Court Opinion

ID: 9349090
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-21 00:04:10.223004+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:44.887033
License: Public Domain

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                                       6 6 %sb. ., . . . - a   L                                  12/20/2022

            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA                                      Case Number: OP 22-0623

                                         OP 22-0623
                                                                                 -

STATE OF MONTANA,
                                                                        DEC 2 0      r22
              Petitioner,                                          C;       L.
                                                                                           ,urt
                                                                           of Iviontana
       v.
                                                                        ORDER
MONTANA FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
COURT, MISSOULA COUNTY, HON. JASON
MARKS, Presiding,

              Respondent.

       Petitioner State of Montana seeks a writ of supervisory control directing the Fourth
Judicial District Court, Missoula County, to vacate its August 8, 2022 Order Dismissing
DUI 4th Offense (Count 2) and reinstitute that charge in its Cause No. DC-2021-568. In
that Order, the District Court dismissed a felony charge of Driving Under the Influence-
4th Offense against Defendant Tamara Lynn Brooks because the court determined that
Brooks had two previous DUI convictions and the State improperly counted a pending DUI
charge as her "third offense" in order to charge her with a fourth offense here. The petition
asserts that the District Court erred as a matter of law when it ruled that the express
language of §§ 61-8-1008(1)(a), -1011(1)(a)(i), and -1011(1)(b), MCA (2021), precluded
the State from simultaneously anticipatorily charging a defendant who had only two prior
DUI convictions and another pending rnisdemeanor DUI charge with yet another DUI as a
felony 4th DUI. The State alleges supervisory control is therefore necessary in this case.
       We invited Brooks, the District Court, and the Attorney General to respond to the
State's petition. Brooks did not file a response, the District Court responded in opposition,
and the Attorney General filed notice that it did not intend to respond, noting that it was
not involved in the decision to draft and file the pending petition and that it was unaware
of the petition until it received this Court's Order.
      Supervisory control is an extraordinary remedy that may be invoked when the case
involves purely legal questions and urgent or emergency factors make the normal appeal
process inadequate. M. R. App. P. 14(3). The case must also meet one of three additional
criteria: (a) the other court is proceeding under a mistake of law and is causing a gross
injustice; (b) constitutional issues of state-wide importance are involved; or (c) the other
court has granted or denied a motion for substitution of a judge in a criminal case.
M. R. App. P. 14(3)(a)-(c); accord State ex reL Hubbert v. Dist. Court, 54 Mont. 472, 473,
171 P. 784, 785 (1918), citing State ex reL Carroll v. Dist. Court, 50 Mont. 428, 147 P.
612 (1915) (supervisory control available for "correction of [a] manifest error" of law that
will result in "gross injustice").    Whether supervisory control is appropriate is a
case-by-case decision. Stokes v. Mont. Thirteenth Judicial Dist. Court, 2011 MT 182, ¶ 5,
361 Mont. 279, 259 P.3d 754 (citations omitted).
      As noted above, this petition arose out of a criminal matter in which Brooks was
charged via Information with one count of DUI, 4th offense, in violation of
§ 61-8-401(1)(d), MCA, for an incident that occurred on October 6, 2021. At the time the
Information was filed, Brooks had two prior DUI convictions and she had a pending DUI,
3rd offense, charge from August 2021. In February 2022, Brooks was subsequently
charged with another DUI, 3rd offense, in Missoula Municipal Court.
       The State then filed an Amended Information on July 22, 2022, with the intention
that all three of Brooks's outstanding DUI charges could be resolved together. A proposed
plea agreement called for Brooks to plead guilty to Count I: DUI, 3rd offense, a
misdemeanor; and Count II: DUI, 4th offense, a felony. The remaining DUI charge, which
had initially been filed in Missoula Municipal Court, would be dismissed.
       However, on August 8, 2022, the District Court sua sponte dismissed Count II. The
court did so because it determined that, under § 61-8-1008(1)(a), MCA (2021), the State is
statutorily limited to considering final convictions that exist on the date of the offense
charged for determining if a DUI is a 4th or subsequent offense. The court further relied
upon the definition of "conviction" found in § 61-8-1011(1)(b), MCA (2021), which
provides inter alia, "An offender is considered to have been previously convicted for the

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purposes of sentencing if less than 10 years have elapsed between the commission of the
present offense and a previous conviction . . . ." The District Court determined that the
State lacked probable cause to charge Brooks with a 4th offense DUI where she lacked the
requisite three prior convictions.
       The State then filed the present petition, arguing that the District Court erred as a
matter of law in concluding that pending DUI charges cannot be counted as convictions for
the purpose of determining whether another DUI charge is a 4th or subsequent offense.
The State alleges that supervisory control is appropriate in this case because it has no
mechanism by which it can directly appeal the District Court's ruling.
       In its petition before this Court, the State argues that the District Court erred in
determining that the State lacked probable cause to charge Brooks with a 4th offense DUI
because she had a pending DUI charge that would have constituted the third prior offense
if Brooks was ultimately convicted of this other pending charge. The State argues that the
court should have reserved ruling upon the matter until sentencing because the issue is a
sentencing factor and not an element of the offense.
       In response, the District Court asserts that the issue is a matter of statutory
interpretation, and the clear language of § 61-8-1011(1)(b), MCA (2021), provides that the
conviction must be a "previous conviction," and therefore must exist at the time of the
"commission of the present offense." As such, Brooks's pending DUI charge could not
qualify as a "previous conviction" under the statute.
       Statutory language must be construed according to its plain meaning and if the
language is clear an unambiguous, no further interpretation is required. Maier v. State,
2021 MT 296, ¶ 8, 406 Mont. 280, 498 P.3d 755 (quotation and citation omitted). In the
construction of a statute, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is
in terms or in substance contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted or to omit
what has been inserted. Section 1-2-101, MCA.
       A district court's statutory interpretation is a question of law, which we review for
correctness. Maier, ¶ 7. In this case, the State has not satisfied its burden of demonstrating

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that the District Court is proceeding under a clear error of law. The State has thus not
demonstrated that exercise of supervisory control is proper here.
       IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the State's Petition for Writ of Supervisory
Control is DENIED.
       The Clerk is directed to provide immediate notice of this Order to all counsel of
record in the Fourth Judicial District Court, Missoula County, Cause No. DC-2021-568,
and the Honorable Jason Marks, presiding.
       DATED this       day of December, 2022.

                                                              Chief Justice

                                                      /94 fier Zit„

                                                                    Justices

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