State v. Hagar

Decision Date24 January 2005
Docket NumberNo. 52809-2-I.,52809-2-I.
Citation126 Wn. App. 320,126 Wash. App. 320,105 P.3d 65
CourtWashington Court of Appeals
PartiesSTATE of Washington, Respondent, v. Howard H. HAGAR, Appellant.

Susan F. Wilk, Washington Appellate Project, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Scott Allen Peterson, Attorney at Law, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

PUBLISHED IN PART

COX, C.J.

Howard Hagar challenges the exceptional sentences imposed following his guilty plea to three counts of first degree theft, arguing that the sentences must be reversed in light of Blakely v. Washington.1 Although Hagar stipulated to facts in his plea agreement that support the exceptional sentences, he contends Blakely provides a basis to argue that a mutual mistake underlies the plea agreement. Hagar argues that the mistake entitles him to resentencing within the standard range.

Generally, the remedy for a mutual mistake is to allow the defendant to choose either specific performance or withdrawal of the plea, unless there are compelling reasons to deny the defendant's choice.2 Here, even assuming a mutual mistake occurred, there is no basis for specific performance. And Hagar expressly declines to have us set aside his plea. Because neither remedy applies, and Hagar's sentences are not otherwise unlawful, we affirm.

Based on evidence that Hagar embezzled nearly $500,000 from three real estate partnerships, the State charged him with 24 counts of first and second degree theft. Prior to trial, the parties negotiated a plea agreement in which Hagar agreed to plead guilty to three counts of first degree theft. The plea agreement further recited that the State would recommend an exceptional sentence.

In addition to stating, in writing and in his own words, why he was guilty of the three counts, Hagar also stipulated as follows:

In accordance with RCW 9.94A.530, the parties have stipulated that the following are real and material facts for purposes of this sentencing:
... The facts set forth in the certification(s) for determination of probable cause and prosecutor's summary.
... The facts set forth in ... Appendix C[.]
Appendix C stated with respect to the "real facts":
In addition to the facts set forth in the certificate of probable cause, Hagar entered into a partnership with Douglas & Patrick Obert. Hagar contributed his interest in the Block 60 partnership to the Hagar-Obert partnership. When the Block 60 properties sold, Hagar embezzled the money as described in the certificate of probable cause instead of distributing his share to Hagar-Obert. Douglas & Patrick Obert each lost their 1/3 share of this money.

The appendix further provided that [Hagar] "must agree to allow the court to consider the above-stated REAL FACTS at sentencing...."

The sentencing court found that Hagar had committed a major economic offense and imposed concurrent exceptional sentences of 30 months. These were above the standard range sentences of 3 to 9 months for these crimes.

Hagar appealed.

While Hagar's appeal was pending, the United States Supreme Court decided Blakely v. Washington. The parties have filed supplemental briefs addressing Blakely and other issues related to this case.

Hagar contends his exceptional sentences are void because Blakely renders the SRA's exceptional sentence statutes facially invalid. We recently rejected the same argument in State v. Harris.3 We adhere to that holding here.

Hagar next argues that his exceptional sentences are unlawful under Blakely because a judge, not a jury, found the facts supporting the sentences and did so without finding those facts beyond a reasonable doubt. The State responds that the sentences do not violate Blakely because Hagar stipulated to the facts supporting the sentences and thus waived his right to a jury. In making this argument, the State relies on the following passage in Blakely:

But nothing prevents a defendant from waiving his Apprendi[4] rights. When a defendant pleads guilty, the State is free to seek judicial sentence enhancements so long as the defendant either stipulates to the relevant facts or consents to judicial factfinding. If appropriate waivers are procured, States may continue to offer judicial factfinding as a matter of course to all defendants who plead guilty.[5]

Hagar replies that his stipulation was not a knowing and intelligent waiver of his constitutional rights under Blakely because that case was not decided at the time of his plea. In short, Hagar contends that there was no valid waiver of his rights.

We need not resolve the conflicting arguments on these questions. Rather, we assume without deciding that Hagar's stipulation to real facts did not validly waive his Sixth Amendment rights under Blakely.6

We start with the observation that Hagar's stipulation to facts was an integral part of a plea agreement that he has not shown to be divisible. Both parties to the agreement received benefits as a part of a package that they negotiated and then presented to the court. Given the stipulation's integral role in the plea agreement, the stipulation and resulting sentence cannot be challenged apart from the agreement itself.7

The essence of Hagar's argument is that the plea agreement rested on a mutual mistake — that facts supporting an exceptional sentence need not be found by a jury or proven beyond a reasonable doubt.8 Hagar contends the parties' mistake entitles him to resentencing within the standard range. We disagree.

When a plea agreement rests on a mutual mistake as to the direct consequences of a plea, the plea is involuntary and the defendant is entitled to choose either withdrawal of the plea or specific enforcement of the plea agreement.9 Hagar contends that while his plea agreement was consistent with then existing law, it rested on a mutual mistake once Blakely announced that facts supporting an exceptional sentence had to be found by juries beyond a reasonable doubt. Even if we accept the validity of that proposition, Hagar does not argue that the mistake concerned a direct consequence of his plea or that his plea was involuntary.10

Moreover, the remedy Hagar seeks is not available. Hagar expressly states that he does not want to withdraw his plea. Instead, he requests "specific performance" in the form of resentencing within the standard range. In general, specific performance is available when the prosecutor has breached the plea agreement, or the defendant has been misinformed regarding a direct consequence of the plea.11 Here, the prosecutor performed as promised, and, as noted above, Hagar does not claim he was misinformed about a direct consequence of his plea.

Even if Hagar was entitled to specific performance, he cites no relevant authority supporting his claim that "specific performance" in these circumstances would require resentencing within the standard range. The cases he cites in support of resentencing — United States v. Barron12 and In re Goodwin13 — are distinguishable.

In Barron, a defendant who pled guilty to several offenses later moved to vacate the sentence on one offense. It was undisputed that a post-plea interpretation of the statute defining the offense had rendered the evidence supporting the conviction insufficient. A United States District Court judge denied the motion, holding that Barron's sole remedy was to withdraw his plea. On appeal, a unanimous panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. Following a rehearing en banc, a divided court reversed. The majority emphasized that the defendant's action was brought under a statute authorizing vacation of an unlawful sentence. Because Barron's conviction was not authorized by law, the majority reasoned that he was entitled to vacate his sentence for that offense without upsetting the rest of his plea.14

Barron is inapplicable here for several reasons. First, it involved the interpretation of a federal statute relating specifically to the vacation of sentences. No similar statute is at issue here.

Second, the Barron majority's holding rested in large part on the fact that Barron was factually innocent and that his conviction was invalid. There is no argument here that Hagar's conviction is invalid.

Third, the Barron majority's analysis regarding the divisibility of plea agreements is at odds with our state supreme court's holding in State v. Turley.15 As we have already explained in this opinion, there is no argument here that the plea agreement is divisible. In re Goodwin is of no help to Hagar. There, the defendant's guilty plea included a stipulation that the prosecutor's recitation of criminal history was correct. On collateral review by way of a personal restraint petition, Goodwin argued that he was entitled to resentencing because his criminal history erroneously included washed out juvenile offenses. In granting the petition and remanding for resentencing, the Goodwin court held that a factual sentencing error could be waived by stipulation, but a "legal error leading to an excessive sentence" could not.16 The court expressly rejected the State's argument that because the error was part of a plea agreement on which the State had detrimentally relied, it should be regarded as a mutual mistake for which the usual remedy — withdrawal of the plea — applied. The court reiterated that "the erroneous portion of a sentence in excess of statutory authority must be reversed, and a plea agreement to the unlawful sentence does not bind the defendant."17

The state supreme court has since explained that Goodwin "turned on the fact that that defendant's sentence contained obvious errors"18 and that its analysis applies only after a defendant demonstrates that a factual or legal error "exists within the four corners of his judgment and sentence."19

Unlike the error in Goodwin, the alleged error here does not appear on the face of the judgment and did not necessarily result in a sentence exceeding what the Legislature intended. Rather, the alleged error was procedural —...

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  • State v. Brown
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • June 22, 2005
    ...facts that were later used at sentencing because they had been set forth in the plea agreement, which was not the case here. See Hagar, 105 P.3d at 67. ¶ 27 We find the reasoning of the prior Arizona cases and of the Minnesota and Oregon courts more constitutionally sound. Because admission......
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    • Washington Supreme Court
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    ...controlled by State v. Harris, 123 Wash.App. 906, 99 P.3d 902 (2004) (constitutionality of the sentencing statute), State v. Hagar, 126 Wash. App. 320, 105 P.3d 65 (2005), and State v. Ermels, 125 Wash.App. 195, 104 P.3d 67 (2005). Order Denying Recons. The Court of Appeals did not elaborat......
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