Gеorge ALFORD and Lise Marie Alford, a/k/a Lise Geronimo, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 82-4228
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
July 15, 1983
JUDGMENT DISMISSING COUNTS 5 THROUGH 9 REVERSED.
Frank J. Petrella, Atlanta, Ga., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Glen H. Davidson, Oxford, Miss., Alfred E. Moreton, III, Asst. U.S. Atty., for defendant-appellee.
Before WISDOM, TATE and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges.
TATE, Circuit Judge:
Contending that their guilty pleas were involuntary because of misadvice by retained defense counsel, George and Lise Alford petitioned, by pro se motions following their incarceration, to have their respective seventeen and seven year sentences vacated and to withdraw their pleas. The matter was set for hearing by the district court, and the Alfords advised thereof three weeks in advance, sought to obtain counsel to represent them at the hearing. An attorney agreed to accept their case, but concluded that additional time would be necessary to prepare adequately. The attorney‘s request for a two week continuance of the hearing, to which the government had no objection, was denied, and the hearing held
I.
On March 18, 1981, Greenville, Mississippi police arrested George and Lise Alford, on various serious federal charges. Shortly thereafter, the Alfords retained a respected Greenville law firm, to defend them for a fee of $17,500. On May 15, 1981, a few days before a motion to suppress hearing was to be held in federal district court, and after extended consultation with their counsel, the Alfords each decided to enter guilty pleas, pursuant to a written plea agreement, to two of the five (Lise) and six (George) counts with which each had been respectively charged in the original federal indictment. On June 10, 1981, Lise Alford received a sentence of seven years, and George Alford a sentence of seventeen years.
Subsequent to their incarceration, the Alfords sought to withdraw their guilty pleas, alleging serious misfeasance on the part of the Greenville firm in the handling of their case. Principally, the Alfords contend that these lawyers had convinced them (i) that they had almost no chance of prevailing at trial on charges for which each might be sentenced to more than fifty years imprisonment and fined more than $100,000, and (ii) that a sub rosa plea bargain had been struck whereby Lise was assured of probation and George a sentence of about seven years, but only if both pled guilty prior to the motion to suppress hearing scheduled a few days later, and only if both denied the existence of such an agreement in the course of their
The Alfords’ efforts to obtain redress pro se began toward the end of September 1981. A motion for leavе to proceed in forma pauperis, an affidavit of poverty, and a motion to vacate sentence pursuant to
Meanwhile, on November 18th, a motion to withdraw the guilty plea was filed, based on the factual allegations of the previous motions, and on November 23rd a discovery motion was filed whereby the Alfords sought all of their attorneys’ files and notes pertaining to the plea bargain in particular and their case in general.3 The Alfords then moved for transcripts and the record of the proceedings below at government expense, in December. This was granted in part (the plea and sentencing proceedings were transcribed and furnished to George Alford). Meanwhile, George Alford prepared a traverse to the government‘s response, to which various affidavits (including three from relatives of Lise Alford representing that the affiant had been told by the Greenville law partners that Lise would receive probation, and George a sentence of approximately seven years) and documents (including letters purportedly written by George Alford to relatives in late May 1981, recounting a similar bargain) were appended. The Alfords subsequently sought reconsideration of the partial denial of their discovery requests, and on February 1, 1982, the district court ordered a copy of the remaining portion of the record (except for certain untranscribed hearings held before a magistrate, thought to be irrelevant) be provided.
On March 22nd, the Alfords made an additional request for discovery, to which the district court responded on May 19th, with an order setting an evidentiary hearing for June 9th:
Upon consideration of the motions of petitioners, George Edward and Lise Marie Alford, the court is of the opinion that the issues to be decided in the motion to vacate sentence under
28 USC § 2255 , and to withdraw guilty plea under Rule 32(d), F.R.Crim.P., may best be resolved after evidentiary hearing.4
At the hearing, the Alfords attempted to show, primarily by oral examination of their former trial counsel, the Greenville attorneys, and their own testimony, that despite the payment of a substantial fee, the retained Greenville lawyers performed poorly. The Alfords claimed that their counsel made only meager efforts to investigate the facts of their case, inadequately researched potential defense strategies, exaggerated the Alfords’ potential exposure to fines and imprisonment following a trial (if held), and finally deceived them with promises of probation for Lise Alford, and a moderate sentence for Geоrge Alford to induce them to plead guilty.
The Greenville law-partners vigorously denied these claims, maintaining that no pressure was placed on the Alfords to plead guilty, that the case had been exhaustively prepared and the firm ready for trial, that the firm enjoyed trying cases and would have tried this one well, that an unusually great number of hours had been spent on preparing the case and conferring with the clients, that George Alford was among the brightest clients they had ever had and had participated significantly in discussions of
However, this testimony was at least somewhat undercut by testimony of the Greenville law partners’ secretary who was called by the government to refute the Alfords’ contentions, but who on her cross-examination by Alford admitted that she recalled an occasion when visiting the Alfords in jail, they were quite excited and began telling her that they thought it a “very good possibility that Mrs. Alford would get probation,” and that they said one of the law-partners had told them that. (However, on re-direct examination by the government, this somewhat reluctant witness wаs unable to recall whether this visit was before or after the Alfords had pleaded guilty.6)
The Dyers further testified that they were careful to impress on the Alfords that sentencing was a matter wholly within the trial court‘s discretion and one in which neither prosecutor nor defense counsel could take part.7
After considering the hearing testimony and the record, the district court denied the Alfords’ petitions on the merits. The Alfords appeal, urging that the trial court should have granted the requested two weeks continuance to allow adequate time for retained counsel to prepare for the hearing, or in the alternative that the court ought to have appointed counsel (and permitted a period for preparation) pursuant to Rule 8(c).
II
The general rule is that the granting or denial of a motion for a continuance is a decision within the discretion of the trial judge. Rhodes v. Amarillo Hospital District, 654 F.2d 1148, 1153 (5th Cir.1981). A reversal is warranted only where that discretion has been abused. Unger v. Sarafite, 376 U.S. 575, 589, 84 S.Ct. 841, 849, 11 L.Ed.2d 921 (1964); Spinkellink v. Wainwright, 578 F.2d 582, 590-91, n. 11 (5th Cir.1978), cert. denied, 440 U.S. 976, 99 S.Ct. 1548, 59 L.Ed.2d 796 (1979). However, there is no mechanical test for determining whether a continuance should be granted, and the circumstances of each case must be carefully examined, especially the reasons presented to the trial judge at the time the request is denied. Unger v. Sarafite, supra, 376 U.S. at 589, 84 S.Ct. at 850. Thus, the denial of a request for a continuance to secure counsel may sometimes be justified even when the appellant‘s opportunity to
Nevertheless, “a myopic insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay can render the right to defend with counsel an empty formality.” Unger v. Sarafite, supra, 376 U.S. at 589, 84 S.Ct. at 849. As reiterated in Linton v. Perini, 656 F.2d 207, 209 (6th Cir.1981), an “essential element” of the constitutional “right to assistance of counsel is that a defendant must be afforded a reasonable opportunity to secure counsel of his own choosing.” There, state convictions on serious felony charges were reversed on federal habeas review, because the trial court had refused to permit a continuance of two or three weeks to allow time for retained counsel‘s adequate preparation of the case, when the trial was set for ten days after arraignment, as a consequence, defendant had been represented at the trial by an attorney appointed shortly before the trial who himself claimed lack of time to prepare a defense. See also United States v. 9.19 Acres of Land, 416 F.2d 1244, 1245 (6th Cir.1969) (an abuse of trial court discretion to refuse a continuance of trial that was to occur a week later, sought in order to permit a corporation рresident to retain counsel, where president first learned at that time he could not represent his corporation pro se in long pending litigation).
Under these principles, once the district court has determined that an evidentiary hearing is necessary to determine issues raised by a § 2255 petition, a petitioner desiring the assistance of his retained counsel to present his case at such a hearing is entitled a fair opportunity to obtain the services at the hearing of such counsel, if retained without delay (as here), including a reasonable (albeit short) period of time for counsel to prepare adequately for the trial.
An indigent prisoner who is ordered to receive an evidentiary hearing upon his § 2255 petition is entitled to representation by appointed counsel at the hearing. Rule 8(c),
III
In the present case, the court articulated no reason for its decision to deny attorney Petrella‘s unopposed request for a two week continuance to permit adequate time for preparation, nor for the court‘s failure to rule on the issue of the Alfords’ motions for
While the public has an interest in the prompt and efficient administration of justice, and the trial court in the management and control of its own docket, these interests must be weighed in relation to the petitioner‘s need for a fair hearing.9 In the present case, no articulated or presently advanced reason supports the denial of a brief continuance to enable the Alfords to be represented by their attorney at an evidentiary hearing instead of being forced to conduct the trial pro se as lay persons. On the other hand, many reasons weigh in favor of concluding that their request for a brief continuance was not unreasonable and was reasonably necessary to assure a fair trial of their contentions.
These include: (a) the Alfords’ ability to find, retain, and confer with counsel was considerably constrained by their incarceration (in separate facilities making concerted efforts and decisions more difficult)—this exacerbated by both being moved, pursuant to court ordered writs of habeas corpus ad testificandum, preparatory to the hearing, a holiday weekend and poor prison mail service; (b) the period of time between the court‘s decision to hold an evidentiary hearing and its scheduled date was brief (only three weeks); (c) the Alfords had no counsel at any time during the course of their petition; (d) the Alfords made efforts to obtain counsel as soon as they received notice of the court‘s decision to hold a hearing; (e) the Alfords promptly advised the court of their neеd and desire for a continuance of the hearing date; (f) the continuance was unopposed by the United States Attorney; (g) the continuance was for a short two-week period, and (h) was for the legitimate purpose of permitting counsel adequate time to prepare; (i) no previous continuances had been sought or granted in the case; (j) the case was one in which a lawyer‘s skills were likely to be crucial—the case was, though narrow, a difficult one to prove even if wholly meritorious (turning on the adverse examination of experienced criminal trial attorneys, and attempting to corroborate the Alfords’ allegations with the testimony of witnesses with little direct knowledge of the whole picture, in particular, the Greenville law-firm‘s secretary, the relatives, the letter recipients, and the cellmates, to show by circumstantial evidence and inference that promises or predictions of leniency were made to the Alfords by the Greenville lawyers prior to the pleas which could have formed a part of the bargain); (k) there was no indication that the delay sought was in any sense a dilatory tactic; (l) although perhaps hypothetically possible, in the real world it was pragmatically impossible for the Alfords from behind prison walls to find and retain another attorney to prepare for the hearing scheduled for hearing and actually held on June 9th, after their timely prospectively retained lawyer was forced to withdraw on June 2 for lack of time to prepare adequately when the district court denied his unopposed request for a continuance for two weeks; and (m)
Nor in the context of § 2255 proceeding is it appropriate to charge the Alfords with delay in failing to retain and pay counsel to represent them at an evidentiary hearing if one was ultimately ordered, given the high pre-hearing mortality rate of § 2255 petitions and prеtermitting financial ability and the feasibility of doing so on a “maybe.” The Rules promulgated for § 2255 (as well as § 2254) proceedings are drafted with the substantial, if not predominant, number of pro se petitioners uniquely in mind and with the intention of therefore keeping the trial judge, not the parties, in control of the scope, nature, incidents, and pace of the proceedings. An evidentiary hearing is not an inevitable, or even necessarily a normal incident of §§ 2254 and 2255 proceedings, which are, whenever justly possible, decided at the earliest possible stage of the proceedings: on the record below by summary dismissal, upon motion for dismissal by the respondent, by dismissal, following the filing of petition and answer, or upon consideration of pleadings and an expanded record. See Advisory Committee Note for
Accordingly, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion by refusing to grant a two week continuance so that retained counsel Petrella could adequately prepare the Alfords’ case. In view of this conclusion, we need not reach the Alfords’ alternate contention that the trial court erred by failing to appoint counsel as indigents, upon the showing made. We vacate the order dismissing their petitions and motion on the merits, and we remand for further proceedings consistent with the views stated above.
VACATED and REMANDED.
TATE
Circuit Judge
GARWOOD, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
I cannot agree with the majority‘s holding that a wholly competent, nonindigent petitioner seeking section 2255 or similar post-convictiоn relief can intentionally delay attempts to secure counsel until the court orders an evidentiary hearing on his petition. Here attorney Petrella, who represented the Alfords so capably on this appeal, had been contacted by them at some unspecified time before the district court had ordered a hearing. Apparently, Petrella was willing to take the case, but it was decided not to actually retain him until the district court ruled whether to have an evidentiary hearing on the petition. When on June 1, 1982 George Alford was finally able to tell Petrella that the trial court had indeed ordered such a hearing and had set it for June 9, Petrella needed a two-week cоntinuance to get ready. Had he been retained when first contacted, entered his appearance, and done minimal preparation, he doubtless would have received notice of the setting by May 20 (when George Alford did) and would have been ready for trial on June 9.* Because Petrella‘s retention was
It will not do to say that Petrella‘s services might not have been needed, because the district court might have disposed of the petition without an evidentiary hearing. It is rare indeed that suсh petitions are granted without an evidentiary hearing, and if they are it will usually be because of the very sort of legal error that counsel is so much more likely than a lay person to be able to discover and articulate to the court. On the other hand, it is obvious that had there been a denial of the petition without an evidentiary hearing, Petrella would have been retained to appeal such a denial, just as he was retained for the present appeal.
The early retention of counsel for post-conviction relief proceedings should be encouraged. Counsel, we may assume, will advise the prospective petitioner of the futility of filing or pursuing petitions or grounds wholly lacking in merit, and at the same time will render it more likely that valid complaints are brought to the attention of the courts in a clear and understandable manner. The early presence of counsel will doubtless even cause an occasional petition to be properly granted without the necessity of an evidentiary hearing, and will likely prevent a greater number of others from being wrongfully denied without such a hearing. Moreover, even if there is to be an evidentiary hearing, the earlier counsel has come into the case, the less likelihood there is of wasted motion, delayed focusing on the real issues to be resolved, and unnecessary continuancеs.
The advantages of having counsel present in the early stages of post-conviction proceedings are also applicable to indigent petitioners, though counsel is usually not appointed for them until a hearing is ordered. The difference, of course, is that in such cases the cost of counsel is borne by the public, or the bar, and does not serve as an economic incentive to the petitioner to screen out frivolous petitions or claims. There is no reason to remove such incentive, or place such costs on the public, for nonindigent petitioners. Further, the more sophisticated legal “screening,” which the indigent nonlawyer petitioner wоuld in any event be unable to effectively do pro se, is done by the court system, law clerks, magistrates, and judges. But there is no reason for these officials to do this service, at public expense, for those who can afford counsel.
In sum, for those who can afford counsel, if they seriously believe that theirs is a case worth taking to federal court, then they should realize that it is necessarily also one worth retaining counsel for, to advise them whether or in what respects the case has arguable merit or chance of success and, if it does, to file it for them and pursue it to a proper conclusion.
On this single occasion, there is certainly no lasting significant harm in allowing the Alfоrds a third bite at the apple.** My main concern is with the general rule laid down by the majority, that a competent, financially able petitioner for post-conviction relief can intentionally delay retaining counsel until an evidentiary hearing on the petition is ordered. Though even this is not a rule of overriding significance, it never-
GARWOOD
Circuit Judge
Notes
(b) Initial consideration by judge. The motion, together with all the files, records, transcripts, and correspondence relating to the judgment under attack, shall be examined promptly by the judge to whom it is assigned. If it plainly appears from the face of the mоtion and any annexed exhibits and the prior proceedings in the case that the movant is not entitled to relief in the district court, the judge shall make an order for its summary dismissal and cause the movant to be notified. Otherwise, the judge shall order the United States Attorney to file an answer or other pleading within the period of time fixed by the court or to take such other action as the judge deems appropriate.
Evidentiary Hearing
(a) Determination by court. If the motion has not been dismissed at a previous stage in the proceeding, the judge, after the answer is filed and any transcripts, or records of prior court actions in the matter are in his possession, shall, upon a review of those proceedings and of the expanded record, if any, determine whether an evidentiary hearing is required. If it appears that an evidentiary hearing is not required, the judge shall make such disposition of the motion as justice dictates.
* * * * * *
(c) Appointment of counsel; time for hearing. If an evidentiary hearing is required, the judge shall appoint counsel for a movant who qualifies for the appointment of counsel under
(g) Discretionary appointments.—Any person subject to revocation of parole, in custody as a material witness, or seeking relief under section 2241, 2254, or 2255 of title 28 or section 4245 of title 18 may be furnished representation pursuant to the plan whenever the United States magistrate or the court determines that the interests of justicе so require and such person is financially unable to obtain representation. Payment for such representation may be as provided in subsections (d) and (e).
This case will be looked upon by the law abiding public as well as the drug culture as a yard stick by which all future drug cases in this district will be measured.
These defendants need to be severely punished for their criminal acts. And the Court needs to send a message to those who would be predisposed to commit such acts that they will be harshly dealt with by this Court upon conviction.
We feel as though we would be remiss in our responsibilities if we did not urge upon the Court that the maximum sentence, both imprisonment and fines be imposed on each of these defendants.
