BRIAN HALL, Appellant, v. STATE OF ALASKA, Appellee.
Court of Appeals No. A-12719
Trial Court No. 3AN-14-09493 CI
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
June 28, 2019
No. 2649
NOTICE
The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts: 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Fax: (907) 264-0878 E-mail: corrections @ akcourts.us
Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Michael L. Wolverton, Judge.
Appearances: Cynthia L. Strout, Law Office of Cynthia L. Strout, Anchorage, for the Appellant. Nancy R. Simel, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
Before: Allard, Chief Judge, and Wollenberg and Harbison, Judges.
In 1995, Brian Hall was convicted of first-degree murder and second-degree murder for the shooting deaths of Mickey Dinsmore and Stanley Honeycutt. In the years following his conviction, Hall litigated two post-conviction relief applications, both of which were denied. Hall now seeks to litigate a third post-conviction relief application based on what he claims is newly discovered evidence of innocence that was not available when he litigated his previous post-conviction relief applications.
In the proceedings below, the superior court summarily dismissed Hall‘s application under
Accordingly, we vacate the superior court‘s dismissal of Hall‘s post-conviction relief application, and we remand this case to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with the guidance provided here.
Factual background and prior proceedings
Late in the evening of April 16, 1993, seventeen-year-old Brian Hall and four of his friends drove together to a bonfire in a parking lot on Campbell Airstrip Road. Hall had a loaded pistol with him.
Shortly after they arrived, Hall and his friends got into a shouting match with the occupants of another vehicle, Mickey Dinsmore and Stanley Honeycutt. A fifteen-year-old girl, Monica Shelton, briefly acted as an intermediary between the two vehicles. Moments later, Dinsmore and Honeycutt began to slowly drive up along the driver‘s side of Hall‘s vehicle. As they did so, Dinsmore extended a beer bottle, bottom end up, to the driver of Hall‘s car, stating, “We ain‘t got no beef with you; do you want some of this?”
Hall, who was then standing outside the passenger door of his vehicle, testified at trial that he thought Dinsmore had a gun. Hall pulled his own gun out of his back pocket and fired three shots over his car towards Dinsmore. One shot hit Dinsmore on the top of the head and another shot hit Honeycutt in the mouth. Both Dinsmore and Honeycutt died as a result of the gunshot wounds inflicted by Hall.
Following waiver of juvenile jurisdiction, Hall was indicted on two counts of first-degree murder. Hall‘s defense at trial was self-defense. He testified that he believed that Dinsmore had a gun because Monica Shelton had relayed to Hall and his friends, “[Dinsmore and Honeycutt] have a gun, and they‘ll shoot [you], so just leave.” Likewise, Hall‘s defense investigator claimed that Shelton had told him, in an unrecorded interview prior to trial, that she thought she had told Hall that Dinsmore and Honeycutt had a gun or might have a gun.1
However, at trial Shelton maintained that she never told Hall that Dinsmore had a gun.
Shelton‘s equivocation on whether she said anything to Hall about a gun was discussed in the defense opening statement at trial, and again during closing arguments. During his direct examination of Shelton, the prosecutor questioned Shelton about her statement to the defense investigator. Shelton testified that she did not recall making that statement, but that she may have done so. Shelton was adamant, however, that the truth was that she had not told Hall that Honeycutt and Dinsmore had a gun.
Hall was convicted of one count of first-degree murder for shooting Dinsmore and one count of second-degree murder for shooting Honeycutt.
Seventeen years after Hall was convicted, in November 2012, a defense investigator who had been hired by Hall‘s family contacted Shelton and interviewed her. In the interview (which was recorded and transcribed), Shelton said that she was willing to “put the record straight.” Shelton told the defense investigator that she did remember telling Hall that there was a gun because Dinsmore and Honeycutt said they had a gun and pointed to their glove box. She stated, “I did tell [Hall and his friends] that there was a gun . . . and that might‘ve been why [Hall] thought ‘I‘m gonna shoot first.‘”
Shelton‘s statement was not made under oath, and she never affirmed the statement in an affidavit.
A year after the recorded interview was obtained, Hall‘s attorney filed a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The motion was later modified and refiled as an application for post-conviction relief. This was Hall‘s third application for post-conviction relief. Hall had previously filed two applications for post-conviction relief in 1999 and 2008, raising various ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Both
The State filed a motion to dismiss the third post-conviction relief application, arguing, inter alia, that Hall‘s application was barred under
The superior court agreed that the application was statutorily barred under
This appeal followed.
Why we conclude that the superior court erred in summarily dismissing Hall‘s application as a successive application under AS 12.72.020(a)(6)
A defendant‘s right to seek post-conviction relief in the Alaska courts is governed by
The requirement that the application must be brought within the statutory deadline is subject to certain statutory exceptions, including an exception for claims based on newly discovered evidence of innocence.3 To qualify for this newly discovered evidence exception under
bring a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence under
In contrast to the statutory exceptions that exist for untimely applications, there are no statutory exceptions to the prohibition against successive petitions. Alaska Statute 12.72.020(a)(6) declares that “[a] claim may not be brought under
In Grinols v. State, however, we recognized that “[t]here is a real possibility that [this] statute may lead to fundamental unfairness.”7 We noted, for example, that
Following the Grinols decision, the Alaska Legislature enacted
In Roberts v. State, we again addressed the problem that
must additionally obtain special permission from the appeals court.14 In addition, the federal “abuse of the writ” doctrine dictates that a petition is only considered “second or successive” if the petitioner raises claims that “could have been raised in the first petition but [were] not so raised, either due to deliberate abandonment or inexcusable neglect.”15
Many states likewise provide relief to a defendant who seeks to raise a newly discovered evidence claim in what would otherwise qualify as a second or successive post-conviction relief application.16 Most states provide this relief directly through their statutes or court rules.17 At least one state has provided this relief through case law.18
In Roberts, we speculated that
This is not true in the current case. Here, Hall‘s claim of newly discovered evidence has not been litigated in any other forum and the merits of his claim are unknown. We therefore must decide the constitutional and statutory interpretation issues that we left undecided in Roberts.
On appeal, Hall urges us to adopt the federal abuse of the writ doctrine for purposes of determining whether a subsequent post-conviction relief application qualifies as a “second or successive” petition. As discussed above, under the federal abuse of the writ doctrine, a petition for writ of habeas corpus is not considered “second or successive” for purposes of
We are not convinced that such a reading is consistent with the legislative intent behind
However, this means that our statute is anomalous among the state and federal statutes that we have surveyed, which do provide for such relief.24 The question therefore arises whether the absolute prohibition against successive petitions codified in
Accordingly, we hold that a defendant is entitled to bring a post-conviction claim for relief in what would otherwise qualify as a second or successive petition if the defendant is able to establish that the claim is based on newly discovered evidence, as that term is defined under
The only remaining question left to answer in this case is whether Hall is entitled to this exception under the facts presented here. In its briefing on appeal, the State argues that
We conclude that these are arguments that should be raised in the first instance to the superior court. Because the superior court summarily dismissed Hall‘s application under
Conclusion
For the reasons explained here, the superior court‘s dismissal of Hall‘s post-conviction relief application is VACATED, and this case is REMANDED to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with the guidance provided in this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
