State v. Santiago

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The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the opinion as it appears on the Commission on Official Legal Publications Electronic Bulletin Board Service and in the Connecticut Law Journal and bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not be repro- duced and distributed without the express written per- mission of the Commission on Official Legal Publications, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut. ****************************************************** ORD319.7E 10-30-15 15:31:42 ESPINOSA, J., dissenting from the denial of the state’s motion for stay of execution. I disagree with the decision of this court to deny the state’s motion for a stay of execution in State v. Santiago, 318 Conn. 1, A.3d , reconsideration denied, 319 Conn. 912, A.3d (2015), pending the resolution of the appeal in State v. Peeler, Docket No. SC 18125 (argued July 10, 2014). Because the majority in Santiago resolved this appeal on bases not raised by the defendant, Edu- ardo Santiago, the state was deprived of fair notice and has not yet had the opportunity to address those issues. Fundamental principles of fairness dictate that the state should have a meaningful opportunity to present argu- ment as to those issues. Consistent with basic principles of justice, the people of the state of Connecticut— whose interests are represented by the state—have a right to be heard after receiving proper notice of the issues that are in play, and without prejudice. This court has ordered the parties to file supplemental briefs in Peeler on the very issues that the state did not have the opportunity to address in Santiago. That order alone, however, does not guarantee the state a meaningful opportunity to present its arguments. Granting the stay in Santiago would ensure that the state could advance its arguments without being hampered by any sugges- tion that the issues have been rendered moot by the likelihood that the offenders currently on death row will have had their sentences vacated and commuted to sentences of life without the possibility of release prior to a decision in Peeler. Denying the state’s motion for a stay, therefore, creates an unreasonable risk of a ‘‘deleterious effect . . . on the public’s perception of the procedural fairness of the criminal justice system.’’ State v. Elson, 311 Conn. 726, 740, 91 A.3d 862 (2014). In light of the prejudice that would be suffered by the state by the likelihood that its claims will be ren- dered moot following the resentencing of the offenders on death row absent an appeal by the state, strict adher- ence to the rules of practice will work injustice. There- fore, pursuant to Practice Book §§ 60-1 and 60-2, I would grant the state’s motion to stay the execution of the judgment in Santiago, pending the resolution of the appeal in Peeler. I recognize that § 60-2 (4) ordinarily authorizes only the stay of ancillary proceedings, and I do not agree with the state that the appeal in Santiago constitutes a proceeding that is ancillary to the appeal in Peeler. Because in the present matter, ‘‘strict adher- ence’’ to the rules of practice would work an injustice, however, § 60-1 not only authorizes, but requires this court to interpret the rules liberally to grant the stay. Denying the people of this state the opportunity to present argument on an issue as important as the one presented in these appeals, however, is inconsistent with fundamental principles of fairness. It is ironic that the majority anchors its decision deny- ing the stay on the insinuation that the state has engaged in panel shopping. The very reason that the state cannot present its arguments to the Santiago panel is because the majority in that panel denied the state’s motion for argument and reconsideration filed in that case. First, I observe that the state’s willingness to submit these issues to the Santiago panel in and of itself should silence any speculation that the state’s aim is to shop for a panel ‘‘more to its liking.’’ Second, I note that the term panel shopping implies that a party chooses one panel over another—the Santiago majority took any such choice away from the state and now has the audac- ity to accuse the state of panel shopping. Finally, I observe that it would be improper for the court to rely on this order declining to stay the execu- tion of the judgment in Santiago as a shield to avoid addressing the substance of the arguments of the people of this state on the important issue of whether the death penalty violates our state constitution. The people of this state have not yet been heard on this issue, and justice demands that this court address their arguments. Accordingly, I dissent.