STATE OF MONTANA, Plаintiff and Appellee, v. MATTHEW LYNN MONTGOMERY, Defendant and Appellant.
No. DA 09-0568 & DA 09-0574.
STATE OF MONTANA
Decided August 31, 2010.
2010 MT 193 | 357 Mont. 348 | 239 P.3d 929
Submitted on Briefs July 21, 2010.
For Appellee: Steve Bullock, Montana Attorney General; Mardell Ployhar, Assistant Attorney General; Helena; George H. Corn, Ravalli County Attorney; T. Geoffrey Mahar, Deputy County Attorney; Hamilton.
JUSTICE RICE delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Matthew Lynn Montgomery appeals from the order entered by the Twenty-First Judicial District Court, Ravalli County, denying his motions to withdraw his no contest and guilty pleas. We affirm.
¶2 Did the District Court err by denying Montgomery‘s motions to withdraw his pleas?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶3 In June 2003, Montgomеry was charged with incest, sexual intercourse without consent, and theft for his actions related to his
¶4 In May 2006, Montgomery was charged with committing sex-related crimes upon four children, including three counts of sexual assault, three counts of sexual abuse of a child, and one count of tampering with physical evidence. Pursuant to a plea agreement, Montgomery pled guilty to two counts of sexual assault in exchange for dismissаl of the remaining charges and the State‘s Notice of Persistent Felony Offender. At the change of plea hearing, the District Court advised Montgomery of the rights he was waiving and ensured he was not entering his pleas under duress. The State recited the facts it would establish at trial, and Montgomery and his attorney agreed with the State‘s recitation of the facts. The District Court accepted Montgomery‘s guilty pleas and his related admission to violating the terms of his twenty-year suspended sentence for the incest he had committed in 2003. On January 12, 2007, the District Court sentenced Montgomery to twenty years, with ten years suspended, for each count of sexual assault. The sentences for both sexual assault counts were to run consecutively. The District Court revoked Montgomery‘s suspended sentence and ordered that Montgomery be committed to the Montana State Prison for twenty years, with ten years suspended, to run consecutively to the sexual assault sentences.
¶5 On October 7, 2008, Montgomery filed a self-represented motion to withdraw his pleas entered in 2003 and 2006, which the State opposed. The District Court appointed counsel for Montgomery and conducted a hearing. The District Court denied the motion, and Montgomery appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶6 We review a district court‘s denial of a motion to withdraw a plea
DISCUSSION
¶7 Did the District Court err by denying Montgomery‘s motions to withdraw his pleas?
¶8 Montgomery argues that the District Court‘s plea colloquy was inadequate, he was induced to plead by threats, and he was insufficiently advised about the consequences of his pleas, rendering them involuntary. The State counters that Montgomery‘s motion to withdraw his pleas was time barred because it was filed more than one year after his convictions became final. Montgomery responds that the State waived the time-bar defense, but, alternatively, if the State preserved the issue, he satisfied the exception to the time bar by raising a “claim of innocence supported by evidence of a fundamental miscarriage оf justice.”
¶9 In response to Montgomery‘s self-represented motion to withdraw his pleas, the State filed an opposing pleading, citing to
Under
§ 46-16-105(2), [MCA] , Montgomery had one year from the day his time for appeal expired to withdraw his guilty pleas. In [the 2003 incest plea], Montgomery‘s time for appeal expired April 19, 2004. Accordingly, Montgomery had until April 19, 2005[,] to withdraw his guilty plea. Likewise, in [the 2006 sexual assault pleas], Montgomery‘s time for appeal expired March 26, 2007. Under the statute, Montgomery therefore had until March 26, 2008[,] to withdraw his second guilty plea. Montgomery‘s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas was filed on October 7, 2008, more than 3 years after the time limit ran for [the 2003 incest plea] and 6 months after the time limit for [the 2006 sexual assault рleas]. The child victims in this case are growing up. They should not be haunted by the prospect of Montgomery now desiring to withdraw his plea[,] thereby causing the victims to face trial testimony anxiety once again. Here, the time-bar consideration for plea withdrawal serves a legitimate purpose.
After Montgomery was appointed counsel, he filed new motions to withdraw his pleas. The State filed another response to the new motions, stating it “continues to rely on the statutory time-barred argument” and incorporating by reference the time-bar arguments it
¶10 Despite this record, Montgomery argues the State waived the issue because it argued to the District Court that
¶11 “The general rule is that issues not raised before the trial court and new legal theories are not considered by this Court on appeal because it is unfair to fault the trial court on an issue it was never given an opportunity to consider.” State v. Courville, 2002 MT 330, ¶ 5, 313 Mont. 218, 61 P.3d 749; see also State v. Adgerson, 2003 MT 284, ¶ 12, 318 Mont. 22, 78 P.3d 850; In re Estate оf Kindsfather, 2005 MT 51, ¶ 34, 326 Mont. 192, 108 P.3d 487; Emmerson v. Walker, 2010 MT 167, ¶ 27, 357 Mont. 166, 236 P.3d 598; State v. Johnston, 2008 MT 318, ¶¶ 16-21, 346 Mont. 93, 193 P.3d 925, overruled on other grounds by State v. Maynard, 2010 MT 115, ¶¶ 21, 28, 356 Mont. 333, 233 P.3d 331. To preserve an issue, a party must set forth more than “general assertions.” Courville, ¶ 5; Emmerson, ¶ 27.
¶12 However, we have permitted parties to bolster their preserved issues with additional legal authority or to make further arguments within the scope of the legal theory articulated to the trial court. See e.g. Becker v. Rosebud Operating Servs., 2008 MT 285, ¶ 18, 345 Mont. 368, 191 P.3d 435 (“While some specific arguments Becker offers on appeal were not offered in the District Court, we cannot conclude that Becker‘s overall theory or clаim has significantly changed.“); Whitehorn v. Whitehorn Farms, Inc., 2008 MT 361, ¶ 23, 346 Mont. 394, 195 P.3d 836 (“[W]e conclude that Brian‘s appellate argument, while clearly a change in emphasis, is not an entirely new theory, and
¶13 Here, the State expressly raised the statutory time bar in the trial court. The District Court was given the opportunity to rule on the issue, urged Montgomery to address the issue in briefing, and, arguably, held that Montgomery‘s claims were time barred in addition to denying Montgоmery‘s motion on the merits (“Montgomery‘s motions to withdraw the pleas he entered to the 2003 Crimes and the 2006 Crimes are well beyond the one-year time bar contained in
¶14 In 2003, the Legislature amended
At any time before judgment or, except when a claim of innocence is supported by evidence of a fundamental miscarriage of justice, within 1 year after judgment becomes final, the court may, for good cause shown, permit the plea of guilty or nolo contendere to be withdrawn and a plea of not guilty substituted. A judgment becomes final for purposes of this subsection (2):
(a) when the time for appeal to the Montana supreme court expires;
(b) if an appeal is taken to the Montana supreme court, when the time for petitioning the United States supreme court for review expires; or
(c) if review is sought in the United States supreme court, on the date that that court issues its final order in the case.
(Emphasis added.)1 The amendment became effective July 1, 2003, and applied to all offenders who pled guilty on or after that date. Laws of Montana, 2003, ch. 346, §§ 2-3, at 1158. The parties agree that the
¶15 However, Montgomery argues that his withdrawal request falls within the exception to the one-year period as a “claim of innocence ... supported by evidence of a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
¶16 Representative John Parker introduced HB 171 in the 2003 Legislature on behalf of the Montana Department of Justice to impose a one-year limitation period for plea withdrawals. Mont. H. Jud. Comm., Hearing on HB 171, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. 9 (Jan. 20, 2003). While testifying, Parker described a case wherein the State charged a defendant with failing to register as a sex offender. The defendant had opposed the charge by attempting to withdraw his guilty plea to the underlying sex crime he had entered years before, which necessitated the registration. Parker explained that “[t]he essence of this bill is tо try to provide some sense of finality in a criminal case” and would “enact a one-year statute of limitations for withdrawal of guilty plea after the time of which a conviction becomes final.” Mont. H. Jud. Comm., Hearing on HB 171, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. 9 (Jan. 20, 2003). John Connor, representing the Department of Justice, testified about the one-year statute of limitation applicable in the post-conviction context and asked for application of the same statute of limitation to requests for plea withdrawals. Mont. Sen. Jud. Comm., Hearing on HB 171, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. 13-14 (Mar. 7, 2003); Mont. H. Jud. Comm., Hearing on HB 171, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. 9 (Jan. 20, 2003).
¶17 Rеgarding the exception to the one-year limitation period, Connor cited to this Court‘s post-conviction relief decision in State v. Redcrow, 1999 MT 95, 294 Mont. 252, 980 P.2d 622, and testified that a claim of “actual innocence supported by a fundamental miscarriage of justice” is not subject to the one-year statute оf limitation. Mont. H. Jud. Comm., Hearing on HB 171, 58th Leg., Reg. Sess. 9 (Jan. 20, 2003).
¶18 Here, Montgomery has fallen far short of carrying his burden to demonstrate a claim of innocence supported by evidence of a fundamental miscarriage of justice. He cites to a one-line, self-serving, unresponsive comment within his hearing testimony asserting “I‘m innocent of these charges,” but offered nothing to deflect the evidence provided by multiple victims, described by his original trial counsel as “very, very compelling,” the corroborative DNA evidence about which his trial counsel testified, or to demonstrate that any of the pleas he entered to multiple charges over multiple years are conceivably suspect. He has set forth vague and conclusory statements, which are insufficient to meet the “steep hurdle” сontemplated by the Legislature.
¶19 We conclude that Montgomery did not satisfy the exception to the one-year time bar. Thus, we affirm the District Court‘s denial of his motion for withdrawal of his pleas.
CHIEF JUSTICE McGRATH, JUSTICES LEAPHART, MORRIS and NELSON concur.
Notes
The Legislature also amended
