STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff - Appellee, vs. MARK E MER SON WILLEY, Defendant - Appellant.
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 8-879 / 08-0241
Filed December 31, 2008
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
MARK EMERSON WILLEY,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jackson County, John A. Nahra,
Judge.
Defendant seeks resentencing arguing his two convictions should be
merged. AFFIRMED.
Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and David Arthur Adams,
Assistant State Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Mark E. Willey, Anamosa, appellant pro se.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Mary Tabor, Assistant Attorney
General, and Phil Tabor, County Attorney, for appellee.
Considered by Sackett, C.J., and Eisenhauer and Doyle, JJ.
2
EISENHAUER, J.
In 2006, a jury convicted Mark Willey of assault with intent to inflict serious
injury, first-degree burglary, and willful injury causing serious injury.
At
sentencing, the court merged the assault and the willful injury convictions and
ordered consecutive sentences for burglary and willful injury.
In September
2007, Willey‟s convictions were affirmed on appeal. In December 2007, Willey
filed a motion for resentencing contending his sentence for willful injury causing
serious injury should have been merged with his conviction for first-degree
burglary.1 The trial court overruled the motion and a motion to reconsider its
ruling.
Our review is for correction of errors at law.
Iowa R. App. P. 6.4.
Because the two crimes have separate and distinct elements and a defendant
can commit first-degree burglary without also committing willful injury causing
serious injury, we affirm.
We first address the State‟s contention the doctrine of res judicata bars
this appeal. See Spiker v Spiker, 708 N.W.2d 347, 352 (Iowa 2006). While
Willey‟s request for further review of the September 2007 appellate decision does
contain his merger argument, Willey‟s merger claim was neither listed as an
issue nor analyzed by the prior appellate courts. The res judicata doctrine does
not bar this appeal.
The issue on appeal is whether willful injury causing serious injury is
“necessarily included” in first-degree burglary under Iowa‟s merger statute, Iowa
1
We do not address Willey‟s double jeopardy argument since this claim was not argued
below and is raised for the first time on appeal. See State v. Halliburton, 539 N.W.2d
339, 343 (Iowa 1995).
3
Code section 701.9 (2005). This statute requires the merger of lesser-included
offenses and provides: “No person shall be convicted of a public offense which is
necessarily included in another public offense.” Iowa Code § 701.9; see State v.
Halliburton, 539 N.W.2d 339, 343 (Iowa 1995). We look to the elements of each
offense and determine if the greater offense (burglary) can be committed without
also committing the lesser offense (willful injury causing serious injury). See
State v. Hickman, 623 N.W.2d 847, 850 (Iowa 2001). “If the greater offense
cannot be committed without also committing the lesser offense, the lesser is
included in the greater. We call this the „impossibility‟ test.” Id. The “elements
test” is “an aid in using the impossibility test and is fully subsumed in it.” Id.
The jury was instructed first-degree burglary required, in relevant part, “the
defendant intentionally inflicted bodily injury.” Bodily injury was defined for the
jury as “physical pain, illness or any impairment of physical condition.”
In contrast, the jury was instructed willful injury causing serious injury
required the jury to find both (1) the defendant specifically intended to cause a
serious injury, and (2) the victim sustained a serious injury.
instruction defined serious injury:
An additional
“A serious injury is a bodily injury which
creates a substantial risk of death or which causes serious permanent
disfigurement or extended loss or impairment of the function of any bodily part or
organ.” See Iowa Code § 702.18(1)(b).
We conclude the bodily injury element of first-degree burglary is much
broader than the serious injury element of willful injury. By definition a serious
injury is only a type of bodily injury – a bodily injury “which creates” a substantial
4
death
risk
or
a
bodily
injury
“which
causes”
serious
permanent
disfigurement/extended loss or impairment. A bodily injury that does not “create”
or “cause” the specific, serious physical harms identified does not qualify as a
serious injury.
Therefore, a defendant can intentionally inflict a bodily injury
(physical pain, illness or impairment) in situations where neither the defendant‟s
intent nor the victim‟s resulting harm rises to the level of a serious injury. Thus, it
is possible for a defendant to commit first-degree burglary, which only requires
intentional bodily injury, without also committing willful injury causing serious
injury.
Further, the legislature has recognized two categories of willful injury. A
defendant who intends serious injury and causes serious injury commits a class
C felony. Id. § 708.4(1). A defendant who intends serious injury and causes
bodily injury commits a class D felony. Id. § 708.4(2). This shows the legislature
recognizes a distinction in whether a serious injury or a bodily injury was caused
by a defendant and first-degree burglary only requires proof of an intentionallyinflicted bodily injury.
Under this analysis it is possible to commit first-degree burglary under the
“intentionally inflicted bodily injury” alternative without also committing willful
injury causing serious injury. The two offenses do not meet the impossibility test
and the convictions should not be merged for sentencing.
AFFIRMED.
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