Court Opinion

ID: 5138033
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 14:49:26.96922+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:05.767858
License: Public Domain

2015 UT App 25
_________________________________________________________

                THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

                         STATE OF UTAH,
                     Plaintiff and Appellee,
                                 v.
                    SACRAMENTO GUTIERREZ,
                    Defendant and Appellant.

                      Memorandum Decision
                         No. 20130713-CA
                      Filed February 5, 2015

        Fourth District Court, American Fork Department
              The Honorable Christine S. Johnson
                          No. 101101250

          Douglas J. Thompson, Attorney for Appellant

         Sean D. Reyes and Jeanne B. Inouye, Attorneys
                         for Appellee

JUDGE JOHN A. PEARCE authored this Memorandum Decision, in
 which JUDGES JAMES Z. DAVIS and KATE A. TOOMEY concurred.

PEARCE, Judge:

¶1     Sacramento Gutierrez appeals from the district court’s
decision to terminate his probation for a theft conviction and to
impose the previously suspended prison sentence upon him. He
argues that the district court erred because he had not violated a
term of that probation. Gutierrez failed to present this argument
to the district court. Instead, he raises it in this court as a matter
of plain error. “The plain error standard of review requires an
appellant to show the existence of a harmful error that should
have been obvious to the district court.” State v. Waterfield, 2014
UT App 67, ¶ 18, 322 P.3d 1194. We conclude that the district
court did not plainly err, and we therefore affirm.
                        State v. Gutierrez

¶2     In November 2010, Gutierrez pleaded guilty to attempted
aggravated assault, a Class A misdemeanor. He was sentenced
and placed on probation (the Assault Probation). One express
condition of the Assault Probation was that Gutierrez have no
contact with the victim of that crime (Victim). Gutierrez violated
the terms of the Assault Probation on at least two occasions. On
each occasion, the district court revoked probation. On each
occasion, the district court then reimposed probation with the
same terms.

¶3      In February 2013, Gutierrez pleaded no contest to vehicle
theft, a third degree felony. That crime did not involve Victim.
The same district court judge presided over both the assault and
theft cases. Gutierrez was sentenced and placed on probation for
the theft (the Theft Probation). At the plea hearing, the district
court also addressed a violation of the Assault Probation. The
district court revoked and reinstated the Assault Probation,
ordering that it “run concurrently with the terms and conditions
of *the Theft Probation+” and that Adult Probation and Parole
(AP&P) “supervise *Gutierrez] with the same terms and
conditions on each” probation.

¶4      On May 25, 2013, Gutierrez went salsa dancing. Victim
was present at the dance hall. Victim asked the dance hall owner
to tell Gutierrez to leave. When Gutierrez refused, Victim called
the police. When the police arrived, they arrested Gutierrez.

¶5     The State filed affidavits in support of orders to show
cause for violating both the Assault Probation and the Theft
Probation. Both affidavits contained the same allegations. The
State averred that Gutierrez had violated the terms of probation:

      1. By having violated the court’s no contact order,
      on or about 5/25/2013, in violation of a standard
      condition of the Probation Agreement.
      2. [By failing] to provide AP&P with a current
      address, in violation of the probation agreement.

20130713-CA                     2                2015 UT App 25
                         State v. Gutierrez

       3. By having contact with [Victim], on or about
       5/25/2013, in violation of a special condition of the
       Probation/Parole Agreement.
       4. Probation is zero tolerance.

At a three-day evidentiary hearing in July 2013 (the Revocation
Hearing), the court heard testimony from Victim, Gutierrez, and
a witness who had been at the dance hall. The court struck the
current-address allegation after the State admitted it had not put
forth any evidence on that point. The court also noted that zero
tolerance was “obviously not an allegation.” The only violations
explicitly discussed at the Revocation Hearing were the
violations of the no-contact order.

¶6      The court found that Gutierrez had stayed at the dance
hall even after learning that Victim was present. The court was
troubled “because this was a, an aggravated assault pled down
to an attempted” and because Gutierrez “thumbed *his+ nose at
the Court order” prohibiting contact. The court also noted, “On
this case, the aggravated—attempted, aggravated assault,
[Gutierrez was] placed on probation in 2011 [and this] is the
third order to show cause.” The district court ruled, “Based on
the, the violations, I’m revoking your probation. And I’m
imposing the sentence that was initially in place. Typically I
might consider doing something different, like giving you some
jail time and closing it out that way. But, but this was a, a, zero-
tolerance probation, and I think that needs to mean something.”
The court imposed “the original sentence: Zero to 5 years in the
State Prison on the third-degree felony, one year on the
attempted agg. assault, concurrently.”

¶7     Gutierrez contends that the district court erred when it
revoked his Theft Probation for violating the no-contact
provision. He argues that the no-contact provision was not a
condition of the Theft Probation. In the alternative, he argues
that if the no-contact provision was a component of the Theft
Probation, it was unenforceable because it was unexpressed and

20130713-CA                      3                 2015 UT App 25
                        State v. Gutierrez

unwritten. He asserts that, “either way, the court’s termination
of [the Theft Probation+ was an error.”

¶8     Gutierrez points to the sentencing minute order the court
entered after he pleaded no contest to the theft charges. That
order listed ten conditions of probation but omitted any mention
of a no-contact condition. Gutierrez also points to an AP&P
progress report relating to the Theft Probation. That report lists
the same ten conditions and again omits any mention of a no-
contact provision.

¶9      We are not convinced that the error Gutierrez asserts—
that the district court incorrectly believed that the terms of the
Theft Probation contained a no-contact provision—was in fact an
error. At the February 2013 hearing, the district court had
addressed both sentencing for the theft charge and an order to
show cause seeking sanctions for violating the terms of the
Assault Probation. With respect to the theft charge, the district
court sentenced Gutierrez to a prison term of zero to five years,
suspended that sentence, and placed him on probation for thirty-
six months. It also ordered a 150-day jail sentence, credited
Gutierrez for 103 days already served, and stated several terms
of probation. Those terms included a substance abuse
assessment, compliance with the Probation Violations and
Rewards Matrix, and abstention from impairing substances. The
court stated, “I don’t have a good track record of you on
probation on the [attempted aggravated assault case;] this is not
the first time this has been before me on an order to show cause,
so I will expect probation to run better on *the theft charge+.”
The district court then ordered, with our emphasis:

      With respect to [the Assault Probation] sanctions,
      I’ll revoke and reinstate your probation for twenty-
      four months. I’ll order that to run concurrently
      with the terms and conditions of [the Theft
      Probation], so this will likewise be zero tolerance

20130713-CA                     4                2015 UT App 25
                         State v. Gutierrez

       probation, we’ll just have AP&P supervise with the
       same terms and conditions on each.

There is no dispute that a no-contact provision was a term of the
Assault Probation. Accordingly, the order applying the same
terms and conditions to both probations incorporated the no-
contact provision from the Assault Probation into the Theft
Probation. It therefore appears that the terms of the Theft
Probation did contain a no-contact provision.

¶10 Additionally, Gutierrez did not preserve for appeal his
claim that the no-contact provision was not a term of the Theft
Probation. Claims of error generally must be presented to the
district court to preserve them for appeal. See 438 Main St. v. Easy
Heat, Inc., 2004 UT 72, ¶ 51, 99 P.3d 801. Gutierrez admitted at
the Revocation Hearing five months after the Theft Probation
began that he had not left the dance hall even after discovering
that Victim was there. The court expressed doubt about “how
supervisable *Gutierrez was+ on probation” and stated that his
actions were “a direct violation of a court order.” It then revoked
both probations. Gutierrez did not argue to the district court that
his actions had violated the terms of only one of his probations.
Because he did not do so, he has failed to preserve this argument
for appeal.

¶11 Gutierrez urges us to reach his claim under the plain error
exception to the preservation rule. In order to demonstrate plain
error, an appellant must “show the existence of a harmful error
that should have been obvious to the district court.” State v.
Waterfield, 2014 UT App 67, ¶ 18, 322 P.3d 1194. We have held
that the plain error exception to preservation applies to both
factual and legal disputes. See id.; State v. Demartinis, 2008 UT
App 261U, paras. 6–7 (per curiam). In Demartinis, a district court
tried a defendant in absentia. 2008 UT App 261U, para. 2. The
court had previously given the defendant two warnings: first,
that the court would jail him until trial if he failed to appear at
subsequent court proceedings and, second, that the court would

20130713-CA                      5                 2015 UT App 25
                          State v. Gutierrez

conduct the trial despite the defendant’s absence if he failed to
appear. Id. paras. 4–6. The defendant did not appear at trial. Id.
para. 2. The court verified that the defendant had not provided
contact information to his defense counsel, was not incarcerated,
and had not contacted the court about his absence. Id. para. 4.
The court then conducted the trial, and the defendant was found
guilty. Id. paras. 1, 4. The defendant appealed, arguing that the
court had plainly erred by punishing his absenteeism with the
second consequence (trial in absentia) rather than the first
(jailing defendant until trial). Id. para. 5. We held that the district
court had not plainly erred, because it was not obvious to the
court that the defendant would have relied on the threat of being
jailed to the exclusion of the threat of trial in absentia. Id.

¶12 Here, five months before the Revocation Hearing, the
district court had ordered that “the same terms and conditions”
applied to both of Gutierrez’s probations. Even if we were to
conclude that this was somehow insufficient to incorporate the
no-contact provision into the terms of the Theft Probation, the
resulting ineffectiveness of that provision would not have been
obvious to the district court absent any protest by Gutierrez.
Because the error—if any—was not obvious, the district court
did not plainly err in proceeding as if the Theft Probation terms
included a no-contact provision.

¶13 Gutierrez also asserts that even if the no-contact provision
was a component of the Theft Probation, it was unenforceable
“because the terms were indefinite and unexpressed.” He argues
that “due process and fundamental fairness require that *a
defendant] be informed of the terms that his probation was to be
conditioned upon.” Gutierrez cites two cases in support of this
proposition. In the first, we observed that “*i+t is necessary that
sentences be rendered with clarity and accuracy in order to
avoid the possibility of confusion and injustice.” State v. Denney,
776 P.2d 91, 93 (Utah Ct. App. 1989). As explained above, the
district court’s order is clear that “the same terms and
conditions” applied to both of Gutierrez’s probations. Gutierrez

20130713-CA                       6                  2015 UT App 25
                         State v. Gutierrez

also cites a case from the United States Supreme Court. There,
the Court stated that “*s+entences in criminal cases should reveal
with fair certainty the intent of the court and exclude any serious
misapprehensions by those who must execute them.” United
States v. Daugherty, 269 U.S. 360, 363 (1926). But the Court also
noted that “*t+he elimination of every possible doubt cannot be
demanded.” Id. Gutierrez does not explain why he believes his
case falls on the far side of this line, nor does he engage in a
meaningful analysis of the impact of that case upon his own. See
Utah R. App. P. 24(a)(9) (“The argument *section of an appellate
brief] shall contain the contentions and reasons of the appellant
with respect to the issues presented . . . .”). He has therefore
failed to carry his burden on appeal.

¶14 The terms of the Theft Probation appear to include a no-
contact provision. Even if they do not, the absence was not
obvious to the district court. The district court therefore did not
plainly err in ruling that Gutierrez’s contact with Victim violated
the terms of the Theft Probation. With regard to Gutierrez’s
claim that the terms of the Theft Probation were too vague to be
enforceable, he fails to carry his burden on appeal.

¶15   Affirmed.

20130713-CA                      7                2015 UT App 25