Thursday, August 26, 2010

Not Plain Error if Appellant Invited the Error

State of Utah v. Shaffer, 2010 UT App. 176, (Utah Court of Appeals July 1, 2010).  This opinion was amended and renumbered to 2010 UT App 176.  I could not determine the amendment, but the link below now links to the amended opinion.

Shaffer entered into an agreement with the State.  At the change of plea hearing, the defense misstated the agreement and agreed to further misstatements by The State.  Further, the State failed to make a recommendation to AP&P as agreed in the plea agreement.  The Judge rejected the State’s recommendation and adopted AP&P’s recommendation.
The Court of Appeals affirmed, finding that the trial court’s actions did not constitute plain error because even if the court believed that the state had breached the plea agreement, the affirmative actions by defense counsel invited the error and an invited error is not plain error, furthermore such an is irrelevant because the court rejected the agreement.
The failure of defense counsel to remedy the matter we not prejudicial for the same reasons, that the court rejected the agreement even in its misstated form.
Further, Defendant did not raise a dispute that the State had not recommended the sentence to AP&P before the trial court and so the trial court had no knowledge of any possible error, thus defendant again invited the error by failing to bring it to the court’s attention and affirmatively agreeing with the State’s statements at the hearing.

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