NOT FOR PUBLICATION FILED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS JAN 12 2021
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No. 19-30098
Plaintiff-Appellee, D.C. No.
9:15-cr-00011-DLC-1
v.
DAN CALVERT WALLEN, MEMORANDUM*
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Montana
Dana L. Christensen, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 2, 2020
Portland, Oregon
Before: BERZON, COLLINS, and VANDYKE, Circuit Judges.
Concurrence by Judge VANDYKE
This is the second appeal from a district court order affirming Defendant Dan
Calvert Wallen’s conviction. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We
reverse and remand.
Wallen shot three adolescent grizzly bears.1 After a bench trial, the
*
This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as provided by
Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
1
Because the parties are familiar with the facts, we recite them here only as necessary.
magistrate judge found Wallen did not act in self-defense and convicted him on
three counts of unlawfully taking a threatened species. The district court affirmed
the conviction. On the first appeal this court determined the magistrate judge
incorrectly applied an objective good faith standard instead of a subjective good
faith standard when analyzing whether Wallen acted in self-defense. United States
v. Wallen, 874 F.3d 620, 632 (9th Cir. 2017). The case was remanded.
Wallen was tried again, on the same record, before the same magistrate
judge. This time, the magistrate judge rejected his self-defense claim on the basis
that “Wallen’s lack of credibility and inconsistent statements demonstrate that he
did not in good faith believe shooting the bears was necessary to protect himself or
his family.” United States v. Wallen, 2018 WL 3360766, at *6 (D. Mont. July 10,
2018) (emphasis added). Wallen was convicted on all three counts a second time.
The district court affirmed Wallen’s conviction. This appeal followed.
On appeal from the district court’s order affirming a misdemeanor
conviction, we perform a second tier of appellate review, and we apply to the
magistrate judge’s decision the same standard used by the district court, but without
any deference to the district court’s conclusion. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 58(g)(2)(D).
We review the magistrate judge’s legal conclusions de novo, as the prior Ninth
2
Circuit panel did in the earlier appeal.2 See Wallen, 874 F.3d at 623.
Here, the magistrate judge erred by determining that Wallen’s lack of
credibility alone was dispositive and rendered other evidence concerning his good
faith irrelevant. Specifically, after concluding that Wallen lacked credibility, the
magistrate judge improperly disregarded other relevant evidence because that
“evidence is not relevant to Wallen’s credibility.” Wallen, 2018 WL 3360766, at
*6. That was error. See Wallen, 874 F.3d at 632 (“We emphasize that, although
the ultimate question is whether a defendant held a subjective good faith belief, the
objective reasonableness (or unreasonableness) of a claimed belief bears directly
on whether that belief was held in good faith.”). The magistrate judge committed
legal error by expressly disregarding other evidence that was relevant to the
objective reasonableness of Wallen’s claim of self-defense—and therefore to his
subjective belief—just because it wasn’t relevant to his credibility. The magistrate
judge should have considered whether, despite Wallen’s credibility issues, this
other evidence raised a reasonable doubt as to his subjective good faith.
Reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence de novo, we conclude that there is
sufficient evidence to convict. See United States v. Clavette, 135 F.3d 1308, 1311
(9th Cir. 1998). Wallen’s original account to the investigator on the night of the
2
While the precise standard of review we apply to the magistrate judge’s findings of fact in a case
like this is not settled law in this circuit, we do not reach the magistrate judge’s factual
determinations because this case turns on a legal error.
3
shootings—that “he had found a single bear eating chickens in his coop and fired
two shots to frighten it away” and that “the bear was walking away as he fired,”
Wallen, 874 F.3d at 624—is enough to constitute sufficient evidence for a rational
fact finder to conclude that he shot the bear to frighten it away from eating his
chickens, not because he perceived himself or his family to be in immediate danger.
See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 318–19 & n.8 (1979). And the many
changes in Wallen’s story, see Wallen, 874 F.3d at 633; see also Wallen, 2018 WL
3360766, at *2–3, could surely support a rational fact finder’s conclusion that the
story Wallen told at trial, in which first two and then one bears charged him, in
separate instances, when he fired, see id. at *3, was not true, undermining the
likelihood that he harbored the relevant subjective belief that he needed to shoot the
bears to protect himself or others from imminent harm. See Wallen, 874 F.3d at
628, 632.
The magistrate judge’s narrow legal error was to treat the well-supported
adverse credibility finding as dispositive, rejecting other evidence—for example,
the perceptions of Wallen’s wife—only as not pertinent to Wallen’s credibility,
without considering whether it was still pertinent to Wallen’s subjective belief. See
Wallen, 2018 WL 3360766, at *6. On remand, the trier of fact could not convict
based on an adverse credibility finding without then completing the analysis by
connecting that finding to the elements of the good faith defense, including taking
4
account of evidence as to Wallen’s state of mind other than his own statements.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
5
FILED
United States v. Wallen JAN 12 2021
19-30098 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
VANDYKE, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree with the memorandum disposition, including its conclusion that there
is sufficient evidence to convict Wallen on this record. I write separately because of
a pragmatic concern unique to this case, its procedural history, and the fact that
Wallen is not entitled to a jury trial on remand under our precedent.
In sharp contrast to the extremely demanding beyond-a-reasonable-doubt
burden of proof that the trier of fact is required to apply in convicting a criminal
defendant, the sufficiency-of-evidence standard that we apply on appeal after
conviction is a relatively easy standard to meet because of the appropriate deference
allowed once someone has already been convicted—usually by a jury of his peers.
In ordering remand for legal error when a jury will be the finder of fact, there is little
risk that the court of appeals’ sufficiency determination will be misinterpreted or
somehow misapplied by a new jury as a license to simply reconvict the criminal
defendant without properly applying the demanding legal standard or fully
considering all the relevant facts in the case. But when, like here, a judge is sitting
as a finder of fact, there is a practical risk that the judge might, perhaps even
unconsciously, take our sufficiency conclusion as a license to summarily reconvict
the defendant on remand and thus fail to give the criminal defendant the full process
demanded by our laws and Constitution.
That would obviously be improper, but the case history here gives me special
concern for that possibility. As I read Judge Christensen’s most recent decision in
this case, he properly considered objective evidence as evidence of good faith and
he properly said that credibility cannot independently serve as a basis to meet the
government’s burden of proof. Judge Christensen observed “that the threat to
Wallen and any family present during the encounters was likely immediate, that
Wallen did not provoke the conflict with the bears, and that the amount of force
Wallen used ... was not excessive.” United States v. Wallen, 2019 WL 1858393, at
*4 (D. Mont. Apr. 25, 2019). He also said, “the record clearly reflects that [Wallen]
was reasonably fearful.” Id. at *5. But then Judge Christensen put too much weight
on the magistrate judge’s credibility finding—much like the magistrate judge’s legal
error noted by the majority—and he “significant[ly]” relied on a misstatement of
fact.1 See id.
Given this case’s history and multiple remands, I don’t think it hurts to
emphasize what should be obvious: if Wallen is retried for a third time, the trier of
1
The government misspoke by telling the district court and our court that on the
night of the bear shooting, Wallen never said that he was fearful, felt threatened, or
that his family was threatened by the bears when he shot them. The record shows
that the local game warden repeatedly testified that Wallen told him on the night of
the shooting that “he was afraid of [the bears]” and afraid for “[h]is children and the
neighbors that were playing in the yard.” In his review of the magistrate judge’s
decision, Judge Christensen relied on the government’s misstatement as a
“significant” reason for his decision affirming Wallen’s conviction.
2
fact must rigorously apply the demanding standard of proof for a criminal defendant,
and not simply rely on our sufficient evidence determination as a license to
summarily reconvict him.
3