State v. Van Huizen , 435 P.3d 202 ( 2019 )


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  •                 This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2019 UT 01
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    COOPER JOHN ANTHONY VAN HUIZEN,
    Respondent.
    No. 20170304
    Filed January 7, 2019
    On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals
    Second Judicial District, Weber
    The Honorable Ernie W. Jones
    No. 131902542
    Attorneys:
    Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Christopher D. Ballard, Asst. Solic. Gen.,
    Salt Lake City, for petitioner
    Elizabeth Hunt, Salt Lake City, for respondent
    JUSTICE PETERSEN authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE,
    JUSTICE HIMONAS and JUDGE CANNELL joined.
    Having recused himself, JUSTICE PEARCE does not participate
    herein; DISTRICT JUDGE BRIAN G. CANNELL sat.
    JUSTICE PETERSEN, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶1    Cooper Van Huizen participated in an armed robbery
    when he was sixteen years old. The State charged him with three
    first-degree felonies in juvenile court. After a preliminary hearing,
    the juvenile judge bound over Van Huizen to the district court to be
    tried as an adult. There, Van Huizen pled guilty to lesser charges
    and the district court judge sentenced him to prison.
    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶2     While he was serving his prison sentence, Van Huizen
    discovered that the juvenile judge who presided over his
    preliminary hearing was married to the Chief Criminal Deputy for
    the Weber County Attorney’s Office—the office that prosecuted
    him on behalf of the State. Van Huizen moved to reinstate the time
    to appeal his bindover order, which the district court granted. He
    argued on appeal that the juvenile judge should have recused
    herself from his case because of her spouse’s position.
    ¶3    The court of appeals agreed and vacated the juvenile
    judge’s bindover order. In its ruling, the court made two holdings
    that are the subject of this petition. First, the court did not require
    Van Huizen to show either that he had preserved his judicial bias
    claim in the trial court or that an exception to preservation applied.
    The court reasoned that Van Huizen did not need to preserve his
    claim because he was not aware of the judge’s conflict and was
    therefore unable to raise it. Second, the court held that Van Huizen
    was entitled to have the bindover decision vacated, even without
    showing that the judge’s conflict caused him prejudice.
    ¶4    We must first determine whether it was error to excuse
    Van Huizen from preserving his claim of judicial bias. Because we
    conclude it was, we do not reach whether such a claim can be
    successful without a showing of prejudice.
    ¶5     We reverse the decision of the court of appeals and
    reinstate Van Huizen’s conviction.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶6     At sixteen years old, Cooper Van Huizen participated in
    an armed robbery with four other individuals: a 17-year-old friend
    and three men he did not know who were all 18. Together, they
    took two revolvers and one airsoft gun from Van Huizen’s house
    and threatened their way into the home of an acquaintance. They
    stole a small amount of marijuana, a wallet, and a phone.
    ¶7    Though the victim and a co-defendant variously claim
    that Van Huizen brandished one of the guns, carried a knife, or was
    the one who stole the wallet and phone, the record is not conclusive
    as to any of these facts. Van Huizen denies carrying a gun or knife.
    Though Van Huizen did not plan the robbery, the record shows
    that he participated in a text conversation about the robbery before
    it occurred, participated in the robbery, and obtained his father’s
    guns for the group to use.
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    Opinion of the Court
    A. Bindover from Juvenile Court
    ¶8     The Weber County Attorney’s Office charged Van Huizen
    in juvenile court with two counts of aggravated robbery and one
    count of aggravated burglary—crimes that qualified as serious
    felonies under the Serious Youth Offender Act. See UTAH CODE
    § 78A-6-702 (2013).1 Because Van Huizen was sixteen or older and
    accused of offenses listed in the Act, the statute required the State
    to charge Van Huizen in a criminal information rather than a
    petition. Id. § 78A-6-702(1).
    ¶9    At a preliminary hearing, the juvenile judge found the
    State had met its burden of proving there was probable cause to
    believe Van Huizen committed the offenses charged. See id. § 78A-
    6-702(3)(a). Under the Serious Youth Offender Act, the judge then
    had to determine whether Van Huizen could establish by clear and
    convincing evidence that “it would be contrary to the best interest
    of the minor and the best interests of the public” to bind Van
    Huizen over to the district court to be tried as an adult. State v. Van
    Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 4, 
    392 P.3d 933
     (citing UTAH CODE §
    78A-6-702(3)(d),(e))(internal quotation marks omitted). The judge
    ultimately concluded Van Huizen should be bound over to district
    court. And Van Huizen did not move to quash the bindover order.
    Id. ¶ 8.
    B. District Court Plea, Sentencing, and Post-Conviction Motions
    ¶10 In the district court, represented by new counsel, Van
    Huizen pled guilty to two counts of robbery as second degree
    felonies. Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 9. The other charges were
    dismissed. The district court sentenced Van Huizen to two
    concurrent sentences of one to fifteen years in prison. 
    Id.
    ¶11 Van Huizen filed several post-trial motions in the district
    court, including a motion to reinstate his time to appeal the
    bindover order and a motion to quash the bindover order. The
    district court denied most of Van Huizen’s motions, but did
    reinstate his opportunity to appeal the bindover order with the
    agreement of the State. Van Huizen appealed the district court’s
    decisions on all his post-conviction motions.
    _____________________________________________________________
    Throughout this opinion we cite to the 2013 version of the Utah
    1
    Code, which governed during the relevant timeframe.
    3
    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    C. Court of Appeals Decision
    ¶12 Before the court of appeals, Van Huizen argued that the
    juvenile judge should have recused herself under rule 2.11 of the
    Utah Code of Judicial Conduct because she was married to the
    Chief Criminal Deputy of the office that prosecuted him. Van
    Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 13. Van Huizen also raised two
    additional grounds to vacate the bindover order—ineffective
    assistance of his juvenile court counsel and plain error of the
    juvenile court with respect to the application of the Serious Youth
    Offender Act. Id. ¶ 12. The court of appeals addressed only the
    appearance of partiality issue. Id.
    ¶13 The court of appeals held that the juvenile judge’s
    undisclosed marriage to the Chief Criminal Deputy—an attorney in
    the “chain of command” at the prosecuting county attorney’s
    office—created an appearance of partiality.2 Id. ¶ 46. It is
    undisputed that Van Huizen did not raise this issue in the juvenile
    court, and the juvenile judge did not have an opportunity to
    address it. Id. ¶ 50 n.15. But the court of appeals concluded that the
    usual rules of preservation did not apply to this claim because the
    judge had not disclosed the relationship on the record and
    therefore Van Huizen did not know about it and could not have
    raised it. Id. The court also held that Van Huizen did not need to
    show he was prejudiced by the judge’s alleged partiality to prevail
    on his claim. Id. ¶ 59. The court vacated the bindover order and
    remanded for a new hearing in juvenile court before a different
    judge. Id. ¶ 65.
    ¶14 The State and Van Huizen cross-petitioned for certiorari.
    We granted the State’s petition on two issues: (1) whether the court
    of appeals erred in concluding that preservation did not apply to
    Van Huizen’s judicial bias claim, and (2) whether it was error to
    allow Van Huizen to prevail on this claim without a showing of
    prejudice because the judge did not disclose the relevant facts on
    the record.
    ¶15 Although we did not grant Van Huizen’s cross-petition
    for certiorari, we permitted him to raise the issues he included in
    _____________________________________________________________
    2The court did not rely upon the judge’s former employment in
    the Weber County Attorney’s Office as a basis for recusal.
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    Opinion of the Court
    his petition as alternative grounds for affirmance.3 We have
    jurisdiction to hear this case pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-3-
    102(3)(a).
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶16 “On certiorari, we review the court of appeals’ decision
    for correctness.” PC Riverview, LLC v. Xiao-Yan Cao, 
    2017 UT 52
    ,
    ¶ 20, 
    424 P.3d 162
     (citation omitted).
    ANALYSIS
    I. PRESERVATION
    ¶17 We must decide as a preliminary matter whether Van
    Huizen’s judicial bias claim is exempt from the preservation
    requirement. We conclude it is not. As with any other claim, Van
    Huizen must have raised this issue in the trial court or be able to
    show that an exception to preservation applies.
    ¶18 Before the court of appeals, the State argued that the court
    must review Van Huizen’s judicial bias claim for plain error
    because he did not raise it in the juvenile court. The court of
    appeals rejected the State’s contention, reasoning that Van Huizen
    need not have preserved his claim because he did not have the
    opportunity to raise the issue in the juvenile court. State v. Van
    Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 50 n.15, 
    392 P.3d 933
    . The court
    concluded that the juvenile judge had the “duty to disclose facts
    relevant to disqualification in the first instance” and, because she
    _____________________________________________________________
    3 Van Huizen prevailed in the court of appeals on all issues before
    us, so he may not cross-petition for affirmance on alternative
    grounds that do not affect the outcome of the court of appeals’
    decision. “Appellees . . . may not use a cross-appeal as a vehicle for
    arguing for the affirmance of a [lower] court’s judgment. Appellees
    must instead raise an alternative ground for affirmance in the
    briefing of the initial appeal.” Helf v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 
    2015 UT 81
    ,
    ¶ 62, 
    361 P.3d 63
    . If appellees “merely desire the affirmance of the
    lower court’s judgment, they need not, and should not, cross-appeal
    or cross-petition.” State v. South, 
    924 P.2d 354
    , 356 (Utah 1996).
    Litigants should only cross-appeal “if they wish to attack a judgment
    of a lower court for the purpose of enlarging their own rights or
    lessening the rights of their opponent.” Id. at 355 (citations omitted).
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    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    did not, the preservation rule did not apply to Van Huizen’s claim
    of judicial partiality. Id. This was error.
    ¶19 We agree that judges are obligated to disclose facts
    relevant to disqualification. But when a litigant alleges undisclosed
    judicial bias for the first time on appeal, such a claim is not immune
    from preservation rules. Rather, when a litigant was truly unable to
    raise a claim – including a claim of judicial bias – at the trial level,
    the litigant is likely to be able to show that an exception to
    preservation applies. But a preservation analysis must still take
    place.
    ¶20 While the court of appeals’ contrary holding is incorrect, it
    is understandable. The court of appeals relied on our decision in
    State ex rel. D.B., in which we stated that a juvenile defendant had
    “no obligation to preserve a claim of which he received no notice.”
    
    2012 UT 65
    , ¶ 15, 
    289 P.3d 459
    . However, we clarified State ex rel.
    D.B. in State v. Johnson, 
    2017 UT 76
    , 
    416 P.3d 443
    , which was
    published after the court of appeals rendered its decision in this
    case.
    ¶21 In Johnson, we explained that “[w]hen an issue is not
    preserved in the trial court, but a party seeks to raise it on appeal,
    the party must establish the applicability of one of the[] exceptions
    [to preservation] to persuade an appellate court to reach that
    issue.” 
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶ 19. There are three exceptions to preservation:
    exceptional circumstances, plain error, and ineffective assistance of
    counsel. 
    Id.
    ¶22 We indicated in Johnson that State ex rel. D.B. should be
    understood as an application of the exceptional circumstances
    exception to preservation. See id. ¶ 35. “We apply [the exceptional
    circumstances] exception to reach an unpreserved issue where a
    ‘rare procedural anomal[y]’ has either prevented an appellant from
    preserving an issue or excuses a failure to do so.” Id. ¶ 29 (second
    alteration in original) (citation omitted).4 We explained that in State
    _____________________________________________________________
    4 In Johnson, we explained that the presence of a rare procedural
    anomaly is not dispositive. Rather, it “opens the door to a deeper
    inquiry.” 
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶ 9. Additional factors that should be
    considered include (a) whether the failure to address an unpreserved
    issue would result in manifest injustice, (b) whether there is a
    (cont’d)
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    Opinion of the Court
    ex rel. D.B. “we recognized a rare procedural anomaly ‘when the
    alleged error first arises in the lower court’s final order or judgment
    and thus, leaves no opportunity for the party to object.” Id. ¶ 35
    (citation omitted).
    ¶23 This is essentially what Van Huizen claims here: that a
    rare procedural anomaly (the judge’s failure to disclose her
    marriage to the Chief Criminal Deputy) prevented him from raising
    the issue of judicial bias in the juvenile court. However, we note
    that even under a proper exceptional circumstances analysis, Van
    Huizen has not sufficiently shown that he was unable to raise an
    objection to the juvenile judge’s participation in his case.
    ¶24 Van Huizen submitted affidavits from his parents and
    himself stating that they did not become aware of the identity and
    position of the juvenile judge’s spouse until after Van Huizen’s
    conviction and after the time to appeal the bindover order had
    expired. But the record suffers from a significant inadequacy—
    there is no affidavit from Van Huizen’s juvenile court counsel that
    he did not know of the juvenile judge’s marriage to the Chief
    Criminal Deputy. Aside from some circumstantial indications in
    the record that the juvenile judge and counsel were unacquainted,
    Van Huizen does not support his assertion that his counsel could
    not have raised the issue of partiality in the juvenile court.
    ¶25 The State argued in the court of appeals that the juvenile
    judge could have made an off-the-record disclosure to Van
    Huizen’s counsel or assumed counsel knew of the relationship. Van
    Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 37 n.11. The court of appeals rejected
    this argument and, citing the Vermont Supreme Court, stated that
    “[i]t is not appropriate to make such an assumption.” 
    Id.
     (citing
    Velardo v. Ovitt, 
    2007 VT 69
    , ¶ 29 n.3, 
    933 A.2d 227
    ) (alteration
    omitted).
    ¶26 We agree that it is the judge’s obligation to recuse when it
    is required, regardless of whether a motion to disqualify is filed. See
    UTAH CODE JUD. CONDUCT ANN. 2.11, cmt. 2; Reg’l Sales Agency, Inc.
    v. Reichert, 
    830 P.2d 252
    , 257 n.7 (Utah 1992). And it is incumbent
    upon a judge, not a litigant or lawyer, to make a clear record of any
    significant constitutional right or liberty interest at stake, and (c)
    judicial economy. Id. ¶ 37.
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    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    disclosure of a basis for disqualification and the parties’ response to
    the disclosure. UTAH CODE JUD. CONDUCT 2.11(C), (D).
    ¶27 But this does not fill the gap in our exceptional
    circumstances analysis here. Van Huizen has the burden to show
    that he was unable to object to the juvenile judge’s participation at
    the proper time. See Johnson, 
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶¶ 54–62 (noting that the
    appellant bore the “high burden” of establishing the existence of
    exceptional circumstances). This includes showing that his counsel
    was unable to raise the issue. See 
    id.
     Van Huizen has not done so.
    Accordingly, the exceptional circumstances exception to
    preservation does not apply here.
    ¶28 The plain error exception also does not save Van Huizen’s
    judicial bias claim. The State argued in the court of appeals that the
    court should conduct a plain error analysis because Van Huizen
    had not preserved this claim. But the court of appeals concluded
    that plain error was “not the proper framework” because the
    preservation rule did not apply to situations in which a party did
    not have the opportunity to raise an issue before appeal. Van
    Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 50 n.15.
    ¶29 As discussed above, this is incorrect. But even under a
    proper preservation analysis, we conclude that the plain error
    exception would not be satisfied here. The applicability of rule 2.11
    to the instant facts is not clear enough to hold that the juvenile judge
    made an obvious error.5
    ¶30 “To demonstrate plain error, a defendant must establish
    that (i) [a]n error exists; (ii) the error should have been obvious to
    _____________________________________________________________
    5 This does not mean we are not concerned with the situation Van
    Huizen has identified. A judge must recuse herself if “the judge’s
    impartiality might reasonably be questioned . . . .” UTAH CODE JUD.
    CONDUCT Rule 2.11(A). While the specific situation here has not been
    previously addressed, the court of appeals conducted a careful
    interpretation of rule 2.11 and determined that the facts at hand
    created an appearance of impartiality. This was not settled law
    during Van Huizen’s juvenile court proceedings, and it is not
    obvious from the plain language of rule 2.11. But the court of
    appeals’ analysis identifies legitimate concerns suggesting the rule
    should be reviewed and possibly clarified.
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    Opinion of the Court
    the trial court; and (iii) the error is harmful, i.e., absent the error,
    there is a reasonable likelihood of a more favorable outcome for the
    appellant, or phrased differently, our confidence in the verdict is
    undermined.” State v. Holgate, 
    2000 UT 74
    , ¶ 13, 
    10 P.3d 346
    (alteration in original) (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). For an error to be obvious to the trial court, “the law
    governing the error” must be clear or “plainly settled.” Johnson,
    
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶ 21 (citing State v. Dean, 
    2004 UT 63
    , ¶¶ 16, 18, 
    95 P.3d 276
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶31 But there is no Utah case law addressing this specific
    factual scenario. See Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 28. And the
    plain language of rule 2.11 does not clearly encompass the judge’s
    husband within the categories requiring disqualification.
    ¶32   The potentially relevant portions of rule 2.11(A) state:
    A judge shall disqualify himself or herself in any
    proceeding in which the judge’s impartiality might
    reasonably be questioned, including but not limited to
    the following circumstances:
    ...
    (2) The judge knows that the judge, the judge’s
    spouse or domestic partner, or a person within the
    third degree of relationship to either of them, or the
    spouse or domestic partner of such a person is:
    (a) a party to the proceeding, or an officer,
    director, general partner, managing member, or
    trustee of a party;
    (b) acting as a lawyer in the proceeding;
    (c) a person who has more than a de minimis
    interest that could be substantially affected by the
    proceeding . . . .
    UTAH CODE JUD. CONDUCT 2.11(A). The court of appeals interpreted
    rule 2.11 to include the juvenile judge’s husband because “he was
    in the direct chain of command between the County Attorney and
    the attorney prosecuting this case,” both of whom would be fairly
    encompassed by rule 2.11(A)(2)(a) or (b). Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 48. But it is not obvious from a reading of the plain language
    of the rule that a supervising attorney not directly involved with
    the case would fall into the category of persons that requires
    disqualification.
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    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶33 With regard to subsection (A)(2)(a)—concerning a
    situation in which a judge knows that her spouse is “a party to the
    proceeding, or an officer, director, general partner, managing
    member, or trustee of a party,”—the court of appeals noted, “[w]e
    are not persuaded that rule 2.11(A)(2)(a)’s language either plainly
    applies or plainly does not apply to the Chief Criminal Deputy.”
    Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 27.
    ¶34 We agree. The Chief Criminal Deputy was not a “party”
    to the proceeding. And the terms “officer, director, general partner,
    managing member, or trustee” suggest positions within a private
    entity or corporate structure.6 We agree with the court of appeals’
    observation that “officer” can apply more broadly to either a
    government or corporate setting. Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    ,
    ¶ 25, (citing Officer, WEBSTER’S NEW WORLD COLLEGE DICTIONARY
    1015 (5th ed. 2016); Officer, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1257 (10th ed.
    2014)). But while the term “officer” would likely include the elected
    County Attorney, it does not unequivocally encompass the Chief
    Criminal Deputy. As the court of appeals correctly noted, “it is
    unclear whether he was ‘elected or appointed’ to his position . . . as
    understood by the term’s definition. Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    ,
    ¶ 26. So, we agree with the court of appeals and are similarly “not
    _____________________________________________________________
    6 E.g., Officer, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (“Someone
    who holds an office of trust, authority, or command. In public
    affairs, the term refers esp. to a person holding public office under a
    national, state, or local government, and authorized by that
    government to exercise some specific function. In corporate law, the
    term refers esp. to a person elected or appointed by the board of
    directors to manage the daily operations of a corporation, such as a
    CEO, president, secretary, or treasurer.”); Director, BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (“1. Someone who manages, guides, or
    orders; a chief administrator. 2. A person appointed or elected to sit
    on a board that manages the affairs of a corporation or other
    organization by electing and exercising control over its officers.”);
    Partner, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (“1. Someone who
    shares or takes part with another, esp. in a venture with shared
    benefits and shared risks; an associate or colleague . . . . 2. One of two
    or more persons who jointly own and carry on a business for
    profit . . . .”).
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    persuaded that the plain language of rule 2.11(A)(2)(a) answers the
    question presented.” Id. ¶ 25.
    ¶35 Subsection 2.11(A)(2)(b) also does not clearly apply. While
    the Chief Criminal Deputy may have had some involvement with
    the case after it was bound over, it is not clear that he was “acting
    as a lawyer” in the juvenile court proceedings.7 And he did not
    appear as counsel on the case.
    ¶36 Similarly, with regard to subsection (A)(2)(c), it cannot be
    said that the Chief Criminal Deputy had “more than a de minimis
    interest that could be substantially affected” by this one criminal
    case. There was no monetary advantage for the Chief Criminal
    Deputy in the result of this case. And any reputational benefit that
    might be achieved is speculative and difficult to measure. See In re
    Inquiry Concerning a Judge, 
    2003 UT 35
    , ¶ 13, 
    81 P.3d 758
     (holding
    that a judge’s relation to a member of a firm representing a party
    was not subject to disqualification “where no money is at issue and
    there is no possibility of a contingent fee arrangement”). Indeed, no
    matter what the result of the bindover, Van Huizen would have
    still been subject to a criminal trial in juvenile court and a
    conviction could have been obtained there. There is no evidence of
    the juvenile judge’s husband having “more than a de minimis
    interest” in the outcome of the proceedings in juvenile court.
    ¶37 Under the language of any subsection of rule 2.11(A), it is
    not clear that the juvenile judge made an obvious error by not
    recusing herself or seeking a waiver. Accordingly, Van Huizen
    cannot overcome preservation based on plain error.
    II. ALTERNATIVE GROUNDS FOR AFFIRMANCE
    ¶38 Van Huizen raises two alternative grounds for reversal of
    the bindover decision. First, he argues that his counsel was
    ineffective at the bindover hearing for failing to inform the court of
    the 2013 amendments to the Serious Youth Offender Act and for
    _____________________________________________________________
    7 The Chief Criminal Deputy’s involvement was limited to
    “respond[ing] on behalf of the Weber County Attorney to
    communications from Van Huizen’s current counsel when counsel
    substituted into the case,” and “request[ing] digital copies of several
    proceedings, on behalf of either himself or a colleague.” Van Huizen,
    
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 37.
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    STATE v. VAN HUIZEN
    Opinion of the Court
    failing to prepare and present a case for retention. Second, Van
    Huizen argues that the juvenile judge misinterpreted the Serious
    Youth Offender Act by failing to adequately consider factors for
    retention that existed in this case.
    ¶39 The State argues that we do not have jurisdiction to
    consider these additional grounds. Both grounds were raised and
    expressly not addressed in the court of appeals. Van Huizen, 
    2017 UT App 30
    , ¶ 12. But “[w]hen a party raises alternative grounds for
    affirmance, an appellate court may affirm the judgment appealed
    from on any legal ground or theory apparent on the record.” PC
    Riverview, LLC v. Xiao-Yan Cao, 
    2017 UT 52
    , ¶ 34, 
    424 P.3d 162
    (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). This holds
    true even when the alternative grounds were “not considered or
    passed on by the lower court.” Bailey v. Bayles, 
    2002 UT 58
    , ¶ 10, 
    52 P.3d 1158
     (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶40 While we have jurisdiction and discretion to reach the
    alternative grounds for affirmance raised by Van Huizen, the court
    of appeals is in a better position to address these arguments in the
    first instance. For this reason, we decline to reach these arguments
    and remand to the court of appeals for consideration of Van
    Huizen’s additional claims.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶41 Preservation rules apply to all claims. If a litigant fails to
    raise a claim in the trial court because the litigant does not know of
    the claim, or is otherwise unable to raise it, on appeal the litigant
    still must show that an exception to preservation applies. If
    circumstances truly prevented a party from raising a claim, it is
    likely that the party could successfully invoke an exception to
    preservation. But the party has the burden of making this showing.
    ¶42 Van Huizen did not preserve his claim that the juvenile
    court judge who handled his case should have recused herself
    because she was married to the Chief Criminal Deputy of the
    prosecuting attorney’s office. This is not necessarily fatal to his
    claim. But he did not show that any exception to preservation
    applies, and that is fatal.
    ¶43 We reverse the decision of the court of appeals, reinstate
    Van Huizen’s conviction, and remand to the court of appeals to
    consider the merits of Van Huizen’s additional claims.
    12