Lead Opinion
OPINION.
On August 24, 2009, appellant Victor Martinez-Mendoza was charged by complaint with one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct [count one] in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.842, subds. 1(a) and 2(a) (2010), and one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct [count two] in violation of MinmStat. § 609.343, subds. 1(a) and 2(a) (2010), for the sexual abuse of his girlfriend’s daughter, A.K.D. The State and Martinez-Mendoza subsequently reached a plea agreement calling for Martinez-Mendoza to plead guilty to count two of the complaint; receive the presumptive guidelines sentence for that offense, which all parties thought to be an executed term of 90 months in prison; and dismissal of count one of the complaint. At a hearing on September 30, 2009, Martinez-Mendoza pleaded guilty to count two of the complaint pursuant to the agreement. The district court accepted the plea, adjudicated Martinez-Mendoza guilty of count two, and set a sentencing hearing for a later date. Before the sentencing hearing took place, the State learned that the actual presumptive guidelines sentence for the offense set out in count two of the complaint was 36 months with execution stayed. As a result, the State moved to vacate the plea or, in the alternative, reinstate count one of the complaint. The district court denied the motion, citing double jeopardy concerns. On appeal, the court of appeals concluded that it had the authority to hear the State’s appeal and reversed based on the parties’ mutual mistake. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse the court of appeals.
I.
This case arises out of the following facts, which are taken from the complaint. According to A.K.D., Martinez-Mendoza, her mother’s live-in boyfriend and father to A.K.D.’s step-siblings, sexually touched A.K.D. on at least two occasions, starting when she was six years old with the most recent incident occurring when she was eight years old. A.K.D. reported that on at least one occasion, Martinez-Mendoza touched A.K.D. on her “private part” with his hand and with his “private part,” and that he also touched her mouth with his mouth and tongue. A.K.D. also reported
At a hearing on September 30, 2009, the State and Martinez-Mendoza reached a plea agreement calling for Martinez-Mendoza to plead guilty to count two of the complaint and the dismissal of count one at sentencing. The agreement also called for Martinez-Mendoza to receive the presumptive sentence under the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines, which both the State and Martinez-Mendoza assumed to be an executed term of 90 months in prison. At the hearing, Martinez-Mendoza formally entered a plea of guilty to count two. The district court аccepted the plea and adjudicated Martinez-Mendoza guilty of second-degree criminal sexual conduct as alleged in the complaint. The court also scheduled a sentencing hearing for November 10, 2009. Before the sentencing hearing, the State discovered that the presumptive sentence for count two as set forth in the complaint was a 36-month stayed prison sentence, not the assumed 90-month executed sentence.
At the October 27 hearing, the district court asked both lawyers if they had looked up the presumptive sentence before the plea hearing. The prosecutor admitted that he did not look up the presumptive sentence, but instead relied on information provided to him by a colleague in the county attorney’s office. The defense counsel indicated that he had looked up the presumptive sentence and made notes on his file indicating the penalties for both a severity level B and severity level D offense. Defense counsel specifically stated:
*4 I was questioning at the time that the plea was taken is this a B or is this a D? But I did not have my books with me at that time, and I did not look it up to see if it was a B or a D; but I was aware that criminal sexual conduct in the second degree could be either a B or a D. So there was a question in my mind as to whether this was a 90-month commit or a 36-month stayed sentence; and I thought that we’re pleading as it is so whatever it is is what it’s going to be. I understood the state was adamant that they thought it was 90, and that’s why I wrote 90 on the plea agreement.
The court also indicated that it had not looked up the presumptive sentence.
The district court also inquired as to each party’s understanding of the terms of the plea agreement. The State stated that it understood the agreement to be a “plea to criminal sexual conduct in the second degree and that that would accomplish a 90-month commit to the Commissioner,” that both the State and defense counsel presented this understanding to the court, and that the State had never discussed a 36-month stayed sentence with defense counsel. Defense counsel stated that:
It was contemplated that this would be a 90-month commit to the Commissioner of Corrections.At the time the plea petition was put in it was assumed, at least by the state and, in part by me, that this would be a severity level B, which calls for a 90-month commit ... [even though] there was a mistake made and this is a 36-month stayed sentence.
Defense counsel further indicated that “[cjount two as charged is a stayed sentence. Clearly that was a mistake_” The district court indicated that it also understood the plea agreement to carry a 90-month executed sentence.
The State argued that, due to mutual mistake, the State should “be allowed to withdraw from the plea agreement and that this matter then be returned to square one, which is having Mr. [Martinez-]Mendoza charged with the two counts he was originally charged.” Defense counsel argued that the plea agreement called for 90 months or a guidelines sentence and, with no showing of grounds for departure, the proper sentence for the guilty plea was the presumptive 36-month stayed sentence for a level D offense.
On November 24, 2009, the court heard arguments regarding sentencing. The State again argued that the mutual mistake precluded a valid and enforceable plea agreement. In response, defense counsel argued that the plea agreement was valid, that the State should have to bear the consequences of its mistakes, and that the court should sentence Martinez-Mendoza pursuant to the presumptive sentence for the offense charged in count two of the complaint. Defense counsel also argued that, because his client had already
At the end of the parties’ arguments, the district court, on the record, found that a mistake had been made with respect to the presumptive sentence for the offense charged in count two of the complaint; that the parties had created a valid plea agreement that called for the dismissal of count one of the complaint and a “guidelines sentence for a plea of guilty to count two”; and that Martinez-Mendoza had, pursuant to that agreement, pleaded guilty to count two of the complaint. The court further noted for the record that it would not have accepted the plea had it known that the sentencing guidelines called for a 36-month stayed sentence. Before sentence was imposed, the State sought a stay of the sentencing to allow time for an appeal to the court of appeals. After consideration, the district court declined to issue a stay and proceeded to sentence Martinez-Mendoza pursuant to the terms of the agreement to the presumptive guidelines sentence of 36 months with execution stayed for the offense of conviction. Pursuant to the plea agreement, the court also dismissed count one of the complaint.
The Statе appealed. The court of appeals considered two issues on appeal: first, whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction to hear the appeal; and, second, if there was jurisdiction, whether the plea agreement was valid.
We granted Martinez-Mendoza’s petition for review, which asks us to answer two questions. First, we must determine whether the district court properly denied the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement, have Martinez-Mendoza’s plea vacated, and amend count two of the complaint. Before answering that question, we must determine whether the State has the authority, statutory or otherwise, to appeal the district court’s order denying the State’s motion. Second, the State аsks us to decide whether it may recharge Martinez-Mendoza with count one of the complaint following this appeal. We consider each of these issues in turn.
II.
Martinez-Mendoza argues that, because jeopardy attached at the time the district court accepted his plea and adjudicated him guilty, the State may not appeal the district court’s order denying the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement, vacate the conviction, and amend the complaint. The State contends that, because the case had not gone to trial and because Martinez-Mendoza had not been sentenced at the time of the denial of its motion, its appeal was from a pretrial order and therefore double jeopardy concerns do not preclude the appeal.
With respect to Rule 28.04, subdivision 2(8), we must determine whether the State’s appeal is precluded by jeopardy having attached before the State’s appeal. While we have not had occasion to address when jeopardy attaches in the context of a plea agreement, we have said that jeopardy attaches, at the latest, following a conviction. See Hankerson v. State,
Here, at the September 30, 2009, hearing at which Martinez-Mendoza and the State agreed to the terms of the plea agreement, Martinez-Mendoza formally pleaded guilty before the district court.
I will accept your guilty plea and adjudicate your guilt on this criminal sexual conduct in the second degree. I’m satis*7 fied that you understand the offense and the plea agreement. Today you freely and voluntarily have waived or given up your rights and you have admitted the essential elements of criminal sexual conduct in the second degree.
At that point, because the district court accepted Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea and adjudicаted him guilty, Martinez-Mendoza stood convicted and jeopardy attached.
Alternatively, the State contends it should be allowed to appeal the district court’s denial of the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement. The State argues that the mutual mistake in the plea agreement as to the presumptive sentence makes the plea agreement voidable by either party, giving the State the right to withdraw.
The State also argues that, because only the State has the right to dismiss charges, the district court had no authority to dismiss the first-degree criminal sexual сonduct charge alleged in count one of the complaint against Martinez-Mendoza. Thus, the State seeks to be allowed to recharge Martinez-Mendoza with count one, even though he has been convicted of an offense based on the same conduct.
Because the State has not yet attempted to recharge Martinez-Mendoza, we conclude that addressing the issue would be premature. See State v. Her, 781 N.W.2d 869, 876 (Minn.2010) (quoting In re McCaskill,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the court of appeals’ decision and reinstate the district court’s decision as to the conviction and sentence of Martinez-Mendoza.
Reversed.
Notes
. While all of the subdivisions of Minn.Stat. § 609.343 constitute criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, some of the subdivisions are categorized as more serious conduct and carry longer presumptive sentences. As relevant here, subdivision 1(a), the offense alleged in the complaint, criminalizes sexual conduct when “the complainant is under 13 years of age and the actor is more than 36 months older than the complainant.” Subdivision 1(a) is a severity level D offense and carries a presumptive 36-month stayed prison sentence. Minn. Sent. Guidelines IV. However, subdivision 1(h) criminalizes sexual conduct when the actor has “a significant relationship to the complainant, the complainant was under 16 years of age at the time of the sexual contact, and ... (iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed over an extended period of time.” Subdivision 1(h) is classified as a category B offense and carries a presumptive 90-month executed prison sentence. Minn. Sent. Guidelines IV. The facts to which Martinez-Mendoza pled guilty arguably support either offense. At the time Martinez-Mendoza agreed to plead guilty and entered the plea, the State was acting on the incorrect assumption that the second-degree offense alleged in the complaint was a category B offense.
. At two points during the hearing, defense counsel offered to compromise with the State and proposed that Martinez-Mendoza be sentenced to a 36-month executed, as opposed to stayed, sentencе. The State evidently rejected this offer.
. Before the court of appeals' decision was issued, Martinez-Mendoza was deported to Mexico. This fact, however, does not moot the issue as Martinez-Mendoza could be subject to conviction for a more serious offense if he were to return to the United States. See United States v. Villamonte-Marquez,
. The State must also “include a ‘summary statement ... as to how the trial court’s alleged error, unless reversed, will have a critical impact on the outcome of the trial.’ ” State v. Lessley,
. In his dissent, Justice G. Barcy Anderson argues that the prosecutor never consented to the plea agreement. However, the record conclusively shows the prosecutor’s consent in that he negotiated the terms of the agreement, proposed the agreement to the court, and consented to its terms on the record. Furthermore, the prosecutor facilitated Martinez-Mendoza's guilty plea by asking him the very questions on the record that established his guilt to count two. Clearly, at the time of Martinez-Mendoza's guilty plea, the prosecutor consented to both the plea agreement and the guilty plea to count two.
. In her dissent, the Chief Justice contends that we are "putting form over substance by concluding that jeopardy attached when the district court accepted and recorded Martinez-Mendoza's guilty plea.” Determining that a conviction occurred by applying clearly established law does not involve putting "form over substance.” Rather, our application of established law is the only means by which we can preserve the integrity of judicial proceedings and ensure that the safeguards of double jeopardy are preserved and enforced. To suggest otherwise is to suggest that constitutional safeguards are mere technicalities.
. The dissents both misstate the terms of the plea agreement when they suggest that Martinez-Mendozа pleaded guilty in exchange for an executed 90-month sentence. Rather, the record is clear that the plea agreement was for Martinez-Mendoza to plead guilty on count two, in exchange for which he would receive the presumptive guidelines sentence for count two. The fact that the parties were mistaken as to the length of the presumptive sentence is irrelevant to determining the terms of the agreement.
. The Chief Justice relies upon State v. Robledo-Kinney,
[Negotiations began on May 28 and culminated on June 1 with a pleа agreement contingent on Kinney not having stabbed or sexually assaulted Christenson. Kinney’s attorney assured the state’s attorney that Kinney had not stabbed Christenson. Shortly after the agreement was reached, Kinney informed his attorney that he had both sexually assaulted and stabbed Chris-tenson. That same day, without informing the state about what he had learned, Kinney’s attorney allowed Kinney to give the police a statement. As part of that statement, Kinney told the police he had sexually assaulted and stabbed Christenson. Based on that information, the state withdrew its offer of the plea agreement.
Id. at 28. Significantly, there had been no court involvement and jeopardy had not attached at the time the State withdrew its offer of the plea agreement. Nor did the defendant stand convicted at that time. Also significantly, Robledo-Kinney did not involve an appeal by the State after the defendant's conviction. Accordingly, the State’s appeal and the question of appellate jurisdiction were not at issue as they are in this case. Here, Martinez-Mendoza did nothing that would void his plea agreement before the court's acceptance and recording of his guilty plea. Consequently, Robledo-Kinney offers no guidance on the issues of this case.
. The Chief Justice disagrees with our statement that a conviction in this case deserves the same protection as that of an acquittal. However, the exceptions she cites in support of her view are not helpful because they are not factually relevant to this case. More importantly, the guarantee against double jeopardy “has been said to consist of three separate constitutional protections. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. And it protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.' ” United States v. DiFrancesco,
. Additionally, we note that, as a basic premise, the posture of this case alone precluded the court of appeals from exercising jurisdiction over this appeal. Even if we could ignore, which we cannot, the fact that Martinez-Mendoza stood convicted when the district court accepted and recorded his guilty plea before the State perfected its appeal to the court of appeals, Martinez-Mendoza had been sentenced by the time the court of appeals heard the case. Accordingly, regardless of any other legal issues, the State is prohibited from challenging the merits of the conviction after Martinez-Mendoza was sentenced. See Sanabria v. United States,
. While we decline to issue an advisory opinion on whether the State may recharge Martinez-Mendoza with count one of the complaint, we note that if the State chooses to recharge him, issues concerning the statutory bars found in Minn.Stat. §§ 609.035 and 609.04 (2010), as well as double jeopardy, may arise.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that this court cannot consider respondent State of Minnesota’s appeal in this case. In my view, jeopardy did not attach when the district court accepted appellant Victor Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea to second-degree criminal sexual conduct because there was a material defect with the plea, based on the parties’ and the district court’s mutual mistake regarding the presumptive sentence Martinez-Mendoza would receive for the offense to which he pleaded guilty. Because of this material defect with the plea, jeopardy also did not attach from any conviction that may have resulted when the district court recorded this guilty plea. Once the district court learned of this mutual mistake, it had the authority, pursuant to Minn. R.Crim. P. 15.04, to withdraw its acceptance of Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea.
I.
As a threshold matter, we must decide whether the State’s pretrial appeal of the district court’s denial of its motion to withdraw from the plea agreement should be heard. In Minnesota, pretrial appeals by the State are permitted, but with restrictions. State v. Barrett,
At the plea hearing on September 30, 2009, the district court accepted Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea to count II, which charged him with second-degree criminal sexual conduct, on the terms of the parties’ plea agreement. The plea agreement called for Martinez-Mendoza to receive a sentence of “middle of the box or 90 months commit to prison” on count II, and for count I, which charged Martinez-Mendoza with first-degree criminal sexual conduct, to be dismissed at sentencing. The assumptions underlying the plea agree
After Martinez-Mendoza pleaded guilty, the prosecutor learned that the severity level for count II was actually Level D and that the applicable presumptive sentence was a 36-month, stayed sentence, and not 90 months, executed. The State then made a motion to withdraw from the plea agreement or, in the alternative, to allow the State to continue to prosecute Martinez-Mendoza for first-degree criminal sexual conduct. At a hearing on November 24, 2009, the State expressly asked the district court not to sentence Martinez-Mendoza and to stay the proceedings if the court denied the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement so that the State could pursue a pretrial appeal. The State made its oral request for a stay prior to the district court dismissing count I and prior to the district court sentencing Martinez-Mendoza on count II.
The district court refused to grant this stay. Instead, it denied the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement, dismissed count I, and sentenced Martinez-Mendoza to a 36-month, stayed sentence at the November 24 hearing. The district court indicated that the State’s ability to appeal its ruling on the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement would not be affected by the imposition of sentence.
The district court did not have the authority to deny the State’s request for a stay. Instead, “[u]pon oral notice that the prosecutor intends to appeal a pretrial order, the district court must stay the proceedings for 5 days to allow time to perfect the appeal.” Minn. R.Crim. P. 28.04, subd. 2(1) (emphasis added). We used the mandatory language of “must” in our rule. See Minn.Stat. § 645.44, subd. 15a (2010). The court therefore was required, under our rule, to grant the State’s motion for a stay.
I would hold that the district court’s failure to comply with the mandatory-stay provision of Rule 28.04 does not deprive the State of its right to file a pretrial appeal, especially when the State complied with its obligations under the rule and requested the stay. And the issue on appeal should be whether jeopardy had attached when the district court denied the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement. At that point in time, the district court had accepted Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea to count II, but the district court had not sentenced Martinez-Mendoza, nor had it dismissed count I. The question, then, is whether jeopardy attached when the district court accepted Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea to second-degree criminal sexual conduct but prior to sentencing him on that offense and prior to dismissing the remaining charges against him. I turn to that question next.
II.
Neither the Supreme Court nor our court has expressly decided when jeopardy attaches in a criminal proceeding when there is no trial and the defendant pleads guilty. See Ricketts v. Adamson,
In Crist v. Bretz, the Supreme Court held that the federal rule that jeopardy attaches in a jury trial when the jury is empaneled and sworn is an integral part of the Fifth Amendment guarantee against double jeopardy and is applicable to the states.
underlying idea ... that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.
Id. at 35,
The Supreme Court has also indicated that when a defendant pleads guilty, the Double Jeopardy Clause’s concerns regarding finality and government overreaching are not always at issue. In Ohio v. Johnson, the Supreme Court ruled that if the defendant pleaded guilty only to the lesser-included offenses he was charged with, over the State’s objection, it did not violate double jeopardy to allow the State to continue its prosecution of the greater offenses.
Several courts have concluded that jeopardy does not automatically attach when a district court accepts a guilty plea but before the court sentences the defendant. United States v. Santiago Soto,
The First Circuit held that jeopardy did not attach when a district court accepted a guilty plea but then sua sponte vacated the
Several courts have also held that jeopardy does not attach when a district court accepts a guilty plea based upon inaccurate information and the district court then vacates the guilty plea or withdraws its acceptance of the guilty plea after learning of the inaccurate information. The New Mexico Supreme Court held that jeopardy did not attach when the defendant’s no-contest plea to misdemeanor DWI was accepted but then dismissed pri- or to sentencing after the magistrate judge learned that the offense should have been charged as felony DWI because of the defendant’s prior record. Angel,
These courts concluded that jeopardy had not attached when the district court accepted the defendants’ guilty pleas because the facts of those cases demonstrated that the concerns the Double Jeopardy Clause was intended to protect against were not implicated. They explained that when the defendant pleaded guilty prior to being sentenced, concerns about finality were not at issue. Santiago Soto,
These cases also support the conclusion that “jeopardy will not attach upon acceptance of a guilty plea if the plea itself suffers from a material defect.” 6 Wayne R. LaFave et al., Criminal Procedure § 25.1(d) (3d ed.2007). When a guilty plea suffers frоm a material defect and the district court then takes action to remedy that defect, by sua sponte vacating the defendant’s guilty plea or withdrawing its acceptance of the guilty plea, jeopardy does not attach to the acceptance of the guilty plea because the concerns the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against are not threatened.
In this situation, the concerns the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against — the finality of judgments, the minimization of harassing exposure to the harrowing experience of a criminal trial, and the valued right to continue with the chosen jury— are not at issue. The constitutional policy of finality is not threatened by a district court’s acceptance of a guilty plea to only a lesser charge because there is not the same expectation of finality that comes with a jury’s verdict, and no criminal judgment has been entered on the charge to which Martinez-Mendoza pleaded not guilty. See Johnson,
Because I believe the court can consider the State’s appeal, the final question that must be addressed is whether the district court had the authority to grant the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement. I would hold that the court had the authority to and should have withdrawn its acceptance of Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea.
We have recognized that “there is no constitutional right to specific performance of a plea agreement.” State v. Garcia,
A district court “must reject or accept the plea of guilty on the terms of the plea agreement.” Minn. R.Crim. P. 15.04, subd. 3(1). The district court has broad discretion whether to accept a plea agreement. The court “may accept a plea agreement of the parties when the interest of justice would be served.” Id., subd. 3(2). The authority given the district court to determine whether a plea agreement promotes the interests of justice continues even after the district court has told the parties that it has accepted the plea agreement. If the district court learns of something after initially accepting a plea agreement, but prior to sentencing, that causes the court to believe that the interests of justice are not served by the plea agreement, the court has the discretion to withdraw its acceptance of the plea agreement. Cf. Robledo-Kinney,
The record in this case compels the conclusion that the district court’s continued acceptance of Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea was not in the interests of justice. Neither party nor the district court verified what severity level count II had under the guidelines. The parties affirmatively represented to the court that the presumptive sentence for count II was 90 months in prison. The parties’ plea agreement was based on the mistaken belief that count II was a severity level B offense, when it was actually a severity level D offense, and that a 90-month prison sen
In addition, there does not appear to be any government overreaching in this case. While the State’s mistaken belief about the severity level of the offense it charged Martinez-Mendoza with in count II is inexcusable, the record establishes that the State made a genuine mistake in this case. Several types of second-degree criminal sexual conduct are level B offenses under the guidеlines. While the complaint charged Martinez-Mendoza with a type of criminal sexual conduct that was a level D offense, the facts alleged in the complaint and the conduct Martinez-Mendoza admitted to at the plea hearing established a violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.342, subd. 1(h) (2010), which is a type of second-degree criminal sexual conduct that is a severity level B offense. The State, which had originally charged first-degree criminal sexual conduct in count I, was not attempting to subject Martinez-Mendoza to a more serious charge only after he pleaded guilty, nor was it attempting to subject Martinez-Mendoza to multiple trials for the same offense.
Finally, our recognition of the interrelationship in a plea agreement between a guilty plea to a lesser charge and the resulting sentence supports the conclusion that the district court should have granted the State’s motion. See State v. Lewis,
Lewis provides a district court with the authority to consider vacating a plea agreement that involved a reduced charge if an appellate court determines the agreed-to sentence in the plea agreement was illegal. The rationale behind Lewis applies with equal force if a court learns it unknowingly accepted a plea agreement in which the defendant received the benefit of a reduced charge but also agreed to a sentence that is too high and cannot be legally imposed. In this situation, a court should be able to consider the effect that changes in the sеntence have on the entire plea agreement and withdraw its acceptance of the plea agreement.
I would hold that the district court erred in denying the State’s motion to withdraw the plea agreement. When the court learned that it had accepted Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea based on a fundamental misunderstanding about the legal sentence that could be imposed for the offense to which he pleaded guilty, the interests of justice dictate that the court reject the plea agreement.
. The majority does not address whether jeopardy attaches when a district court accepts a guilty plea. Instead, it concludes that jeopardy attached when the district court accepted and recorded Martinez-Mendoza’s guilty plea because this resulted in a conviction under Minnesota law. Minnesota law does define a conviction as the acceptance and recording of a guilty plea by the district court. Minn.Stat. § 609.02, subd. 5 (2010). But "[t]he exaltation of form over substance is to be avoided. ... [I]n the double jeopardy context it is the substance of the action that is controlling, and not the label given that action.” United States v. DiFrancesco,
. The majority concludes that granting the State’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement "would allow Martinez-Mendoza to be twice placed in jeopardy in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.” Relying on State v. Large,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider resрondent State of Minnesota’s appeal in this case. It is my view that, by operation of law, the prosecutor could not have consented to the plea agreement. Minnesota Rule of Criminal Procedure 15.07 prohibited the district court from accepting appellant’s guilty plea, and therefore jeopardy could not have attached.
The facts of this case are not in dispute, so I rely upon the majority’s recitation of the full facts. In brief, both parties proposed a plea agreement to the district court that would “DISMISS COUNT I @ sentencing middle of the box or 90 months commit to prison on COUNT II.”
The threshold issue in this case is whether the State has a right to appeal the district court’s denial of its motion to withdraw from the plea agreement. In Minnesota, the State’s ability to appeal is limited — there must “be a statute or court rule that permits the appeal, or the issue must ‘arise by necessary implication’ from an issue where the State’s right to appeal is expressly provided.” State v. Rourke,
A defendant may only plead guilty to a lesser charged offense with the prosecutor’s consent. Minn. R.Crim. P. 15.07. When reviewing plea agreements, we have consistently applied principles of contract law to determine the terms and validity of the agreement. In re Ashman,
Here, the agreement called for the imposition of a 90-month executed prison sentence for a crime that carried a 36-month stayed sentence. But, the 90-month prison sentence was illegal as it would be an invalid upward departure from the presumptive sentence. Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.D; State v. Edwards,
. Minnesota Rule of Criminal Procedure 15.07 provides, “With the prosecutor’s consent and the court’s approval, the defendant may plead guilty to a lesser included оffense or to an offense of lesser degree.”
. In the plea petition, the parties described the agreement as 90 months or the middle of the box. Appellant argues that the plain language of the agreement is legally possible because “middle of the box” can refer to the 3 6-month presumptive sentence even though no range is given in the presumptive sentence. But, appellant previously conceded to the district court at the investigative hearing that the contemplated prison sentence in the plea agreement "would be a 90-month commit to the Commissioner of Corrections.” In light of that concession, appellant’s “middle of the box” argument is riot persuasive and the agreement clearly meant for a 90-month executed prison sentence.
. Alternatively, contract law offers another theory under which the plea agreement could be void. Here, the parties were mistaken as to the length of the applicable sentence and it is clear that there was no "meeting of the minds” or mutual assent to a 36-month stayed sentence. See Houghton v. Mendenhall,
. I recognize that Minn. R.Crim. P. 15.07 allows a court to, upon defendant’s motion and after a hearing, accept a defendant’s guilty plea to an offense of a lesser degree without the prosecutor’s consent if “the court is satisfied that the prosecutor cannot introduce sufficient evidence to justify the submission of the offense charged to the jury or that it would be a manifest injustice not to accept the plea.” But, the defendant did not make a motion to plead guilty to a lesser offense without the prosecutor’s approval. Consequently, the court did not hold a hearing to determine the merits of such a motion. Thus, the technical requirements of the rule were not met and the court did not have the authority to accept the plea agreement without the prosecutor's consent. Furthermore, the court stated on the record that it would not have accepted the guilty plea had it known the true sentence length; therefore, no legitimate argument can be made that a manifest injustice would have resulted had the court not accepted the plea agreement.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Chief Justice Gildea.
