OPINION
¶ 1 Richard Norris appeals his sentence entered pursuant to conditional pleas of guilty to two counts of communications fraud, a third degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-10-1801(1) (1995).
BACKGROUND
¶2 Norris advertised employment positions, promising salaries and benefits for “diet counselors.” Norris required the prospective “employees” to sign what they believed to be agreements regarding the custody of the diet product. Those agreements were in fact sales agreements wherein the “employees” turned out to be purchasers of the product, rather than employees entrusted with distributing the product. When the “employees” refused to pay, Norris then sued on those contracts. He was eventually charged with thirteen counts of communications fraud.
¶ 3 Norris’s trial counsel assured him that the trial date would be continued. However, on the date set for trial, the trial court denied Norris’s motion to continue. Norris’s counsel then urged him to plead guilty to two of the charges, rather than face conviction for all thirteen charges, pursuant to a plea bargain agreement offered by the prosecution before trial. Norris followed his attorney’s advice, and pleaded guilty pursuant to
State v. Sery,
¶ 4 Norris timely moved to withdraw his guilty pleas, alleging coercive circumstances in the inducement of those pleas. Primarily, he alleged that his counsel was unprepared for trial on the scheduled date. That lack of preparation, Norris alleged, pressured him into pleading guilty unexpectedly when he had expected the court to grant his motion to continue. He further alleged that the trial court’s assurances led him to plead guilty in exchange for “non-existent benefits,” rendering his pleas involuntary. The trial court orally denied Norris’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas, but never entered a written order to that effect. Moreover, no signed minute entries appear in the record evidencing the trial court’s disposal of the motion.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶ 5 Although the court orally denied Norris’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas, the State asserts that this court lacks jurisdiction to hear Norris’s claims because it never entered a final order on the record. An appellate court’s “determination of whether it has jurisdiction to hear an appeal is a question of law. Specifically, the jurisdictional question in this case is predicated upon whether an order is final and appealable, which is a question of law.”
Miller v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co.,
¶ 6 Norris challenges the trial court’s oral denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. “We review a trial court’s denial of a motion to withdraw a guilty plea under an abuse of discretion standard, incorporating the clearly erroneous standard for the trial court’s findings of fact made in conjunction with that decision.”
State v. Benvenuto,
ANALYSIS
I. Jurisdiction
¶ 7 “We first address the State’s claim that this court lacks jurisdiction. The State argues defendant [cannot] appeal[] from unsigned minute entries” and that no written orders appear in the record.
State v. Smith,
¶ 8 “However, defendant actually appeals from the trial court’s order of judgment and sentence which
is
a final appeal-able order, and not the unsigned minute entries.”
Smith,
II. Norris’s Motion to Withdraw Guilty Pleas
¶ 9 The question before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant Norris’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas after Norris presented an affidavit describing the alleged coercive circumstances surrounding his guilty pleas and waiver of rights. Norris argues that the court’s erroneous assurances that he could appeal his vindictive prosecution claim rendered his conditional guilty pleas involuntary because they were given in exchange for “non-existent benefits.”
¶ 10
State v. Copeland,
¶ 11 Both the trial court and the State clearly promised Norris that he could pursue a claim for vindictive prosecution on appeal, but neither the court nor the State could fulfill that promise. The court’s legal error exaggerated the benefits Norris would receive from pleading guilty. Thus it misled Norris as to “the nature and value of [the] promise[ ] made to him.” Id. at 1274.
¶ 12 We conclude “it is possible that defendant was genuinely and legitimately confused about” the value of these assurances compared with the seriousness of pleading guilty.
Id.
Accordingly, the court erred as a matter of law by promising Norris that he could appeal a vindictive prosecution claim. A discretionary ruling that compounds a previous harmful error of law constitutes an abuse of discretion.
See Doty v. Cedar Hills,
¶ 13 Thus, Norris’s pleas were not made voluntarily with full knowledge of the consequences of pleading guilty. Accordingly, Norris “must be allowed to withdraw his [guilty] plea[s].”
Copeland,
¶ 14 WE CONCUR: JAMES Z. DAVIS and GREGORY K. ORME, Judges.
Notes
. The court itemized the following issues as preserved for appeal: (1) the court's denial of Norris’s motion to dismiss based on the statute of limitations; (2) the court's denial of Norris's motion to dismiss based on the expungement of the arrest records made in conjunction with the charges; (3) the court's denial of Norris's motion to remove his counsel for incompetency and conflict of interest; (4) the effective denial of Norris’s speedy trial rights; (5) Norris's vindictive prosecution claim; (6) the State’s failure to comply with discovery requests; (7) the constitutionality of Utah’s communications fraud statute; and (8) inadequacy of the information.
. After the court enumerated the appealable issues, Norris struggled to identify more issues he hoped to preserve. The court apparently satisfied Norris’s trepidation by promising Norris that "you’re reserving the right to appeal any issue that the Court has heard and ruled on, but ruled adversely to you ... you'd have a right to appeal that issue." The parties agreed in oral arguments that this was the most sweeping
Sery
plea they had seen. Although the breadth of the court’s promises is not an issue before us, we note our concern that blanket preservation of issues for appeal may very well overflow the banks of what is allowable under
Sery
and its progeny.
See State v. Sery, 758
P.2d 935 (Utah Ct.App.1988). In
Sery,
we adopted the practice of accepting conditional guilty pleas because "forcing the parties to go through an entire trial merely to preserve the suppression issue is a pointless and wasteful exercise."
Sery,
. In light of this decision, we do not address Norris's remaining challenges.
