No. 00-835
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2002 MT 311
STATE OF MONTANA,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
KENT ALLEN TICHENOR,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District,
In and for the County of Lewis and Clark,
The Honorable Jeffrey M. Sherlock, Judge presiding.
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Thomas S. Winsor, Michael Scott Winsor, Winsor Law Firm, Helena,
Montana
For Respondent:
Mike McGrath, Montana Attorney General, Ilka Becker, Assistant Montana
Attorney General, Helena, Montana; Leo J. Gallagher, Lewis and Clark
County Attorney, Carolyn A. Clemens, Deputy Lewis and Clark County
Attorney, Helena, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: June 7, 2001
Decided: December 16, 2002
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice James. C. Nelson delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Kent Allen Tichenor appeals his conviction in the District Court for the First Judicial
District, Lewis and Clark County, of three counts of criminal trespass to property, two counts
of stalking and one count of partner or family member assault. We affirm.
¶2 We address the following issues on appeal:
¶3 1. Did the District Court properly deny as premature Tichenor's pretrial motion to
dismiss the burglary and stalking charges?
¶4 2. Did the District Court properly deny Tichenor's motion to dismiss the felony
stalking count?
¶5 3. Did the District Court properly exercise its discretion in giving Jury Instructions 23
and 24 regarding stalking?
Factual and Procedural Background
¶6 Tichenor and Bobbi Jo Nall began dating in the summer or fall of 1998. In late
November or early December 1998, Nall moved into a new apartment. Shortly thereafter,
Tichenor moved in with her and Nall gave Tichenor his own key to the apartment. Tichenor
provided some of the furniture for the apartment and, on at least one occasion, Tichenor
contributed to the rent. Nall had a daughter from a previous marriage who occasionally
stayed at the apartment with her mother.
¶7 Eventually, Tichenor moved into his own place, but he and Nall continued their
relationship. Tichenor provided Nall with a key to his place and he kept the key to Nall's
apartment. The relationship between the parties began to sour in September 1999, when they
had a physical altercation, but they continued dating, continued to call each other several
2
times each day, and continued to spend the night at each other's residences. Nall testified that
following the September incident, she and Tichenor returned each other's keys, but Tichenor
testified that Nall was aware that he still had a key to her apartment. Also, Tichenor's
roommate testified that Nall retained a key to Tichenor's apartment because she used her key
to enter the apartment while Tichenor was in jail.
¶8 On November 2, 1999, during one of their daily phone conversations, Nall informed
Tichenor that, rather than going out with him that evening, she had a date with one of her
male co-workers. Tichenor later testified that he was surprised by this as he was not aware
that his relationship with Nall was over. He went to her work place, followed her to a gas
station and followed her home, all the while trying to discourage her from dating another
man. At Nall's apartment, finding the safety chain on the door fastened, Tichenor climbed
through a window he knew Nall left open to allow her cat to come in and out. Once inside,
Tichenor confronted Nall and pushed her into her bedroom. (This entry into Nall's apartment
gave rise to the first count of burglary against Tichenor.)
¶9 At the time Tichenor entered her apartment, Nall was on the phone with the male
friend she planned to see that evening. When Tichenor pushed her, she called out her friend's
name knowing that he was still on the phone. Tichenor grabbed the phone and hung it up.
He ordered Nall into the living room and proceeded to yell at her. She twice tried to leave,
but Tichenor stopped her. At one point, Tichenor threw the telephone on the floor and
crushed it with his foot. Nall later testified that Tichenor threatened to kill her. (These facts
gave rise to the charge of partner or family member assault against Tichenor.)
3
¶10 After a heated discussion regarding their relationship, Tichenor left Nall's apartment
and returned to his home. Meanwhile, Nall's friend, hearing Nall call out his name when
Tichenor confronted her, called the police. Nall eventually spoke with the police, but she
initially declined to press charges against Tichenor.
¶11 The following day, Tichenor returned to Nall's apartment when she was not at home,
let himself in with his key, and left a new telephone to replace the one he had broken and a
card of apology for Nall. (This entry into Nall's apartment gave rise to the second count of
burglary against Tichenor.) The day after that, Tichenor returned to the apartment, installed
the telephone, left another note for Nall and fed Nall's cat. (This entry into Nall's apartment
gave rise to the third count of burglary against Tichenor.)
¶12 Tichenor was arrested on November 4, 1999, on the charges of burglary and partner or
family member assault. At Tichenor’s arraignment, Justice of the Peace Wallace Jewell
instructed Tichenor that as a condition of his bond, he was not to have any contact with Nall.
However, Nall subsequently complained to the county attorney's office that she had been
receiving numerous hang-up calls. The county attorney's office subpoenaed Tichenor's cell
phone records and discovered that he had called Nall's apartment 46 times and her place of
employment 23 times between November 11 and November 16, 1999. (These phone calls
gave rise to one of the stalking counts against Tichenor.)
¶13 On November 22, 1999, both Tichenor and Nall were present at a party at the home of
mutual friends. Tichenor and Nall ended up spending the night together. Tichenor testified
that he and Nall made plans to get together again the next night, but he was arrested and
4
incarcerated in the Lewis and Clark County Jail for violating the court's no-contact order.
Following his arrest, Tichenor placed over 50 calls to Nall's apartment from the Lewis and
Clark County Jail between November 24 and November 28, 1999. Nall recorded many of the
calls on her answering machine and played them for a police investigator. (These phone calls
gave rise to the other count of stalking against Tichenor.)
¶14 On December 17, 1999, the State charged Tichenor by Information with three counts
of felony burglary in violation of § 45-6-204, MCA, one count of partner or family member
assault in violation of § 45-5-206(1)(c), MCA, and two counts of stalking in violation of
§ 45-5-220(1)(b), MCA. Following his arraignment, Tichenor moved to dismiss the burglary
and stalking charges for lack of sufficient evidence. Tichenor claimed that he lacked the
necessary intent required for the stalking charges and that he had license to enter Nall's
apartment so the burglary charges were unfounded. After a hearing, the District Court denied
the motion.
¶15 Thereafter, the State requested leave to amend the Information to add a third count of
stalking based on Tichenor's repeated attempts to contact Nall by phone and by mail while
Tichenor was incarcerated in the Lewis and Clark County Jail. Rather than grant the request
to add a third count of stalking, the court merged the new charges into one of the other two
counts.
¶16 Trial was conducted from May 1 through May 4, 2000. The jury found Tichenor
guilty of three counts of misdemeanor trespass as a lesser included offense of burglary, one
count of partner or family member assault, and two counts of stalking. On June 2, 2000,
5
Tichenor moved for a new trial claiming that the State failed to produce evidence of intent;
that he was improperly charged for more than one count of stalking; that the jury was given
improper jury instructions; and that his communications and attempted communications with
Nall were constitutionally protected. The District Court denied Tichenor's motion.
¶17 Tichenor was sentenced on July 11, 2000, to six months in the Lewis and Clark
County Jail on each of the criminal trespass counts, one year each in the Lewis and Clark
County Jail for the count of partner or family member assault and the first count of stalking,
and five years in Montana State Prison on the second stalking count. He also received a
$10,000 fine on the second stalking count and a sentence enhancement of 20 years with
five years suspended for being a persistent felony offender. Tichenor appeals the District
Court's judgment and sentence.
Standard of Review
¶18 The denial of a motion to dismiss in a criminal case is a question of law and we
review a district court's conclusions of law to determine whether those conclusions are
correct. State v. Hocevar, 2000 MT 157, ¶ 115, 300 Mont. 167, ¶ 115, 7 P.3d 329, ¶ 115
(citing State v. Weaver, 1998 MT 167, ¶ 43, 290 Mont. 58, ¶ 43, 964 P.2d 713, ¶ 43).
Issue 1.
¶19 Did the District Court properly deny as premature Tichenor's pretrial motion to
dismiss the burglary and stalking charges?
¶20 Tichenor filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the burglary and stalking charges alleging
that he lacked the requisite intent to be convicted of stalking and that he could not be
6
convicted of burglary because he had license to enter Nall's apartment. The District Court
denied the motion noting that Tichenor was essentially asking the court to judge the evidence
prior to trial. The court determined that the facts alleged in the State's Affidavit in Support of
Leave to File Information, if proven, supported the charges contained in the Information and
that it was up to the jury, not the court, to weigh the evidence. The District Court further
noted that after the presentation of the State's case, the court could order a dismissal of one or
more of the counts if warranted, but that it was premature to order a dismissal before the
State had presented any evidence. Nevertheless, Tichenor did not move for a directed verdict
for insufficiency of the evidence at the close of the State's case or at the close of all of the
evidence, nor did the District Court dismiss any of the charges against Tichenor sua sponte.
¶21 Whether Tichenor had the requisite intent to be convicted of stalking was a question
of fact for the jury. See State v. DeVore, 1998 MT 340, ¶ 37, 292 Mont. 325, ¶ 37, 972 P.2d
816, ¶ 37, overruled on other grounds by State v. Good, 2002 MT 59, 309 Mont. 113, 43
P.3d 948. Likewise, whether Tichenor was unlawfully in Nall's apartment was a question of
fact for the jury and it would have been improper for the judge to step into the jury's place
and resolve these issues pretrial.
¶22 Tichenor relies on State v. David (1994), 266 Mont. 365, 880 P.2d 1308, to support
his argument that the charges of burglary and stalking should be dismissed. However, David
is distinguishable from the case sub judice because in David, the District Court denied the
State's motion for leave to file an Information charging the defendant with stalking because
there was not sufficient probable cause. David, 266 Mont. at 366-67, 880 P.2d at 1309.
7
Here, the District Court had already granted the State's motion for leave to file an
Information against Tichenor, thus establishing that the State had probable cause to bring the
charges. The State had no further burden of proof with regard to these charges until trial.
See State v. Nichols, 1998 MT 271, ¶ 4, 291 Mont. 367, ¶ 4, 970 P.2d 79, ¶ 4 (holding that
the defendant's challenge to the evidence through a pretrial motion to dismiss "was premature
because such a challenge can only be made after the State has had an opportunity to present
its evidence to the trier of fact").
¶23 Accordingly, we hold that the District Court properly denied Tichenor's pretrial
motion to dismiss the burglary and stalking charges because the motion was premature.
Issue 2.
¶24 Did the District Court properly deny Tichenor's motion to dismiss the felony stalking
count?
¶25 Tichenor argues that there should have been only one count of misdemeanor stalking
and that his right to be free from double jeopardy was violated when he was charged and
convicted twice for the same offense. He also contends that if he did commit two stalking
offenses, they were both misdemeanor offenses. Finally, Tichenor contends that the facts
that gave rise to the second stalking count happened before the facts that gave rise to the first
stalking count, therefore, there could not have been a second or subsequent offense that
would constitute a felony charge.
¶26 County attorneys in Montana are charged with a duty to conduct, on the State's behalf,
all prosecutions for public offenses. Section 7-4-2716(1), MCA. In discharging that duty, a
8
county attorney has broad discretion to determine whether to prosecute an offender and what
offense to charge. State ex rel. Fletcher v. District Court (1993), 260 Mont. 410, 414-15,
859 P.2d 992, 995.
¶27 We agree with the State that the prosecutor properly exercised her discretion in
charging two counts of stalking as the evidence supported two distinct charges. Stalking is
defined as follows:
(1) A person commits the offense of stalking if the person purposely or
knowingly causes another person substantial emotional distress or reasonable
apprehension of bodily injury or death by repeatedly:
(a) following the stalked person; or
(b) harassing, threatening, or intimidating the stalked person, in person
or by phone, by mail, or by other action, device, or method.
Section 45-5-220, MCA.
¶28 Shortly after Tichenor's arrest on November 4, 1999, on the charges of burglary and
partner or family member assault, Judge Jewell ordered Tichenor not to have any contact
with Nall. Yet, between November 11 and November 16, 1999, Tichenor's cell phone
records showed that he called Nall a total of 69 times. Tichenor committed a second offense
of stalking when, following his arrest on November 23, 1999, for violating the first no-
contact order, he was again ordered by Judge Jewell not to have any contact with Nall, yet he
repeatedly harassed her by phone and by mail from the county jail. The acts committed from
the jail were aimed not only at Nall, but at her daughter as some of the mail was directed to
Nall's daughter. Given the fact that Tichenor violated two separate orders issued by Judge
Jewell, the fact that Tichenor's November 23, 1999 arrest was a break in his course of
9
conduct, and the fact that Tichenor now included a second individual in his harassment,
Nall's daughter, we hold that the prosecutor acted within her discretion in charging two
offenses, as opposed to one.
¶29 Tichenor also argues that under § 46-11-410(2)(e), MCA, he cannot be convicted of
more than one offense if that offense is defined to prohibit a continuing course of conduct.
He maintains that the term "repeatedly" in the stalking statute is the same as the phrase
"continuing course of conduct" in § 46-11-410, MCA, thus he could only be charged with
one count of stalking for his numerous phone calls to Nall.
¶30 However, Tichenor's argument raising § 46-11-410, MCA, is being raised for the first
time on appeal. It is well settled that this Court will not review issues raised for the first time
on appeal and we will not hold a district court in error where the court was never given an
opportunity to correct itself. State v. Baker, 2000 MT 307, ¶¶ 29-30, 302 Mont. 408, ¶¶ 29-
30, 15 P.3d 379, ¶¶ 29-30; State v. Weeks (1995), 270 Mont. 63, 85, 891 P.2d 477, 490.
Moreover, objecting parties must make the basis and grounds for their objection clear to the
court. Baker, ¶¶ 29-30; Weeks, 270 Mont. at 85, 891 P.2d at 490. And, the objection must be
specific enough to inform the court or the prosecutor of the issue. See State v. McKeon
(1997), 282 Mont. 397, 408-09, 938 P.2d 643, 649-50. Having failed to reference § 46-11-
410, MCA, in the District Court, Tichenor is barred from relying upon that statute as a basis
of error.
¶31 Tichenor next argues that if he did indeed commit two offenses, they were both
misdemeanor offenses and the felony charge must be dismissed. On the contrary, by
10
identifying the second count of stalking as a felony, the State gave Tichenor notice that if he
were convicted of both counts, the second count would be treated as a felony for sentencing
purposes. See § 45-5-220(3), MCA. Whether a person has committed a prior offense of
stalking is a sentencing factor, not an element of the offense of stalking. See Apprendi v.
New Jersey (2000), 530 U.S. 466, 120 S.Ct. 2348, 147 L.Ed.2d 435 (holding that any fact,
other than a prior conviction, that increases the maximum penalty for a crime must be
charged in an indictment, submitted to a jury, and proven beyond a reasonable doubt); State
v. Baker, 2000 MT 235, 301 Mont. 323, 8 P.3d 817 (holding that age factor in sexual assault
statute pertains only to sentencing and is not an element of the offense).
¶32 In opposing Tichenor's motion to dismiss, the State noted that if Tichenor were
convicted of only one offense of stalking, he would receive a misdemeanor penalty, but that
if he were convicted of both offenses, he would be sentenced for both a misdemeanor and a
felony. Consequently, once the jury convicted Tichenor of both offenses, it was then proper
for the District Court to sentence him to a felony on the second offense pursuant to the
sentencing provisions of § 45-5-220(3), MCA:
For the first offense, a person convicted of stalking shall be imprisoned
in the county jail for a term not to exceed 1 year or fined an amount not to
exceed $1,000, or both. For a second or subsequent offense . . . the offender
shall be imprisoned in the state prison for a term not to exceed 5 years or fined
an amount not to exceed $10,000, or both.
11
Hence, if the jury failed to convict Tichenor on one of the stalking counts, the District Court
would have been precluded from imposing a felony sentence.
¶33 Tichenor also maintains that the second stalking charge should have been dismissed
because there was no "prior conviction" upon which to base the felony charge. However,
§ 45-5-220, MCA, does not require that there be a prior "conviction" before the offender
receives a felony sentence. Rather, the statute refers to a "second or subsequent offense."
¶34 Tichenor's final argument on this issue is that since the facts giving rise to Count VI
(calling Nall from his cell phone) took place prior to those giving rise to Count V (calling
Nall from jail), Count VI could not have been a second or subsequent offense requiring a
felony sentence. This argument lacks merit. The jury convicted Tichenor of two counts of
stalking and the judge sentenced the second count as a felony. The order in which the
stalking counts were listed on the Information and on the verdict form is irrelevant, the fact
remains that Tichenor was convicted of two counts of stalking.
¶35 Accordingly, we hold that the District Court did not err in denying Tichenor's motion
to dismiss the felony stalking count.
Issue 3.
¶36 Did the District Court properly exercise its discretion in giving Jury Instructions 23
and 24 regarding stalking?
¶37 This Court reviews jury instructions in criminal cases to determine whether the
instructions as a whole, fully and fairly instruct the jury on the applicable law. State v.
Scarborough, 2000 MT 301, ¶ 47, 302 Mont. 350, ¶ 47, 14 P.3d 1202, ¶ 47 (citing State v.
12
Patton (1996), 280 Mont. 278, 286, 930 P.2d 635, 639; State v. Brandon (1994), 264 Mont.
231, 237, 870 P.2d 734, 737). To constitute reversible error, a district court's rulings on the
jury instructions must prejudicially affect the defendant's substantive rights. Scarborough, ¶
47 (citing State v. Beavers, 1999 MT 260, ¶ 33, 296 Mont. 340, ¶ 33, 987 P.2d 371, ¶ 33;
State v. Goulet (1997), 283 Mont. 38, 41, 938 P.2d 1330, 1332; State v. Bradley (1995), 269
Mont. 392, 395, 889 P.2d 1167, 1168).
¶38 The District Court gave the following jury instructions with regard to the two counts
of stalking. Jury Instruction 22 read as follows:
A person commits the offense of stalking if the person purposely or
knowingly causes another person substantial emotional distress or reasonable
apprehension of bodily injury or death by repeatedly:
(a) following the stalked person; or,
(b) harassing, threatening, or intimidating the stalked person, in person
or by phone, by mail, or by other action, device, or method.
Jury Instruction 23 read as follows:
To convict the defendant of Count V - stalking, the State must prove the
following elements:
1. That the defendant purposely or knowingly
2. Caused Bobbi Jo Nall substantial emotional distress or reasonable
apprehension of bodily injury or death by repeatedly:
a. harassing or intimidating her, by calling her home approximately 54
times from the Lewis and Clark County Jail, and by having items mailed to her
home after having been ordered by Justice of the Peace Wallace Jewell to
have no contact with her. [Emphasis added.]
Jury Instruction 24 read as follows:
To convict the defendant of Count VI - stalking, the State must prove
the following elements:
1. That the defendant purposely or knowingly
13
2. Caused Bobbi Jo Nall substantial emotional distress or reasonable
apprehension of bodily injury or death by repeatedly:
a. harassing or intimidating her, by calling her home approximately 46
times from his cell phone, after being ordered by Justice of the Peace Jewell to
have no contact with her. [Emphasis added.]
¶39 Tichenor objects to the reference to the no-contact order in Jury Instructions 23 and 24
as being irrelevant to the stalking charges. He also contends that Jury Instructions 23 and 24
had a prejudicial effect on his substantive rights because they allowed the jury to convict him
of felony stalking by confusing the issue of whether his violation of conditions on bail was
sufficient to satisfy the element in the felony stalking statute regarding violation of an order
of protection.
¶40 Tichenor's argument is unsupported by the record. The State never contended that an
order of protection was in place and the jury was never instructed on the sentencing
provisions of the stalking statute. Hence, the jury could not have been confused in this
regard.
¶41 The additional language in the jury instructions regarding the no-contact order by
Judge Jewell did not diminish the State's burden of proving every element of the stalking
offenses. Consequently, we hold that the instructions, as a whole, fully and fairly instructed
the jury on the applicable law and did not prejudicially affect Tichenor's substantive rights.
Scarborough, ¶ 47.
¶42 Accordingly, we hold that the District Court properly exercised its discretion in giving
Jury Instructions 23 and 24 regarding stalking.
14
¶43 That said, Justice Cotter has raised several contentions in her dissent to Issue 2 that
deserve a response. First, she argues that Tichenor "was not on notice that the first series of
calls would give rise to stalking charges." Contrary to Justice Cotter's contention, the
stalking statute itself gives an individual notice that such conduct could give rise to charges.
To say that Tichenor was not on notice that 69 telephone calls made to Nall over a one-week
period after he had threatened to kill her could be considered stalking is as absurd as saying
that Tichenor was not on notice that entering Nall's house through a window after she locked
the door to keep him out could give rise to burglary charges.
¶44 Furthermore, to claim ignorance of the law when the record reflects that this was the
third time that Tichenor had harassed women who had attempted to terminate their
relationships with him is ridiculous. Although neither of those two previous occasions
resulted in stalking charges being filed against Tichenor (the first incident occurred prior to
the enactment of the stalking statute and, in the second incident, the victim refused to press
charges), nevertheless, one resulted in Tichenor's probation being revoked and the other
resulted in assault charges being filed against Tichenor.
¶45 If Tichenor wanted to argue that the statute failed to give him notice that his conduct
would give rise to stalking charges as Justice Cotter suggests, then Tichenor should have
attempted to attack the stalking statute on void for vagueness grounds. See State v. Dixon,
2000 MT 82, ¶ 20, 299 Mont. 165, ¶ 20, 998 P.2d 544, ¶ 20 ("a statute is void on its face if it
fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice that his contemplated conduct is
forbidden"). However, Tichenor did not raise any constitutional challenge to the stalking
15
statute, hence it is inappropriate to now argue that Tichenor was not on notice that his
conduct would give rise to stalking charges.
¶46 Moreover, this Court adheres to the old maxim: "Ignorance of the law is no excuse."
State v. Lynn (1990), 243 Mont. 430, 435-36, 795 P.2d 429, 433 (citing State ex rel. Rowe v.
District Court (1911), 44 Mont. 318, 119 P. 1103). In Lynn, the defendant was convicted of
two game violations. He argued on appeal that the State failed to prove that he was aware
that hunting from a public highway was prohibited in Montana or that the season on bighorn
sheep was closed. We held in Lynn that the defendant's alleged ignorance of Montana's laws
regarding hunting was no excuse and that the State had no burden to prove that the defendant
had knowledge that road hunting is illegal or that the season for hunting bighorn sheep was
already closed.
¶47 In addition, this Court stated in Rowe:
Ignorance of the law cannot be urged as an excuse for a violation of it.
Nor is good faith, under such circumstances, any justification or excuse. The
rule rests on public necessity; the welfare of society and the safety of the state
depend upon its enforcement. If a person accused of a crime could shield
himself behind the defense that he was ignorant of the law which he violated,
immunity from punishment would in most cases result. No system of criminal
justice could be sustained with such an element in it to obstruct the course of
its administration. The plea would be universally made, and would lead to
interminable questions incapable of solution. Was the defendant in fact
ignorant of the law? Was his ignorance of the law excusable? The denser the
ignorance, the greater would be the exemption from liability.
. . . When the statute plainly forbids an act to be done, and it is done by
some person, the law implies conclusively the guilty intent, although the
offender was honestly mistaken as to the meaning of the law he violates.
16
When the language is plain and positive, and the offense is not made to depend
upon the positive, willful intent and purpose, nothing is left to interpretation.
It would be a very dangerous exercise of the power of courts to interpret
positive statutes so as, in effect, to interpolate into them exceptive provisions.
If the court could do so, there would be scarcely a limit beyond which it might
not go, and thus make, instead of interpret, the law.
Rowe, 44 Mont. at 324-25, 119 P. at 1106-07 (internal citations omitted).
¶48 Justice Cotter next claims that Tichenor is not raising his argument regarding § 46-11-
410, MCA, for the first time on appeal, thus he has not waived that argument. Justice Cotter
maintains that Tichenor did raise this argument in his closing brief on his motion to dismiss
when he asked the District Court to "see this case for what it is lest the jeopardy of
punishment far exceed the seriousness of the circumstances," and again when he used the
phrase "double jeopardy" in his motion to set aside the verdict. In the first instance, Tichenor
is not arguing that he has been charged twice for the same crime, but rather, he is arguing that
the punishment in his case exceeds the crime. Merely because he used the term "jeopardy" is
not sufficient to conclude that he raised an argument under § 46-11-410, MCA. Secondly,
while Tichenor did use the phrase "double jeopardy" in his motion to set aside the verdict, he
offered no citation to authority in support of his allegation. As we noted previously in this
Opinion, objecting parties must make the basis and grounds for their objection clear to the
court, Baker, ¶¶ 29-30, and the objection must be specific enough to inform the court or the
prosecutor of the issue, McKeon, 282 Mont. at 408-09, 938 P.2d at 649-50. Having failed to
17
reference § 46-11-410, MCA, in the District Court, Tichenor is barred from relying upon that
statute as a basis of error.
¶49 Justice Cotter also argues that the District Court erred by failing to merge the two
counts of stalking into one misdemeanor count because stalking is a continuing offense that
requires repeated conduct and unless a defendant's course of conduct is broken, any
continuation of behavior constitutes one stalking offense. In this case, Tichenor's conduct
was broken not merely by his arrest as Justice Cotter contends, but also by time, by the
circumstances under which the conduct occurred, and by the intensity of the conduct after his
arrest.
¶50 Tichenor was ordered not to have contact with Nall, yet he attempted to call her 69
times between November 11 and November 16, 1999. He was subsequently arrested after his
bond was revoked for violating the "no contact" order and again ordered not to have contact
with Nall. Nevertheless, Tichenor began a new series of phone calls to Nall from jail
beginning on November 24, 1999 and ending on November 28, 1999, when all calls from the
jail to Nall were blocked by the authorities. Nall testified at trial that she was particularly
distressed by these calls because neither two warnings by a judge not to contact Nall nor an
arrest for violating the "no contact" order could deter Tichenor from attempting to contact
her.
¶51 Moreover, Tichenor's conduct seemed to intensify after his arrest. Nall testified that
in one of the calls from jail, Tichenor left a message on her answering machine warning her
that if she testified against him, she should fear for her life and that of her daughter. In
18
addition, while in jail, Tichenor began writing to Nall and requesting various mailings be
delivered to her. While these mailings were not threatening in themselves, Nall testified that
she was extremely disturbed by them because they were addressed to Tichenor at her address
and at least one was addressed to "Kent and Bobbi Jo Tichenor"--implying a type of
relationship that had never existed between them--and another was directed toward Nall's
daughter. Unless a statute specifically so requires, there is nothing in Montana's criminal law
requiring that ongoing criminal activity must be charged as one crime when a crime is
committed over and over by different means. Moreover, it would frustrate the policy of the
stalking statute to take the position that all instances of similar types of conduct have to be
merged into one charge particularly in light of the escalating nature of the conduct.
¶52 Finally, Justice Cotter argues in her dissent that dividing Tichenor's conduct into two
separate offenses was manifestly unfair in light of both the law and Nall's willing and
intimate relations with Tichenor in the midst of that course of conduct. It is true that Nall
engaged in intimate relations with Tichenor after the first series of calls. However, that did
not give Tichenor license to continue to harass Nall.
¶53 Nall testified that she was not aware that Tichenor would be at her friends' house that
evening and that Tichenor approached her and hugged her. She testified that she did not feel
threatened by his presence that night initially because several other people were present and
later because "he did not look like the monster that broke into my house that night and
threatened to kill me." She further testified that she spent that evening and part of the
following day with him because she believed that it would put an end to the problems
19
between them and would provide closure for both of them. To that end an investigator for
the Helena Police Department specializing in offenses involving domestic violence testified
that it is not unusual for a victim of this type of crime to have further contact with their
abuser in an attempt to keep the abuser from becoming angry and to prevent further violence.
¶54 Nevertheless, had Nall not been distressed by the calls and the mail she received from
Tichenor after the night they spent together, she would not have reported them to the police.
Nall testified at Tichenor's trial that she continued to fear Tichenor and the jury found her
testimony credible.
¶55 Affirmed.
/S/ JAMES C. NELSON
We Concur:
/S/ KARLA M. GRAY
/S/ JIM REGNIER
/S/JOHN WARNER
Judge John Warner sitting for Justice
Jim Rice
20
Justice Patricia O. Cotter dissents.
¶56 I dissent from the Court's disposition of Issue 2. I believe the District Court erred
when it failed to either dismiss the second stalking count or merge the stalking counts into
one misdemeanor charge.
¶57 Tichenor was first arrested on November 4, 1999, on three burglary counts and one
partner family member assault charge. He bonded out of jail on November 9, 1999, with the
admonishment from the Justice of the Peace not to have contact with Nall. Between
November 11 and 16, Tichenor called Nall 69 times. Nall apparently reported the calls on
November 14, 1999, and ten days later, Tichenor was arrested for violating the "no contact"
order. In the mean time, however, it is undisputed that on the night of November 22, 1999,
Nall and Tichenor saw each other at a mutual friend's house where they were seen kissing
and hugging, and also visiting for over a half an hour in Nall's car. Later that evening,
Tichenor was invited to Nall's apartment, where he spent the night, as well as the majority of
the next day. Tichenor was then arrested the following day, November 24, 1999, when his
bond was revoked for allegedly violating his conditions of release by contacting Nall.
¶58 It appears that the demarcation for the two "discrete series" of stalkings identified in
the original Information was Tichenor's arrest on November 24, 1999. However, Tichenor's
arrest that day was not for stalking, but rather was the result of the revocation of his bond,
based on allegations that he had violated the "no contact" order. While Tichenor and Nall
had engaged in prohibited contact, it seems clear that given Nall's behavior and
encouragement, Tichenor had no reason at this point to think that any of the conduct was
22
either threatening or harassing to Nall. Tichenor was not charged with stalking until the
Information was filed on December 17, 1999, which was well after the "second series" of
calls had ceased. In other words, when the second series of calls began, Tichenor was not on
notice that the first series of calls would give rise to stalking charges.
¶59 The State argues, and the Court agrees, that Tichenor is barred from raising § 46-11-
410, MCA, since he raises it for the first time on appeal. However, a close analysis of
Tichenor's motion to dismiss and his objection to the filing of the amended information
suggests otherwise. During the hearing on his motion to dismiss and in his reply brief,
Tichenor argued that if they occurred at all, the two charges of stalking, one misdemeanor
and one felony, were really one event. In his closing brief on his motion to dismiss, Tichenor
asked the District Court to "see this case for what it is lest the jeopardy of punishment far
exceed the seriousness of the circumstances" (emphasis added). (Section 46-11-410, MCA,
is codification of the double jeopardy protection against multiple punishments for the same
offense. See, Commission Comments, § 46-11-410, MCA.)
¶60 In April of 2000, before the District Court ruled on Tichenor's motion to dismiss, the
State moved to amend the Information, adding the mailings as a third count of stalking.
Tichenor objected to the proposed amendment, arguing that "the repeated course of conduct,
whether or not it amounts to stalking, should be one count rather than three." Finally,
following the trial, in his motion for a new trial or to set aside the verdict, Tichenor argued
that his right to be free from double jeopardy was violated when he was charged with more
than one stalking offense.
23
¶61 The State continued to assert that the two series of calls and the mailings from jail
were completely distinct and separate and involved totally different circumstances, arguing
that "[n]othing in the criminal law require[d] that on-going criminal activity necessarily be
charged as one crime, when in fact, a crime is committed over and over by different means."
However, stalking is a continuing offense that requires repeated conduct. See, § 45-5-220,
MCA. Therefore, unless a defendant's course of conduct is broken, any continuation of
behavior allegedly constituting stalking, constitutes one stalking offense. See, State v. Vigil
(Tenn. Crim. App. 2001), 65 S.W.3d 26, 35. In my opinion, the District Court erred by
failing to merge the original counts of stalking into one misdemeanor count.
¶62 Dividing Tichenor's continuous conduct into two separate offenses, and the elevation
of the second offense to a felony, was manifestly unfair in light of both the law and the
victim’s willing and intimate relations with Tichenor in the midst of that course of conduct
which would later result in his conviction of felony stalking. For these reasons, I would
vacate the felony stalking conviction and affirm the misdemeanor stalking conviction.
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
Justices W. William Leaphart and Terry N. Trieweiler join in the foregoing dissent.
/S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART
/S/ TERRY N. TRIEWEILER
24
25