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                                                                 No. 97-449



                               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA



                                                              1998 MT 310N




STATE OF MONTANA,



Plaintiff and Respondent,



v.



CARLA COLORES,



Defendant and Appellant.




APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,

In and for the County of Cascade,

The Honorable Kenneth R. Neill, Judge presiding.


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COUNSEL OF RECORD:



For Appellant:



Scott Albers, Attorney at Law; Great Falls, Montana



For Respondent:



Hon. Joseph P. Mazurek, Attorney General; C. Mark Fowler,

Assistant Attorney General; Helena, Montana



Brant Light, Cascade County Attorney; Susan Weber,

Deputy County Attorney; Great Falls, Montana




                                                                                                  Submitted on Briefs: October 1, 1998



                                                                                                             Decided: December 15, 1998

Filed:




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__________________________________________

Clerk



Justice Jim Regnier delivered the opinion of the Court.

¶1. Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court 1996 Internal
Operating Rules, the following decision shall not be cited as precedent but shall be
filed as a public document with the Clerk of the Supreme Court and shall be
reported by case title, Supreme Court cause number, and result to the State Reporter
Publishing Company and to West Group in the quarterly table of noncitable cases
issued by this Court.

¶2. Carla Colores appeals from her sentence entered by the District Court for the
Eighth Judicial District, Cascade County, on May 8, 1997. After pleading guilty to
mitigated deliberate homicide in a nonbinding plea agreement, Colores was
sentenced to forty years in the Montana State Prison with an additional ten years to
run consecutively for the use of a weapon. Colores claims the prosecution breached
an oral agreement during the sentencing and in fairness she is entitled to a second
hearing. We affirm.

¶3. The dispositive issue on appeal is whether Colores waived her complaints
regarding the prosecutor's conduct at the hearing by failing to timely object in the
District Court.

                                                FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4. Colores appeals her sentence on the grounds that the State breached its oral
agreement and violated her constitutional rights. She alleges that her attorney and
the prosecutor made an off-the-record oral agreement during a recess of the
sentencing hearing wherein the State promised to present no further testimony or
evidence and to rest its case. In return, Colores agreed to limit her evidence to her
own testimony and that of her mother.

¶5. Colores argues that the State breached the agreement. She contends that after she
presented her limited evidence, the State, in its closing remarks at the sentencing,
introduced new matters when one of the prosecutors presented a summary of
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statements made earlier by Colores regarding the crime. Defense counsel did not
object to the presentation. The prosecutor then told the court that Colores gave
inconsistent statements. Defense counsel objected to this on proper foundation. The
State completed its summation, then rested. Defense counsel made no motion or
objection but began his closing remarks.

¶6. Colores now complains that the evidence was in direct violation of the oral
agreement to her prejudice. She further asserts that the evidence was admitted
without foundation, was hearsay, and left her in an untenable position where she
could not rebut the evidence since she had dismissed her other witnesses pursuant to
her agreement with the State. Colores argues she was forced to make a difficult
tactical decision: (1) raise an objection and thus shift the focus of the hearing from a
determination of her sentence to a legal dispute over the oral agreement, or (2)
simply ignore the breach and go forward with the hearing and hope to minimize the
potential damage to her position. Colores argues that she chose the second option by
objecting to the State's evidence only on an evidentiary basis. Colores now asserts in
this Court that the State's breach of the agreement not only caused her a longer
sentence, it violated her constitutional rights to confront witnesses, effective
assistance of counsel, and due process. She requests a second hearing.

                                                             DISCUSSION

¶7. Did Colores waive her complaints regarding the prosecutor's conduct at the
hearing by failing to timely object in the District Court?

¶8. There is no question that Colores failed to raise these matters in the District
Court. The record discloses that Colores failed to object when the State made its
argument and sentencing recommendation. There was never an objection or
argument raised in the District Court that the proceeding violated Colores's right of
confrontation or denied her due process or effective assistance of counsel. Moreover,
after both sides completed their presentations at sentencing, the District Court
specifically inquired whether there was any legal reason why the court could not
proceed with sentencing. The defense replied that there was none.

¶9. This Court will not consider issues raised for the first time on appeal when a
party had the opportunity to make an objection at the trial level. See § 46-20-104(2),
MCA; State v. Weeks (1995), 270 Mont. 63, 86, 891 P.2d 477, 491; State v. Webb

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(1992), 252 Mont. 248, 251, 828 P.2d 1351, 1353. Colores nonetheless refers our
attention to State v. Allen (1981), 197 Mont. 64, 645 P.2d 380, as support for her
position that we should consider the issue of whether an enforceable agreement
existed between her and the State, and whether the State breached the agreement. In
Allen, we held that an unresolved factual dispute concerning the terms of a written
plea bargain agreement and the issue of whether the prosecutor violated the
agreement should be remanded to the District Court. Unlike Colores's claim,
however, the defendant in Allen properly preserved this issue for appeal. The
defendant petitioned the district court to set aside the sentence or, alternatively, to be
allowed to withdraw his plea of guilty on the ground that the prosecuting attorney
failed to fulfill his promises made in a plea bargain. See Allen, 197 Mont. at 66, 645
P.2d at 381. Colores failed to do this.

¶10. Colores next resorts to the doctrines of equitable and judicial estoppel to relieve
her of the responsibility to register a timely objection in the District Court. Neither
apply under the facts of this case. In essence, she argues that the State should be
equitably or judicially estopped from claiming that the error was not properly
preserved because the State breached the agreement and caused her to change her
position to her detriment. She cites no authority, however, to support her position
that either equitable or judicial estoppel can excuse a party's responsibility to
properly raise objections in a district court criminal proceeding in order to preserve
the issue on appeal.

¶11. Colores also argues that the plain error doctrine should be applied here. We
invoke the plain error doctrine sparingly where a defendant's fundamental
constitutional rights are implicated and our failure to review may result in a manifest
miscarriage of justice, leave unsettled questions of fundamental fairness, compromise
the judicial process, or where the error falls within the ambit of § 46-20-701(2),
MCA. See State v. Finley (1996), 276 Mont. 126, 137, 915 P.2d 208, 215. This case
does not present the type of extraordinary circumstances that persuade us to invoke
the plain error doctrine, nor does § 46-20-701(2), MCA, apply.

¶12. Lastly, we will not remand this matter for a new sentencing hearing on the
grounds that the District Court incorrectly overruled Colores's objection on
evidentiary grounds. We review a district court's sentencing decision for legality only
and will not disturb the decision unless the district court abused its discretion. See
State v. DeSalvo (1995), 273 Mont. 343, 346, 903 P.2d 202, 204. We conclude that the

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District Court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence and further note
that the rules of evidence are not applicable or controlling in sentencing hearings. See
DeSalvo, 273 Mont. at 349-50, 903 P.2d at 206.

¶13. Affirmed.

/S/ JIM REGNIER




We Concur:


/S/ J. A. TURNAGE

/S/ JAMES C. NELSON

/S/ TERRY N. TRIEWEILER

/S/ WILLIAM E. HUNT, SR.




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