ALFONSO PONTON v. SECRETARY, FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
No. 16-10683
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
June 4, 2018
D.C. Docket No. 1:16-cv-20059-KMW; [PUBLISH]
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
(June 4, 2018)
ED CARNES, Chief Judge:
This case involves the effect of a Castro error in an earlier federal habeas proceeding on whether a later habeas petition is to be treated as second or successive for purposes of
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Alfonso Ponton was charged in 1982 in Florida state court in three separate criminal cases on a total of 12 counts of robbery, 3 counts of armed robbery, 1 count of aggravated assault with a firearm, and 3 counts of aggravated battery. Juries found him guilty on nearly all of those counts, and he was sentenced to 65 years imprisonment in the first case, 730 years in the second, and 402 years in the third. The state appellate court affirmed his convictions and, with one minor exception not relevant here, affirmed his sentences in all three cases. See Ponton v. State, 436 So. 2d 117 (Table) (Fla. 3d DCA 1983); Ponton v. State, 436 So. 2d 364 (Fla. 3d DCA 1983); Ponton v. State, 434 So. 2d 347 (Fla. 3d DCA 1983).
After those convictions became final, Ponton launched a barrage of pro se post-conviction pleadings in state and federal court. He has filed at least 40 post-conviction motions and petitions in state court alone. See Ponton v. State, 155 So. 3d 425, 425 (Fla. 2014). Beginning in 1984, he filed his first of over a dozen pro se pleadings in federal district court. His first four federal pleadings — a mixed habeas corpus petition and civil rights action filed in 1984, a civil rights action filed that same year, a
Ponton‘s fifth federal pleading, which he filed in 1988, is the one that matters in this case. He alleged that the judge and other individuals involved in his trials conspired against him so that he could not assist in his own defense and that his attorneys provided ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court dismissed his complaint as a mixed
On remand the State conceded that he had exhausted his ineffective assistance claim. Ponton withdrew his other claims, asked the district court to proceed on his ineffective assistance claim, and filed an amended complaint. The docket sheet indicated his amended complaint had been classified as a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Nothing in the record indicates that the court notified him of that recharacterization or warned him that it could limit future federal habeas filings. The
After that 1988 filing, Ponton filed three
Undeterred, Ponton filed yet another
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review de novo whether a petition for a writ of habeas corpus is second or successive.” Patterson v. Sec‘y, Fla. Dep‘t of Corr., 849 F.3d 1321, 1324 (11th Cir. 2017) (en banc).
III. DISCUSSION
Ponton contends that the district court erred in dismissing his 2016 petition as an unauthorized second or successive petition because, in light of the Supreme Court‘s Castro decision, his 1988 petition does not count as a first petition.
In Castro the Supreme Court addressed the “longstanding practice” in which courts “sometimes treat[ ] as a request for habeas relief under
To ensure that litigants are aware of those consequences, Castro held that when district courts recharacterize a pro se litigant‘s pleading as a first
There is no reason to believe that the district court notified Ponton when it recharacterized his 1988 pleading as a
The State argues that the Castro notice-and-warning requirement does not apply to pleadings that were filed before that decision was issued in 2003, and as a result Ponton‘s 1988 petition still counts as a first petition for second or successive purposes.
The State is wrong. The Castro notice-and-warning requirement applies to pre-Castro petitions because that is what the Supreme Court did in Castro itself, and Ponton‘s situation is no different than Castro‘s. See Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314, 323, 107 S. Ct. 708, 713 (1987) (noting the principle that “similarly situated defendants” must be treated the same). Castro‘s first pleading (filed in 1994) was recharacterized without notice as a
That is the same situation Ponton is in: His 1988 pre-Castro pleading was recharacterized without warning and denied on the merits, his current 2016 petition was dismissed as an unauthorized second or successive petition based on that 1988 denial, and he argues that his 1988 pleading does not count as a first petition.5 Just
as the Supreme Court applied the notice-and-warning requirement to Castro‘s 1994 pleading, we must apply the notice-and-warning requirement to Ponton‘s 1988 pleading. See Griffith, 479 U.S. at 323, 107 S. Ct. at 713; see also Powell v. Nevada, 511 U.S. 79, 84, 114 S. Ct. 1280, 1283 (1994) (“[S]elective application
pre-Castro motion did not count as a first
IV. CONCLUSION
Because Ponton‘s 1988 petition was recharacterized without the required notice and warning, the district court erred in dismissing his 2016 petition as an unauthorized second or successive petition.8
VACATED AND REMANDED.
