Defendant Danny Rivera was charged on three criminal counts: aggravated robbery (count I), possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person (count II), and failure to respond to an officer’s signal to stop (count III). After he was bound over from the magistrate to the district court, he moved to quash the bindover as to counts I and II. The district court denied this motion. Rivera consequently entered into a plea agreement with prosecutors whereby he entered a conditional plea of no contest to count II in exchange for the dismissal of counts I and III. Rivera’s plea explicitly preserved his right to appeal the issue of whether bindover as to counts I and II had been proper. The plea bargain agreement states:
Both parties agree Mr. Rivera has the right to appeal the court’s ruling on the Motion to Quash the bindover as well as the right to withdraw his no contest plea should he prevail on appeal.... Plea is conditional under State v. Sery[,758 P.2d 935 , 939 (Utah Ct.App.1988) ].
In State v. Sery, the Utah Court of Appeals held that conditional pleas are permissible in Utah even in the absence of any statute or rule authorizing them. Id. This *1345 court subsequently approved the Sery holding on this issue by adopting a rule permitting conditional pleas:
With approval of the court and the consent of the prosecution, a defendant may enter a conditional plea of guilty, guilty and mentally ill, or no contest, reserving in the record the right, on appeal from the judgment, to a review of the adverse determination of any specified pre-trial motion. A defendant who prevails on appeal shall be allowed to withdraw the plea.
Utah R.Crim. P. ll(i).
Rivera’s no-eontest plea was expressly conditioned on the court of appeals’ reviewing and affirming the bindover issue on appeal, and both the prosecutor and the court agreed to permit Rivera to withdraw his plea should the court of appeals rule that count I or count II was erroneously bound over for consideration by the district court. On the basis of the conditional plea agreement, the district court entered a judgment of conviction against Rivera for possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person.
Rivera subsequently appealed the court’s denial of his motion to quash, but the court of appeals initially vacated Rivera’s plea on the theory that a defendant may not enter a conditional plea on a nondispositive issue.
State v. Rivera,
As to count II, possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person, the court of appeals found that there was probable cause to support the prosecution, and the bindover was therefore upheld.
State v. Rivera,
Rivera argues that the court of appeals must either review the bindover permitted by the trial court as to count I or, in the alternative, permit him to withdraw his no-eontest plea entered on the condition that review be permitted. He seeks a remand of the case to the court of appeals with an explicit order that that court review the trial judge’s denial of his motion to quash the bindover of the aggravated robbery charge. If we should find that such a review is not required, Rivera urges us to vacate his conviction on the charge of possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person and remand the case to the trial court, allowing Rivera to withdraw his conditional plea for failure of the condition upon which it was based. Rivera’s arguments present a question of law for which we review the decision of the court of appeals for correctness.
Montoya,
Nothing in our decision in
Montoya
or the court of appeals’ decision in
Sery
suggests any justification for the court of appeals’ finding that pretrial motions relating to dismissed charges are not subject to review.
See Rivera II,
The State does not argue that either rule ll(i) or the cases on conditional pleading permit a court to refuse review of issues preserved by a conditional plea. Instead the State relies on “[fjundamental rules of justi-ciability.” The State argues that the bind-over issue is now moot as to the aggravated robbery charge because that charge was dismissed and therefore any opinion proffered by a court of appeal would be purely advisory. We disagree. Under
State v. Sims,
Rivera entered into a plea bargain on the assumption that he was facing charges on three counts. He pleaded no contest to count II to avoid facing charges on counts I and III, but he expressly reserved his right to appeal the court’s decision to permit prosecution under counts I and II. Rivera proceeded on the understanding that if he won on appeal, he could renegotiate with the prosecutor for a new agreement. Indeed, if the court of appeals reviews the bindover as to count I and reverses the district court on this issue, Rivera will be in the position, to negotiate a more favorable agreement with the prosecutor because he will be facing prosecution only for illegal possession of a firearm and failure to stop, not for aggravated robbery. Alternatively, Rivera may decide. not to negotiate at all but to defend himself against the remaining charges in court.
The State claims, “The dismissal of the aggravated robbery charge following the conditional plea agreement gave petitioner precisely the relief that petitioner sought when he first moved to dismiss and then later to quash the bindover as to that charge.” However, Rivera moved to quash bindover as to two charges; he has now been convicted of one crime on the basis of a bargain he struck to have the other charge dismissed. In contract terms, Rivera made a conditional offer to plead no contest in reliance on the promise that the court’s bindover decision would be reviewed and that he would be able to withdraw his offer in the event of a favorable result. Rivera’s offer cannot be enforced until the condition he relied on is satisfied. For this reason, the court of appeals’ decision to enforce a conviction reached on the basis of Rivera’s conditional plea while refusing to review his bindover as to count I is unfair and therefore contrary to the public policy articulated in Utah Rule of Criminal Procedure 1(b): “These rules are intended and shall be construed to secure simplicity in procedure, fairness in administration, and the elimination of unnecessary expense and delay.” (Emphasis added.)
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse that portion of the court of appeals’ decision in which the court refused to review the trial judge’s denial of Rivera’s motion to quash bindover of the aggravated robbery charge, and we remand this case to the court of appeals for a review of'the decision to bind Rivera over to district court on charges of aggravated robbery.
