In 2005, a District Court judge accepted pleas of guilt by the defendant to two counts of assault and battery. In 2012, the judge allowed the defendant’s motion to vacate the convictions. The defendant contended that the pleas had resulted from the ineffective assistance of counsel because his attorney
Background. 1. Defendant’s guilty pleas. The Commonwealth charged the defendant with assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, G. L. c. 265, § 15A(b) (count one); and assault and battery on a child causing injury, G. L. c. 265, § 13J(Z?) (count two). The charges arose from allegations that the defendant had physically abused his nine year old daughter. The parties engaged in plea discussions and made recommendations to the judge for disposition. The “Tender of Plea” form, otherwise known as the “green sheet,” shows that the defendant accepted the following disposition: (1) on count one, a finding of guilty and a sentence of one year of confinement, suspended for two years, upon certain probationary terms; and (2) on count two, a finding of guilty and a sentence of one year of confinement concurrent with the first sentence, also suspended for two years, but with no additional probationary terms.
The green sheet includes the following information concerning the potential deportation consequences of the guilty pleas: (1) the defendant’s signature underneath his acknowledgment that “conviction of this offense may have the consequence of deportation . . . pursuant to the laws of the United States”; (2) plea counsel’s certification that he had explained to the defendant the “above-stated provisions of law ... so as to enable [him] to tender his . . . plea of guilty . . . knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily”; and (3) the judge’s certification that he had informed the defendant that conviction of the charges “may have the consequences of deportation, exclusion from admission to the United States, or denial of naturalization.” On July 7, 2005, the defendant pleaded guilty to both counts.
2. Defendant’s motions to vacate his guilty pleas. In September of 2011, the defendant through new counsel moved to vacate his guilty pleas. By affidavit the defendant alleged that plea counsel had “never explained to [him] the immigration con
On January 20, 2012, the defendant submitted to the court the same motion (with its original September 1, 2011, date); the affidavits of the defendant and plea counsel; a copy of the criminal complaint, green sheet, and police report; and a memorandum of law. These papers appear to have been identical to the original motion papers. On February 2, 2012, before the Commonwealth had filed a response, the same judge endorsed the motion as “[ajllowed.” No hearing had occurred.
On February 16, 2012, the Commonwealth filed a comprehensive motion for reconsideration. It included a copy of the green sheet and challenged the integrity of the defendant’s affidavit. The Commonwealth pointed out also that it had not received a sufficient opportunity to respond to the defendant’s resubmitted motion. No hearing resulted. On February 29, 2012, the judge endorsed the motion for reconsideration as “[djenied.” The Commonwealth has appealed.
Discussion. 1. Procedure: vacation of the guilty pleas without an evidentiary hearing and findings. The vehicle for the proposed withdrawal of a guilty plea is a motion for a new trial under Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), as appearing in
The motion judge’s discretion includes the decision whether to conduct an evidentiary hearing. Commonwealth v. Shuman,
The judge should have held an evidentiary hearing before he ruled on the defendant’s motion because evidence clearly conflicted with the defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. The defendant’s affidavit contradicted (1) the green sheet certifications signed by the judge and the defendant’s plea counsel; (2) the defendant’s own green sheet acknowledgment; and (3) the plea counsel’s affidavit. The contents of the resubmitted motion, indicated by the cover sheet, also show that the judge received those materials. Despite the conflicting evidence,
Further, as a matter of law, the omission of an evidentiary hearing inevitably caused a violation of rule 30(b)’s requirement that the judge “shall make such findings of fact as are necessary to resolve the defendant’s allegations of error of law” (emphasis supplied). It similarly precluded any written explanation in support of the final two rulings. Recorded reasoning serves multiple valuable purposes. It guides the decision maker to the merits, assures the parties of a deliberative result, enables informed appellate review, and promotes public knowledge of, and confidence in, the rationality of judicial work. See In the Matter of the Enforcement of a Subpoena,
2. Merits: applicability of Padilla to defendant’s claim. By briefing and oral argument in this court, the defendant has contended that the District Court judge has implicitly applied the rule of Padilla,
In Commonwealth v. Clarke,
Seven months later, in Commonwealth v. Sylvain, supra at the Supreme Judicial Court concluded that a noncitizen defendant pleading guilty to a sanctionable aggravated felony in a Massachusetts trial court could challenge a final prz-Padilla conviction by a motion to withdraw the plea.
Conclusion. For these reasons, we vacate the order allowing the defendant’s motion pursuant to rule 30(b) to withdraw his guilty pleas. We remand the case to the District Court for an evidentiary hearing. The judge hearing the motion shall make specific subsidiary and ultimate findings of fact and provide separate reasoning and conclusions of law.
So ordered.
Notes
We assume without deciding that the defendant can show “more than a hypothetical risk” of deportation. See Commonwealth v. Barreiro,
In February of 2012, the judge did not have the benefit of the thorough analysis of the importance of an evidentiary hearing in the present circumstances (i.e., a motion to withdraw guilty plea by a noncitizen contradicting the plea tender paper certifications) appearing in Commonwealth v. Gordon,
The oppressive workloads confronting many trial judges often render extensive findings and reasoning difficult or prohibitive. In those circumstances, an annotated or dictated summary of findings and reasoning may be sufficient and certainly preferable to one-word decisions of dispositive motions. As one useful expedient, a judge may cite and adopt by reference those portions of
In this instance the omission of any factfinding and reasoning is especially conspicuous because the Commonwealth’s vigorous motion to reconsider with supporting documents and legal argument clearly previewed an appeal.
The court reasoned that the Padilla holding was an application of the preexisting or “old” general rule of Strickland v. Washington,
Under the doctrine of Teague v. Lane,
Roselva Chaidez had pleaded guilty to two counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1342. Her convictions became final in 2004. Chaidez v. United States, supra at 1105-1106. The District Court imposed sanctions of probation (four years) and restitution. Id. at 1106. In 2009, immigration officials began removal proceedings. Ibid. She challenged the validity of her pleas upon the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel: the alleged failure of her plea attorney to advise her of the risk of deportation. Ibid. While her collateral challenge was pending, the Supreme Court decided Padilla. Ibid.
Kempress Sylvain pleaded guilty to possession of cocaine, G. L. c. 94C, § 34, and received a sentence of eleven months in the house of correction suspended for two years. Commonwealth v. Sylvain, supra at 425. The conviction became final in October of 2007, more than two years before the announcement of Padilla. Commonwealth v. Sylvain, supra.
In the Supreme Court’s words, “[FJinality of state convictions is a state interest, not a federal one. It is a matter that States should be free to evaluate, and weigh the importance of, when prisoners held in state custody are seeking a remedy for a violation of federal rights by their lower courts.” (Emphasis in original.) Danforth v. Minnesota, supra at 280.
We deny the defendant’s request for an award of appellate attorney’s fees as meritless.
