03/09/2021
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA Case Number: OP 20-0587
OP 20-0587
FILED
STATE OF MONTANA,
MAR 0 9 2021
Petitioner, Bowen Greenw000
Clerk of Supreme 00,1--
State of Monta,a
v.
ORDER
MONTANA EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT COURT,HONORABLE
JOHN C. BROWN,Presiding,
Respondent.
The State ofMontana seeks a writ ofsupervisory control over the Eighteenth Judicial
District Court, Gal!at in County, to vacate that court's September 15, 2020 Order Denying
State's Motion to Quash Subpoena Issued to Prosecutor Bjorn Boyer and Granting
Defendant's Cross Motion to Disqualify Mr. Boyer from Representing the State at Trial in
Cause No. DC-18-448C. Miller, via counsel, has responded in opposition to the State's
petition. The District Court also responded, indicating that it stands by its order.
Supervisory control is an extraordinary remedy that may be invoked when the case
involves purely legal questions and urgent or emergency factors make the normal appeal
process inadequate. M. R. App. P. 14(3). The case must meet one of three additional
criteria: (a) the other court is proceeding under a mistake of law and is causing a gross
injustice:(b) constitutional issues of state-wide importance are involved; or (c) the other
court has granted or denied a motion for substitution of a judge in a criminal case.
M. R. App.P. 14(3)(a)-(c). We decide on a case-by-case basis whether supervisory control
is appropriate. Stokes v. Mont. Thirteenth Judicial Dist. Court, 2011 MT 182, ¶ 5,
361 Mont. 279, 259 P.3d 754 (citations omitted).
The standard of review on a motion to disqualify counsel is abuse of discretion.
Schuff v. A.T. Klemens & Son, 2000 MT 357, ¶ 26, 303 Mont. 274, 16 P.3d 1002.
"Ultimately, it is this Court's "constitutional mandate to fashion and interpret the Rules of
Professional Conduct.' A district court therefore commits reversible error if it misapplies
those rules." Krutzfeldt Ranch, LLC v. Pinnacle Bank,2012 MT 15, ¶ 14, 363 Mont. 366,
272 P.3d 635 (citing In re Rules ofProf? Conduct, 2000 MT 110, ¶ 9, 299 Mont. 321,
2 P.3d 806,Schutt, ¶ 176 (Day, Dist. J., dissenting). A party seeking the testimony of the
prosecutor trying the case "must demonstrate that the evidence is vital to his case, and that
his inability to present the same or similar facts from another source creates a compelling
need for the testimony." United States v. Watson, 952 F.2d 982, 986 (8th Cir. 1991)
(citations omitted). The Ninth Circuit has reasoned:
[A]defendant has an obligation to exhaust other available sources ofevidence
before a court should sustain a defendants efforts to call a participating
prosecutor as a witness. United States v. West, 680 F.2d 652, 654
(9th Cir. 1982). Nonetheless,the defendants obligation to resort to alternative
means of adducing factual testimony is not absolute. Both the quality and
quantity of the alternate sources of evidence are proper subjects for
comparison with that sought directly from the participating prosecutor.
United States v. Prantil, 764 F.2d 548, 551-52 (9th Cir. 1985). "Regardless of the
prosecutor's view ofthe utility of his own testimony, the district judge is charged with the
responsibility of making determinations as to the materiality of witness testimony."
Prantil, 764 F.2d at 552. "The District Court's ruling on such a motion will not be reversed
`absent a clear and prejudicial abuse of discretion.' Watson, 952 F. 2d at 986.
In December 2018, the State charged Miller with one count of sexual intercourse
without consent, alleging that Miller, age 27 at the time ofthe alleged offense,had sex with a
14-year-old girl("V1"). During the initial police investigation, V1 maintained that she and
Miller were dating, but she denied they had had sex. VI also asserted that she had lied to
Miller about her age and that she had convinced him she was 18 years old. Miller admitted
that he had had sex with VI, but he asserted that he believed she was 18.
Boyer, as prosecutor, filed the Information in Miller's case. In March 2020,Boyer,
who had not yet met V1,learned she was being held in youth detention inBillings atter using
her mother's vehicle to run away from home. Boyer also learned that VI rnight soon leave
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the state. On March 7,2020,Boyer traveled alone to Billings, where he met with VI and her
mother in order to explain the trial process and to attempt to establish a rapport with VI.
Boyer's meeting with VI and her mother was not recorded. During the meeting, VI
told Boyer that she and Miller had had sex and that during their relationship, she had
disclosed her age to Miller but convinced him to continue dating her. V1 explained that she
had not previously disclosed this information because she had wanted to protect Miller. VI
also expressed anger that she had spent more time in jail than Miller had.
Upon his return, Boyer promptly e-mailed Miller's attorneys and informed them that
he had interviewed VI and that she had disclosed that she and Miller had had sex and that
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Miller knew she was 14 years old. Boyer did not at that time tell Miller's attorneys that V1
had stated she was mad at Miller because she had spent more time in jail than he had.
Miller's attorneys indicated that they might wish to depose Boyer or to call him as a witness
at trial because VI's credibility was increasingly at issue. At the final pretrial conference on
August 27,2020, defense counsel indicated that it intended to call Boyer as a witness at trial
with regard to his interview of VI in which she provided a different account of the matter
than she had previously. After the pretrial conference, Boyer informed defense counsel
about VI's statement that she was mad about spending more time in jail than Miller.
Miller's counsel then subpoenaed Boyer for trial.
On September 3, 2020,the State moved for an affirmative ruling that Boyer is not a
necessary witness under M.R.Pro. Cond. 3.7. The State also moved to quash the subpoena
for Boyer's testiinony. Defense counsel filed a cross-motion to disqualify Boyer as trial
counsel The District Court then issued its rulings denying the State's motion to quash the
subpoena and granting Miller's motion to disqualify Boyer as trial counsel, for which the
State now seeks supervisory control.
The State argues that this matter is appropriate for supervisory control because the
correctness of the District Court's rulings presents purely legal issues, and allowing these
rulings to stand would cause a gross injustice. The State further argues it has no adequate
rernedy ofappeal, as a court ruling that allows a defendant to disqualify a prosecutor and call
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the prosecutor as a witness is not grounds for the State to appeal in a criminal case.
Section 46-20-103, MCA.
Miller contends that this case is not appropriate for a writ of supervisory control
because it does not present purely legal issues. Acknowledging that the facts are not in
dispute, Miller maintains nonetheless that because the District Court considered the
underlying facts in reaching its conclusions, the issue is not "purely legal." Miller is
incorrect. Although disqualification ofcounsel rnay not be susceptible to supervisory control
where the underlying facts are disputed, see Ahern v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court,
No. OP 18-0054, 391 Mont. 538,414 P.3d 756(Feb. 20, 2018), the facts are undisputed in
this instance. The question presented on the State's petition is the purely legal question
whether the District Court abused its discretion when it concluded that Miller could
subpoena Deputy Gallatin County Attorney Bjorn ,Boyer as a witness in his case, thus
disqualifying Boyer from prosecuting the matter. As the State points out, it has no remedy
of appeal from this ruling. We conclude this matter is appropriate for consideration upon
petition for writ of supervisory control.
The State argues that the District Court erred in finding Boyer a necessary witness
because Miller has alternatives to calling Boyer at trial. In the District Court, the State
suggested Miller's counsel could interview V 1 and she could sign an affidavit about her
disclosures to Boyer, or a defense investigator could interview V1 and the State would waive
hearsay objections to the investigator's testimony. The State also suggested VI's mother,
who was present, could be called to testify about the conversation. Miller's counsel objected
to these alternatives, arguing that Boyer's testimony would carry more credibility and
weight; the District Court agreed.
Miller argues in response to the State's petition that the District Court correctly
weighed the parties' arguments in determining that Boyer was a necessary witness. Miller's
counsel argues that Boyer's meeting with V1 that evolved into an interview was "an
inflection point where V 1 changed from being an exculpatory witness to an accusatory
witness" and that Boyer is the only person who can testify to certain aspects ofthe meeting,
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including the meeting's initial purpose and the circumstances that led to it evolving into an
interview.
Reviewing a trial court for abuse of its discretion, this Court does not ask if it agrees
with the trial court but whether the trial court acted arbitrarily without the employment of
conscientious judgment or exceeded the bounds ofreason, in view of all the circumstances,
ignoring recognized principles and resulting in substantial injustice. Schuff, ¶ 27. A
determination that an individual is a "necessary witness" is not amenable to firm rules but
depends on the unique circurnstances of each case. Undisputedly, Boyer did not initially
intend to interview VI on March 7,2020. But the fact remains that VI ultimately disclosed
to Boyer a version of events that contradicted her earlier statements. Miller's counsel
maintained, and the District Court agreed, that although VIs mother witnessed the
interview, she is not in the same position as Boyer to testify to this interview at trial. As
Miller points out, the State essentially asks us to reweigh the evidence presented to the trial
court and reach a different conclusion: that is not this Court's function under an abuse-of-
discretion standard.
The State rightly points out that a prosecutor should not be subject to automatic
disqualification simply for meeting in advance of trial with a child sexual assault victim.
The unique situation presented here,though, is that Boyer set up a meeting with VI and her
mother on short notice to introduce himselfand establish a rapport with V1 after learning of
Vl's possible imminent departure from Montana. This meeting developed into an interview
during which V1 provided information that contradicted her earlier recitation of events.
Unfortunately, Boyer did not have an investigator or other neutral witness with him.
Contrary to the State's characterization, the District Court did not hold that Boyer was a
necessary witness simply because he met with V 1. The court decided that Boyer was the
only witness able to testify to the circumstances and substance ofhis interview ofVI should
vl's trial testimony differ—as had her previous statements—notwithstanding the presence
of VI's mother at the same meeting. The District Court in its discretion found these facts
sufficient to conclude that Boyer was a necessary witness. The trial court's ruling is limited
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to this case and does not fling the door open to defendants disqualifying prosecutors in any
and all circumstances in which a prosecutor meets with a victim. Under the applicable
standard of review, we cannot find a "clear and prejudicial abuse of discretioe in the
District Court's ruling.
M.R.Pro. Cond.3.7(a)(3)provides that a lawyer shall not act as advocate at a trial in
which the lawyer is likely to be a necessary witness unless disqualification of the lawyer
would work substantial hardship on the client. Here, the State has not demonstrated that
Boyer's disqualification would pose a substantial hardship. It is not preferable to switch
counsel in the middle ofa case and undoubtedly will pose inconvenience for the prosecution.
But the State does not argue that no one else is available to try the case; the Gallatin County
Attorney's Office has other deputies who could competently assume the role of prosecutor
for this matter, which is currently set for trial several months away, in June 2021.
We have determined that the State has failed to demonstrate that the District Court
operated under a mistake oflaw resulting in substantial injustice when it denied the State's
motion to quash the subpoena issued for Boyer's trial testimony and granted Miller's
cross-motion to disqualify Boyer as trial counsel.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the State's Petition for a Writ of Supervisory
Control is DENIED. The District Court's September 15, 2020 Order in its Cause No.
DC-18-448C is AFFIRMED.
The Clerk is directed to provide notice of this Order to all counsel of record in the
Eighteenth Judicial District Court's Gallatin County Cause No. DC-18-448C and to the
Honorable John Browrresiding District Court Judge.
DATED this — day of March,2021.
Chief Justice
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Justices
Justice Laurie McKinnon, dissenting.
This Court has never analyzed under what circumstances a prosecutor becomes a
"necessary" witness in the case he or she is prosecuting, particularly when a State's victim
makes an inconsistent statement that hurts the defense's case by rendering him more
culpable and offers other statements of only tangential impeachment value. The Court
affirms the District Court's decision to disqualify the prosecutor without proper analysis or
standards,' and places the burden on the State to "demonstraten that Boyer's disqualification
would pose a substantial hardship [to the State]." The Court concludes the Gallatin County
Attorney's decision to assign Boyer as lead prosecutor is of no consequence; irnplies that
prosecutors are interchangeable; and concludes that the "Gallatin County Attorney's Office
has other deputies who could competently assume the role ofprosecutor for this matter and
The Court gives lip-service to rules oflaw and standards when it sets them out but does not follow
them. The Court, here, falls on the discretionary standard of review to avoid following the clear,
reasonable, and workable analytic framework for evaluating the prosecutor-witness rule.
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"the State does not argue that no one else is available to try the case." Most respectffilly,
management ofthe numerous County Attorney Offices is committed to the executive branch
of government. This Court should not be in the business ofshuffling prosecutors to handle
the cases; evaluating the competency of County Attorney's Offices; or deciding there are
available unnamed attorneys who can act as substitutes for the prosecutor. In my opinion,
while the disqualification of a participating prosecutor may be warranted on occasion, the
law does not permit a defendant to liberally call a prosecutor as a witness. Moreover,
a defendant must demonstrate a compelling and legitimate need for the prosecutor's
testimony. Where there are other available means for presenting the evidence, such as
through a third party who can testify to the same matters or conversations, no compelling
need exists.
This Court has never addressed the analytical framework for considering when a
prosecutor is a necessary witness in a case requiring disqualification. Federal courts,
however, have identified a clear framework to be employed. To begin,"the federal courts
have almost universally [condemned]the practice ofa Government prosecutor testifying at
the trial of a case he [or she] is prosecuting . . . and have stated that the practice should be
permitted only in extraordinary circumstances or for compelling reasons."
United States v. Birdman, 602 F.2d 547, 553 (3d Cir. 1979). See also United States v.
Schwartzbaum, 527 F.2d 249,253 (2d Cir. 1975); United States v. Torres, 503 F.2d 1120,
1126(2d Cir. 1974); United States v. Clancy, 276 F.2d 617, 636 (7th Cir. 1960), rev'd on
other grounds; United States v. Pepe,247 F.2d 838,844(2d Cir. 1957); United States v. Alu,
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246 F.2d 29, 33-34 (2d Cir. 1957); Christensen v. United States, 90 F.2d 152, 154
(7th Cir. 1937). Accordingly, requests for such testimony are disfavored. United States v.
Prantil, 764 F.2d 548, 552-54 (9th Cir. 1985).
As requests for a prosecutor's testimony are "condemner and "disfavored,"
"[t]he party seeking such testimony must demonstrate that the evidence is vital to his[or her]
case, and that his [or her] inability to present the same or similar facts from another source
creates a compelling need for the testimony." United States v. Watson, 952 F.2d 982, 986
(8th Cir. 1991)(citation omitted). A defendant has"an obligation to exhaust other available
sources ofevidence before a court should sustain a defendant's efforts to call a participating
prosecutor as a witness." Prantil, 764 F.2d at 551(citation omitted). "Nonetheless, the
defendant's obligation to resort to alternative means of adducingfactual testimony is not
absolute." Prantil, 764 F.2d at 551-52 (emphasis added) (citation omitted). Both the
quality and quantity of "alternate sources of evidence are proper subjects for comparison
with that sought directly from the participating prosecutor." Prantil, 764 F.2d at 552.
Where the statement made to a prosecutor has value only as duplicative impeachment,courts
have rejected the need to have the prosecutor abdicate his or her role as advocate.
See United States v. Tamura,694 F.2d 591,601 (9th Cir. 1982). Thus, a distinction exists
between statements with value as impeachment and those relating to factual testimony.
The professional impropriety of assuming a dual role as advocate and witness has
long been acknowledged. The ABA has codified disciplinary rules designed to prevent this
conflict and to minimize the prejudicial potential of conflicting roles when prevention is
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impossible. The ABA Standards Relating to the Prosecution Function make clear that these
rules apply to prosecutors as well.
A prosecutor should avoid the prospect of having to testify personally about
the content ofa witness interview. The prosecutor's interview of most routine
or government witnesses (for example, custodians of records or law
enforcement agents) should not require a third-party observer. But when the
need for corroboration ofan interview is reasonably anticipated, the prosecutor
should be accompanied by another trusted and credible person during the
interview. The prosecutor should avoid being alone with any witness who the
prosecutor reasonably believes has potential or actual criminal liability, or
foreseeably hostile witnesses.
American Bar Assoc. Standards for Criminal Justice, Prosecution Function Standards
3-3.4(f)(4th ed. 2017). Here,Boyer interviewed the victim in the presence ofa third person.
Boyer also recognized the potential impeachment value of the victirn's statements and,
among other remedies he suggested, agreed to stipulate to the statements made during the
interview and provide an affidavit from the victim as to the statements she made. Boyer thus
removed the potential for conflict by abiding by these standards. Under these circumstances,
Miller should not be allowed to choose disqualification over other remedies that adequately
protect his rights of confrontation and compulsory process. This prosecution, like many
sexual offenses, was challenging because ofthe victirn's age and indecisiveness. However,
this sort of prosecution is not unique, and prosecutors should not be subjected to
disqualification challenges sirnply because they have witnesses who provide varying
versions of the offense.
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Although disqualification ofa prosecutor is disfavored, a defendant has a competing
and countervailing interest in the right of confrontation and compulsory process. The
Supreme Court, on this point, has admonished:
The need to develop all relevant facts in the adversary systein is both
fundamental and comprehensive. The ends of criminal justice would be
defeated if judgments were to be founded on a partial or speculative
presentation ofthefacts. The very integrity ofthe judicial system and public
confidence in the system depend on full disclosure of all thefacts, within the
framework of the rules of evidence. To ensure that justice is done, it is
imperative to the function ofthe courts that compulsory process be available
for the production of evidence needed either by the prosecution or by the
defense.
United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683, 709, 94 S. Ct. 3090, 3108(1974)(ernphasis added),
rev'd on other grounds. To emphasize, courts have disfavored allowing a defendant to call
the prosecutor as a witness in the defendant's case. Prantil, 764 F.2d at 551. Recognizing
the possibility for abuse, the Ninth Circuit and other courts require that a defendant
demonstrate a "compelling nee& before a participating prosecutor will be disqualified and
called as a "necessary witness.
Here, Miller cannot present a compelling need for Boyer's testirnony. First and
foremost, the victim's statements were witnessed by her mother who is available and can
testify to those statements. "Where witnesses other than the prosecutor can testib) to the
same matters or conversations, no compelling need exists." United States v. Wallach,
788 F.Supp. 739, 744 (S.D.N.Y. 1992)(citing United States v. Roberson, 897 F.2d 1092,
1098(1Ith Cir. 1990)). Second,the offense charged was statutory rape. During the victim's
March 7th interview, she indicated that she had, in fact, told Miller, who was 27 years old,
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that she was only 14 years old—a statement clearly not helpful to the defense's case. The
victififs statement about her age helped the prosecution's case; Boyer's credibility, as a
former prosecutor in the case, would weigh heavily on his credibility as a witness. Finally,
while inconsistent with a statement made earlier to police—that she had convinced Miller
she was over 18 years old—the statement made during the March 7th interview could be
used only for impeachment purposes. The victim would be available at trial and subject to
cross-examination. The victim's displeasure at having been detained longer than Miller has
tangential and questionable impeachment value.
Underlying all ofthese circumstances, however,is Miller's refusal to consider any of
the proposed remedies Boyer suggested: defense counsel could interview the victim; the
victim could sign an affidavit about what she told Boyer and her mother; a defense
investigator could interview Boyer and the State would waive hearsay objections so the
testimony from the defense investigator could be admitted; and, the State would stipulate to
the victim's damaging statements made during the interview. The value of the statements
was entirely for purposes ofimpeachment and to attack the victim's credibility in a statutory
rape prosecution. A third person who was available to testify witnessed the statements. The
District Court's order,in a paragraph, disqualified Boyer because the State had subpoenaed
him as a witness.
I disagree with the Court that there was no abuse of discretion when Miller could
present the victim's impeachment testimony through a third person and when there were
other means available to obtain the same evidence. The State does not have the burden of
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showing **substantial hardship" or that no one else was available to try this case. While there
undoubtedly will be occasions where disqualification of the participating prosecutor is
necessary for a fair presentation of the facts, and to vindicate a defendant's rights of
confrontation and compulsory process, this is not one ofthem. Under the aforementioned
rules and standards, the Court is required to assess the quality of the evidence and the
availability ofother means to present the same evidence. In my opinion,the Court has failed
in this regard and,instead,chosen to rest its decision on the discretionary standard ofreview.
I dissent from the Court's order affirming the District Court's disqualification of Boyer as
the prosecutor.
Justice
Justice Dirk Sandefur joins in the Dissent of Justice McKinnon.
Justice
Justice Jim Rice joins in the conclusions of law reached by Justice McKinnon. and would
reverse the District Court's order.
Justice
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