We hold that appellate counsel is ineffective if counsel fails to provide the trial record establishing facts that support a valid claim raised in the appeal but unsupported by the record provided.
Factual and Procedural Background
On October 9, 1999 at approximately 11 or 11:30 pm, Robert “Kwan” Harris, age 32, and his friend James Common were outside their Anderson, Indiana apartment when they met two girls, “A” and “B,” who were walking home from a mall. Harris and Common invited the girls to talk with them, and the girls walked over to the two men. The girls told Harris and Common that they were both fifteen years old and attended Anderson High School. Harris and Common invited the girls to their apartment, and the girls agreed, thinking the men were seventeen or eighteen years old. Once in the apartment, Harris and Common told the girls that if the girls “wanted to stay there [the girls] had to have sex with them or [they] had to leave.” The girls testified that they consented to the sex because it was too far to walk to A’s house and they “would of got in trouble” had they returned to B’s grandmother’s house that late at night.
A and Harris first went to Harris’s bedroom. Shortly after they had begun sexual intercourse, Common and B joined them and had sex on the same bed.] When the four had finished, all returned to the living room, but after “about five minutes,” the foursome “switched,” and Harris took B back to his bed and had intercourse with her while Common and A remained in the living room to have sex.
The girls spent the night at the apartment and left the next morning. A’s mother and B’s grandmother found the girls at the mall that morning. The girls eventually confessed that they had been “at two guy’s house” the night before. B’s grandmother called the police, and both girls went to Saint John’s Hospital where rape kit samples were taken. Both girls identified Harris’s photo to Detective Benson of the Anderson Police Department as one of the men with whom they had had
At the time of Harris’s trial, Indiana Code section 35 — 50—1—2(c) provided that
the total of the consecutive terms of imprisonment ... to which the defendant is sentenced for felony convictions arising out of an episode of criminal conduct shall not exceed the presumptive [now advisory] sentence for a felony which is one (1) class of felony higher than the most serious of the felonies for which the person has been convicted.
Subsection (b) defines an “episode of criminal conduct” as “offenses or a connected series of offenses that are closely related in time, place, and circumstance.” This limitation does not prohibit consecutive sentences, but it does limit the length of the sum- of the consecutive sentences.
Reed v. State,
On direct appeal Harris challenged only the length of his aggregate sentence.
1
Harris argued that the trial court’s sentence of forty years violated Indiana Code section 35-50-l-2(c) because his two Class B felonies did not involve “crimes of violence”
2
and took place in a single “episode of criminal conduct” for which the presumptive (now advisory) thirty years sentence for a Class A felony was the maximum allowed by the episode statute.
Harris v. State,
On October 3, 2001, Harris filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief. On April 18, 2005, Harris, through appointed counsel, filed a petition for post-conviction relief, alleging that appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance when he did not include the trial transcript as part of the appellate record. Harris pointed out that only the trial transcript included the testimony of the two victims. That testimony was the only source of the facts that only five minutes passed between the two encounters, both took place in the same bed in the same apartment, and both were enticed by the same dialogue. Harris contended that the victims’ testimony established that two crimes took place in a single “episode of criminal conduct” and his counsel was ineffective for failing to establish the facts necessary to reach this conclusion. After a hearing the post-conviction court denied relief, and Harris appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed the post-conviction court’s finding that counsel was not ineffective.
Harris v. State,
I. Res Judicata
The State first contends that because Harris’s sentence was reviewed on direct appeal and his crimes were held to be lawful under the episode statute the issue is res judicata. We do not agree. In
Bieghler v. State,
II. Ineffective Assistance of Appellate Counsel
In reviewing claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, we use the same standard applied to ineffective assistance of trial counsel claims.
Taylor v. State,
A. Deficient Performance
Harris contends that his appellate counsel was ineffective in making his claim of sentencing error because he failed to include the trial transcript. In
Bieghler,
we identified three categories of appellate counsel ineffectiveness claims.
At post-conviction Harris’s appellate counsel testified that he did not read the record of the trial proceedings that preceded Harris’s pleading guilty because
It wasn’t necessary. [Harris] was pleading guilty based on the charged [sic] against him and the factual basis from the prosecutor. If there’s anything addition [sic] that had any bearing on his conduct, he had the opportunity to present that at his guilty hearing.
From this testimony it is difficult to conclude that strategy was employed in the decision to omit the transcript. Harris’s appeal was based on a claim that required evidence that the two crimes occurred in a series of “closely related events.” The trial transcript contained that evidence and was the only source of evidence to support the factual predicate of the claim Harris asserted on appeal. Failure to include the transcript under these circumstances falls below prevailing professional norms and therefore satisfies the first prong of Strickland.
B. Prejudice
On direct appeal Harris’s only contention was that the trial court erred in sentencing him to a term longer than the presumptive thirty years for a Class A felony.
Harris,
Here, our review is hampered by the fact that the evidence admitted at the trial prior to Harris’ [sic] guilty pleas has not been included in the record presented to this court. On the basis of the record before us, neither of Harris’s acts of sexual misconduct was a necessary prerequisite for the other. Indeed, although Harris had sexual intercourse with each of the girls on the same evening and in the same apartment, there was no other connection between the events such that a complete account of one cannot be given without referring to the details of the other.
Id.
In affirming Harris’s denial of post-conviction relief, the Court of Appeals reasoned that because on direct appeal the court said, “the acts of sexual intercourse involve separate victims and separate acts” and was therefore “more than one episode of criminal conduct,” the court would have reached the same conclusion even if the trial transcript was part of the record.
Id.; Harris,
A second formulation of the test of a single episode is also problematic. In
Tedlock v. State,
[T]his is a bit of an overstatement. We are of the view that although the ability to recount each charge without referring to the other can provide additional guidance on the question of whether a defendant’s conduct constitutes an episode of criminal conduct, it is not a critical ingredient in resolving the question. Rather, the statute speaks in less absolute terms: “a connected series of offenses that are closely connected in time, place, and circumstance.”
Reed,
In Harris’s case the testimony at trial prior to the guilty pleas revealed that Harris’s crimes occurred after Harris and Common met the two victims together and took them both to the same apartment. The crimes were committed in the same
Harris’s appellate counsel failed to include the transcript of the trial and instead relied in his brief on the prosecutor’s recitation of the factual basis for the charge, which stated:
More specifically, Your Honor, and very simply put, Mr. Harris and an individual named James Common met these two girls one night. They ended up in the apartment of Robert Harris and at some point during the proceedings inside the apartment at various times, Mr. Harris had sexual intercourse with both [A] and [B].
The trial transcript showed that “Harris and his friend were able to get the girls consent to their sexual advances because the girls wanted a place to stay for the night.” Testimony from B showed that during this chain of events and “about five minutes” after Harris had sex with A, the foursome “switched” and Harris took B back to his room where the two had sex in the same bed which the four had just used. This testimony, available only in the transcript, should have caused the Court of Appeals to hold that Harris’s crimes were a single criminal episode. The Court of Appeals observed that it was “hampered” by lack of the record and that its decision was made “on the basis of the record before” them. There is a reasonable probability that the record would have caused either the Court of Appeals or this Court to rule that the record established a single episode. In light of this record we so hold today. Accordingly, Harris’s appellate counsel was ineffective.
Conclusion
Transfer is granted and the judgment of the post-conviction court is reversed. Harris’s sentence is revised to thirty years, which is the maximum permitted by
Notes
. Harris pleaded guilty in open court without any agreement as to the sentence that would be imposed. He therefore was free to challenge the sentence on appeal, unlike the defendant in
Lee v. State,
. Indiana Code section 35-50-l-2(a) provides a list of those crimes that are "crimes of violence” for this purpose. It includes sexual misconduct with a minor as a Class A felony under IC 35-42-4-9(a)(2) or a Class B felony under IC 35-42-4-9(b)(2), both of which require aggravating circumstances such as the use of force. The definition does not include section 9(a)(1) under which Harris was charged.
. See
Ballard v. State,
