We granted Stanley Crawford’s certificate of probable cause to appeal the denial of his petition for habeas corpus in order to determine whether the habeas court erroneously analyzed Crawford’s claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. We hold that the habeas court incorrectly applied
Shorter v. Waters,
Crawford was represented at trial by attorney Cooper. After Crawford was convicted of armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery, attorney Mason was appointed to represent Crawford on appeal. Mason raised three issues before the Court of Appeals in Crawford’s appeal: the denial of Crawford’s motion for discharge and acquittal after the State failed to timely bring him to trial in compliance with his speedy trial demand; an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim in which the only argument was that Cooper improperly placed Crawford’s character into evidence by questioning Crawford on direct about his prior criminal record; and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. In
Crawford v. State,
Crawford subsequently filed a habeas petition in which he asserted, inter alia, that his appellate counsel was ineffective for raising the speedy trial issue as a separate enumeration of error rather than in the context of a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. The habeas court found that Mason chose not to raise such a claim because Mason “did not think trial counsel was ineffective.” Mason recognized that Cooper, in presenting Crawford’s statutory
speedy trial demand on the armed robbery charge, had cited to OCGA § 17-7-170 (speedy trial demand in non-capital cases) instead of OCGA § 17-7-171, the statute applicable to capital crimes such as armed robbery, and that Cooper made no formal announcement that Crawford was ready to be tried on the indictment when he and Crawford appeared at calls of the case during the two terms following the filing of the demand.
1
The habeas court found that “[Mason] did not believe that [using the wrong statute] made the difference in the
A claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel requires a showing both that counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced the outcome of the defendant’s appeal.
Sloan v. Sanders,
Looking to the deficiency component, the issue before the habeas court in this case was whether Mason’s decision not to include the speedy trial error as an additional claim in the ineffective assistance of trial counsel enumeration was “ ‘an unreasonable one which only an incompetent attorney would adopt.’ [Cit.]”
Shorter,
supra,
Although we accept the habeas court’s factual finding that these were the reasons for Mason’s decision, we are not bound by the habeas court’s legal conclusion that Mason’s decision was a reasonable tactical move which any competent attorney in the same situation would have made and instead independently apply the applicable legal principles to the facts.
Turpin v.
Bennett,
Even where trial counsel’s performance is found to be deficient, an ineffective assistance claim may nevertheless fail if that deficient performance did not prejudice the defense.
Strickland,
supra. Here, the habeas court found that Mason determined Crawford’s defense was not prejudiced by Cooper’s performance because Mason believed that Cooper’s use of the incorrect statute made no difference in the outcome of the motion for discharge and acquittal. Mason was clearly wrong in reaching this conclusion. Given the well established law that “[djischarge and acquittal based on a demand is an extreme sanction that requires strict statutory compliance [cit.],”
Crawford,
supra,
Applying
Shorter,
supra, we conclude that Crawford carried his burden of showing that Mason’s decision not to raise the speedy trial issue as part of the ineffective assistance of trial counsel enumeration was an unreasonable one no competent attorney in the same circumstances would have made. See generally
Phillips v. Williams,
The habeas court also held that Crawford failed to show that there was a reasonable probability that the outcome of his appeal would have been different had Mason properly raised the speedy trial issue as part of the ineffective assistance of trial counsel enumeration. We disagree. Under the prejudice prong, “the inquiry does not focus on the projected result on remand or retrial, but whether there is a reasonable probability that the result of the
appeal
would have been different. ‘A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.’ [Cit.]”
Nelson v. Hall,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The habeas court noted that Cooper alleged that “he did not have to actually announce ready because he was present during those terms of court and announced not guilty.”
We cannot speculate whether or not the State would have tried Crawford timely had Cooper acted in strict statutory compliance with OCGA § 17-7-171. However, the evidence before the habeas court clearly established that the State did not try Crawford within two terms of court after the speedy trial demand was filed but instead sought continuances, first in order to indict and try Crawford together with another individual and then twice later because of the unavailability of the victim and/or other witnesses.
Although the habeas court focused exclusively on the outcome of the motion for discharge in assessing the prejudice to Crawford from trial counsel’s deficient performance, we note that Crawford was more directly prejudiced by trial counsel’s deficient performance in that he was denied his statutory right to be tried within two regular terms of court after the term at which his demand was filed. OCGA § 17-7-171 (b).
