentially or de novo in no way alters its responsibility to undertake that inquiry.
¶20 The defendant asserts that abuse of discretion occurs only in more limited circumstances, such as when a decision shocks one‘s sense of justice or results from bias, prejudice, or malice. But that is a misstatement of the law.
¶21 When district courts have discretion to weigh factors, balance competing interests, or otherwise choose among a range of permissible approaches or outcomes, those discretionary determinations must rest upon sound legal principles. For that reason, when a legal conclusion is embedded in a district court‘s discretionary determination, we peel back the abuse of discretion standard and look to make sure that the court applied the correct law. See, e.g., Gardiner v. Taufer, 2014 UT 56, ¶ 23, 342 P.3d 269 (“[W]e review the district court‘s legal conclusions in the context of a rule 60(b) ruling for correctness.“); see also, e.g., Rodriguez v. Kroger Co., 2018 UT 25, ¶ 11, 422 P.3d 815 (noting that although “[a] trial court‘s decision . . . is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard . . . , whether the district court applied the appropriate standard . . . presents a legal question that we review for correctness” (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)); McLaughlin v. Schenk, 2013 UT 20, ¶ 19, 299 P.3d 1139 (noting that although “application of the law of the case doctrine is ordinarily reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard . . . , when a legal question is presented to an appellate court in law-of-the-case packaging, the abuse of discretion standard must yield to the correctness standard of review” (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
¶22 We apply that approach here. We review for correctness the legal conclusions embedded in the district court‘s denial of the State‘s rule 60(b) motion. We then determine whether the court abused its discretion or regularly pursued its authority in denying the motion. Finally, we consider whether to exercise our discretion to grant the writ and instruct the district court to correct its error.
ANALYSIS
I. The District Court Abused Its Discretion When It Declined to Exercise Jurisdiction over The State‘s Rule 60(b) Motion
¶23 The State moved for relief under
¶24 The district court erred in both respects. The State could seek relief under rule 60(b) because neither the PCRA nor any other statute or rule governs this aspect of the criminal proceeding. And rule 60(b) provided the court with jurisdiction to consider the State‘s motion. This misapplication of the law infected the district court‘s rulings, and the court thus abused its discretion in denying the State‘s motion.
A. The State Properly Moved Under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) to Challenge the Defendant‘s Conviction, Sentence, and Judgment
¶25 Criminal matters are governed primarily by the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure. But those rules are not comprehensive. When looking to fill the gaps between those rules, the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure instruct that “[t]hese rules of [civil] procedure shall also govern in any aspect of criminal proceedings where there is no other applicable statute or rule, provided, that any rule so applied does not conflict with any statutory or constitutional requirement.”
¶26 The question then is whether the State may avail itself of
¶27 Rule 60(b) provides that “[o]n motion and upon just terms, the court may relieve a party or its legal representative from a judgment, order, or proceeding” for several reasons, including “fraud . . . , misrepresentation or other misconduct of an opposing party.”
¶28 In Kell, we addressed whether a party could file a motion under rule 60(b), and under subsection (b)(6) in particular, following an appellate court‘s affirmance of the underlying judgment. Id. ¶¶ 17–18, 21; see also
¶29 Kell is nevertheless instructive to the question before us. In Kell, the district court read into rule 60(b) a requirement not present in the rule‘s text, namely, that a case must be “pending” at the time the motion is filed. Id. ¶ 16. We rejected that requirement after considering the rule‘s broader purpose: “The rule seeks to strike a delicate balance between two countervailing impulses: the desire to preserve the finality of judgments and the incessant command of the court‘s conscience that justice be done in light of all the facts.” Id. ¶ 16 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). Rule 60(b)‘s “whole purpose is to make an exception to finality,” id. (citation omitted), when the strong interest in the finality of judgments is outweighed by the paramount importance of preserving our courts as arbiters of just and equitable proceedings.
¶30 Here, as in Kell, rule 60(b) does not support reading into it an additional, nontextual requirement—that only nonprevailing parties may invoke it. When, for example, the discovery of fraud, misrepresentation or other misconduct undermines a court‘s confidence that a judgment resulted from a just and fair proceeding, the interest in preserving the judgment gives way, regardless of which party discovered the fraud and attempted to undo it. Accordingly, prevailing parties are not categorically barred from filing motions under rule 60(b).
¶31 The district court and the defendant assert that by allowing the State to seek relief under rule 60(b) in this case, we are “permit[ting] the State to seek relief from a judgment for other rule 60(b) reasons” and “arguably open[ing] the door for the State to challenge an acquittal.” We are unpersuaded by the argument that if we permit the State to move under rule 60(b), we are opening Pandora‘s box. Our decision does not upend any existing limits on the State‘s ability to challenge a final judgment in a criminal case. And it should not be read so broadly.
¶32 By the civil rules’ plain language, the State may invoke rule 60(b) to challenge a judgment only if “there is no other applicable statute or rule, provided, that any rule so applied does not conflict with any statutory or constitutional requirement.”
¶33 Our rules of criminal procedure contain only one provision authorizing a postsentencing challenge on nonclerical grounds. Rule 22(e) permits a district court to correct a sentence that “exceeds the statutorily authorized maximums;” “is less than statutorily required minimums;” “violates Double Jeopardy;” “is ambiguous as to the time and manner in which it is to be served;” “is internally contradictory;” or “omits a condition required by statute or includes a condition prohibited by statute.”
¶34 Rule 60(b) may therefore fill that gap in our criminal rules and allow a challenge that falls within the rule‘s provisions, so long as application of the rule does not conflict with a statutory or constitutional requirement.6 See
¶35 Although the PCRA “establishes the sole remedy for any person who challenges a conviction or sentence for a criminal offense,”
¶36 Moreover, the PCRA establishes a framework under which the State may respond to petitions for relief. Under
¶37 The PCRA thus does not authorize the State to challenge a conviction or sentence as the district court suggested. Because the State lacked another path to bring this issue before the court, the State properly invoked rule 60(b).8
B. Rule 60(b) Grants the District Court Jurisdiction to Consider the State‘s Motion
¶38 The district court concluded that it could not consider the State‘s rule 60(b) motion because it lacked jurisdiction to do so. The district court cited the general rule that “[o]nce a court imposes a valid sentence and final judgment is entered, the court . . . loses subject matter jurisdiction over the case.” State v. Rodrigues, 2009 UT 62, ¶ 13, 218 P.3d 610. Based on this principle, all of the parties to this proceeding assume that upon entry of the judgment against Bela Fritz, the district court lost subject matter jurisdiction over the matter. That may well have been the case.9 But even assuming the district court‘s broad subject matter jurisdiction expired at that time, the State‘s motion under
¶39 Under our procedural rules, district courts retain jurisdiction to address certain matters postsentencing and postjudgment. Under the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure, a district court may arrest judgment prior to entry of a sentence, correct a sentence if it embodies certain defects, stay a sentence pending appeal, and correct clerical mistakes.
¶40 In each of these circumstances, a district court is taking action in a proceeding that has otherwise concluded, when we might expect jurisdiction over the case to have expired. Moreover, from time to time, we alter our rules of procedure, changing the circumstances under which a district court may exercise jurisdiction post judgment or post sentencing. When we do so, and redefine the limits of district courts’ jurisdiction based on the language of a particular rule, we are not referring to constitutional limits on judicial authority. We are using the term “jurisdiction” to refer to the principles, developed via rule-making procedures or embedded in our case law, through which we regulate the proceedings that take place in our courts. And we grant those rules “jurisdictional” status. See State v. Lara, 2005 UT 70, ¶ 12, 124 P.3d 243.
¶41 Thus, as a matter of practice, we speak of such limits on judicial authority as “jurisdictional.” “For example, when [this court] turn[s] away an untimely filed appeal on the grounds that we do not have jurisdiction to entertain it, we are granting ‘jurisdictional’ effect to our own rules of procedure.” Id. We have likewise spoken in terms of “jurisdiction” when stating that, as a general
¶42
II. Given the Important Questions and Consequences at Issue, We Exercise Our Discretion and Grant the Writ
¶43 Having concluded the district court abused its discretion, we must determine whether to grant the State‘s petition. As noted above, we have “outlined a number of nonexclusive factors a court may consider in deciding whether to grant a petition for extraordinary relief.” Gilbert v. Maughan, 2016 UT 31, ¶ 16, 379 P.3d 1263. “These factors include ‘the egregiousness of the alleged error, the significance of the legal issue presented by the petition, [and] the severity of the consequences occasioned by the alleged error . . . .‘” Id. (quoting State v. Barrett, 2005 UT 88, ¶ 24, 127 P.3d 682). Additional factors may color or control our analysis, see id. ¶¶ 18, 20, and in each instance, the determination of whether to grant relief is tailored to the proceeding‘s particular issues and circumstances.
¶44 Here, the significance of the legal issues presented and the consequences of leaving the error uncorrected provide ample reason to grant the petition. A defendant‘s misrepresentation of his or her identity is an illicit attempt to game the criminal justice system. It carries with it troubling consequences. If unchecked, the defendant‘s conduct may result in a conviction being recorded against another. In addition, the defendant‘s sentence may not be tailored to his or her background, criminal history, or mental or physical health. The sentence may fall well short of legislative requirements in terms of punishment and deterrence. And public safety may be put at risk. The State is obstructed in the exercise of its prosecutorial discretion, and district courts cannot determine appropriate sentences, when operating against a backdrop of misinformation regarding a defendant‘s identity.
¶45 Accordingly, we exercise our discretion to grant the State‘s petition. We do not, however, grant all the relief the State seeks. We decline to determine in the first instance that the defendant misrepresented his identity. “[T]he challenged proceedings are judicial in nature,” and our review extends no “further than to determine whether the [district court] has regularly pursued its authority.”
CONCLUSION
¶46 The State may move under
Notes
Nothing we say today should be interpreted as a concession that the State is without a mechanism to address a defendant‘s misrepresentation if the State discovers it more than three months after the entry of judgment. We have acknowledged that rule 60 “does not limit the power of a court to entertain an independent action to relieve a party from a judgment, order or proceeding or to set aside a judgment for fraud upon the court.”
