Revette Ann Sauser v. State of Iowa
Revette Ann Sauser v. State of Iowa
Opinion
Revette Sauser pled guilty to kidnapping in the second degree, voluntary manslaughter, and going armed with intent, after fatally shooting her husband, Terry, in their home. Sauser filed a postconviction-relief application and an amended application alleging a variety of errors. The district court denied the application after a trial.
Sauser appeals, contending her trial counsel was ineffective in allowing her to plead guilty to kidnapping because the record lacked a factual basis for the charge. To prevail on her ineffective-assistance claims, Sauser must show (1) counsel breached an essential duty and (2) prejudice resulted.
See
Strickland v
.
Washington
,
As relevant to this case, second-degree kidnapping has four elements: (1) Sauser confined Terry, (2) with the intent to inflict serious injury upon Terry, (3) knowing she did not have the consent of Terry to do so, and (4) while she was armed with a dangerous weapon.
See
"Our cases do not require that the district court have before it evidence that the crime was committed beyond a reasonable doubt, but only that there be a factual basis to support the charge."
State v
.
Finney
,
Here, Sauser admitted to all the elements of the crime during her plea colloquy with the court:
COURT: On [April 3, 2011], did you bring a gun to your living room, knowing you were going to confine Terry Sauser?
SAUSER: Yes.
COURT: You knew you did not have the right to confine Terry Sauser during the argument that the two of you had. Correct?
SAUSER: Correct.
COURT: You also knew that you had the intent to inflict serious injury on Mr. Sauser, correct?
SAUSER: Correct.
COURT: You used the gun that you were carrying to keep Mr. Sauser confined in that space, correct?
SAUSER: Correct.
"The defendant's admission on the record of the fact supporting an element of an offense is sufficient to provide a factual basis for that element."
1
State v
.
Philo
,
Sauser acknowledges that she "admitted that she 'confined' Mr. Sauser," but she claims "that admission must be evaluated in context" because the district court "did not provide a specific definition of 'confine.' " Sauser cites no authority for her proposition that the court was required to provide a legal definition for the term "confine" where there is no indication that term "under the statute has a specific meaning."
Cf
.
Rhoades v
.
State
,
We determine Sauser has not shown trial counsel breached an essential duty in failing to challenge the factual basis for the kidnapping charge.
See
Dempsey v
.
State
,
AFFIRMED.
Bower, J., concurs; Doyle, P.J., dissents.
I respectfully dissent. I would reverse the judgment of the district court, set aside Sauser's sentence, and remand to give the State the opportunity to establish a factual basis for the kidnapping charge.
Sauser argues there was an insufficient factual basis for her guilty plea to the kidnapping charge and her counsel was therefore ineffective in allowing her to plead guilty. A factual basis to support a guilty plea is sufficient if the record at the time of the guilty plea, as a whole, discloses facts to satisfy each element of the offense.
See
Rhoades v. State
,
Sauser admitted during the plea colloquy that she knew she was going to confine Terry, knew she did not have the right to confine him, had the intent to inflict serious injury on him, and used the gun to confine him. However, the term "confine" was not defined by the court. In the context of the kidnapping statute,
confinement ... must exceed that normally incident to the underlying crime and that confinement or removal sufficient to support a charge of kidnapping may exist if the evidence shows the confinement or removal substantially increased the risk of harm, significantly lessened the risk of detection, or significantly facilitated the escape of the perpetrator.
State v. Robinson
,
Furthermore, the minutes of evidence, in my opinion, do not establish a factual basis for the confinement element of the kidnapping charge. The facts in the record do not establish that Sauser confined Terry to the living room of their home. Nothing in the record establishes that she held him there at gunpoint. At best, the facts establish that, although Sauser had the gun hidden from Terry for some time prior to the shooting, there was only a short period of time between Sauser's display of the gun, Terry grabbing the gun, the ensuing struggle for the gun, and its discharge. The facts before us do not involve sufficient confinement to constitute kidnapping.
See
State v. Mead
,
So, with no knowing and intelligent admission as to the confinement element of the crime, or any other factual basis for the plea concerning the confinement element, I conclude Sauser's plea counsel was ineffective in allowing Sauser to plead guilty to the kidnapping charge. "Where a factual basis for a charge does not exist, and trial counsel allows the defendant to plead guilty anyway, counsel has failed to perform an essential duty."
State v. Schminkey
,
I would reverse the judgment of the postconviction-relief court and remand the case back to the district court to enter judgment finding trial counsel was ineffective, to order the sentence in Sauser's criminal case be set aside, and-because it is possible the State can establish a factual basis-to order the court in the criminal case to give the State the opportunity to establish a factual basis.
See
In its ruling on Sauser's application for postconviction relief, the district court found Sauser held the gun for thirty to forty-five minutes before she shot Terry and that while Sauser was sitting on her couch arguing with Terry, she texted with a friend "saying something to the effect of 'I've got my gun. He better leave me alone. I'll shoot.' "
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.