IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 17-1087
Filed October 24, 2018
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
JERRY DARNELL MOSLEY,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clay County, Carl J. Peterson,
Judge.
Jerry Mosley appeals his convictions and sentence for first-degree burglary
and assault causing bodily injury following a jury trial. CONVICTION AFFIRMED,
SENTENCE VACATED, AND REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Martha J. Lucey, Assistant
Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Tyler J. Buller, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., Potterfield, J., and Blane, S.J. *
*
Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2018).
2
VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.
Jerry Mosley appeals his judgment and sentence for first-degree burglary
and assault causing bodily injury. He contends (1) the record lacks sufficient
evidence to support the jury’s finding of guilt on the first-degree burglary charge,
(2) his trial attorney was ineffective in failing to object to certain testimony as being
outside the scope of the minutes of testimony, (3) the district court should have
merged the assault causing bodily injury conviction with the first-degree burglary
conviction, and (4) the district court failed to assess his reasonable ability to pay
restitution.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence – First-Degree Burglary
The jury was instructed the State would have to prove the following
elements of first-degree burglary:
1. On or about the 6th day of June, 2016, the defendant
entered the residence of [a woman].
2. The residence was an occupied structure as defined in
Instruction No. 26.
3. One or more persons were present in the occupied
structure.
4. The defendant did not have permission or authority to enter
the residence or defendant did not have permission and authority to
remain in the residence or defendant’s authority to remain had
ended.
5. The residence was not open to the public.
6. The defendant did so with the specific intent to commit an
assault.
7. During the burglary, the defendant did intentionally or
recklessly inflict bodily injury on [the woman].
Mosley challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the fourth element.
Our review is for substantial evidence. State v. Sanford, 814 N.W.2d 611, 615
(Iowa 2012).
3
A jury could have found the following facts. Mosley had an affair with a
woman. According to the woman, the relationship ended in late 2015 but, three
months later, “just kind of picked right up where it left off.” After several months,
the woman accused Mosley of seeing other women. The couple engaged in a
spirited text-message exchange, which culminated in a second break-up.
The same day, Mosley entered the woman’s duplex. The woman testified
she was confused to see Mosley there because they had just agreed they “weren’t
going to be talking anymore.” Mosley ran up the stairs, grabbed the woman, and
pushed her against a wall, leaving a “body print” on the wall. He hit her in the face
“multiple times,” causing bleeding and scarring. The woman screamed to stop and
screamed to a child to call 911. The woman subsequently called 911.
The woman testified she “didn’t give [Mosley] permission to come over.”
She stated he had permission to come to her home “[d]uring the relationship” but
that permission ended when they agreed to go their “own separate ways.” After
Mosley began assaulting her, she wanted “him to leave.” Although she did not
expressly tell him to leave, she “kick[ed] at him to get him off” her. She also noted
he never had keys to the duplex.
A reasonable juror could have found that Mosley lacked permission to enter
the woman’s home by virtue of the severance of their relationship earlier in the
day. A reasonable juror also could have found that Mosley lacked authority to
remain in the duplex after he entered. See State v. Walker, 600 N.W.2d 606, 609
(Iowa 1999).
In Walker, the court addressed the identical issue raised here: “whether a
defendant may be convicted of committing burglary by remaining on the premises
4
after his privilege to be there has been revoked where the victim testifies that she
did not expressly ask the defendant to leave.” Id. at 607. The court concluded:
[A] victim need not expressly revoke his or her consent to the
defendant’s presence; it is sufficient that the victim’s actions give the
defendant reason to know that such consent has been withdrawn. If
the defendant remains on the premises after having reason to know
he has no right to do so, he has “remained over” and, if, during the
time he unlawfully remains on the premises, he forms the requisite
intent to commit a felony, assault or theft, the defendant has
committed a burglary.
Id. at 609. We are not at liberty to overrule this authority, as Mosley requests.
Substantial evidence supports the fourth element of the jury instruction and the
jury’s finding of guilt on the first-degree burglary charge.
II. Ineffective Assistance – Scope of Minutes of Testimony
The State elicited testimony from a child in the home. The child stated
Mosley “threatened to burn down the house and kill everybody who was in it,
including [the woman] and her kids and me and my brother.” Mosley claims the
testimony exceeded the scope of the minutes of testimony and his trial attorney
was ineffective in failing to object to the testimony on this ground. To prevail,
Mosley must show (1) deficient performance and (2) prejudice. See Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984).
The Iowa Supreme Court recently discussed precedent on pretrial
disclosures in criminal cases. See State v. Shorter, 893 N.W.2d 65, 79–81 (Iowa
2017). The court stated, “[T]he question of the scope of proper disclosure by the
prosecution of minutes of evidence prior to trial has been hotly contested.” Id. at
81. The court characterized the advent of Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 2.5(3)
governing the scope of minutes as an effort to “promote greater disclosure.” Id.
5
Addressing whether the State was obligated to disclose that a witness would make
an eyewitness identification of the defendant, the court stated, “Ordinarily, we think
it incumbent upon the State to disclose in the minutes of testimony if a witness will
identify a defendant as engaging in criminal conduct.” Id. at 82. The court found
the record “not entirely clear” on what defense counsel knew and found “no clear
picture regarding prejudice to the defendant.” Id. The court concluded, “Because
of the factual uncertainties surrounding the claimed ineffective assistance of
counsel arising out of the deficient minutes, we conclude that this claim cannot be
resolved on direct appeal and should be addressed in an action for postconviction
relief.” Id. at 83.
Here, both sides agree the record may be inadequate to address the issue.
With this concession in mind and with the benefit of Shorter, we preserve the claim
for postconviction-relief proceedings.
III. Illegal Sentence – Merger
Mosley contends the district court should have merged his assault causing
bodily injury conviction with his first-degree-burglary conviction. See Iowa Code
§ 701.9 (2016) (“No person shall be convicted of a public offense which is
necessarily included in another public offense of which the person is convicted.”);
see also Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.6(2) (“Upon prosecution for a public offense, the
defendant may be convicted of either the public offense charges or an included
offense, but not both.”); State v. Peck, 539 N.W.2d 170, 175 (Iowa 1995) (“We
conclude that it would be impossible to commit first-degree burglary by
‘intentionally or recklessly’ injuring another without also committing assault or
assault causing injury because all of these crimes involve general intent.”). The
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State counters that merger was not warranted because there was sufficient
evidence “to establish a break in the action and support at least two separate
assaults.” But as Mosley accurately points out, “The instructions submitted did not
ask the jury to engage in the fact-finding necessary to support separate acts of
assault.” Cf. State v. Lambert, 612 N.W.2d 810, 816 (Iowa 2000) (rejecting the
State’s argument that merger of offenses did not occur because “no special
interrogatories were submitted and we therefore have no way of knowing the
alternative upon which the jury based its decision”).
We conclude the assault causing bodily injury conviction merged with the
first-degree burglary conviction. We vacate the sentence and remand for merger.
See id.
IV. Restitution of Attorney Fees and Court Costs
The district court ordered Mosley to make restitution for court costs and
attorney fees. Mosley asserts, “The district court failed to consider [his] reasonable
ability to pay the cost of his legal assistance prior to the order entering judgment
for reimbursement of the court-appointed attorney fees.” The State counters that
the challenge is “premature because neither court costs nor attorneys’ fees have
actually been imposed in judgment against the defendant, as there is no plan of
restitution on file.” We agree with the State. See State v. Jackson, 601 N.W.2d
354, 357 (Iowa 1999) (stating until a plan of restitution1 is completed, “the court is
not required to give consideration to the defendant’s ability to pay”); State v.
1
A “plan of restitution” “sets out the amounts and kind of restitution in accordance with the
priorities established in section 910.2.” State v. Kurtz, 878 N.W.2d 469, 471 (Iowa Ct.
App. 2016).
7
Swartz, 601 N.W.2d 348, 354 (Iowa 1999) (same). Mosley’s restitution concerns
are premature.
We affirm Mosley’s conviction for first-degree burglary. We preserve for
postconviction relief his ineffective-assistance claim grounded on testimony
arguably beyond the scope of the minutes. We vacate his sentence and remand
for merger of the assault conviction with the burglary conviction.
CONVICTION AFFIRMED, SENTENCE VACATED, AND REMANDED
FOR RESENTENCING.