Williаm M. FOONDLE, Appellant, v. Angela M. O‘BRIEN, Daniel B. Lord, Joe S. Montague, and Quinlan G. Steiner, Executive Director of the Alaska Public Defender Agency, Appellees.
No. S-15045.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
April 3, 2015.
346 P.3d 970
Ali Moser Rahoi, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellees.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, MAASSEN, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
William Foondle appeals the superior court‘s dismissal of his claims for legal malpractice against the public defenders who represented him in a criminal case. In dismissing Foondle‘s malpractice claims, the superior court relied on the public policy principle that precludes criminally convicted plaintiffs from civil recovery based on the alleged negligence of their former defense counsel. We hold that the superior court‘s legal analysis was correct, and we affirm the judgment on that basis. We reject, as unsupported, Foondle‘s argument thаt the dismissal violated his rights to due process and access to the courts. Finally, we affirm the award of attorney‘s fees to the public defenders because they prevailed on the merits of Foondle‘s claims.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Criminal Proceedings And Post-Conviction Relief
A grand jury indicted William Foondle for felony driving under the influence (DUI) in 2007. The DUI charge was a felony because Foondle had been convicted of DUI twice in the preceding ten years: once earlier in 2007 and once in North Dakota in 1999.1 Assistant public defenders Angela O‘Brien and Daniel Lord were assigned to defend Foondle.
Foondle testified during his jury trial that the North Dakota DUI conviction resulted
O‘Brien, one of Foondle‘s public defenders, filed a sentencing memorandum arguing that the North Dakota DUI should not be viewed as a prior conviction for sentencing purposes and that Foondle should therefore be sentenced for a misdemeanor rather than felony DUI. While awaiting sentencing, Foondle made the same argument pro se in a habeas corpus petition and in a separate petition for post-conviction relief. At some point before sentencing he discharged his public defenders, and his two petitions were consolidated for decision before Superior Court Judge Carl Bauman, who had presided over Foondle‘s criminal trial and who appointed new counsel for purposes of the proceedings for post-conviction relief.
Judge Bauman held an evidentiary hearing at which he received records from the North Dakota proceedings and heard testimony from a North Dakota court clerk and state attorney; he then issued a written decision. He found by clear and convincing evidence that the North Dakota plea agreement Foondle signed was changed from driving with a suspended license to a DUI without Foondle‘s knowledge or consent, compromising his fundamental constitutional rights. Judge Bauman concluded that the North Dakota DUI conviction would therefore be “set aside for purposes of sentencing [Foondle] on his 2008 DUI conviction in [Alaska].” By another order entered the same day, Judge Bauman ruled that “Defendant‘s felony DUI conviction is set aside and a conviction under the misdemeanor DUI criteria shall be entеred and Defendant shall be sentenced under [those] misdemeanor criteria.” Foondle was sentenced for a misdemeanor DUI.
B. Civil Suit For Legal Malpractice
In 2011, acting pro se, Foondle sued O‘Brien and Lord along with their supervisors, Joe Montague and Quinlan Steiner. In an amended complaint he alleged negligence and intentional tort for the attorneys’ alleged failure to adequately investigate the North Dakota DUI. He alleged that the judgment of conviction was vоid because of a “fatal flaw” in the indictment: it charged a felony, but one of the facts that made it a felony was successfully challenged and then disregarded for sentencing purposes. He alleged that he had rights to appeal his DUI conviction, the decision on post-conviction relief, and the sentencing, but he lost those rights because his attorneys failed to appeal. He claimed that his attorneys’ negligence causеd him to serve a longer time in prison and triggered a revocation of his federal probation, all of which resulted in debt, lost income, lost consortium, and depression.2 He alleged that his post-conviction relief petition was badly handled as well, though he did not sue the lawyer who handled it.
The public defenders moved under
Judge Moran issued another written decision in which she again dismissed Foondle‘s claims with prejudice pursuant to
Foondle argues on appeal that the superior court erred in three ways in dismissing his malpractice complaint: 1) it misapplied public policy; 2) it unconstitutionally deprived him of due process and access tо the courts by deciding the case short of trial; and 3) it should not have awarded attorney‘s fees to the public defenders as prevailing parties.
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review de novo an order dismissing a complaint for failure to state a claim.6 “The court must presume all factual allegations of the complaint to be true and [make] all reasonable inferences... in favor of the non-moving party.”7 We affirm the dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim оnly if “it appears beyond doubt” that the plaintiff “can prove no set of facts which would entitle [him] to relief.”8 Whether the right to due process has been violated “is a question of law to which we apply our independent judgment.”9 We review “a trial court‘s prevailing party determination for abuse of discretion.”10
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Superior Court Did Not Err When It Relied On Shaw And Howarth To Dismiss Foondle‘s Malpractice Claims.
We have recognized significant public policy constraints on the ability of persons convicted of crimes to recover from their criminal defense attorneys for professional malpractice, observing that “civil recovery should not be a tool for shifting an individual‘s responsibility for the individual‘s criminal acts.”11 We held in Shaw v. State, Department of Administration that “if plaintiffs engaged in the criminal conduct they are accused of, then they alone should bear full responsibility for the consequences of their acts, including imprisonment. Any subsеquent negligent conduct by a plaintiff‘s attorney is superseded by the greater culpability of the plaintiff‘s criminal conduct.”12
We also held in Shaw that the plaintiff‘s “actual innocence” is critical to his malpractice claim.13 Other courts have recognized that “[t]he rationale for requiring proof of actual innocence is to eliminate the possibility that someone who has been found guilty of a crime would profit from his crimi-
We held in Shaw that the burden of proof on this element is with the attorney-defendant, who must raise actual guilt as an affirmative defense and prove it by a preponderance of the evidence.16 In this case, the public defenders’ motion to dismiss properly raised the affirmative dеfense that Foondle was actually guilty of misdemeanor DUI.17
The superior court granted the motion to dismiss on that basis. The superior court noted, correctly, that while Foondle “successfully challenged the categorization of [his DUI] conviction as a felony..., the facts of his conduct underlying the DUI charge - whether it be felony or misdemeanor DUI - remain the same: that plaintiff Foondle had committed the criminal conduct of driving under the influence.” Foondle “stood accused and convicted of the essential elements of DUI under
Our decision in this case is guided by our decision in Howarth v. State, Public Defender Agency.18 The plaintiff in Howarth had pleaded nolo contendere to first degree sexual assault and was sentenced to ten years in prison; seven years later he was allowed to withdraw his plea after a court found that his public defender had counseled him inadequately about certain evidence.19 Pending retrial, he pleaded nolo contendere to secоnd degree sexual assault on the prosecution‘s agreement that it would seek no more than a six-year sentence; the plaintiff was immediately released as a result, having already served nearly seven years.20 He sued the public defender for malpractice, contending that he spent more time in prison than he would have if his lawyer had not been negligent. But we affirmed the superior court‘s grant of summary judgment to the public defender, аnd our reasoning applies to this case as well.
Noting that the plaintiff was precluded from denying that he committed sexual assault because “the conviction stands,” we nonetheless assumed for purposes of argument “that if his attorney had not been negligent his sentence would have been four years and that because of the attorney‘s negligence the sentence was seven years.”21 Still, under Shaw, the plaintiff‘s “intentional criminal conduct is a lеgal cause of the entire period of his imprisonment. [The plaintiff] has no redress against his attorney because [his] conduct was intentional and in violation of the criminal law, whereas his attorney‘s was merely negligent.”22 Quoting Shaw, we again held that “subsequent negligent conduct by a plaintiff‘s attorney is superseded by the greater culpability of the plaintiff‘s criminal conduct.”23
B. The Suрerior Court Did Not Err When It Relied On Foondle‘s Conviction For Misdemeanor DUI To Dismiss His Malpractice Claims.
Foondle makes two arguments in support of a contention that the superior court erred in relying on his DUI conviction to dismiss his malpractice claims. First, he argues that the conviction suffered from a fatal jurisdictional defect - the inconsistency between the grand jury‘s indictment for felony DUI and his ultimate conviction and sentencing for misdemeanor DUI. But а conviction for misdemeanor DUI does not signal a jurisdictional flaw, because misdemeanor DUI under
Second, Foondle argues that the superior court should not hаve given collateral estoppel effect to his DUI conviction because he lacked the opportunity to appeal it.29 He acknowledges that he had the right
C. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Its Award Of Attorney‘s Fees To The Public Defenders As Prevailing Parties.
Foondle identifies one of the issues on appeal as whether the superior court abused its discretion “as to the amount of the award” of costs and attorney‘s fees to the public defenders. His brief does not explain why the amount was erroneous, however; it contends only that the public defendеrs should not have been deemed the prevailing
V. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
