05/12/2020
DA 19-0224
Case Number: DA 19-0224
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2020 MT 122N
STATE OF MONTANA,
Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
DESMOND ALLEN MACKAY,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Twentieth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Lake, Cause No. DC-14-034
Honorable Deborah Kim Christopher, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Desmond Allen Mackay, Self-Represented, Shelby, Montana
For Appellee:
Timothy C. Fox, Montana Attorney General, C. Mark Fowler, Assistant
Attorney General, Helena, Montana
Steven Eschenbacher, Lake County Attorney, James Lapotka, Deputy
County Attorney, Polson, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: April 8, 2020
Decided: May 12, 2020
Filed:
cir-641.—if
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
Reports.
¶2 Desmond Allen Mackay appeals the Twentieth Judicial District Court’s order
denying his motion to withdraw guilty plea. Mackay challenges the voluntariness of his
plea and argues that he should be afforded a hearing on his claim of ineffective assistance
of counsel. We affirm.
¶3 On September 17, 2015, Mackay appeared in open court with his counsel and
pleaded guilty to mitigated deliberate homicide. On November 19, 2015, the District
Court sentenced Mackay to Montana State Prison for forty years, with a twenty-five year
parole eligibility restriction. Through the Office of Appellate Defender, Mackay
appealed, but he later voluntarily dismissed his appeal, attesting that he did not wish to
continue with it. See State v. Mackay, No. DA 16-0028, Or. (Mont. Oct. 31, 2016). On
May 17, 2018, Mackay filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The State never
responded, and the District Court entered its denial order March 8, 2019.
¶4 Mackay filed a petition for writ of supervisory control with this Court on
March 21, 2019. Citing to M. R. App. P. 14(3), Mackay argued that the District Court
was proceeding under a mistake of law and causing a gross injustice by refusing to
review his motion. By order entered April 3, 2019, we denied his petition, noting that he
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had a remedy of appeal. Mackay v. 20th Jud. Dist., OP 19-0178 (Or. Apr. 2, 2019).
Mackay filed his notice of appeal on April 12, 2019.
¶5 Mackay sought to withdraw his plea on the ground that the evidence and witness
statements showed the deceased was not Mackay’s intended victim, but that Mackay
killed him by mistake. He reasserts this position on appeal: because a jury could have
been warranted in finding him guilty of negligent homicide, his counsel was deficient in
not providing competent legal advice on this point, preventing Mackay from making a
knowing and intelligent decision when he made the choice to plead guilty to mitigated
deliberate homicide.1 The District Court held that Mackay had not raised his claims in a
timely fashion and that a mistake of fact as to the identity of the victim did not relieve
him from having the mental state of purposely or knowingly.
¶6 We review a district court’s denial of a defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty
plea to determine whether the court’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous and whether
its interpretation and application of the law to the facts are correct. State v. Warclub,
2005 MT 149, ¶ 24, 327 Mont. 352, 114 P.3d 254. The dispositive issue in this case is
one of law, the timeliness of Mackay’s motion.
¶7 Under Montana law, a district court may permit a defendant, for good cause
shown, to withdraw his plea of guilty within one year from the date the judgment
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Mackay also raises, for the first time on appeal, a claim that his appellate counsel was
ineffective by failing to seek withdrawal under Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738,
87 S. Ct. 1396 (1967) (when appellate counsel is unable to find any non-frivolous issues to raise
on appeal, counsel must file a brief advising the Court of her conclusion). We decline to
consider this argument. See, e.g., State v. Martinez, 2003 MT 65, ¶ 17, 314 Mont. 434,
67 P.3d 207.
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becomes final. Section 46-16-105(2), MCA. Section 46-16-105(2)(b), MCA, provides
that if appeal is taken to the Montana Supreme Court, a judgment becomes final when the
time for petitioning the United States Supreme Court expires.2 This Court dismissed
Mackay’s appeal with prejudice at his request on October 31, 2016. State v. Mackay,
DA 16-0028 (Or. Oct. 31, 2016). Even allowing Mackay the ninety days for seeking
Supreme Court review (which he waived by voluntarily dismissing his direct appeal), he
had until January 30, 2018, to file his motion. But he did not file it until May 17, 2018,
nearly three months beyond the longest possible time bar.
¶8 Section 46-16-105(2), MCA, permits an exception from the one-year time bar
“when a claim of innocence is supported by evidence of a fundamental miscarriage of
justice[.]” Mackay may not take advantage of this exception. As the District Court
correctly observed, there is no legal support for a claim that trial counsel should have
advised Mackay he could be exonerated when Mackay acknowledged that he deliberately
struck the victim in the head with a hammer, even if it wasn’t the person he wanted to
attack. Section 45-5-103(1), MCA, defines mitigated deliberate homicide in relevant part
as “purposely or knowingly caus[ing] the death of another human being[.]”
(Emphasis added.) It does not require specific intent. State v. Starr, 204 Mont. 210, 218,
664 P.2d 893, 897 (1983) (“Since Montana revamped its criminal statutes in 1973 by
adopting in essence the Model Penal Code, specific intent is not an elemental concept,
unless the statute defining the defense requires as an element thereof a specific
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A party has ninety days from the date of judgment within which to petition the Supreme Court
for a writ of certiorari. U.S. Sup. Ct. Rule 13.1.
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purpose.”); State v. Van Dyken, 242 Mont. 415, 434, 791 P.2d 1350, 1362 (1990)
(noting that “a defendant can properly be convicted of deliberate homicide even though
he may not have intended that the death result from the act where he contemplated the
same kind of harm or injury to the victim.”). See also 1 W.R. LaFave & A. W. Scott, Jr.,
Substantive Criminal Law § 3.5 at 310-11 (1986) (discussing the principle of “transferred
intent” and noting that where the crime “merely requires the intent to kill another,” the
fact that the defendant missed and struck the wrong person is only an issue of causation).
Mackay has no claim to actual innocence to excuse the untimeliness of his motion.
¶9 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of
our Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. In the opinion
of the Court, the case presents a question controlled by settled law. The District Court
correctly ruled that Mackay’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea was untimely, and its
order is affirmed.
/S/ BETH BAKER
We Concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
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