Hughes v. Jorgenson

                      SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
                               En Banc

FRANK DOUGLAS HUGHES,            )        Arizona Supreme Court
                                 )        No. CV-01-0336-PR
                      Petitioner,)
                                 )        Court of Appeals
                v.               )        Division Two
                                 )        No. 2 CA-SA 01-0058
HON. CINDY JORGENSON, JUDGE OF   )
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE )         Graham County
OF ARIZONA, in and for the       )        Superior Court
County of Pima,                  )        No. CR-2000-174
                                 )
                      Respondent,)
                                 )
THE STATE OF ARIZONA,            )        O P I N I O N
                                 )
          Real Party in Interest.)
                                 )

     Special Action from the Superior Court in Graham County

               The Honorable Cindy Jorgenson, Judge

                              REVERSED

JANET A. NAPOLITANO, ARIZONA ATTORNEY GENERAL                 Phoenix
     By   Randall M. Howe, Chief Counsel,
          Criminal Appeals Section
     and John R. Evans, Assistant Attorney General              Tucson
Attorneys for Real Party In Interest

LAW OFFICES OF WALTER B. NASH, III, P.C.                        Tucson
     By   Walter B. Nash, III
     and William J. Kirchner
Attorneys for Petitioner

B E R C H, Justice

¶1        We   granted   review   to     determine   the   appropriate

interpretation of the term “substantial interest” as it is used in

Arizona’s conflict of interest statute, Ariz. Rev. Stat. (“A.R.S.”)

§ 38-503 (2001).     The question is whether the term encompasses
interests other than non-remote pecuniary or proprietary interests.

We conclude that it does not.

                             BACKGROUND

¶2          The question arises against the following background:

While on traffic patrol on January 2, 2000, Graham County Deputy

Sheriff Michael Kieffer stopped a speeding vehicle. The driver was

“Jane Doe,”1 the sister of Graham County Sheriff Frank Hughes

(Petitioner).    During the traffic stop, Deputy Kieffer saw what

appeared to be drugs and drug paraphernalia in Jane Doe’s car.   She

was agitated and belligerent during the stop, prompting Kieffer to

call Hughes for assistance in calming her down.       Sheriff Hughes

arrived, calmed his sister, then told Kieffer that if he decided to

arrest Doe, he should take her to the hospital first.        Kieffer

released Jane Doe to Hughes’ custody, and Hughes took her to her

home.    Neither officer arrested her.

¶3          Later that evening, Deputy Kieffer asked Sheriff Hughes

whether he should prepare a report of the incident.           Hughes

instructed Kieffer to await further instruction.       The next day,

Sheriff Hughes met with Undersheriff David Boyd and instructed him

that all decisions regarding Jane Doe’s case would be left to Boyd.

¶4          On January 14, 2000, Hughes asked Deputy Kieffer to

prepare a report of the incident.         After reviewing the report

     1
          Because Jane Doe’s identity, other than her relationship
to Petitioner Frank Hughes, is not relevant to the case, we
identify her only by a fictitious name.

                                 -2-
approximately a week later, Hughes asked Kieffer to omit certain

information    and      make    some      suggested     editorial       changes.

Undersheriff Boyd, who was supervising the investigation, agreed

with the decision to edit the report and with the edits themselves.

The edited report includes relevant details of the traffic stop,

but omits facts that could be considered irrelevant or personal.2

Hughes asked Deputy Sheriff Glen Orr, who had also responded to the

scene on January 2, to write a report.             Finally, Hughes prepared

his   own   report.       All   reports      and   evidence   were   given   to

Undersheriff Boyd.

¶5          Apparently, no charges resulting from the January 2

incident were ever brought against Jane Doe.             However, the State

charged Sheriff Hughes with obstructing a criminal prosecution,

conducting a fraudulent scheme, and wilful concealment of evidence.

See   A.R.S.   §§     13-2409   (2001)    (obstruction),      13-2311    (2001)

(fraudulent scheme and concealment).           Four months later, the State

added an additional charge of conflict of interest, in violation of

A.R.S. § 38-503(B).

¶6          At a preliminary hearing on October 20, 2000, the trial

court found probable cause to believe that Hughes had committed the

crimes charged.       Hughes requested a new determination of probable

cause regarding the conflict of interest charge, but the finding



      2
          We have reviewed both reports and a composite version
showing the changes.

                                       -3-
was affirmed following an evidentiary hearing before a different

judge.     The court of appeals declined jurisdiction of Hughes’s

special action.

¶7          We    granted    review       to   determine   whether   the   term

“substantial interest” as it is used in A.R.S. § 38-508(B) (2001)

encompasses Sheriff Hughes’ conduct.             See Ariz. Const. art. 6, §

5.3; ARCAP 23 (authorizing court’s exercise of jurisdiction); see

also Paradigm Ins. Co. v. Langerman Law Offices, 200 Ariz. 146,

147,   ¶   1,    24   P.3d   593,   594    (2001)   (approving   exercise    of

jurisdiction for questions of first impression and those that may

have significant impact).            We also granted review because, if

convicted of the conflict of interest charge, the Sheriff will be

required to resign his office.         See A.R.S. § 38-510(B) (2001).       The

prosecution of all three charges has been stayed pending our

decision here.

                                    DISCUSSION

¶8          Arizona’s conflict of interest statute precludes any

public official who has a substantial interest in a public decision

from participating in the decision-making process without making

his interest known:

            Any public officer or employee who has, or
            whose relative has, a substantial interest in
            any decision of a public agency shall make
            known such interest in the official records of
            such public agency and shall refrain from
            participating in any manner as an officer or
            employee in such decision.


                                       -4-
A.R.S. § 38-503(B) (emphasis added).              A “substantial interest” is

“any pecuniary or proprietary interest, either direct or indirect,

other       than   a   remote   interest.”    A.R.S.    §   38-502(11)    (2001).

Because       we   conclude     that   Hughes’s     interests   here     are    not

“substantial pecuniary or proprietary interests,” we need not

determine whether those interests are too remote to qualify under

the statute.3

¶9             The State argues that Hughes’s conduct falls within the

ambit of the conflict of interest statute because both Hughes and

his sister “had some financial interest to gain or lose by [Jane

Doe’s]        arrest,     incarceration,      and    prosecution       for     drug

possession.”4          Hughes’s pecuniary interest, the State asserts, is

that the voters might refuse to vote for him if they thought that

he had given special treatment to a family member.                  Jane Doe’s

asserted pecuniary interest is that her arrest and potential

conviction on drug charges might result in economic loss to her:

potential fines, possible forfeiture of property, and – if she were


        3
          The legislature has defined “remote interests” as those
falling within any of several categories of interests, none of
which is relevant to our determination here. A.R.S. § 38-502(10).
        4
          The State has apparently abandoned its claim that Jane
Doe’s liberty interest in avoiding incarceration is a “substantial
interest” within the meaning of A.R.S. § 38-503. Whether the State
abandoned the theory because a liberty interest is not a pecuniary
or proprietary interest or because of the unlikelihood that Jane
Doe would have been incarcerated even if convicted of simple drug
possession is unclear, but is no longer important. See A.R.S. §
13-901.01 (2001) (requiring treatment and probation for first or
second personal possession convictions).

                                        -5-
employed – potential loss of employment and related benefits.

¶10       Hughes responds that these asserted interests are not

“substantial interests” for purposes of the conflict of interest

statute because they are neither pecuniary or proprietary nor are

they direct.   Hughes points to the complete lack of evidence of any

direct, non-speculative, non-contingent pecuniary or proprietary

interests that either he or his sister had in his conduct.

¶11       In construing A.R.S. § 38-503(B), we must determine

whether the legislature intended “substantial interest” to include

the interests at stake in a possible criminal prosecution.      See,

e.g., UNUM Life Ins. Co. v. Craig, 200 Ariz. 327, 329-30, ¶ 11, 26

P.3d 510, 512-13 (2001) (“The primary aim of statutory construction

is to find and give effect to legislative intent.”).5    Generally,

if a statute is clear, we simply “apply it without using other

means of construction,” id. at 330, ¶ 12, 26 P.3d at 513, assuming

that the legislature has said what it means.     When a statute is

ambiguous or unclear, however, “we attempt to determine legislative

intent by interpreting the statutory scheme as a whole and consider

‘the statute’s context, subject matter, historical background,

effects and consequences, and spirit and purpose.’”     Id. (quoting

Aros v. Beneficial Ariz., Inc., 194 Ariz. 62, 66, 977 P.2d 784, 788


      5
          But intent must be objectively indicated or at least
clearly manifested by the language of the statute. We cannot be
asked to guess at the legislature’s subjective intent.       Stated
succinctly, we must be able to reach our conclusion “by analysis of
the statute instead of by psychoanalysis of [the legislature].”
United States v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 345 U.S. 295, 319 (1953)
(Jackson, J., concurring).

                                 -6-
(1999)); see also A.R.S. § 1-213 (1994) (“Words and phrases shall

be construed according to the common and approved use of the

language.”).

¶12        The conflict of interest statute at issue is unambiguous:

Section   38-503(B),   when   read   incorporating   the   definition   in

section 38-502(11), clearly reflects that substantial interests are

non-remote pecuniary or proprietary interests.         The case law in

this area confirms such an interpretation.

¶13        In Yetman v. Naumann, 16 Ariz. App. 314, 317, 492 P.2d

1252, 1255 (1972), for example, the court of appeals rejected a

construction of “interest” that included “a mere abstract interest

in the general subject or a mere possible contingent interest.” In

finding the language of A.R.S. § 38-503 not impermissibly vague,

the court reasoned that “the term [pecuniary interest] refers to a

pecuniary or proprietary interest by which a person will gain or

lose something[,] as contrasted to general sympathy, feeling or

bias.”    Id.   In the case now before us, the record does not show

that Hughes stands to lose more than perhaps the votes of his

constituents if the State proves that he interfered in his sister’s

case or if his sister is convicted of possession of drugs.

¶14        In Shepherd v. Platt, 177 Ariz. 63, 865 P.2d 107 (App.

1993), the court of appeals determined that Navajo tribal members

who served as county supervisors had not violated the conflict of

interest statute in their decisions regarding county expenditures

on the Navajo Reservation.      Noting that a conflict exists within



                                     -7-
the meaning of A.R.S. § 38-503 only “when a public official [or a

relative] has a substantial pecuniary or proprietary interest in

one of his or her decisions,” id. at 65, 865 P.2d at 109, the court

succinctly defined the terms at issue:             “[p]ecuniary means money

and proprietary means ownership.”          Id.

¶15        When facing a related issue in 1988, the court of appeals

similarly concluded that a member of a state agricultural board who

worked for a company that belonged to a lobbying group arguably

affected by a board decision did not violate the conflict of

interest   statute.        See   Arizona   Farmworkers     Union    v.    Agric.

Employment Relations Bd., 158 Ariz. 411, 762 P.2d 1365 (App. 1988).

In doing so, the court focused on the individual’s interest in the

decision: “[I]t does not appear that [the board member] would gain

or lose financially from the decision in this case.”               Id. at 413,

762 P.2d at 1367. Speculation regarding the individual’s interest,

the Farmworkers court concluded, “defines a contingent or remote

interest,”   which    is   not   covered   by    the   conflict    of   interest

statute.   Id.

¶16        These cases make clear that to violate the conflict of

interest statute, a public official must have a non-speculative,

non-remote pecuniary or proprietary interest in the decision at

issue. The statutes require public officials to disclose potential

conflicts and, in most instances, to then refrain from acting on

issues on which the conflict exists.             See A.R.S. § 38-503; cf. §

38-508(B) (allowing an official with an “apparent” conflict to act


                                     -8-
under certain circumstances).

¶17           The trial court relied on dictum from United Farm Workers

v. Arizona Agricultural Employment Relations Board, 727 F.2d 1475

(9th   Cir.    1984),       to    support       the    finding       of    probable       cause.

Although the Ninth Circuit did state, in a non-criminal case, that

the “conflict of interest statute pertains to any decision of a

public    agency      and    prohibits         any    substantial          interest       in    any

decision of the public agency,” id. at 1478, it did so in dictum in

a context far different from that in the case now before us.

Rather    than      determining          the    contours       of    the     definition          of

“substantial interest,” the Ninth Circuit was deciding whether the

Arizona       Agricultural           Employment            Relations              Board         was

unconstitutionally constituted because its membership consisted of

members of management and members of “organized agricultural labor”

–   members    who,    the       appellants      there     claimed,         had    a   built-in

“conflict of interest.” The Ninth Circuit found that the board was

constitutionally composed.                It did not purport to determine the

question now before this court.

¶18           The     history       of     the       statute        also     confirms          that

“substantial interest” refers to non-remote interests that are

pecuniary or proprietary in nature.                    Most clearly supporting that

construction of the term is a 1978 amendment that added the phrase

“pecuniary     or     proprietary”         to    the    definition          of    substantial

interest.     See A.R.S. § 38-502(11).                The 1978 amendment also added

language to the definition of “remote interest” that suggests that


                                               -9-
the legislature was concerned only with economic conflicts of

interest.      A.R.S. § 38-502(10)(i) (non-remote interest must, among

other      things,      “confer       a     direct        economic         benefit      or

detriment . . .”).       Of lesser value in our determination are notes

from committee hearings regarding the 1978 amendment suggesting

that legislators were concerned with purely economic conflicts.

¶19           Finally, and dispositively, this court will not define

the   edges    of    meanings    of   terms      in   a   statute     in    a   criminal

prosecution.        See United States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 347-49

(1971) (due process requires that ambiguities in criminal statutes

be construed in favor of the defendant); State v. Tarango, 185

Ariz.   208,     210,   914   P.2d    1300,      1302     (1996)   (if     “statute     is

susceptible to more than one interpretation, . . . doubt should be

resolved    in   favor   of     the   defendant”),         opinion    adhered     to    on

rehearing, State v. Ariz. Dep’t of Corrections, 187 Ariz. 211, 928

P.2d 635 (1996).          Should the legislature wish to expand the

definition of pecuniary and proprietary interest to include liberty

interests or remote or contingent interests, it may do so, within

constitutional       limits.      But     this    court     will     not    expand     the

definition of “conflict of interest” in a criminal prosecution to

include conduct that does not clearly fall within the plain meaning

of the statute under which the defendant is charged, as that

meaning may be ascertained from the language of the statute, the

interpretation of the statute by the courts of this state, or the

statute’s legislative history.



                                          -10-
¶20       The State acknowledges that it did not present any

evidence to the trial court of any direct, non-speculative economic

benefits or detriments that faced either Hughes or his sister. The

State’s inability to direct the court to anything in the record

showing a non-remote, non-speculative pecuniary impact on either

Hughes or his sister dooms its case.

                              CONCLUSION

¶21       The interests involved in this criminal prosecution do

not fall within the scope of the conflict of interest statute.

Absent any proof of non-remote pecuniary or proprietary interests,

the trial court’s finding of probable cause was in error.       We

therefore reverse the finding of probable cause, dismiss this

charge against Hughes, and dissolve the stay granted on January 16,

2002.



                         Rebecca White Berch, Justice


CONCURRING:



Charles E. Jones, Chief Justice



Ruth V. McGregor, Vice Chief Justice



Stanley G. Feldman, Justice



Thomas A. Zlaket, Justice (Retired)


                                 -11-