State of New Hampshire v. Bryan Weston Luikart ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for rehearing under Rule 22 as well
    as formal revision before publication in the New Hampshire Reports. Readers are
    requested to notify the Reporter, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, One Charles
    Doe Drive, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, of any editorial errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion goes to press. Errors may be
    reported by e-mail at the following address: reporter@courts.state.nh.us.
    Opinions are available on the Internet by 9:00 a.m. on the morning of their
    release. The direct address of the court’s home page is:
    http://www.courts.state.nh.us/supreme.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    2nd Circuit Court-Lebanon District Division
    No. 2019-0539
    THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    v.
    BRYAN WESTON LUIKART
    Argued: September 24, 2020
    Opinion Issued: May 4, 2021
    Gordon J. MacDonald, attorney general (Elizabeth C. Woodcock,
    assistant attorney general, on the memorandum of law and orally), for the
    State.
    Simpson & Mulligan, P.L.L.C., of Lebanon (Gary Apfel, on the brief and
    orally), for the defendant.
    HANTZ MARCONI, J. The defendant, Bryan Weston Luikart, appeals an
    order of the Circuit Court (Bamberger, J.) imposing a portion of his suspended
    sentence. The defendant argues the trial court erred in finding that the State
    met its burden of proving that he violated the good behavior condition of his
    suspended sentence by committing witness tampering. See RSA 641:5, I(b)
    (2016). We reverse.
    I
    The pertinent facts before the trial court and the procedural posture of
    the case, established by the record from the motion hearing, are as follows.1
    See State v. Smith, 
    163 N.H. 13
    , 18 (2011) (explaining “the trial court must
    independently evaluate the evidence before it” to impose a suspended sentence
    (quotation and brackets omitted)); State v. Gibbs, 
    157 N.H. 538
    , 539, 542
    (2008). On February 5, 2018, the defendant pled guilty to various charges and
    was sentenced to 90 days’ incarceration, suspended for a period of two years.
    Conditions on the defendant’s suspended sentence included that the defendant
    “complete [a] batterer’s intervention program and be of good behavior.”
    Following his sentencing, the defendant enrolled in his first batterer’s
    intervention program, but his participation in the program ended on January
    24, 2019, for reasons irrelevant to this appeal. As a result of the defendant’s
    departure from the program, the State moved to impose the defendant’s
    suspended sentence on February 8. The defendant then enrolled in a second
    batterer’s intervention program on February 19, and the State withdrew its
    motion to impose on February 28.
    Three days later, on March 3, the defendant sent the following e-mail to
    his ex-wife: “If you want to be on friendly communicating terms for the best
    interest of [our child] you might want to consider not trying to trigger the
    suspended sentence and not trying to continue hurting me. You are the
    abuser.” On March 7, the State filed a new motion to impose the defendant’s
    suspended sentence. A hearing on the State’s motion was held on July 23.
    The State’s evidence included the defendant’s e-mail, its withdrawn February 8
    motion, its March 7 motion, the defendant’s suspended sentence, and its offers
    of proof supporting its argument that the defendant committed witness
    tampering, see RSA 641:5, I(b), and, consequently, that he violated the good
    behavior condition of his suspended sentence. The trial court granted the
    State’s motion to impose, finding the evidence before it “sufficient to grant the
    State’s motion, at least generally.” The trial court imposed ten days of the
    defendant’s 90-day sentence, with the balance suspended for an additional
    year. Over the State’s objection, the trial court granted the defendant’s request
    for a stay of the imposition pending appeal. The defendant filed a motion to
    reconsider the trial court’s imposition of his suspended sentence, which was
    denied. This appeal followed.
    1 In its memorandum of law, the State references evidence that was not before the trial court when
    it found that the defendant violated the good behavior condition of his suspended sentence. We
    do not rely upon evidence not before the trial court to determine whether it erred in so finding.
    See State v. Gibbs, 
    157 N.H. 538
    , 539, 542 (2008).
    2
    II
    The defendant argues that the trial court erred in finding he violated the
    good behavior condition of his suspended sentence by committing witness
    tampering, and in doing so characterizes his argument as a challenge to the
    “sufficiency of the evidence,” which is consistent with language used in our
    prior cases. See, e.g., State v. Benner, 
    172 N.H. 194
    , 202 (2019) (deferred-
    sentence violation); Smith, 163 N.H. at 18 (suspended-sentence violation);
    State v. Kay, 
    162 N.H. 237
    , 243-44 (2011) (probation violation). On appeal, the
    defendant must show that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to
    the State, fails to support the trial court’s decision. Benner, 172 N.H. at 202.
    Because a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence raises a claim of legal
    error, our standard of review is de novo.2 Id.; see, e.g., State v. Folley, 
    172 N.H. 760
    , 771 (2020) (“Our review of the trial court’s legal conclusions is de novo.”);
    State v. Ducharme, 
    167 N.H. 606
    , 613 (2015).
    “[T]he imposition of a suspended sentence is the remedy for a defendant’s
    noncompliance, not a punishment for the underlying acts,” Gibbs, 157 N.H. at
    541, and determining whether a defendant has violated a condition of his or
    her suspended sentence presents a “separate task” from determining whether
    the defendant may bear criminal liability for the same underlying acts, id. at
    542; see State v. Dunn, 
    164 N.H. 268
    , 271 (2012) (“A jury acquittal of criminal
    charges is not dispositive as to whether a suspended sentence should be
    imposed.” (quotation and brackets omitted)). Thus, in the context of
    considering a motion to impose a defendant’s suspended sentence, the trial
    court must independently evaluate the evidence before it to determine whether
    the State proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, that violation of the
    suspension condition occurred. See Smith, 163 N.H. at 18; Gibbs, 157 N.H. at
    542.
    Accordingly, to prevail on a challenge asserting that the trial court erred
    in finding a violation of a suspension condition, a defendant must show that
    the evidence before the trial court on a motion to impose, viewed in the light
    most favorable to the State, fails to support the trial court’s decision that the
    State met its burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that a
    violation of a condition of the suspended sentence occurred. See Kay, 
    162 N.H. at 243-45
    ; Benner, 172 N.H. at 202; see also Smith, 163 N.H. at 18; Gibbs, 157
    N.H. at 540, 542.
    2 In Kay, we distinguished our review of whether the evidence was sufficient to establish that a
    violation occurred, which we review under a de novo standard, from our review of the trial court’s
    decision regarding the appropriate sanction to be imposed after a violation has been found, which
    we review for an unsustainable exercise of discretion. See Kay, 
    162 N.H. at 244
     (probation
    violation case). The State, for its part, does not dispute that we should be reviewing the
    sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s finding of a good behavior violation under a
    de novo standard.
    3
    Here, we conclude that, even when viewed in the light most favorable to
    the State, the evidence adduced at the motion hearing fails to establish, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant committed witness
    tampering. See RSA 641:5, I(b). Witness tampering was the only theory
    advanced by the State in support of its March 7 motion alleging that the
    defendant violated his condition to be of good behavior, and we do not interpret
    the trial court’s ruling as having independently found, from the evidence before
    it, that the defendant’s behavior amounted to another type of criminal conduct
    which violated the good behavior condition.3 See Smith, 163 N.H. at 18; Gibbs,
    157 N.H. at 542; see also Kay, 
    162 N.H. at 242
     (“Our interpretation of a trial
    court order is a question of law, which we review de novo.”). Because the
    evidence does not support the trial court’s decision that the defendant violated
    his condition to be of good behavior, we conclude that the trial court erred in
    granting the State’s motion to impose his suspended sentence. See Kay, 
    162 N.H. at 244
    .
    “[G]ood behavior” means “conduct conforming to the law.” State v.
    Auger, 
    147 N.H. 752
    , 753 (2002) (quotation omitted). To impose a suspended
    sentence on the ground that the defendant has violated a condition of good
    behavior, a trial court must find that “the defendant engaged in criminal
    conduct.” Id. at 753-54 (concluding that “trial court may not impose the
    defendant’s suspended sentences upon proof that he committed a violation-
    level offense” because a violation does not constitute a crime). However, proof
    of a criminal conviction is not necessary to prove a good behavior violation
    because the State’s burden to prove a violation of a suspended sentence is by a
    preponderance of the evidence; it need not “establish criminal liability” beyond
    a reasonable doubt. Stapleford v. Perrin, 
    122 N.H. 1083
    , 1089 (1982); see
    Gibbs, 157 N.H. at 540, 542 (distinguishing the “separate task[s]” of a jury
    determination of whether evidence established the defendant committed the
    alleged crimes beyond a reasonable doubt, and a trial court’s evaluation of
    whether the evidence established a violation of the suspension conditions by a
    preponderance of the evidence).
    The defendant was not convicted of, or charged with, witness tampering.
    In the absence of a criminal conviction for the acts that allegedly constitute the
    good behavior violation, the State can satisfy its burden by proving “the
    commission of the underlying acts.” Gibbs, 157 N.H. at 540 (quotation
    omitted); see Moody v. Cunningham, 
    127 N.H. 550
    , 553-54 (1986) (holding
    evidence of criminal indictment was insufficient, standing alone, to justify
    imposing suspended sentence because “[i]n the absence of a criminal
    3 Although the trial court noted that it found “the language in [the defendant’s] email to be
    threatening,” we do not understand the trial court to have independently determined that the
    evidence before it demonstrated that the defendant violated his condition to be of good behavior by
    engaging in any criminal conduct other than the State’s sole claim of witness tampering. See
    Smith, 163 N.H. at 18; see also Gibbs, 157 N.H. at 542; Kay, 
    162 N.H. at 242
    .
    4
    conviction, the fact-finder must make an independent determination that the
    defendant committed the alleged violations”).
    Although the State need not “establish criminal liability” to prove a good
    behavior violation, Stapleford, 
    122 N.H. at 1089
    , the State must still establish
    that the defendant engaged in criminal conduct, i.e., conduct not in
    conformance with the law, Auger, 147 N.H. at 753-54. Thus, the court must
    look to the law as articulated to determine whether the defendant’s behavior
    was not in conformity therewith. See, e.g., id. (looking to RSA 265:81-a (1993)
    to evaluate the conduct allegedly supporting the State’s motion to impose and
    concluding the defendant’s conduct amounted to only a violation-level offense
    per the statute); Gibbs, 157 N.H. at 542 (concluding that the trial court’s
    determination that defendant violated a condition of his suspended sentence
    was “properly premised solely upon the evidence adduced at [his criminal]
    trial,” despite defendant being acquitted, given the lesser burden of proof on a
    motion to impose).
    To the extent our prior case law on this issue is unclear, we take this
    opportunity to clarify that in order to prove a violation of good behavior in the
    absence of a criminal conviction, the State has the burden to prove the
    essential elements of the criminal conduct that amounts to the alleged good
    behavior violation, and must do so by a preponderance of the evidence. See
    Gibbs, 157 N.H. at 542 (“[T]he motion to impose is a separate proceeding [from
    a criminal prosecution], with a different, lesser, burden of proof.”).
    III
    Here, the State argued that the defendant violated the good behavior
    condition of his suspended sentence by committing witness tampering, and the
    trial court granted the State’s motion to impose. See RSA 641:5, I(b).
    Pursuant to the relevant provisions of New Hampshire’s witness tampering
    statute, a person has committed witness tampering if, “[b]elieving that an
    official proceeding . . . or investigation is pending or about to be instituted, he
    attempts to induce or otherwise cause a person to . . . [w]ithhold any
    testimony, information, document or thing.” Id.; see RSA 641:1, II (2016)
    (defining “official proceeding”).
    On appeal, the defendant argues: (1) the belief of the “mere possibility”
    that a motion to impose a suspended sentence could be brought is inadequate
    to satisfy the mens rea element of RSA 641:5 as a matter of law; (2) the State
    failed to prove the defendant believed an official proceeding or investigation was
    pending or about to be instituted; and (3) the State failed to prove the
    defendant attempted to induce his ex-wife to “[w]ithhold any testimony,
    information, document or thing.” RSA 641:5, I(b); see RSA 641:5, I (2016).
    5
    The defendant’s first argument raises an issue of statutory
    interpretation. The interpretation of a statute presents a question of law,
    which we review de novo. See State v. Thiel, 
    160 N.H. 462
    , 465 (2010). In
    matters of statutory interpretation, this court is the final arbiter of the intent of
    the legislature as expressed in the words of a statute considered as a whole.
    See 
    id.
     “We construe provisions of the Criminal Code according to the fair
    import of their terms and to promote justice.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted); see RSA
    625:3 (2016). We first look to the language of the statute itself, and, if possible,
    construe that language according to its plain and ordinary meaning. Thiel, 160
    N.H. at 465.
    The defendant’s argument centers on the proper interpretation of the
    mens rea element of the New Hampshire witness tampering statute, which
    requires a “[b]elie[f] that an official proceeding . . . or investigation is pending or
    about to be instituted.” RSA 641:5, I. The defendant argues that evidence
    showing his belief of the “mere possibility” that a motion to impose his
    suspended sentence could be brought is inadequate to satisfy the mens rea
    element of RSA 641:5 because the phrase “about to be instituted” requires that
    the actor “believe not only that a proceeding or investigation is possible; he
    must also believe that it is probable.” “Said another way,” the defendant
    contends, “the statute requires imminence.” As support for his argument, the
    defendant relies upon the commentary to the Model Penal Code.
    RSA 641:5, like much of our Criminal Code, is derived from the Model
    Penal Code. See, e.g., State v. Formella, 
    158 N.H. 114
    , 117 (2008); see also
    Commission to Recommend Codification of Criminal Laws, Report of
    Commission to Recommend Codification of Criminal Laws § 586:5 at 91 (1969).
    “Accordingly, we look to the Model Penal Code and its commentaries for
    guidance” when interpreting analogous New Hampshire statutes. Formella,
    158 N.H. at 117. RSA 641:5 is substantially derived from section 241.6 of the
    Model Penal Code. See RSA 641:5, I; Model Penal Code & Commentaries §
    241.6(1), at 162-63 (1985); cf. State v. Kilgus, 
    125 N.H. 739
    , 743 (1984) (“[T]he
    New Hampshire Legislature excluded the terms ‘witness’ and ‘informant’ used
    in the Model Penal Code provision on witness tampering, and instead used the
    broader term ‘person.’”). Like our witness tampering statute, the Model Penal
    Code requires the “belie[f] that an official proceeding or investigation is pending
    or about to be instituted.” Model Penal Code & Commentaries § 241.6(1), at
    162; see RSA 641:5, I. Comment 2 to section 241.6(1) explains the drafters’
    intent behind the use of this language. See Model Penal Code & Commentaries
    § 241.6 cmt. 2, at 166-67.
    According to the drafters of the Model Penal Code, the model was worded
    “to eliminate the purposeless quibbling invited by laws requiring that a
    proceeding or investigation actually be pending or in fact be contemplated by
    the authorities.” Id. at 166. Thus, “[t]he prosecution must establish that the
    defendant held the specified belief but need not prove that a proceeding or
    6
    investigation was in fact pending or about to be instituted.” Id. at 166-67.
    Under the Model Penal Code, “[i]n assessing such belief, the word ‘about’ as it
    appears in [section 241.6(1)] should be construed more in the sense of
    probability than of temporal relation” because “[w]hat is important is not that
    the actor believe that an official proceeding or investigation will begin within a
    certain span of time but rather that he recognize that his conduct threatens
    obstruction of justice.” Id. at 167.
    We likewise conclude that the legislature intended the phrase “about to
    be instituted” in RSA 641:5, I, to be understood more in the sense of
    probability than of temporal relation. RSA 641:5, I; see Model Penal Code &
    Commentaries § 241.6 cmt. 2, at 166-67. Therefore, to the extent the
    defendant argues, by equating the concepts of “probability” and “imminence,”
    that RSA 641:5, I, requires the belief that the institution of an official
    proceeding or investigation was probable — and also the belief that it “will
    begin within a certain span of time” — we disagree. We conclude that the
    legislature, like the drafters of the Model Penal Code, intended to distinguish
    the considerations of probability and temporal relation, and emphasize the
    import of the former over the latter. See RSA 641:5, I; Model Penal Code &
    Commentaries § 241.6 cmt. 2, at 166-67. Nevertheless, given our
    interpretation of the phrase “about to be instituted” in RSA 641:5, I, we agree
    with the defendant that evidence demonstrating a belief in the “mere
    possibility” that a motion to impose could be brought is inadequate as a matter
    of law to satisfy the mens rea element of witness tampering.
    We next turn to the defendant’s second argument, that the State failed to
    prove he believed an official proceeding or investigation was pending or about
    to be instituted. At the hearing, the State’s evidence included its February 8
    motion to impose and the facts surrounding its withdrawal, the defendant’s
    March 3 e-mail, the fact that the defendant was under a suspended sentence,
    and its March 7 motion. The State argued that even though the February 8
    motion had been withdrawn, because the defendant was “under a suspended
    sentence” when he sent the e-mail, “there was a possibility for a motion to be
    filed at any moment for any other reason that would have been a justified
    reason to file one.” According to the State, the defendant “still blamed” his ex-
    wife for the State’s first motion to impose and “[i]f it was true that [the]
    defendant believed that the [ex-wife] could ‘trigger’ his suspended sentence, he
    clearly understood that proceedings could be imminent if he failed to satisfy
    the terms of his suspended sentence.” And thus, the State contends, the
    defendant’s e-mail served as a “request that [his ex-wife] remain silent about
    future infractions.”
    Even when viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence
    before the trial court shows only the defendant’s belief of the “mere possibility”
    of an official proceeding or investigation being instituted, not the defendant’s
    belief that either was probable. There was evidence showing that the defendant
    7
    understood the nature of what it means to be subject to a suspended sentence
    — as the State articulates, that the defendant “clearly understood that
    proceedings could be imminent if he failed to satisfy the terms of his
    suspended sentence” — and that he believed that his ex-wife “could ‘trigger’” a
    motion to impose by reporting information to the prosecution, as he believed
    she had done once already. There was also evidence showing that the
    defendant’s belief that his ex-wife could trigger another motion to impose
    prompted his March 3 e-mail, stating, “If you want to be on friendly
    communicating terms for the best interest of [our child] you might want to
    consider not trying to trigger the suspended sentence and not trying to
    continue hurting me. You are the abuser.” However, the defendant’s implied
    “request that [his ex-wife] remain silent about future infractions,” simply does
    not show that the defendant believed the institution of an official proceeding or
    investigation was probable, or was pending.
    Consequently, we hold that the evidence before the trial court does not
    support a finding that the defendant believed an official proceeding or
    investigation was pending or about to be instituted when he sent the March 3
    e-mail, when the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the State.
    See RSA 641:5, I. As a result of this conclusion, we need not address the
    defendant’s other arguments on appeal.
    IV
    In sum, we conclude that evidence showing that the defendant believed
    there was a “mere possibility” for the institution of an official proceeding or
    investigation does not satisfy the mens rea element of RSA 641:5, I, as a matter
    of law. See id. We also conclude that the evidence adduced at the motion
    hearing, viewed in a light most favorable to the State, fails to support, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, the conclusion that the defendant believed an
    official proceeding or investigation was pending or about to be instituted. See
    id. Accordingly, because the State failed to prove the essential elements of
    witness tampering by a preponderance of the evidence, it advanced no other
    argument as to why the defendant violated the good behavior condition of his
    suspended sentence, and we do not understand the trial court to have found
    that the defendant engaged in any other type of criminal conduct which
    violated the good behavior condition, the State failed to meet its burden of
    proving that the defendant violated the good behavior condition of his
    suspended sentence. Therefore, the trial court erred when it granted the
    State’s motion, and we reverse the court’s order imposing a portion of the
    defendant’s suspended sentence.
    Reversed.
    HICKS, BASSETT, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019-0539

Filed Date: 5/4/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/4/2021