Isaac Benjamin Kruse Vs. Iowa ( 2006 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 37 / 04-0078
    Filed April 21, 2006
    ISAAC BENJAMIN KRUSE,
    Plaintiff,
    vs.
    IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR HOWARD COUNTY,
    Defendant.
    Certiorari to the Iowa District Court for Howard County, Margaret L.
    Lingreen, Judge.
    Probationer challenges via certiorari an order requiring him to register
    as a sex offender. WRIT ANNULLED.
    Kevin E. Schoeberl of Story & Schoeberl Law Firm, Cresco, for
    plaintiff.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kevin Cmelik, Assistant Attorney
    General, and Joseph M. Haskovec, County Attorney, for defendant.
    2
    CARTER, Justice.
    Having received a suspended sentence following conviction, by plea of
    guilty, of the aggravated misdemeanor of assault with intent to commit
    serious injury in violation of Iowa Code section 708.2(1) (2003),
    Isaac Benjamin Kruse was cited for a violation of his probation.           The
    violation report alleged that he had failed to register as a sex offender as
    specified in his probation agreement and had failed to participate in a
    prescribed sex offender education program. The district court found these
    violations to have occurred. Kruse sought to appeal that ruling, and this
    court, concluding that it was not a proper subject for appeal, has agreed to
    review the ruling by certiorari. After reviewing the record and considering
    the arguments presented, we annul the writ of certiorari.
    Kruse was originally charged with third-degree sexual abuse in
    violation of Iowa Code section 709.4, a class “C” felony.             The trial
    information alleged that Kruse, who was seventeen, performed a sex act
    with a thirteen-year-old girl. His effort to transfer the case to juvenile court
    was unsuccessful. Eventually, pursuant to a plea agreement, the offense
    charge was amended downward to the aggravated misdemeanor of assault
    with intent to inflict serious injury. Kruse entered a written plea of guilty to
    the amended charge.
    In his written plea of guilty, Kruse recited:
    My lawyer has informed me of the elements of the crime I
    have been charged with. Such elements are listed below as
    follows:
    Assault with Intent to Inflict Serious Injury.
    (a)   That on or about March 22, 2001;
    (b)   While in Howard County, Iowa;
    (c)   I did assault a person (Child K);
    (d)   With the intent to inflict serious injury.
    3
    If I plead not guilty, the State must prove each element beyond
    a reasonable doubt to convict me. By pleading guilty, I admit
    they can prove each and all elements.
    He further recited in the written plea:
    I know that the Court must be satisfied that there is a
    factual basis for a plea of guilty before my plea can be
    accepted. I represent to counsel and to the Court that the
    Minutes of Testimony accurately describe what happened in all
    significant aspects. In the event that I disagree with the
    Minutes of Testimony, the facts are as follows:
    [Nothing stated].
    The district court accepted Kruse’s guilty plea. An indeterminate
    prison sentence of two years was imposed, but that sentence was
    suspended, and Kruse was placed on probation for two years.               The
    sentencing order expressly provided a no-contact order for protection of the
    victim and directed that Kruse “participate in sexual abuse counseling.”
    The sentencing order did not mention registration as a sex offender.
    Kruse’s probation officer prepared a probation agreement that Kruse
    signed on September 25, 2003. That agreement was also signed by Kruse’s
    mother. In that document, Kruse agreed that he would participate in the
    department of correction’s sex offender treatment program and would
    “complete Sex Offender Registry by 9-30-03.”          When Kruse had not
    registered as a sex offender by November 1, 2003, and had failed to keep
    two appointments for the sex offender treatment program, his probation
    officer filed a violation report with the court. At the hearing on the alleged
    probation violation, Kruse asserted for the first time that he could not be
    compelled to register as a sex offender because the offense for which he had
    been convicted was not a “criminal offense against a minor” as that term is
    used in Iowa Code section 692A.2(1).
    The district court concluded that the facts of Kruse’s crime, as
    gleaned from his written guilty plea, fell within the definition of a criminal
    4
    offense against a minor contained in paragraphs (c) and (g) of subsection (5)
    of Iowa Code section 692A.1. We set forth the language of those statutory
    provisions in subsequent paragraphs of this opinion.                    Based on its
    interpretation of these statutes, the district court found that Kruse was in
    violation of his probation for failing to register as a sex offender as required
    by law. 1     Other facts bearing on our decision will be discussed in our
    consideration of the legal issues presented.
    I. Whether Kruse’s Sentence Was Improperly Altered by the
    District Court.
    Iowa Code section 692A.2(1) provides “[a] person who has been
    convicted of a criminal offense against a minor . . . shall register as provided
    in this chapter.” Persons convicted and placed on probation are required to
    register with the sheriff of the county of their residence within five days
    pursuant to Iowa Code section 692A.3. A “[c]riminal offense against a
    minor” is a statutorily defined term. The applicable statute defines such an
    offense as follows:
    5. “Criminal offense against a minor” means any of the
    following criminal offenses or conduct:
    a. Kidnapping of a minor, except for the kidnapping of a
    minor in the third degree committed by a parent.
    b. False imprisonment of a minor, except if committed
    by a parent.
    c. Any indictable offense involving sexual conduct directed
    toward a minor.
    d. Solicitation of a minor to engage in an illegal sex act.
    e. Use of a minor in a sexual performance.
    f. Solicitation of a minor to practice prostitution.
    g. Any indictable offense against a minor involving sexual
    contact with the minor.
    1Thecourt withheld revocation of probation on the condition that Kruse comply with
    the requirement to register as a sex offender and attend the sex-offender treatment
    program.
    5
    h. An attempt to commit an offense enumerated in this
    subsection.
    i. Incest committed against a minor.
    j. Dissemination and exhibition of obscene material to
    minors in violation of section 728.2.
    k. Admitting minors to premises where obscene material
    is exhibited in violation of section 728.3.
    l. Stalking in violation of section 708.11, subsection 3,
    paragraph “b”, subparagraph (3), if the fact-finder determines
    by clear and convincing evidence that the offense was sexually
    motivated.
    m. Sexual exploitation of a minor in violation of section
    728.12.
    n. Enticing away a minor in violation of section 710.10,
    subsection 1.
    o. An indictable offense committed in another
    jurisdiction which would constitute an indictable offense under
    paragraphs “a” through “n”.
    Iowa Code § 692A.1(5) (emphasis added).
    Kruse insists that the charge to which he ultimately pled guilty was
    not a criminal offense against a minor because the elements of the crime as
    set forth in his written guilty plea did not refer to any sexual involvement
    with the victim. This contention ignores the fact that his written plea
    recited that “the Minutes of Testimony accurately describe what happened
    in all significant aspects.” The minutes of testimony that accompanied the
    trial information set forth the testimony of the victim attesting to the fact
    that Kruse had forcibly removed her underwear and had sexual intercourse
    with her.
    The action the district court took in sustaining the report of Kruse’s
    alleged probation violation did not require an amendment to the sentence
    that had been imposed following his plea of guilty.        This is because
    determination of whether a particular conviction is a criminal offense
    against a minor need not be determined by the judgment of conviction. A
    judgment of conviction for certain offenses, because of the required
    6
    elements of the crimes, will leave no doubt that the offense falls within one
    of the definitions of “criminal offense against a minor” contained in section
    692A.1(5). In contrast, other convictions, such as the assault for which
    Kruse was convicted, will require a resort to information dehors the fact of
    conviction in order to determine if the offenses fall within a section
    692A.1(5) definition. In either case, it is the operative command of the
    statutes, i.e., Iowa Code sections 692A.2 and 692A.3, that impose the
    registration requirement on the convicted party rather than the judgment of
    the court.
    When a person has been convicted of a criminal offense against a
    minor and is not incarcerated, Iowa Code section 692A.5 contemplates that
    “prior to release or sentencing of the convicted person” the court will obtain
    fingerprints and a criminal history and inform the person concerning the
    sex-offender registration requirements. The State concedes that this was
    not done in the present case prior to sentencing, but urges that such
    omission does not relieve Kruse of the requirement to register as a sex
    offender as required by law. We agree with that contention.
    Within ten days of his sentencing, Kruse was advised by his probation
    officer of his duty to register as a sex offender and signed an agreement to
    do so. We are satisfied that, notwithstanding the absence of a specific
    instruction from the court concerning Kruse’s registration requirement, it
    was not improper for his probation officer to conclude from available
    credible information concerning the facts of the crime that Kruse was
    required by law to register as a sex offender.
    At the hearing on the application to revoke probation, Kruse was
    allowed to challenge the conclusion of his probation officer that his offense
    constituted a criminal offense against a minor as defined in section
    692A.1(5). Our goal in interpreting statutes is to determine the legislature’s
    7
    intent. State v. Tague, 
    676 N.W.2d 197
    , 201 (Iowa 2004). “We do not
    speculate as to the probable legislative intent apart from the words used in
    the statute.” State v. Adams, 
    554 N.W.2d 686
    , 689 (Iowa 1996). We apply a
    plain and rational meaning consistent with the subject matter of the statute
    if the statutory language is clear. City of Fairfield v. Harper Drilling Co., 
    692 N.W.2d 681
    , 684 (Iowa 2005); State v. Albrecht, 
    657 N.W.2d 474
    , 479 (Iowa
    2003).
    We agree with the district court’s conclusion that, because
    paragraphs (c) and (g) of subsection (5) of section 692A.1 contain the words
    “[a]ny indictable offense,” these definitions include offenses in which sexual
    conduct was involved, but which do not require sexual conduct as an
    element for conviction. We also agree with the district court that, given the
    concessions contained in Kruse’s plea of guilty, resort to the minutes of the
    victim’s testimony was proper in determining whether the assaultive
    conduct fell within the definition of a “[c]riminal offense against a minor.”
    II. Due Process Challenges.
    Kruse has lodged due process challenges to the statutes on which the
    State relies in order to impose a requirement that he register as a sex
    offender.   Basically, these alleged due process violations are that the
    statutes defining a “[c]riminal offense against a minor” are impermissibly
    vague and that the right to challenge an alleged requirement to register as a
    sex offender only exists at a postdeprivation stage.
    With respect to the vagueness challenge, we apply the rule that a
    statute challenged on vagueness grounds must describe the prohibited
    conduct with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand
    that which is prohibited and which will assure that the statute will not
    foster arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. Kolender v. Lawson, 
    461 U.S. 352
    , 357, 
    103 S. Ct. 1855
    , 1858, 
    75 L. Ed. 2d 903
    , 909 (1983); State v.
    8
    Hunter, 
    550 N.W.2d 460
    , 463 (Iowa 1996). We are convinced that the
    statutory provisions that Kruse challenges on vagueness grounds, i.e.,
    paragraphs (c) and (g) of subsection (5) of section 692A.1, clearly satisfy this
    test as applied to acts upon which his conviction was based.
    A far more difficult challenge is presented by Kruse’s due process
    claim that the postdeprivation hearing provided by Iowa Code section
    692A.8 is insufficient to satisfy due-process considerations under the
    Fourteenth Amendment. We recognized in State v. Seering, 
    701 N.W.2d 655
    (Iowa 2005), that limitations on conduct that flow from legislative
    classifications that include no exemptions are ordinarily immune from
    procedural due-process challenges. 
    Seering, 701 N.W.2d at 666
    (relying on
    Conn. Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Doe, 
    538 U.S. 1
    , 8, 
    123 S. Ct. 1160
    , 1162, 
    155 L. Ed. 2d 98
    , 105 (2003)). However, as we have previously observed, not all
    convictions for the offense of assault with intent to inflict serious injury
    trigger the requirement to register as a sex offender. It is necessary to
    engage in a factual inquiry dehors the fact of conviction of that crime in
    order to ascertain whether registration is required. 2 It would appear that
    resort to some tribunal must be available to resolve disputes over these
    issues.
    We need not determine whether the postdeprivation review available
    to sex-offender registrants under Iowa Code section 692A.8 is sufficient to
    2The    State also asserts that Kruse has no due-process challenge because a
    requirement to register as a sex offender does not subject him to the loss of a liberty or
    property interest. In making this contention, the State relies on Paul v. Davis, 
    424 U.S. 693
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 1155
    , 
    47 L. Ed. 2d 405
    (1976), in which the Court held that a state-
    mandated program for identifying convicted shoplifters in a certain geographical area did
    not deprive the person so identified of a liberty interest. 
    Paul, 424 U.S. at 711-13
    , 96 S. Ct.
    at 
    1165, 47 L. Ed. 2d at 420-21
    . In determining whether that principle applies in the
    present case, we cannot ignore the fact that, under the statutory scheme with which Kruse
    is involved, a requirement to register under Iowa Code section 692A.2 automatically
    triggers the limitations on residency contained in section 692A.2A. In the Seering case, this
    court, by clear implication, recognized that those residency requirements were a limitation
    of a liberty interest. 
    Seering, 701 N.W.2d at 663
    .
    9
    satisfy due process concerns. 3 This is because in the present case the
    district court, acting under the residual authority the court retains over
    probationers under Iowa Code section 907.8 (“Jurisdiction over these
    persons shall remain with the sentencing court.”), afforded Kruse a
    predeprivation hearing at which he was allowed to challenge the registration
    requirement sought to be impressed upon him both as to the law and the
    facts. No sanctions were imposed against Kruse for conduct on his part
    that antedated that hearing. Consequently, Kruse has not been denied due
    process of law. We have considered all issues presented and conclude that
    the writ must be annulled.
    WRIT ANNULLED.
    3A   regulation of the department of public safety provides that a registrant may
    initiate a request for a determination of whether registration with the Iowa Sex Offender
    Registry is required. Iowa Admin. Code r. 661—83.3(4). That regulation provides that, if
    there are issues of fact that cannot be evaluated based upon the record of conviction,
    sentencing, and other records provided, this may be made the subject of a contested-case
    hearing before an administrative law judge. Id.