OPINION
Case Summary and Issues
Pierre Fisher appeals the post-conviction court’s denial of his petition for post-conviction relief relating to his convictions following a jury trial of criminal deviate conduct, a Class A felony, and robbery, a Class C felony, and his conviction following a guilty plea of rape, a Class B felony. On appeal, Fisher argues he received ineffective assistance of counsel at his trial and his guilty plea for rape was invalid. Concluding that Fisher has failed to establish that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that the trial court properly accepted Fisher’s guilty plea, we affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
The underlying facts with regard to Fisher’s criminal deviate conduct and robbery convictions appear in this court’s opinion on direct appeal affirming Fisher’s convictions.
The evidence reveals that Fisher posed as a paperboy and got a $20 bill from the victim, who was 78 years old. He then asked to use her telephone to gain entrance to her house. Once inside, he attacked her and pulled her into the guest room. He then took off her clothes and placed his fingers in her vagina. The victim pleaded with him to stop and leave her alone, and Fisher told her he would not leave until he got more money. He told her several times that he had a gun, but she never saw it. He then emptied her purse and took three or four dollars and some change before he left.
Fisher v.
State, No. 82-A01-9107-CR-218, slip. op. at 2,
Fisher was a juvenile when he committed the offenses, but was tried as an adult following a juvenile waiver hearing. On February 28, 1991, the jury found Fisher guilty of criminal deviate conduct and robbery. On March 25, 1991, the trial court held a sentencing hearing and sentenced Fisher to forty years for criminal deviate conduct and six years for robbery, with the sentences running concurrently. On May
Fisher appealed, arguing that the victim’s identification of him at his juvenile waiver hearing was unduly suggestive, thereby making his waiver to adult court improper, and that the trial court improperly admitted physical evidence. This court affirmed in the previously cited unpublished opinion. Subsequent to this appeal, Fisher filed numerous motions. Relevant to the instant issues, on April 11, 2005, this court issued an order granting Fisher permission to file a Successive Petition for Post-Conviction Relief. On June 29, 2005, Fisher filed a motion for a copy of the record. The Indiana Public Defender subsequently filed a Motion to Rescind Order for Copy of Record, alleging that Fisher had received a copy of the record on September 28, 1992, and that Fisher remembers receiving part of the record at that time. This court granted the motion to rescind, but in a subsequent order indicated “that if the trial court finds that it needs the complete record from [Fisher’s] original appeal in order to rule on [Fisher’s] Successive Petition for Post-Conviction Relief, this Court will honor a request from the trial court to send to the trial court the record from [Fisher’s] direct appeal.” Appellant’s Appendix at 82. The trial court did not make such a request.
Fisher’s petition raised four issues: (1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel; (2) whether the trial court improperly accepted his guilty plea to rape; (3) whether his sentence for criminal deviate conduct was manifestly unreasonable; and (4) ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. The post-conviction court denied his petition in an order along with findings of fact and conclusions of law. Fisher now appeals the post-conviction court’s order with respect to his claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel and the trial court’s acceptance of his guilty plea.
Discussion and Decision
Initially, we note that the State claims that Fisher failed to satisfy his burden to the post-conviction court by failing to present a record of the prior proceedings. However, it is plain that Fisher made several motions attempting to obtain a copy of the record. This Court issued an order indicating that it would provide a copy of the record if the post-conviction court determined it needed the record. After this court issued this order, Fisher sent the post-conviction court a letter requesting that it obtain a copy of the record from this court. The post-conviction court denied this request, finding “that it does not need a copy of the complete record from the appellant’s original appeal.” Appellant’s App. at 11. We fail to see how Fisher can be held at fault for failing to supply the post-conviction court with the record under these circumstances.
The State also argues that as Fisher did not introduce a copy of this court’s previous opinion on Fisher’s direct appeal and Fisher’s initial post-conviction relief petition, he cannot establish that he is not barred, on grounds of res judicata, from raising the issues of ineffective assistance of counsel or improper acceptance of guilty plea at this time. The fundamental problem with the State’s argument is that it is
Fisher asks that we take judicial notice of the record on his original appeal. The law in Indiana is murky as to whether we may do so. Courts may take judicial notice of a fact “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is ... capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Ind. Rule of Evidence 201(a)(2). This court has previously held that “a trial judge may take judicial notice of the pleadings and filings in the very ease that is being tried,” but that “facts recited within the pleadings and filings that are not capable of ready and accurate determination are not suitable for judicial notice.”
Brown v. Jones,
Our supreme court has held that, as a general rule, a post-conviction court may not take judicial notice of the transcript from the original proceeding.
Bonds v. State,
It does not appear that an Indiana appellate court has squarely addressed this issue.
1
As this court has recognized that although, “generally, a trial court may not take judicial notice of prior proceedings, the rule for judicial notice at the appellate level is not quite as straightforward.”
Sharp v. State,
Therefore, it is clear that Indiana appellate courts take judicial notice of records on file with that court in relation to a related proceeding. Still, we note the apparent inequity of taking judicial notice of a record with which Fisher had at least some familiarity, but to which the State did not have access at the post-conviction hearing or in preparing its appellate brief. It would be even more inequitable, however, to deny Fisher the ability to effectively appeal the post-conviction court’s decision based on that court’s decision that it did not need the record. We conclude that, based on the facts of this case, we may examine the record from Fisher’s direct appeal to the extent it contains factual information not subject to reasonable dispute.
2
See
Ind. R. Evid. 201;
In re Tor
I. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
A. Standard of Review
Post-conviction proceedings are civil in nature.
Stevens v. State,
B. Fisher’s Assistance at Trial
When reviewing ineffective assistance of counsel claims, Indiana courts use the two-pronged test set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
Fisher argues that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to present the following evidence to the jury: 1) the victim, when handed a picture of Fisher at the juvenile waiver hearing, indicated that she did not know who the person in the picture was; 2) a police officer testified at the juvenile waiver hearing that no fingerprints were found on the victim’s doorknob or telephone; 3) Greta Gray, Jim Gray, and Rick Baumeyer, three potential witnesses relating to Fisher’s rape conviction, failed to pick Fisher out of a lineup.
“While defense counsel is not ineffective when he fails to present all evidence in support of the defense position, counsel’s representation cannot be deemed adequate or effective when he fails to produce any evidence at all from available sources in support of a defense.”
Williams v. State,
Here, Fisher’s counsel both cross-examined the witnesses against Fisher and presented evidence in his defense. We initially note that Fisher’s counsel did introduce evidence that Greta Gray, who testified at trial that a young man had come to their house posing as a newspaper delivery boy, had failed to pick Fisher out of a police line-up.
See
Trial Transcript at 251-52. She also cross-examined Greta Gray and the victim regarding their identifications of Fisher on the day of the crime, thereby calling into doubt the State’s identification evidence before the jury.
Cf. Davenport v. State,
Additionally, substantial evidence existed of Fisher’s guilt. After the attack, the victim called police and described her assailant and indicated that he had fled on a multicolored girl’s ten-speed bicycle. At trial, a police officer testified that he found Fisher in the vicinity shortly after the attack, wearing clothes matching the description given by the victim, at a video store, outside of which was a multi-colored girl’s ten-speed bicycle. Fisher was bleeding from the knee, again in accordance with information from the victim. This officer took Fisher back to the victim’s house, where the victim positively identified Fisher as her assailant. The victim
In regard to trial counsel’s failure to introduce evidence relating to the absence of fingerprints on the victim’s doorknob or telephone, we initially note that the State itself introduced testimony that the police were unable to lift fingerprints from the victim’s phone. See Trial Tr. at 95. The officer testified that the inability to lift fingerprints from the phone was not significant, as a phone is handled by many people and used on a continuous basis, resulting in fingerprints being “piled one on top of the other and you just don’t lift good prints off of them.” Id. at 96. The logical conclusion is that the officer would have had the same explanation for his inability to lift fingerprints from the doorknob. Fisher has simply failed to establish any prejudice resulting from the absence at trial of evidence relating to the lack of fingerprint evidence.
We conclude Fisher has failed to meet his burden of establishing a reasonable possibility that the result of his trial would have been different had his trial counsel introduced the evidence to which he now points. Therefore, we conclude he has failed to éstablish ineffective assistance of counsel.
II. Acceptance of Guilty Plea
Fisher argues the trial court improperly accepted his guilty plea because Judge Young failed to advise Fisher of his rights at the hearing at which he entered a judgment of conviction. “To be valid, a guilty plea must be made knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently.”
Dillehay v. State,
The post-conviction court denied Fisher’s claim, finding Fisher “has neither offered into evidence nor made any specific citation to the transcripts or record in asserting his claim that the trial Court improperly accepted his plea of guilty.” Appellant’s App. at 306. As discussed above, Fisher’s failure to cite to the record is directly attributable to the post-conviction court’s failure to request this court to transmit the record. Further, Fisher cited to the transcript of the guilty plea hearing in arguing that the trial court improperly accepted his guilty plea without advising him of his constitutional rights.
See
Appellant’s App. at 228. As the basis of Fisher’s claim is that the record contains no evidence of advice, we fail to understand how Fisher should have more specifically cited to something he claimed was absent. As we have recognized, “if the record of the guilty plea hearing does not affirmatively disclose advisement of [the rights a defendant is waiving] the petitioner has satisfied his burden since a knowing, intelligent and voluntary entry of a guilty plea cannot be presumed from a silent record.”
Brown v. State,
Further, in finding that Fisher was advised of his rights, the post-conviction court erroneously relied on the chronological case summary, which included the notation, “court advises the defendant of constitutional rights and files acknowledgment of rights with the court.” As we have indicated, “a docket entry is an insufficient record to support a guilty plea because it only reflects conclusions and not whether the defendant was properly advised of his rights.”
Graham v. State,
Although the post-conviction court’s findings do not support its conclusion, it remains Fisher’s burden on appeal to demonstrate that the evidence as a whole indicates the post-conviction court should have reached the opposite conclusion.
Hall,
Also, it is not necessary “ ‘that the record of the guilty plea proceeding show that the accused was formally advised that the entry of his guilty plea waives certain constitutional rights,’ nor does
Boykin
require that the record contain a formal waiver of these rights by the accused.”
Dewitt v. State,
Conclusion
We conclude that Fisher has failed to establish that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that the trial court did not improperly accept his guilty plea. The judgment of the post-conviction court denying Fisher’s petition is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Other states do allow an appellate court reviewing the denial of a petition for post-conviction relief to take judicial notice of the record of the preceding direct appeal.
See Rash v. State,
. We take this opportunity to note that on December 17, 2007, Odyssey, a new computerized case management system, was implemented in Monroe county, pursuant to a project of our Supreme Court’s Judicial Technology Automation Committee ("JTAC”). See "December ‘Go Live’ Set For First Odyssey CMS Sites,” at www.in.gov/judiciary/jtac/ news/cms-golive2007.html (last visited December 19, 2007). This system will allow courts to exchange and share information with other courts and state agencies, pursuant to JTAC’s belief that "it is in the best interest of Indiana's citizens, trial courts, court clerks, law enforcement officials, and lawyers that all of Indiana’s courts maintain their records in a statewide computerized ease management system that connects courts across county lines and connects courts with local and state entities that need court information.” JTAC, "FAQs on Policy Statement,” at www.in.gov/judiciaiy/jtac/ docs/0605-faq-policy.pdf (last visited December 19, 2007). The implementation of this project demonstrates the growing trend of allowing trial courts to access and consider reliable information stored in court or other government records. We speculate that along with this access will undoubtedly come more permissive use of judicial notice, as it would be fairly unproductive to allow courts to access this information but not consider it.
. We note that this event allegedly occurred at Fisher's juvenile waiver hearing, the transcript of which was not included in the record of Fisher's direct appeal. Therefore, the only evidence before us that the victim actually failed to recognize Fisher in a picture is an affidavit filed by Fisher.
. A “silent” record is not the same as a missing record, and a petitioner faced with a missing record is still required to prove he was not informed of his rights.
Hall v. State,
