Title: Idaho v. Dieter

State: idaho

Issuer: Idaho Supreme Court (criminal)

Document:

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
Docket No. 38687 
 
STATE OF IDAHO, 
 
       Plaintiff-Respondent, 
 
v. 
 
PHILIP L. DIETER, 
 
       Defendant-Appellant. 
 
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Boise, August 2012 Term 
 
2012 Opinion No. 125 
 
Filed:  September 17, 2012 
 
Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk 
 
 
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Ada 
County.  Hon. George D. Carey, District Judge.  
District court order denying dismissal, affirmed. 
Bray Family Law, Boise, for appellant. 
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent.  
 
_______________________ 
BURDICK, Chief Justice 
This case arises out of an appeal of the district court’s refusal to grant a dismissal 
following an evidentiary hearing in 2011.  In 1988, Philip Dieter (Dieter) entered a plea 
agreement with the State in which he agreed to plead guilty to lewd conduct in exchange for the 
State’s dismissal of two related charges.  Subsequently, the court entered an Order of Withheld 
Judgment and Order of Probation.  Following an amended order that enlarged the terms of 
probation, the district court dissolved and terminated probation in 1992.  However, it did not 
dismiss the case.  Dieter argues that the district court should be required to dismiss the case 
because the initial order contained a clause that stated the case would be dismissed if Dieter fully 
complied with his probation terms.  He also argues that the district court had no authority to deny 
the dismissal.  We affirm the decision of the district court. 
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I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 
 
According to the presentence report for the 1988 charge, Dieter began a relationship with 
the victim in 1986.  At the time, he was 31 years old and the victim was 15 years old.  According 
to Dieter, he knew the victim’s family well and dated the victim’s older sister until she moved 
out of state.  The victim’s parents had essentially abandoned the family as they were driving 
trucks on long-haul routes, and the victim’s brother was physically abusive towards the victim.  
Dieter claims he originally felt that he was protecting her from a bad situation and trying to keep 
her in school.  This conforms with the victim’s original statements; she stated that “[m]y parents 
were on the road driving a truck, my brother was violent and I was worried about food and how 
to take care of myself.”  In August of 1986, Dieter’s relationship with the victim turned sexual, 
and did not end until over a year later when the victim was living full-time with foster parents.  
During this period, Dieter also took nude photos of the victim.  According to Dieter, he was in 
love with the victim, and at one point asked her to marry him when she finished high school.   
On July 12, 1988, a grand jury indicted Dieter on three charges: lewd conduct with a 
minor under sixteen, infamous crime against nature, and sexual abuse of a child under sixteen.  
Dieter entered into a plea agreement with the State and pled guilty to lewd conduct in exchange 
for the State dismissing the other two charges.  On December 16, 1988, the district court, the 
Honorable Robert G. Newhouse presiding, entered an Order Withholding Judgment and Order of 
Probation.  The joint order decreed a five year period of probation and withheld judgment.  The 
order also stated that the case would be dismissed if Dieter fully complied with the terms of his 
probation.   
The district court entered a Second Amended Order Withholding Judgment on June 21, 
1990.  This order continued the probation but enlarged the terms to allow Dieter to have full 
contact with minors in public places and with his new nuclear family.   
On August 17, 1992, the State filed a motion for a bench warrant alleging that Dieter had 
violated several of the terms of his probation.  However, the record contains no information 
regarding the disposition of the alleged probation violations, and there has never been a judicial 
finding that Dieter violated the terms of his probation.  Dieter subsequently filed a motion to 
dissolve his probation on September 22, 1992.  On October 9, 1992, the district court entered an 
Order Terminating Probation, Dissolving Order of Probation, and Entering Order Withholding 
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Judgment.  One year remained before the expiration of the probation, but the court found that 
Dieter had “substantially complied” with the terms of probation.   
On September 16, 1999, Dieter filed a motion for expungement.  It was denied on 
December 30, 1999.  Almost eleven years later, on December 14, 2010, Dieter filed a pro se 
motion to dismiss his case “pursuant to the Orders issued . . . on December 16, 1988 and on 
October 9, 1992.”  The court then issued a “Notice of Intent to Deny Motion to Dismiss.”  It 
stated that I.C. § 19-2604(1) requires that defendants comply with the terms and conditions of 
probation “at all times” and make a “satisfactory showing” that dismissal would be “compatible 
with the public interest” for the court to dismiss the case.  Based upon the partial record provided 
to the court that did not contain the disposition of the motion for the bench warrant, the court 
found that Dieter had not shown that he had complied with his probation at all times and had not 
made a satisfactory showing that dismissal was in the public interest.   
Dieter then retained counsel, requested an evidentiary hearing, and filed a 
“Memorandum” on January 28, 2011, responding to the court’s notice.  In the memorandum, 
Dieter claimed that the alleged probation violations were “in dispute” in 1992, and were 
“resolved by the court’s order” when it terminated his probation.  Dieter claimed that the 
termination was due in part to several affidavits regarding the alleged violations that were 
submitted by him and others on his behalf.  Dieter’s most significant argument with respect to 
the public interest issue was that he had moved to Montana in 1999, and Montana had recently 
passed a new statute that required anyone who had a sex offense on his record to register that 
offense.  This registration would result in automatic termination of Dieter’s hunting and fishing 
license and his right to vote.  Dieter claimed that he hunted and fished to support his family.   
However, as a result of several accidents he suffered while working, he was significantly 
handicapped, had trouble balancing while walking, and thus had to hunt with a companion.   
At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, Dieter asked the court to expunge or dismiss 
the case.  The court found that, while Dieter appeared to have complied with the terms of his 
probation, dismissal was not in the public interest and entered an order denying the motion to 
dismiss.  Dieter filed a motion to reconsider which was denied.  Dieter timely appealed. 
II. ISSUES ON APPEAL 
1. Whether the district court lacked jurisdiction or discretion to deny Dieter’s motion to 
dismiss. 
2. Whether the district court erred when it denied Dieter’s motion to dismiss. 
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III. STANDARD OF REVIEW 
“Whether a court lacks jurisdiction is a question of law that may be raised at any time, 
and over which appellate courts exercise free review.”  State v. Jones, 140 Idaho 755, 757, 101 
P.3d 699, 701 (2004) (citation omitted).  A decision to deny a motion to dismiss is discretionary: 
“[i]f a sentence has been suspended or withheld, I.C. § 19-2604(1) gives the district court 
discretion to ‘terminate the sentence or set aside the plea of guilty or conviction of the defendant, 
and finally dismiss the case and discharge the defendant.’”  State v. Wiedmeier, 121 Idaho 189, 
191, 824 P.2d 120, 122 (1992).  The decision of the district court will be upheld if the court “(1) 
correctly perceived the issue as one of discretion; (2) acted within the outer boundaries of its 
discretion and consistently with the legal standards applicable to the specific choices available to 
it; and (3) reached its decision by an exercise of reason.”  State v. Gurney, 152 Idaho 502, __, 
272 P.3d 474, 475 (2012).  
IV. ANALYSIS 
A. The district court had jurisdiction and discretion to deny Dieter’s motion to dismiss. 
 
Dieter argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction or discretion to amend or modify 
the final orders entered in 1988, 1990, and 1992, and cites to State v. Hartwig. 150 Idaho 326, 
328, 246 P.3d 979, 981 (2011).  There, the district court entered an order releasing Hartwig from 
his duty to register as a sex offender.  The prosecutor subsequently filed a motion for 
reconsideration, but it was untimely filed after the period for reconsideration had lapsed, and thus 
the district court had no jurisdiction to amend the order.  Id.  Here, the State argues that the 
district court had the authority to deny Dieter’s motion to dismiss because the court did not 
actually amend or modify any of the final orders.  The actual issue of dismissal was never ruled 
on by Judge Newhouse, and the 1992 final order only terminated the fifth year of probation, 
dissolved the order of probation, and stated that the judgment would remain withheld.  
The State is correct.  Hartwig does not apply because Dieter’s case was not dismissed by 
the 1992 order.  Under I.C.R. 48(b), an order of dismissal must state the reasons for dismissal.1  
The order does not state reasons for a dismissal.  More importantly, it simply does not dismiss 
the case.  The original 1988 Order Withholding Judgment stated that the case would be 
dismissed if Dieter “fully complied with the terms of his probation.”  Similarly, the 1992 order 
                                                 
1 “When a court dismisses a criminal action upon its own motion or upon the motion of any party under this rule, it 
shall state in the order of dismissal its reasons for such dismissal.” 
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referenced dismissal when it stated that “upon a proper showing of compliance . . . this action 
would be dismissed.”  However, it did not dismiss the case.  Thus, the district court did not 
amend or modify a final order when it denied Dieter’s 2010 motion to dismiss, and we therefore 
hold that the district court had jurisdiction and discretion to deny Dieter’s 2010 motion to 
dismiss. 
B. The district court did not err when it denied Dieter’s motion to dismiss. 
The relevant language of I.C. § 19-2604(1) states that if a defendant has “at all times 
complied with the terms and conditions” of probation, a court “may, if convinced by the showing 
made that there is no longer cause for continuing the period of probation, and if it be compatible 
with the public interest, terminate the sentence . . . and finally dismiss the case . . . .”2  It is true 
that the 1988 order stated that the case would be dismissed when the probation term expired or 
was terminated, and there was a written showing that Dieter had fully complied with the terms of 
his probation.  Also, despite the State’s firm belief otherwise, the 1992 order actually does use 
the word “dismissed” when it references the original order.  So it is understandable why Dieter 
may have believed the case was dismissed as a result of the 1992 order.  However, the plain 
language of the order makes it clear that it only terminated the fifth year of probation, dissolved 
the original and amended probation orders, and withheld judgment.  Additionally, it appears that 
Judge Newhouse believed that Dieter did not fully comply with the probation terms and therefore 
decided not to dismiss the case.  His use of the word “substantially” in relation to Dieter’s 
compliance lends credence to this argument: “[a]pproximately four years of the five year 
probation has elapsed and [Dieter] has substantially complied with the said Order.”  In reference 
to the 1989 version of I.C. § 19-2604(1), this Court has specifically stated that:  
[t]he statute requires that defendant has ‘complied’ with his conditions of 
probation.  It does not state that he must have obeyed to the satisfaction of the 
sentencing court or substantially complied.  Finally, it states that he must have at 
all times complied with ‘the terms and conditions upon which he was placed on 
probation.’  Compliance with most of the terms, or the major terms, is not 
sufficient.   
State v. Thompson, 140 Idaho 796, 798, 102 P.3d 1115, 1117 (2004) abrogated on other grounds 
by Verska v. Saint Alphonsus Reg’l Med. Ctr., 151 Idaho 889, 265 P.3d 502 (2011) (emphasis 
added). 
                                                 
2 This is the language from the older version of §19-2604(1).  See S.L. 1989, ch. 305, § 1.  This section was 
amended effective July 1, 2011. 
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Idaho Code section 19-2604(1) requires the defendant to make a showing that dismissal 
is in the public interest.  Even though the district court’s 2011 memorandum concerning Dieter’s 
motion to dismiss stated that Dieter appeared to have complied with the terms of his probation, it 
also stated that dismissal was not in the public interest.  It said “the public interest requires the 
continued protection afforded by the original guilty plea” and referenced the fact that the 1988 
psychosexual evaluation stated that Dieter had been “frankly dishonest about his sexually deviant 
interests” and displayed a “complete lack of motivation towards treatment focused upon the 
rehabilitation of sexual offenders.”  The court was also concerned that the doctor who wrote the 
evaluation believed that Dieter was at risk for further misbehavior with minors, his expressed 
remorse seemed superficial, and he was suspicious of therapy.  Thus, despite Dieter’s clean 
record and productive work history since 1988, the district court held that dismissal was not in 
the public interest. 
 
Dieter focuses on the district court’s determination that “[t]he public interest requires the 
continued protection afforded by the original guilty plea.”  He argues that there are no current 
facts that support the district court’s conclusion and points out that 25 years have passed since 
the original offense and the denial of the motion for dismissal.  Additionally, he argues that in 
1988 Judge Newhouse considered the potential for rehabilitation noted in the psychosexual 
evaluation, and that the district court ignored his successful rehabilitation when it denied his 
motion to dismiss.  He also argues that the district court ignored the fact that there is a strong 
public interest argument to dismiss the case as he will lose his license to hunt and fish and his 
ability to vote if the case is not dismissed.  Finally, he states that the district court’s holding was 
an abuse of discretion, and “[e]stablishing a guilty plea as the ‘protection standard’ for the public 
would create an absolute standard that could not be met” and would “nullify and negate” the 
standards of I.C. § 19-2604(1).  The State contends that Dieter’s argument regarding the guilty 
plea is “without merit” because the district court also considered the information in the 
psychosexual evaluation.   
 
The text of Idaho Code section 19-2604 contains no explicit guidance on what constitutes 
the public interest.  We understand that the public interest is served by rehabilitation of the 
individual, but in addition, a petitioner must present how there is a public interest served by 
dismissal.  Some guidance can be found in the private attorney general doctrine.  Under that 
doctrine, attorney fees may be awarded to parties that meet a three-part test articulated in Heller 
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v. Cenarrusa.  106 Idaho 571, 577–78, 682 P.2d 524, 530–31 (1984).  Included in that test is a 
determination of the societal importance of the public policy indicated by the litigation.  Id.  In 
State v. Hagerman Water Right Owners, Inc., this Court held that if the plaintiff seeking to use 
the doctrine “is protecting its own economic interests, it cannot claim that it is a public interest 
litigant. It is not enough that the action results in benefits to the public; it must be pursued with 
the purpose of benefiting the public.” 130 Idaho 718, 726, 947 P.2d 391, 399 (1997).  Put into 
this context, public interest refers to that which the public or the community at large has an 
interest.  Here, Dieter argues that there is a strong public interest argument to dismiss the case as 
he will lose his license to hunt and fish and his ability to vote if the case is not dismissed.  These 
consequences would directly impact Dieter’s private interest, but not the public interest.   
 “If a sentence has been suspended or withheld, I.C. § 19-2604(1) gives the district court 
discretion to ‘terminate the sentence or set aside the plea of guilty or conviction of the defendant, 
and finally dismiss the case and discharge the defendant.’”  Wiedmeier, 121 Idaho at 191, 824 
P.2d at 122 (1992).  Thus, the district court correctly perceived that it had discretion on this 
matter, and we next analyze whether the district court abused its discretion when it denied the 
motion to dismiss.  Contrary to Dieter’s claim that the district court relied only on his original 
guilty plea, the 2011 order makes it clear that the court also relied on the 1988 psychosexual 
report in reaching its decision.   
In a motion to dismiss, the moving party has the burden of providing evidence to 
persuade the court to decide in its favor.  State v. Gurney, 152 Idaho 502, __, 272 P.3d 474, 476, 
n.1 (2012).  Here, Dieter had the burden of providing enough evidence for the district court to 
decide that it was in the public interest to dismiss.  Unfortunately, Dieter provided the court with 
no new evidence, such as an updated psychosexual report or any other proof submitted on his 
behalf that would explain why the public interest would be served by dismissal and overcome his 
burden of persuasion.  Contrary to Dieter’s argument, the public interest prong of I.C. § 19-
2604(1) is not an absolute standard that can never be met.  It may however, depending on the 
case, take new affirmative evidence to rebut existing facts and evidence in the case file.  The 
district court was not furnished with enough evidence to fulfill Dieter’s burden of persuasion.  
Thus, while reliance on a 1988 report should be given minimal weight, the nature of the offense 
is an appropriate criterion, and the district court simply based its denial of the motion on the 
evidence available to it.  Dieter’s statements were not enough to show a public interest could be 
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served by dismissal.  Therefore, the district court, based upon the facts and evidence available, 
acted within the bounds of its discretion, acted consistently with the choices available to it, and 
reached its decision by an exercise of reason.  We affirm the ruling of the district court. 
V. CONCLUSION 
We hold that the district court had jurisdiction and discretion to decide this case.  Further, 
we hold that the district court’s decision to deny the dismissal was not an abuse of discretion and 
we therefore affirm the ruling of the district court.  
Justices EISMANN, J. JONES, W. JONES and KIDWELL, J., Pro Tem CONCUR.