Gеrald A. Bareella appeals from the district court’s denial of his application for post-conviction relief. We affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The facts giving rise to the charge against Bareella are set forth in this Court’s opinion on Barcella’s direct appeal from his conviction,
State v. Barcella,
The state’s evidence at trial set forth the following fact scenario: On the evening of April 2, 1995, Bareella told Kenneth Thrift-his drinking buddy for the evening, Virginia Smeltzer — the bartender at the Watering Hole bar in Coeur d’Alene, and Brad Bakie that he intended to kill Smith, the elderly manager of the Harmony House apartments where Bareella resided.
Returning to Barcella’s room at the Harmony House apartments after the Watering Hole closed, Bareella and Thrift noisily entered the building and went into Barcella’s one-room apartment, across the hall from Smith’s room. There, they continued to drink accompanied by the noise of the radio and television. Smith, through the door, told Bareella to turn the volume down. Bareella begrudgingly complied. Some time later, while Thrift returned to his room next door to get some сigarettes and more beer, Bareella entered Smith’s room and bludgeoned him in the head with a pulaski. When Thrift came back, about five minutes later, Bareella was at Smith’s door, across the hall, wiping off the doorknob with his bandana.
Back in Barcella’s room, Bareella told Thrift that he had killed Smith. The two continued drinking beer until about 4:30 a.m. and then left to get breakfast at Denny’s Restaurant. From there, Bareella called his girlfriend Rikki Bobo. He toldher to get over to Denny’s and that he had killed Smith. Once she arrived, Barcella again told Bobo and Thrift that he killed Smith by striking him in the head three times with a pick ax.
After visiting with Barcella and Thrift at Denny’s for nearly an hour, Bobo returned to Barcella’s room at Harmony House. There, she noticed that Bareella’s pulaski was not in his room. When Barcella arrived, Bobo, with Barcella’s approval, wrote out a note addressed to Smith requesting a receipt for Barcella’s rent payment. Barcella told her that the note was a good idea because it would make the police believe that Barcella thought Smith was still alive. Bobo slipped the note under Smith’s door.
Later that afternoon, Peter Cooper, the owner of the Harmony House apartments, discovered Smith’s body. Smith had several large head wounds and smaller wounds in his chest. A pulaski was found under a piece of carpet stuffed under Smith’s bed. During the homicide investigation, officers discovered that Barcella, a convicted felon, possessed firearms in his room. While in jail on a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm, Barcella was charged with first degree murder for the killing of Smith, I.C. §§ 18-4001-18-4003.
Barcella,
Barcella, acting pro se, filed an application alleging numerous grounds for post-conviction relief. The State answered and moved for summary dismissal. Thereafter, Barcella, with the aid of appointed counsel, filed an amended application alleging four grounds for post-conviction relief, and the State agаin filed an answer and an amended motion for summary dismissal. A hearing was held on the State’s amended motion, and the district court granted the motion as to Barcella’s claims of an unconstitutional judgment and sentence and prosecutorial misconduct, but ordered an evidentiary hearing on Barcella’s claims regarding ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel. The parties submitted briefing to the court after the two-day evidentiary hearing, and the district court subsequently issued its decision denying Barcella’s application for post-conviction relief. Barcella appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
An application for post-conviction relief initiates a civil, rather than criminal, proceeding, governed by the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure.
State v. Yakovac,
Idaho Code § 19-4:906 authorizes summary dismissal of an application for post-conviction relief, either pursuant to motion of a party or upon the court’s own initiative. Summary dismissal of an application is the
On review of dismissal of a post-conviction relief application without an evidentiary hearing, we determine whether a genuine issue of material fact exists based on the pleadings, depositions, and admissions together with any affidavits on file.
Rhoades v. State,
A. Notice
In Barcella’s opening brief to this Court, he contends that the State’s answer, amended answer, motion for summary dismissal, and amended motion for summary dismissal were all “vague,” such that they did not provide Barcella with sufficient notice of the grounds for dismissal. In light of the Idaho Supreme Court’s decision in
DeRushé v. State,
In Barcella’s pro se application for post-conviction relief, Barcella listed 29 various “grounds for his application for Post Conviction Relief.” The State filed an answer to Bareella’s application and also filed a motion for summary dismissal. The district court directed that an amended application be filed. At a subsequent status conference, Barcella’s counsel represented that he had “rеduced [Barcella’s] claims to four broad claims of action.” Thereafter, Barcella filed his amended application setting forth the following claims for relief:
a. That the judgment and sentence is in violation of the Constitution of the United States and the State of Idaho.
b. Prosecutorial misconduct which resulted in a violation of due process.
c. That the conviction is subject to collateral attack on the grounds of ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
d. That the affirmation of the conviction by the Supremе Court [presumably referring to the Court of Appeals decision] is subject to collateral attack on the grounds of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
Following the above delineation of Barcella’s claims, the amended application stated:
That the specific allegations in support of each of the above contentions, along with the statutorily required attachments referring to transcripts and evidence are contained in the Petitioner’s previously filed 290 page pro se Petition and will not be reiterated herein, but should be considered as included by way of reference thereto. Further supporting material in the way of affidavits, transcripts, etc. will be filed in supplement to this Petition as they are gathered.
Barcella proceeded with the four claims presented in the amended application, which claims were alleged to be supported by the “specific allegations” set forth in the original application for post-conviction relief. Thus, the question of notice is limited to the four claims set out in the amended application.
The State’s amended motion for summary dismissal specifically addressed each of the four claims alleged in Barcella’s amended application and listed the grounds for which the State was seeking summary dismissal. Regarding the first two claims, unconstitutional judgment and prosecutorial misconduct, the State argued that those claims could have been, but were not, raised on direct appeal and, therefore, were barred by I.C. § 19-4901(b). Regarding the claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel, the State argued that “[Barcella] has provided no affidavit, record, or other evidence supporting his conclusory allegations that trial and appellate counsel were ineffective; I.C. § 19-4903 requires such evidence to support a petitioner’s allegation.” Therefore, Barcella’s argument that
no
notice was given is clearly belied by the record. Any argument regarding the sufficiency of the notice is precluded by
DeRushé,
as that claim may not be raised for the first time on appeal.
See DeRushé,
B. Unconstitutional Judgment and Prosecutorial Misconduct
Barcella contends that his claims of unconstitutional judgment and sentence and prosecutorial misconduct should not have been summarily dismissed. Barcella argues that certain allegations set out in the original application for post-conviction relief which support his claims could not have been raised on direct appeal because they were based on facts outside the appellate record. However, this argument was never presеnted to the district court.
1. Unconstitutional Judgment and Sentence
Barcella’s counsel did not make any argument at the summary dismissal hearing as to how Barcella’s judgment and sentence were unconstitutional, other than by stating that the judgment was subject to collateral attack under ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial misconduct theories. The district court dismissed the claim, stating:
... Mr. Barcella attacks the judgment and sentence as being in violation of the Constitution. I think, clearly, the statute prohibits advancing for purposes of post-conviction relief an issue that clearly could be subject to direct appeal, which I think that issue is.
Now, I concede there’s certainly this argument that may accomplish the same goal in terms if you are successful on a legitimate basis of post-conviction relief that I think the form of relief may be to receive relief from the judgment and sentence. But to attack directly the judgment and sentence as being a violation of the Constitution is a separate cause of action or ground for post-conviction relief. Iwould agree that would be barred under 19-4901(b) as an issue that was raised and ruled upon direct appeal or one that could have been so raised. So I think the state should receive summary disposition with respect to that first time.
In response to the motion for summary dismissal, Barcella did not articulate any reason or point to any allegation or evidence as to why the claim should survive the bar of I.C. § 19 — 4901(b). Nor did he present to the court on the motion any allegations or evidence supporting an independent claim of an unconstitutional judgment and sentence. Instead, Barcella folded this claim into the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. “[T]he trial court is not required to search the record looking for evidence that may create a genuine issue of material fact; the party opposing the summary judgment is required to bring that evidence to the court’s attention.”
Esser Electric v. Lost River Ballistics Technologies, Inc.,
2. Prosecutorial Misconduct
In response to the State’s contention that Barcella’s claim of prosecutorial misconduct was subject to dismissal because it could have been raised on direct appeal, Barcella’s counsel argued ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failure to assert prosecutorial misconduсt in the notice of appeal and also ineffective assistance of appellate counsel for failure to raise prosecutorial misconduct on appeal. The district court stated:
Really, the claim for prosecutorial misconduct really is subsumed into the argument for ineffective assistance of counsel, as [Barcella’s counsel] has pointed out. So as it would constitute a direct claim or direct connection under post-conviction relief, I think the state should, likewise, be entitled to summary disposition.
(Emphasis added.) Barcella did not articulate any reason or point to any allegation or evidence as to why the claim should survive the bar of I.C. § 19 — 4901(b). Nor did he present to the court on the motion any allegations or evidence supporting an independent claim of prosecutorial misconduct. Instead, Barcella, as with the prior claim, folded this claim into the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Based upon Barcella’s presentation to the district court, the district court did not err in summarily dismissing the claim of prosecutorial misconduct.
C. Right to Testify
The district court denied the State’s summary dismissal motion with respect to Barcella’s claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel. An evidentiary hearing was conducted on those claims. At the hearing Barcella testified that his trial counsel did not allow him to testify at trial. Barcella then testified regarding what he would have said had he testified at trial. The district court found that “Petitioner would not have helped his case or persuaded the jury to more leniency if he had taken the stand and described the events as he did at the Evidentiary Hearing.” Thus, the district court held that Barcella had not met his burden of showing prejudice on his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for counsel’s failure to allow Barcella to testify. Barcella contends that this was error.
When reviewing a decision denying post-conviction relief after an evidentiary hearing, an appellate court will not disturb the lower court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous. I.R.C.P. 52(a);
Russell v. State,
Bareella argues in his initial brief that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by-prohibiting Bareella from testifying. Bar celia filed a supplemental brief, in which he now argues that pursuant to DeRushé, his claim should be analyzed as a direct constitutional violation of his right to testify as opposed to a clаim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Thus, it is necessary to determine what effect, if any, DeRushé has on Barcella’s claim.
In
DeRushé,
the Supreme Court noted that, among other alleged errors by his trial counsel, DeRushé alleged that his trial counsel deprived him of the right to testify.
DeRushé,
In rejecting this claim, the district court stated that DeRushé’s counsel had the right to determine whether DeRushé testified and that there was no showing that his counsel was ineffective in deciding not to have DeRushé testify.
The district court erred in analyzing De-Rushé’s claim as alleging ineffective assistance of counsel rather than as alleging denial of his constitutional right to testify in his own behalf.
DeRushé,
DeRushé
is also procedurally distinguishable from this case. In
DeRushé,
the Supreme Court was analyzing the district court’s decision at the summary dismissal phase.
DeRushé,
In this case, Bareella pled and argued a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, and the district court ruled on that claim. No argument was ever presented to the district court regarding a direct constitutional violation of Barcella’s right to testify. The district court was not required to frame the issues for the parties, nor was it required to develop the arguments to be presented. Barcella’s argument that the district court was required, under
DeRushé,
tо analyze the claim as a direct constitutional violation is
We turn, then, to the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may properly be brought under the post-conviction procedure act.
Murray v. State,
The district court analyzed Barcella’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim in two ways. First, the district court addressed the advice that trial counsel gave Barcella regarding his right to testify. The court noted that although Barcella’s trial counsel could not remember the specifics of Barcella’s case, he did testify that “[he] has advised clients in the past not to testify for varying reasons even though they wanted to do so.” Barcella’s trial counsel indicated that based upon his review of the Court of Appeals opinion, it appeared that he had anticipated that Barcella would testify, but for some reason Barcella did not testify. Barcella’s trial counsel testified that it is the client’s decision whether or not to testify and that he leaves it up to the client. The district court stated, “To the extent that [trial counsel] counseled Petitioner not to testify, such advice clearly fell within the wide range of reasonable assistance based on objective standards of competence and was sound trial strategy.” Therefore, the district court determined that counsel was not deficient in advising Barcella not to testify.
Second, the district court distinguished between advising a client not to testify and preventing a client from testifying. When asked whether he had refused to allow Barcella to testify, trial counsel stated, “I may have, I just don’t recall.” The district court noted that conflicting testimony was presented at the evidentiary hearing, but that it would assume, for purposes of its discussion on the issue, that trial counsel did not allow Barcella to testify. The court also noted that the decision to testify is ultimately to be made by the accused. The district court determined that “[i]f Petitioner was not allowed to testify, trial counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and was deficient.” Therefore, the district court found that the first prong of Strickland had been met. Nevertheless, the court determined that “based on the great amount of evidence in the trial record, the jury would have reached the same conclusion even if Petitioner had testified.” Thus, the court concluded that “[e]ven if trial counsel’s performance was deficient, Petitioner was not prejudiced because the outcome of the trial would not have been different if Petitioner hаd been allowed to exercise his constitutional right to testify.” 1
The district court summed up Bareella’s testimony regarding what he would have testified to as follows:
... At the Evidentiary Hearing, Petitioner testified that he grabbed the Pulaski before going out to talk to some kids on the street and the next thing he remembered was waking up over Bill Smith’s body with the Pulaski on the floor between them; Petitioner went in his room and drank another beer or two while trying to figure out what to do.
The district court noted that Barcella also testified regarding the amount of alcohol he cоnsumed, but stated that independent testimony verified that fact at trial. The district court further noted that the jury was instructed for lesser included offenses, but rejected possible lesser verdicts. The district court concluded that, based upon all of the testimony at trial, Barcella’s version of what happened would not have changed the outcome. Based upon the record, Barcella has failed to demonstrate deficient performance regarding trial counsel’s advice not to testify and has also failed to demonstratе prejudice from any prevention by trial counsel of Barcella testifying at trial.
III.
CONCLUSION
The State’s motion provided notice to Barcella of the grounds for summary dismissal. The district court did not err in granting the State’s motion for summary dismissal on Barcella’s claims of unconstitutional judgment and sentence and prosecutorial misconduct. Barcella failed to show that any prejudice resulted from any ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court’s orders summarily dismissing Barcella’s unconstitutional judgment and prosecutorial misconduct claims and denying his ineffective assistance of counsel claims are affirmed.
Notes
. While the district court incorrectly articulated the Strickland prejudice prong, its application of the standard was correct.
