Robert EY, Petitioner,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*619 Hunter W. Carroll of Carlton and Carroll, P.A., Bradenton, FL, for Petitioner.
Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, FL; Robert J. Krauss, Assistant Attorney General, Bureau Chief, and Patricia A. McCarthy, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, FL, for Respondent.
CANTERO, J.
In this case, we consider whether, when a defendant has committed two separate crimes and informs his attorney about both of them, the attorney's erroneous advice that his plea in one case could not be used to enhance his sentence in the other constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel. We hold that it does. We also hold, however, that such claims must be filed within the two-year deadline of Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850.
Below, we (I) detail the relevant facts and procedural history of the case; (II) explain why counsel's wrong advice about the effect of a plea to one crime on a sentence for another crime that already has been committed constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel, and establish the pleading requirements for such a claim; (III) address the deadlines for timely filing such claims; and (IV) apply our holding to the facts of this case and order that Petitioner be afforded an opportunity to amend his claim if he can do so in good faith.
*620 I. THE RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Petitioner was arrested for petit theft in case number 99-21195 (Case# 1). According to Petitioner's allegations (no evidentiary hearing has been held), he informed his counsel before the plea that he had committed another crimedealing in stolen property. His counsel informed him that his plea in Case # 1 would not affect any subsequent sentence for his other crime. On April 10, 2000, he pled no contest in Case # 1 and was placed on probation. His conviction became final in May 2000. Soon after entering his plea, he was arrested and charged in case number 00-9494 (Case # 2) with three counts of dealing in stolen property. He was tried and found guilty. In November 2001, based in part on the felony conviction in Case #1, the trial court sentenced Petitioner in Case # 2 as a habitual offender to thirty years in prison.
In August 2002more than two years after his conviction in Case # 1 became finalPetitioner filed a pro se motion for postconviction relief attacking his conviction in that case. He alleged that his counsel provided ineffective assistance when he wrongly advised Petitioner that the conviction in Case # 1 could not be used to enhance a sentence for dealing in stolen property (which later became Case # 2). He further claimed that, had he known the conviction could be used to enhance the sentеnce in Case # 2, he would not have pleaded guilty in Case # 1. Petitioner alleged that he discovered counsel's erroneous advice on August 30, 2000, when he received the State's notice of sentence enhancement in Case #2.
The circuit court found that the motion was untimely and dismissed it. Petitioner appealed, and the Second District Court of Appeal affirmed without elaboration. It also, however, certified the following question to be of great public importance:
Whether allegations of affirmative misadvice by trial counsel on the sentence enhancing consequences of a defendant's plea for future criminal behavior in an otherwise facially sufficient motion are cognizable as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
Ey v. State,
Petitioner timely petitioned for review in this Court. The case remained pending while we decided State v. Dickey,
II. ERRONEOUS ADVICE ABOUT SENTENCING CONSEQUENCES
We were first presented with the question certified in this case in Bates v. State,
A. Dickey and Future Crimes
Like most cases alleging ineffective assistance of counsel, Dickey analyzed the claim using the now-familiar two-pronged test the United States Supreme Court established in Strickland v. Washington,
Even before Dickey, we had applied Strickland to claims of advice about the effects of a guilty plea on a sentence for a future crime. In Major v. State,
We answered that question in Dickey. In that case, the defendant alleged that before entering his plea, his counsel advised him that if Dickey committed another crime, his plea could not be used to enhance a sentence for the later crime. Dickey claimed counsel was ineffective because his conviction wаs used precisely that way, and had he known of this potential effect he would not have pleaded guilty to the earlier crime. Dickey,
We conclude that allegations of affirmative misadvice by trial counsel on the sentence-enhancing consequences of a defendant's plea for future criminal behavior in an otherwise facially sufficient motion are not cognizable as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. A majority of this Court concludes that claims that a defendant entered a plea based on wrong advice about a potential sentence enhancement for a future crime fail to meet the Strickland test, either because such claims do not demonstrate deficient performance in the case at issue or because, as a matter of law, any deficient performance could not have prejudiced the defendant in that case. Therefore, we hold that wrong advice about the consequences for a crime not yet committed cannot constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
Dickey,
Just as Dickey considered a question left open in Major, here we consider a question left open in Dickey: whether the erroneous advice that a guilty plea will not enhance the sentence for another crime constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel when the defendant specifically tells counsel before the plea that he has committed another crime.
B. Subsequent Sentence for a Prior Crime
Relying on our decisions in State v. Sallato,
*623 We rejected the claim in Dickey because "wrong advice about the consequences for a crime not yet committed cannot constitute ineffective assistance of counsel." Dickey,
C. The Pleading Requirements
To raise a facially sufficient claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must allege specific facts meeting both of Strickland's prongs. Thus, the defendant must allege both that counsel's performance was deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced the defendant. See Jones v. State,
As stated above, what distinguishes this claim from the one we rejected in Dickey is the imminence of the peril. That is, at the time of the plea, the defendant has an extant basis for concern about the effect of that plea because he already has committed another crime. To raise a fаcially sufficient claim, however, a defendant must do more than allege that counsel provided erroneous advice. A defendant must plead that (1) before entering the plea, he informed defense counsel that he committed another crime for which he had not yet been sentenced, (2) he explained to counsel the nature of the crime, (3) counsel erroneously advised the defendant about the potential use of the conviction to enhance a subsequent sentence for that other crime (explaining why the advice was erroneous), and (4) had counsel not erroneously advised the defendant, the defendant would have exercised his right to a trial. To prevail on such an ineffective assistance claim, a defendant must ultimately prove both deficient performance and that under "the totality of the circumstances surrounding the plea," there is a reasonable probability the defendant *624 would have gone to trial instead of entering a plea. Grosvenor v. State,
III. TIMELINESS
Having recognized the validity of, and determined the pleading requirements for, the ineffective assistance claim raised here, we next address the deadline for filing a claim. The State argues that such a claim must be filed within two years after the conviction based on the plea the defendant is attacking becomes final. In other words, rule 3.850 applies. Petitioner contends that the motion is timely if filed within two years after a defendant receives notice of the State's intent to enhance the subsequent sentence based on the previously entered plea. We agree with the State.
Because in Dickey we did not recognize a claim, we expressly declined to address the timeliness issue. Dickey, 928 at 1195 n. 3. At least two district courts, however, have held that in such cases the clock begins to run when a defendant discovers that the advice was erroneous. See Love v. State,
These holdings were based by analogy on our decision in Peart v. State,
[W]e apply the criteria of rule 3.850 to determine whether a postconviction motion claiming a rule 3.172(c)(8) violation is timely. A motion seeking to withdraw a plea on grounds that the trial court did not advise the defendant of the possibility of deportation will be held to the same time constraints as other postconviction motions raising other claims under rule 3.850. These claims must be brought within two years of the date that the judgment аnd sentence (or order withholding adjudication of guilt) become final. Henceforth, it is the fact that the plea subjects the defendant to deportation, rather than a specific threat of deportation, that establishes prejudice for the failure to inform the defendant in accord with rule 3.172(c)(8). Whether the plea subjects the defendant to deportation is an existent fact on the date of the plea which is either known or ascertainable by the defendant.
Green,
We find our reasoning in Green applies as well to the erroneous advice *625 claim we recognize here. The fact of the plea subjects the defendant to the potential for subsequent sentence enhancement on another offense. The defendant with knowledge both of his plea and of the other offense he committed before entering his plea can ascertain within two years of the plea whether that plea could subject him to enhancement of any subsequent sentence. Therefore, we hold that a defendant's claim that counsel erroneously advised that a plea would not affect the subsequent sentence for another crime committed before the plea must be filed within two years after the conviction based on the plea is final. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.850(b).
IV. THIS CASE
The trial court dismissed Petitioner's postconviction motion because it was nоt filed within two years of his judgment and sentence becoming final, as required by rule 3.850. At the time Petitioner filed his motion, however, district courts applied Peart to similar claims and held that the clock started on the date the defendant discovered the enhancement. While the petition was pending in this Court, we overruled Peart. See Green,
V. CONCLUSION
In Dickey, we answered in the negative the question certified in this case. We find, however, that Petitiоner's claim is substantively different. Therefore, we hold that counsel's erroneous advice about the effect of a plea in one case on a subsequent sentence for a crime committed before the plea constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel. To adequately plead such a claim, however, the defendant must meet the pleading requirements we delineated above. The triаl and appellate courts shall apply these pleading requirements to any currently pending cases alleging this claim and permit defendants failing to meet them to amend the claim, if they can do so in good faith.
Accordingly, we quash the district court's decision in this case and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
LEWIS, C.J., and WELLS, ANSTEAD, PARIENTE, QUINCE, and BELL, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] We also modified the pleading and proof requirements for the clаim:
The requirement that a defendant allege and prove that he or she would not have entered the plea if informed of this possibility remains in force. See Peart,
Green,
[2] Petitioner's postconviction motion also alleged that counsel erroneously advised him that voluntary intoxication was, without exception, no longer a valid defense. The trial court did not address that claim, and we express no opinion about it. Further, in dismissing the case, the trial court advised Petitioner about the procedure for filing a motion under rule 3.850(b)(3), alleging that counsel did not file a timely 3.850 motion. We do not address Petitioner's argument regarding this claim, either.
