Minnesota Statutes, sec.
60C.11, subds. 3 and 7
Insurance Claim Recovery; Insolvent Insurer
(Full Case in Appendix, page A1)
Minnesota
Statutes, sec. 62E.11, subd. 5
Insurers Assessed by Minnesota
Comprehensive Health Association
(Full Case in Appendix, page A10)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 152.01, subd. 12a
Drug Offense Within One City Block of Park Zone
(Full Case in Appendix, page A17)
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
169A.20, subd. 1, clause (5)
DWI; Alcohol Concentration
Within Two Hours of Driving
(Full Case in Appendix, page
A23)
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
176.061, subd. 5
Recovery Rights of Workers’ Compensation Insurer
(Full Case in Appendix, page A30)
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
204D.10, subd. 2
Elections; Primary Threshold Law
(Full Case in Appendix, page A37)
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
211B.04, para. (a)
Freedom of Speech; Election Campaign
Material Disclaimer
(Full Case in Appendix, page A45)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 216B.1691, subd. 2,
paras. (a) and (b)
Renewable Energy Standards for Utilities
(Full Case in Appendix, page A74)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 244.11, subd. 3
Separation of Powers; Defendant’s Right to Appeal
Sentence
(Full Case in Appendix, page A84)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 260B.130, subd. 4,
para. (b)
Equal Protection; Extended Juvenile Jurisdiction
(Full Case in Appendix, page A98)
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
299A.465, subd. 1, para. (c)
Family Health Coverage After Public Safety Officer’s
Death
(Full Case in Appendix, page A107)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 340A.702,
clause (6)
Liquor Sales Within 1,000 Feet of County Jail
(Full Case in Appendix, page A114)
Minnesota Statutes, section
590.05
Right to Counsel for Postconviction Relief
(Full Case in Appendix, page A119)
Minnesota Statutes, secs.
609.321, subd. 12, and 609.324, subd. 2
Prostitution; Public Place
(Full Case in Appendix, page A130)
The Minnesota Legislature responded to recent constitutional, ambiguity, and other problems with statutory provisions, which were raised by Minnesota’s Court of Appeals or Supreme Court.
The
U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466,
120 S.Ct. 2348 (2000); Blakely v. Washington, 124 542 U.S. 296, 124
S.Ct. 2531 (2004); and United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 125 S.Ct.
738 (2005), evolved into a constitutional rule enunciated by the Minnesota
Supreme Court in State v. Shattuck, 704 N.W.2d 131 (Minn. 2005), as:
Any fact (other than a prior conviction) which is necessary to support a sentence exceeding the maximum authorized by the facts established by a plea of guilty or a jury verdict must be admitted by the defendant or proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Minnesota Supreme Court and Court of Appeals dealt with this principle in numerous other cases. In response, the legislature amended various criminal and sentencing statutes in Laws of Minnesota 2005, chapter 136, article 16, and again in Laws of Minnesota 2006, chapter 260, article 1.
In Brink v. Smith Companies Construction, Inc., 703 N.W.2d 871 Minn.App. 2005), the court held that a 10-to-12-year statute of repose (Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 541.051, subdivision 1, paragraph (a), violated Brink’s due process rights and right to a remedy, as applied to Brink. The legislature amended that section in such a way as make Brink’s fact situation unlikely to happen again, in Laws of Minnesota 2004, chapter 196, section 1.
In Unity Church of St. Paul v. State, 694 N.W.2d 585 (Minn.App. 2005), the court declared as unconstitutional Minnesota Statutes, section 624.714, the Minnesota Citizens’ Personal Protection Act of 2003, under the single subject clause. The legislature reenacted this statute retroactively at Laws of Minnesota 2005, chapter 83, section 1.
In Fedziuk v. Commissioner of Public Safety, 696 N.W.2d 340 (Minn. 2005), the court declared unconstitutional Minnesota Statutes, section 169A.53, following its amendment in the 2003 legislative session to remove the requirement that a hearing on the suspension of a driver’s license be held no later than 60 days after a petition for review, as a violation of due process. The legislature added the requirement to the statute in Laws of Minnesota 2005, chapter 136, article 8, section 4.
In MCCL v. Kelley, 698 N.W.2d 424 (Minn. 2005), the court, in response to a certified question from the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, interpreted the words “to influence” and related phrases in the Ethics in Government Act’s definitions of “political committee” and “political fund” (Minnesota Statutes, section 10A.01, subdivisions 27 and 28) to be narrowly construed to mean “expressly advocate” in order to avoid declaring the provisions unconstitutional in light of the decision by the United States Supreme Court in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 96 S.Ct. 612 (1976).
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 60C.11, subds. 3 and 7
Insurance Claim Recovery;
Insolvent Insurer
MIGA v. Integra Telecom, Inc.
Minnesota Court of Appeals
Employee of appellant (Integra Telecom) filed a workers’ compensation claim. Before the claim was paid, the appellant’s insurer became insolvent. Without the permission of the appellant, who was the insured party in this case, the Minnesota Insurance Guaranty Association (MIGA) paid a stipulated award of $62,801 to the employee following an administrative hearing. MIGA is an organization created by the legislature (Minnesota Statutes, chapter 60C) to generally pay claimants who would otherwise have received compensation if the insurer had not become insolvent and, to that end, is “… deemed the insurer to the extent of its obligation on the covered claims and [has] the right to pursue and retain salvage and subrogation recoverables on covered claim obligations …” under Minnesota Statutes, section 60C.05, subdivision 1, paragraph (a). MIGA sought reimbursement from appellant under Minnesota Statutes, section 60C.11, subdivision 7, which states in pertinent part, that MIGA is entitled to “… recover the amount of any covered claim … paid, resulting from insolvencies … on behalf of an insured who has a net worth of $25,000,000 … and whose liability obligations to other persons are satisfied in whole or in part by payments made under this chapter.” Appellant refused to pay, arguing, among other things, that MIGA was exceeding the authority granted it by the legislature, citing Minnesota Statutes, section 60C.11, subdivision 3, which provides that MIGA “… has no cause of action against the insured of the insurer for any sums it has paid out except the causes of action the insurer would have had if the sums had been paid by the insurer.”
The
court found that subdivisions 3 and 7 of section 60C.11 could “reasonably be
interpreted” as conflicting, making the section ambiguous.
The
court found that Minnesota Statutes, section 645.26, subdivision 2, stating the
“… clause last in order of date or position shall prevail” to favor subdivision
7 over subdivision 3 of section 60C.11; that “While the purpose … is to protect
insureds like appellant, the subsequent enactment of subdivision 7 recognizes
that certain insureds have the ability to pay judgments and that MIGA’s limited
funds should go to those least able to absorb the impact”; that “legislative
history makes clear that subdivision 7 was intended to allow MIGA the right to
recover amounts paid on behalf of a company with a net worth greater that $25
million … to ensure that MIGA’s limited funds would go to pay the claims of
those insureds without substantial assets”; that providing a recoupment
provision to recover claims paid to injured employees helps to accomplish the
purpose of the Act; and that the legislature sought to balance the interests of
claimants and policyholders by allowing MIGA to handle claims quickly and
efficiently and by providing MIGA with an option to seek reimbursement from
high net worth insureds ….”
The
court held for MIGA stating “… the … Act permits the Minnesota Insurance
Guaranty Association to negotiate a settlement and recover the amount of any
covered claim paid from an insured with a net worth exceeding $25 million ….”
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 62E.11, subd. 5
Minnesota Court of Appeals
April 12, 2006
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota (BCBSM) challenged the assessment calculation of the Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association (MCHA), which included stop-loss insurance premiums as accident-and-health insurance premiums. BCBSM claimed that stop-loss insurance is not accident-and-health insurance for the purposes of the assessment statute so that stop-loss insurance premiums should not be included in calculation of the assessment.
Generally, stop-loss insurance is insurance purchased by a self-insuring employer to protect the employer from health care costs that exceed a certain monetary amount. Minnesota Statutes, section 62E.02, subdivision 11, defines “accident and health insurance policy” as “insurance or nonprofit health service plan contracts providing benefits for hospital, surgical and medical care.” The definition also listed eight categories of insurance that are not covered by an accident and health insurance policy; stop-loss insurance was not included as a type of insurance not covered. The MCHA offers health insurance to “… Minnesota residents who have been rejected for standard insurance coverage because of high-risk health conditions ….” Health insurers are required to be members of the MCHA and to fund the costs of the MCHA as a condition of doing business in this state. The members, including BCBSM, are assessed proportionally by MCHA as calculated according to Minnesota Statutes, section 62E.11, subdivision 5, which states, in pertinent part:
Each … member … shall share the losses due to claims expenses … and shall share in the operating and administrative expenses … [of] … the association …. Claims expenses of the state plan which exceed the premium payments allocated to the payment of benefits shall be the liability of the … members. Contributing members shall share in the … expenses … equal to the ratio of the … member’s total accident and health insurance premium … as divided by the total accident and health insurance premium, received by all contributing members … as determined by the commissioner. [Emphasis added]
….
The court found the statute to be ambiguous. The court found persuasive the district court’s invocation of the rule of construction that “the expression of one thing excludes another” in reasoning that if the legislature had intended to exclude stop-loss insurance as accident and health insurance it would have expressly so stated, “as it did with other categories of insurance”; the legislature was aware of the existence of stop-loss insurance but did not include it as one of “…15 lines of insurance that can be sold in the state …” which “supports MCHA’s claim that stop-loss insurance is not a separate and distinct line of insurance but rather is a form of one of the enumerated lines, namely accident-and-health insurance …” because … “[if] this were not so, BCBSM would have no authority to sell stop-loss insurance in Minnesota”; BCBSM’s argument that stop-loss insurance covers employers and accident and health insurance covers employees is a “difference without a distinction” because both insure the costs of health care; a determination of whether state law or the federal ERISA law covers stop-loss insurance is “… irrelevant to a determination of whether stop-loss carriers were members of … [a] comprehensive health insurance association …”; and stop-loss insurance provides health and accident benefits.
The court determined “that the legislature intended that insurers who offer stop-loss insurance should be among those assessed. Consequently, we conclude that premiums for stop-loss insurance were properly included as accident-and-health-insurance premiums in calculating MCHA’s annual assessment of its members.
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 152.01, subd. 12a
Drug Offense Within One City
Block of Park Zone
Minnesota Court of Appeals
The district court denied the state’s motion to amend its original complaint to include three additional charges of second-degree sale of a controlled substance for cocaine sales by Estrella in a “park zone.” Sale of a controlled substance in a park zone is a controlled substance crime in the second degree. Minnesota Statutes, section 152.022, subdivision 1, clause (6). Investigation reports alleged that Estrella sold cocaine at two trailer homes located more than 300 feet from a municipal park in Cannon River. Minnesota Statutes, section 152.01, subdivision 12a, defines, “park zone” as, in pertinent part, “an area designated as a public park … [and] includes the area within 300 feet or one city block, whichever distance is greater, of the park boundary.” Testimony in the district court showed that the city is not laid out in a grid system; in other words, is not plotted into city blocks. The court concluded that the definition of “park zone” in this context is ambiguous.
The state argued that the court should interpret “city block” as including the municipal park, the trailer home park, and all other land bounded by streets on three sides without regard to its size; respondent Estrella argued that the legislature foresaw cases such as this and included the alternative measurement of 300 feet to be used when areas were not laid out in a grid system of blocks.
The court found Estrella’s argument the more reasonable and concluded that “… under circumstances where no actual grid system is present, the term ‘one city block’ does not apply and, therefore, a drug transaction must take place within the ambit of the ‘park zone’ statute.”
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
169A.20, subd. 1, clause (5)
DWI; Alcohol Concentration
Within Two Hours of Driving
Minnesota Court of Appeals
December 28, 2004
Appellant was convicted of driving while impaired under Minnesota Statutes, section 169A.20, subdivision 1, which states in pertinent part:
Subdivision 1. … It is a crime for any person to
drive, operate, or be in physical control of any motor vehicle … :
…
(5) when the person’s
alcohol concentration at the time, or as measured within two hours of the time,
of driving, operating, or being in physical control of the motor vehicle is
0.10[.]
….
A
test to determine the appellant’s alcohol concentration was administered two
hours and 14 minutes after the appellant had been driving, which showed a
concentration of 0.17.
The
court found the word “measured” to be ambiguous because it was susceptible to
two reasonable interpretations:
On the one hand, “measured” could indicate the act
of measuring, or taking the steps necessary to ascertain the quantity of the
alcohol concentration. Using this
meaning, law enforcement would have to obtain a sample and run the test for
alcohol concentration within two hours.
On the other hand, “measured” could indicate the quantity determined by
measuring. Applying that meaning,
“measured” would allow police to obtain or administer the test for the blood,
urine or breath sample after two hours, as long as the quantity or measurement
of alcohol concentration is accurately established as of a point in time within
the two-hour limit. …. Using this second meaning, “measuring” would
relate back to a specified earlier point in time by providing accurate proof
that the driver’s alcohol concentration was above the legal limit within two
hours of driving.
The court examined the language and history of section 169A.20 and other, related statutes to discern the legislature’s intent and held:
Although the breath sample in this case was obtained more than two hours after appellant had been driving, the appellant’s alcohol concentration in excess of the legal limit of .10 was measured as of a point within two hours of driving, and the district court properly determined that appellant was in violation of Minn. Stat. [section] 169A.20, subd. 1, [clause] (5).
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 176.061, subd. 5
Recovery Rights of Workers’
Compensation Insurer
Minnesota Supreme Court
February 2, 2006
By stipulated facts, Appellant’s negligence led to the death of insured’s employee; respondent insurer, Zurich American Insurance Company, paid benefits on behalf of the employer to the employee’s surviving dependents totaling $104,319, of which $48,336 represented damages recoverable under the Wrongful Death Act.
Zurich
brought a subrogation action against appellant to recover all benefits in full,
arguing that amendments to Minnesota Statutes, section 176.061, subdivision 5,
by Laws of Minnesota 2000, chapter 447, section 5, allowed for full
recovery. That provision states in pertinent part:
… If the …employee’s dependents …[receive] benefits … or [accept] … payment on account of the benefits, the employer … is subrogated to the rights of the employee or the employee’s dependents or has a right of indemnity against a third party regardless of whether such benefits are recoverable by the employee or the employee’s dependents at common law or by statute. [Emphasis added]
Appellant argued that Zurich was limited to the recovery of wrongful death damages and that the amendment “does not enlarge the employer’s right to recover the third-party tortfeasor but rather, it expands the definition of what types of benefits are eligible to be recovered and that his liability remained one of subrogation only.
The court found that the statute was “not clear and free from all ambiguity”; that the “legislative history provides no clear indication that the legislature intended to accomplish what Zurich asserts” so consequently “… little legislative intent can be inferred …”; that the unchanged language of section 176.061 “… continues to state that the employer is ‘subrogated to the rights of the employee’”; that any intent of the legislature “to alter the fundamental nature of the employer’s cause of action against the third party is belied by the fact that the legislature did not amend … the distribution formula that allocates a recovery from a third party paying what it would normally pay if no compensation question were involved”; and that Zurich’s interpretation, upheld by the court below, “would significantly shift the burden for the financial consequences of workplace accidents from employers onto third-party tortfeasors.”
The court concluded:
It seems to us fairly evident, then, that the 2000 amendments have not modified the measure of damages against which the employer may assert a right of recovery. In the absence of a definitive indication from the legislature that it meant to replace or otherwise enlarge the employer’s cause of action against the third party beyond that of subrogation, we reaffirm the fundamental principle that in a subrogation suit the employer has no greater rights than those of the employee.
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 204D.10, subd. 2
Elections; Primary Threshold
Law
Minnesota Supreme Court
November 10, 2004
The Minnesota Secretary of State notified the Independence Party that the names of its candidates for elective office would not be placed on the 2004 general election ballot based on Minnesota Statutes, section 204D.10, subdivision 2, which requires that at least one candidate receive “… a number of votes equal to ten percent of the average of the votes cast at the last state general election for state officers of that major political party within the district for which the office is voted ….”
The Secretary of State and her counsel, the
Minnesota Attorney General, conceded that “there is no rational state purpose
served by the primary threshold law.” The court found “irrationality and
arbitrariness of the … law are evident” and “supports the conclusion that the …
law cannot be justified.”
The
court held that “… by denying Independence Party candidates access to the
general election ballot the primary threshold law violates petitioners’
constitutional rights to vote and to associate for the advancement of political
beliefs under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
211B.04, para. (a)
Freedom of Speech; Election
Campaign Material Disclaimer
Minnesota Court of Appeals
April 26, 2006
Four days before an election, Jankowski, an attorney and son of a candidate for city office, distributed to voters campaign material, provided and prepared by at least one challenging candidate, charging that three incumbent office holders “attempted to profit illegally … or allow the profiting … from their elected positions …” of the sale of city land. The distributed material did not carry a disclaimer, but stated on the envelope, “This publication is not circulated on behalf of any candidate ….” Suit was brought and a panel of administrative law judges determined that relators had violated, among other statutes not pertinent here, Minnesota Statutes, section 211B.04, paragraph (a), which states in pertinent part:
(a) A person who participates in the preparation or dissemination of campaign material …, that does not prominently include the name and address of the person or committee causing the material to be prepared or disseminated in a disclaimer substantially in the form provided in paragraph (b) or (c) is guilty of a misdemeanor. [Paragraphs (b) and (c) set out in detail the form of the information required.]
The court reviewed McIntyre v. Ohio Elections
Comm’n, 514 U.S. 334, 115 S.Ct. 1511 (1995) and Minn. Citizens Concerned
for Life, Inc. v. Kelley, 291 F.Supp.2d 1052 (D.Minn.2003), aff’d in part,
rev’d in part, 427 F.3d 1106 (8th Cir.2005), concluding “… there may
be circumstances in which the disclaimer requirement is violated by completely
truthful anonymous statements made by individuals acting independently from any
candidate and using their own resources.
Respondents have not identified an overriding state interest that
permits … [limiting] such political expression under the exacting scrutiny that
we must apply.
The court held, “… Minn. Stat. [section] 211B.04 [,
paragraph] (a)[,] directly regulates the content of pure speech in violation of
the First Amendment ….”
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
216B.1691, subd. 2, paras. (a) and (b)
Renewable Energy Standards
for Utilities
Minnesota Court of Appeals
July 26, 2005
Environmental organizations challenged an order of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC) setting standards for electric utilities to comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 216B.1691, subdivision 2, paragraphs (a) and (b), objectives for increasing the use of renewable energy resources.
Paragraph (a) reads, in pertinent part:
(a) Each electric utility shall make a good faith effort to generate or procure sufficient electricity generated by an eligible energy technology … so that:
(1) commencing in 2005, at least one percent of the electric utility’s total retail electric sales is generated by eligible energy technologies;
(2) the amount provided under clause (1) is increased by one percent of the utility’s total retail electric sales each year until 2015; and
(3) ten percent of the electric energy provided to retail customers in Minnesota is generated by eligible energy technologies.
The utilities argued that paragraph (a) “set a one-percent baseline for total retail electric sales from eligible energy technologies in 2005 and required an increase by one percentage point each year until sales from eligible energy technologies reach 10 percent of total retail sales in 2015.” The environmental groups argued that sales from eligible energy technologies would vary and that “once a utility established its annual percentage of retail electric sales from eligible energy technologies,” it must annually increase those sales by one percent. The PUC’s order reflected the utilities’ position and allowed preexisting generation in computing utility compliance.
The court found the statutory language ambiguous, as susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation; that the words “at least” in paragraph (a), clause (1), must be interpreted in the context of the entire subdivision and concluded that the “statutory scheme sets a baseline objective of one percent in 2005 with annual increases of one percent so as to reach the 10-percent objective by 2015”; and that the “legislative history supports the proposition that nonmandated sources of preexisting generation are included among eligible energy technologies” and does not require annual increases through new generation.
Paragraph (b) reads in pertinent part:
(b) Of the eligible energy technology generation required under paragraph (a), clauses (1) and (2), not less than 0.5 percent of the energy must be generated by biomass energy technologies …. By 2010, one percent of the eligible technology generation required under paragraph (a), clauses (1) and (2), shall be generated by biomass energy technologies….
The environmental groups argued that the biomass requirement was a percentage of a utility’s total electric sales and the utilities argued that the biomass requirement was a percentage of all eligible energy sources.
The PUC found the statute ambiguous and concluded that “the percentages pertain to the ‘eligible energy technology generation,’ not total retail electric sales.” The court accepted the PUC’s judgment on this issue, stating that the provision’s “phrase ‘of the energy’ plainly relates back to the opening phrase of the subdivision, which refers to ‘eligible energy technology generation’ under subdivision 2 [,paragraph] (a)” and that the “only reasonable construction … is that the percentages … are applied to the amount of eligible … generation, not total retail electric sales.”
The court held:
The PUC did not commit an error law by concluding that the renewable energy objectives … direct each electric utility to make a good faith effort to ensure that 10 percent of total electric sales to retail customers is generated by eligible energy technologies by 2015, with a one-percent initial objective in 2005 and a benchmark increase of one percent annually. The PUC’s … [calculation] of electrical generation from biomass energy technologies as compared to all eligible energy technologies was not arbitrary and capricious.
[NOTE: The Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed this decision by an evenly divided court by order dated May 22, 2006.]
Separation of Powers;
Defendant’s Right to Appeal Sentence
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
260B.130, subd. 4, para. (b)
Equal Protection; Extended
Juvenile Jurisdiction
Minnesota Court of Appeals
January 26, 2005
TCJ,
a 17-year-old juvenile, was charged with first-degree assault, a felony if
committed by an adult. After the prosecution was unsuccessful in seeking certification
as an adult offender, the juvenile court granted TCJ’s motion that the
proceeding be conducted as an extended juvenile jurisdiction (EJJ) case. The
jury found him guilty of the charge of
third-degree assault. However, it
acquitted him of first-degree assault, the charged offense giving rise to the
sought-after adult certification and the subsequent EJJ prosecution. The court
“entered judgment on the jury’s verdict finding juvenile committed conduct
which would constitute third-degree assault if committed by an adult” and
imposed a stayed adult criminal sentence under Minnesota Statutes, section
260B.130, subdivision 4, paragraph (a), in addition to the juvenile disposition
under section 260B.198.
TCJ
argued that he should have been sentenced only to a juvenile disposition under
Minnesota Statutes, section 260B.130, subdivision 4, paragraph (b), which is
limited to “a child prosecuted as an extended jurisdiction juvenile after designation
by the prosecutor” and found guilty of an “offense that would not, on its
own, have justified an EJJ prosecution …” and “that the court’s application of
the EJJ statute violated his right to equal protection under the law.
The
court found that the phrase “after designation by the prosecutor in the
delinquency petition” in paragraph (b) to require “a disparately more severe
sentence for every EJJ conviction that results from the juvenile court’s
rejection of adult certification” and that “… if the state had not sought the
adult-certification process … a decision entirely within the state’s discretion
and a choice which the court rejected … he would only be subject to a juvenile
disposition for the third-degree assault conviction.”
The
court applied the rational basis standard to determine if TCJ’s equal protection
rights under the state and federal constitutions were violated and held that
Minnesota Statutes, section “260B.130, subd. 4 [, paragraph] (b) is
unconstitutional …” and that “the imposition of a stayed adult sentence on a
juvenile defendant violates his right to equal protection, and we vacate the
stayed adult sentence.”
(Note:
The court cited the Minnesota Supreme Court’s equal protection analysis in State
v. Garcia, 683 NW.2d 294 (Minn. 2004), reported in this office’s 2004
report, in which another provision of the EJJ statute (sec. 260B.130,
subdivision 5), which denied credit for time served in a juvenile facility, was
held to be unconstitutional. That provision remains the same as when Garcia
was decided.)
Minnesota Statutes, sec. 299A.465, subd. 1, para. (c)
Family Health Coverage After
Public Safety Officer’s Death
Minnesota Court of Appeals
A Columbia Heights police officer was disabled in the line of duty and, afterward, he and his family continued to receive health care coverage from the city. When the officer died from causes not related to his disability, the city discontinued coverage for his surviving dependents. The dependents brought suit claiming the city had violated Minnesota Statutes, section 299A.465, subdivision 1, paragraph (c), which states, in pertinent part:
(c) The employer is responsible for the continued payment of the employer’s contribution for [health] coverage of the officer … and … the officer’s … dependents. Coverage must continue for the officer … and … the officer’s … dependents until the officer … reaches the age of 65 ….
The city argued that the statute conditions the payment of health coverage on the officer continuing to live to age 65 and contended that if the legislature had intended otherwise it could have made continued dependent coverage explicit in the statute. The court noted that other statutes cited by the city “… equally support the counterargument: if the legislature had intended the contribution requirement to expire upon the death of an officer, it could have explicitly stated so.”
The court agreed with the district court that “the
statutory language may be read to ‘require coverage until the 65th
anniversary of an officer’s [birth].’” It found that to adopt the city’s
interpretation would lead to an unreasonable result; that the district court’s
interpretation was reasonable; that the legislature has recognized elsewhere in
statutes the “special nature of [public
safety officers’] sacrifice and contribution”; that to deny coverage to
dependents because a disabled officer dies before reaching the age of 65 would
frustrate the purpose of the statute to provide such coverage; and that
legislative intent “…is best effectuated by reading this language to require
contribution until the 65th anniversary of the officer’s birth.”
The court concluded “… when an officer who is
disabled in the line of duty dies prior to attaining age 65, Minn. Stat.
[section] 299A.465, subd. 1 [, paragraph] ( c) …, requires the officer’s
employer to continue to contribute to the health coverage of the officer’s
dependents until the 65th anniversary of the officer’s birth.
Minnesota Statutes, sec.
340A.702, clause (6)
Liquor Sales Within 1,000
Feet of County Jail
Minnesota Court of Appeals
January 4, 2005
A citizens’ group sought to prevent the city of Walker from moving its municipal liquor store to a historic building located within 1,000 feet of the county jail, arguing to do so would violate Minnesota Statutes, section 340A.702, clause (6), which reads in pertinent part:
It is a gross misdemeanor:
…
(6) to sell … intoxicating liquor within 1,000 feet
of a state hospital, training school, reformatory, prison, or other
institution under the supervision and control, in whole or in part, of the
commissioner of human services or the commissioner of corrections[.] [Emphasis
added.]
The
district court granted summary judgment to the respondent citizens’ group,
concluding that the county jail was an institution partially supervised or
controlled by the Department of Corrections. The city appealed, arguing that
the limitation only applied to state institutions.
The
court of appeals found the statute ambiguous.
Based
on its own examination of the statute’s legislative history, the court found
that the predecessor statute specifically named the applicable institutions,
that they were all state institutions, and that the present statute’s “change
in wording … appears to have been designed to eliminate the need to separately
list each institution and to define in a more generic manner the set of
institutions covered by the statute.
Retention of the adjective ‘state’ … appears to carry forward what was formerly
a clear limitation of the application of the statute to state institutions.”
The
court reversed the district court, holding “… the statute refers only to sales
within 1,000 feet of a state institution, and the statute does not apply to
prohibit liquor sales within 1,000 feet of a county jail.”
Minnesota Statutes, section 590.05
Right to Counsel for
Postconviction Relief
Minnesota Supreme Court
March 23, 2006
Following a plea agreement, Deegan pleaded guilty and received a sentence of 360 months, less than the presumptive sentence. Later, Deegan requested the assistance of the Public Defender to file a postconviction petition, which was denied under Minnesota Statutes, section 590.05. The statute was amended in 2003 to include the following language:
If, however, the person pled guilty and received a presumptive sentence or a downward departure in sentence, and the state public defender reviewed the person’s case and determined that there was no basis for an appeal of the conviction or of the sentence, then the state public defender may decline to represent the person in a postconviction remedy case.
Deegan’s
motion for appointment of counsel was denied by the district court and court of
appeals under section 590.05 and Pennsylvania v. Finley, 481 U.S. 551,
107 S.Ct. 1990 (1987), in which the U.S. Supreme Court held there is no 14th
Amendment right to counsel for a state postconviction action.
The
court accepted Deegan’s petition to review the constitutionality of the 2003
amendment. After analyzing the history
and scope of postconviction remedies and the right to counsel in Minnesota and
other states, and at the federal level, the court concluded “… that the 2003
amendment deprives some defendants of meaningful access to one review of a
criminal conviction, in violation of their right to the assistance of counsel
under Article I, section 6 of the Minnesota Constitution.”
The
court held that “a defendant’s right to the assistance of counsel under … the
Minnesota Constitution extends to one review of a criminal conviction, whether
by direct appeal or a first review by postconviction proceeding” so that,
consequently, “section 590.05, as amended by … [Laws] … 2003, [1st
Special Session] ch. 2, art. 3, [section] 2, … is unconstitutional. The court’s remedy was to sever the 2003
amendment so that section 590.05 exists “… as it existed before the 2003
amendment” and “… the version that existed prior to the 2003 amendment is
revived.”
[NOTE
1: Laws 2003, First Special Session
chapter 2, article 3, section 3, also added identical language to Minnesota
Statutes, section 611.14.]
[NOTE
2: Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
590.05, continues to show the language declared to be unconstitutional by this
case, not the “revived” pre-2003 version.]
Minnesota Statutes, secs. 609.321, subd. 12, and 609.324, subd. 2
After negotiating with an undercover police officer, while in the
officer’s car, for an exchange of oral sex for $30, the defendant was arrested
and charged with prostitution under Minnesota Statutes, section 609.324,
subdivision 2, which states, in pertinent part, “Whoever solicits … to engage
for hire in sexual … contact while in a public place may be sentenced
….” [Emphasis added.] Minnesota
Statutes, section 609.321, subdivision 12, defines “public place” as “… a
public street or sidewalk, a pedestrian skyway system …, a hotel, motel, or
other place of public accommodation, or a place licensed to sell intoxicating
liquor, wine, nonintoxicating malt beverages, or food.”
The defendant argued the interior of the officer’s car is not a public
place for purposes of the prostitution laws and the lower court agreed,
dismissing the charge after finding “public place” to be ambiguous and concluding
that the term “should be interpreted to refer to areas ‘where the public is
likely to be present.’”
The court framed the issue as “… whether that part of the ‘public
street’ occupied by the vehicle inside which White was sitting was a ‘public place.’”
After examining other cases and contexts determining the scope of
“public place,” the court noted that “Had the legislature so intended, it could
have defined as a gross-misdemeanor offense the solicitation of prostitution in
a motor vehicle.” It affirmed the lower court and held that the term does not
include the interior of a car.