Case Information
*1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 44991
GILBERTO GARZA JR., )
) Petitioner-Appellant, ) Boise, September 2017 Term
) v. ) 2017 Opinion No. 112
) STATE OF IDAHO, ) Filed: November 6, 2017
) Respondent. ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk
) Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Ada County. Hon. Jason D. Scott, District Judge.
District court order dismissing petitions for post-conviction relief, affirmed.
Eric D. Fredericksen, Idaho State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant. Maya P. Waldron, Deputy State Appellate Public Defender argued.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Kale D. Gans, Deputy Attorney General argued.
_________________________________
BURDICK, Chief Justice.
Gilberto Garza, Jr., appeals the Ada County district court’s order dismissing his petitions for post-conviction relief. Garza signed two plea agreements relating to charges of aggravated assault and possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute. As part of his plea agreements Garza waived his right to appeal. Despite the waivers, Garza instructed his attorney to appeal. Garza’s attorney declined to file the appeals, citing the waivers of appeal in the plea agreements. Garza then filed two petitions for post-conviction relief, alleging his counsel was ineffective for failing to appeal. The district court dismissed Garza’s petitions concluding Garza’s counsel was not ineffective in failing to appeal. The Court of Appeals agreed and affirmed. We granted Garza’s timely petition for review and affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This appeal involves two underlying convictions and two corresponding petitions for post-conviction relief. [1] On January 23, 2015, Garza entered an Alford plea to aggravated assault (assault case), and on February 24, 2015, he pleaded guilty to possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver (possession case). The plea agreements bound the district court to sentence Garza to five years in prison for the assault case (two years fixed, three indeterminate), and another five years in prison for the possession case (one year fixed, four indeterminate). The sentences were to run consecutively, along with another prison sentence previously imposed on Garza. The district court accepted the plea agreements and imposed sentence in accordance with them on the same day Garza entered the possession plea. In both binding Idaho Criminal Rule 11(f)(1)(c) plea agreements, Garza waived his right to appeal, and waived his right to request relief pursuant to Idaho Criminal Rule 35. The court acknowledged that Garza had waived his right to appeal, but advised Garza of his appeal rights anyway. Garza did not appeal the convictions or sentences in the underlying cases.
Approximately four months later, Garza filed a petition for post-conviction relief in each case, asserting among other things that his trial attorney was ineffective for not filing notices of appeal. Garza stated in his affidavit submitted in the possession case that he asked his attorney to appeal, and in his affidavit submitted in his assault case that his attorney failed to appeal despite numerous phone calls and letters from Garza. Garza’s former attorney stated in an affidavit that he did not file an appeal because Garza “received the sentence(s) he bargained for in his [plea] agreement” and “an appeal was problematic because [Garza] waived his right to appeal in his Rule 11 agreements.”
The court appointed an attorney for Garza and issued a notice of intent to dismiss all of Garza’s claims except for his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. After both parties responded to the notice, the court dismissed all post-conviction claims except for the ineffective assistance of counsel claim regarding the failure to file an appeal. The parties then filed cross- motions for summary adjudication on Garza’s remaining claim for post-conviction relief, where Garza sought a reopening of the appeals period in the underlying criminal cases on the basis of *3 ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court dismissed Garza’s petitions, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. We granted Garza’s timely petition for review.
II. ISSUE ON APPEAL
1. Was Garza’s attorney ineffective when he did not file an appeal after Garza requested it even
though Garza had waived his right to appeal as part of a Rule 11 plea agreement?
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When addressing a petition for review, this Court will give “serious consideration to the
views of the Court of Appeals, but directly reviews the decision of the lower court.”
State v.
Schall
,
IV. ANALYSIS
A criminal defendant is permitted to waive his right to appeal as part of a plea agreement.
State v. Murphy
,
This Court has not yet decided whether counsel is ineffective if counsel denies his client’s request to file an appeal when the client waived the right to appeal in a binding Idaho Criminal Rule 11 plea agreement. Garza argues that the district court erred in requiring him to show, rather than presuming, his counsel was deficient and that Garza was prejudiced when his attorney declined to file an appeal in light of the waiver. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Garza’s petitions for post-conviction relief.
Criminal defendants have a Sixth Amendment right to “reasonably effective” legal
assistance.
Roe v. Flores-Ortega
,
Neither the United States Supreme Court nor this Court have decided whether an attorney has provided ineffective assistance of counsel if the attorney declines to file an appeal after a defendant has requested it, when the defendant has waived the right to appeal as part of a plea agreement. There is a federal circuit split regarding the issue, which involves differing interpretations of the United State Supreme Court’s decision in Flores-Ortega . The Flores- Ortega case did not involve an appeal waiver, but rather dealt with whether an attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel when she failed to appeal because it was unclear if her client wanted to appeal. See Flores-Ortega , 528 U.S. at 475. The Court held “when counsel’s constitutionally deficient performance deprives a defendant of an appeal that he otherwise would have taken, the defendant has made out a successful ineffective assistance of counsel claim entitling him to an appeal.” at 484.
A majority of federal circuit courts have interpreted to apply even in
situations where the defendant has validly waived his right to appeal. Those circuits hold that
*5
attorneys are ineffective when they do not file an appeal after the clients requested it, regardless
of whether the defendants had waived their rights.
See Campbell v. United States
,
Two federal circuit courts and a federal district court in an undecided circuit follow the
minority approach and hold that does not require an attorney be presumed
ineffective for failing to appeal upon request when there has been a waiver of the right to appeal.
See Nunez v. United States
, 546 F.3d 450, 456 (7th Cir. 2008),
vacated on other grounds by
Nunez v. United States
,
Though few other states have addressed the issue, the ones who have continue to apply
the
Strickland
test.
See Buettner v. State
,
In a recent case, this Court discussed
Flores-Ortega
in the context of an ineffective
assistance of counsel claim when counsel did not consult with a defendant about filing an appeal
after the defendant waived his right to appeal.
McKinney v. State
, 162 Idaho 286, __, 396 P.3d
1168, 1171–72 (2017). In
McKinney
, a defendant waived his right to appeal as part of a Rule 11
sentencing agreement, and then sought post-conviction relief on the ground that his attorney was
ineffective for not consulting with him about appealing his sentence, despite having waived his
appeal rights in the plea.
Id.
at __,
In this case, we decline to presume counsel ineffective for failing to appeal at Garza’s request when Garza has waived the right to appeal as part of a plea agreement. Rather, to show ineffective assistance of counsel, Garza must show deficient conduct and resulting prejudice. In so holding, we conclude that Flores-Ortega does not require counsel be presumed ineffective for failing to appeal at the client’s direction in situations where there has been a waiver of the right to appeal, as there was here.
The Court made clear that a presumption of prejudice applies in the context of an ineffectiveness claim because an attorney’s deficient performance deprives the defendant of his or her opportunity for an appellate proceeding. Notably, Flores- Ortega did not address whether this principle has any force, let alone controls, where the defendant has waived his right to appellate and collateral review.
Mabry
,
This approach is consistent with other areas of Idaho law. Idaho courts do not presume a defendant is prejudiced when an attorney fails to follow his client’s instruction to file a Rule 35 motion, despite the client having the right to do so. Hassett v. State , 127 Idaho 313, 316, 900 P.2d 221, 224 (Ct. App. 1995).
[T]o prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel an applicant . . . must show both that counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced the applicant. Where the alleged deficiency is counsel’s failure to file a . . . motion, a conclusion that the motion, if pursued, would not have been granted, is generally determinative of both prongs of the test. If the motion lacked merit and would have been denied, counsel ordinarily would not be deficient for failing to pursue it, and, concomitantly, the petitioner could not have been prejudiced by the want of its pursuit.
Id.
(quoting
Huck v. State
,
When considering whether an attorney’s failure to file or pursue a motion to suppress or strike evidence constitutes incompetent performance, the court is required to examine the probability of success of such a motion in order to determine whether counsel’s decision against pressing the motion was within the wide range of permissible discretion and sound trial strategy. In Carter v. State ,108 Idaho 788 , 794-795, 702 P.2d 826, 832-33 (1985), the Idaho Supreme Court held that counsel’s failure to move to suppress the defendant’s confession constituted ineffective assistance because it was obvious that the confession would have been suppressed. In Maxfield v. State , 108 Idaho 493, 501, 700 P.2d 115, 123 (Ct. App. 1985), we held that newly appointed counsel’s failure to renew a motion to suppress was not deficient, since previous counsel had been unsuccessful on the same motion and no new grounds existed. Because it was clear that the new motion would have been denied as well, counsel’s failure to make the motion *8 was not deficient. See also, Davis v. State ,116 Idaho 401 , 406,775 P.2d 1243 , 1248 (Ct. App. 1989), (counsel’s failure to timely file a motion to suppress evidence seized from defendant’s home was not deficient because defendant had failed to show that the items would have been suppressed); State v. Youngblood , 117 Idaho 160, 165, 786 P.2d 551, 556 (1990) (failure to move to suppress items seized was not error where items were obviously subject to plain view exception to exclusionary rule); State v. Walters , 120 Idaho 46, 56, 813 P.2d 857, 867 (1991) (failure of counsel to object to inadmissible opinion testimony was ineffective assistance.)
Huck
,
Moreover, a criminal defense attorney has a duty to the judicial system to exercise
professional judgment and not file frivolous litigation, “and an appeal in the teeth of a valid
waiver is frivolous.”
Nunez
,
Additionally, a plea agreement is a bilateral contract, to which both the State and
defendant are bound.
McKinney
, 162 Idaho at __, 396 P.3d at 1178. Once a defendant has
accepted the plea, he should be bound by the waiver therein.
Nunez
, 546 F.3d at 455. “Empty
promises are worthless promises; if defendants could retract their waivers . . . then they could not
obtain concessions by promising not to appeal.”
United States v. Wenger
,
In this case, we decline to presume Garza’s counsel ineffective when counsel failed to file an appeal at Garza’s request because of the appeal waiver. Rather, to show ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to appeal in light of the waiver, Garza needed to show both deficient performance and resulting prejudice. The district court concluded that Garza was unable to show any non-frivolous grounds for appeal, and therefore could not show prejudice. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Garza’s petitions for post-conviction relief.
V. CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Garza’s petitions for post-conviction relief. This Court does not presume counsel to be automatically ineffective when counsel declines to file an appeal in light of an appeal waiver. Rather, a defendant needs to show deficient performance and resulting prejudice to prove ineffective assistance of counsel. Because Garza cannot show such grounds, his petitions for post-conviction relief were properly dismissed by the district court, and the district court is affirmed.
Justices JONES, HORTON, BRODY and TROUT, Pro Tem, CONCUR.
Notes
[1] The convictions were based on two Idaho Criminal Rule 11 plea agreements that were part of a global agreement that included a third case and other unfiled charges.
[2] While the Ninth Circuit follows the majority approach, its language in
Sandoval-Lopez
seems to indicate it has
doubts about the policy considerations implicated under the majority approach. The court expressed that the
defendant’s appeal would likely have been dismissed or he would have lost, and it was likely wise for his attorney to
not file the appeal as it was in breach of the plea agreement.
Sandoval-Lopez
,
