IN RE ALFRED DEWAYNE BROWN, RELATOR
No. 19-0877
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
December 18, 2020
Argued October 29, 2020
JUSTICE GUZMAN
ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
JUSTICE GUZMAN
Alfred Dewayne Brown was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death because the prosecuting attorney withheld and suppressed
We conditionally grant Brown‘s petition for writ of mandamus challenging the Comptroller‘s eligibility determination. The Tim Cole Act imposes a “purely ministerial” duty on the Comptroller to determine a claimant‘s eligibility for wrongful-imprisonment compensation based “only” on the “the[] face” of “verified copies” of the required documents.3 The district court‘s amended dismissal order appears regular on its face and contains all the judicial determinations required for compensation under the Act. The Comptroller‘s purely ministerial duty to determine eligibility does not include looking behind the verified documents to review the district court‘s factual and legal conclusions de novo.
I. Background
In 2005, Brown was convicted of capital murder. In a post-conviction habeas petition to set aside his conviction and death sentence, Brown alleged the prosecutor failed to disclose exculpatory evidence as required by Brady v. Maryland.4 That allegation was substantiated when the investigating police officer fortuitously discovered the prosecutor‘s suppression of phone records confirming Brown‘s alibi. Based on this discovery, the State conceded a new trial was required. In November 2014, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals vacated Brown‘s conviction and ordered a new trial because the “State withheld evidence that was both favorable and material to [Brown]‘s case in violation of Brady.”5
The State declined to retry Brown at that time and instead filed a motion to dismiss the capital-murder indictment on the basis that inculpating accomplice testimony could not be corroborated. After serving more than twelve years behind bars, including nearly ten on death row, Brown became a free man in June 2015 when the district court granted the State‘s dismissal motion. The Comptroller denied Brown‘s first application for wrongful-incarceration compensation under the Tim Cole Act because habeas relief was not based on his actual innocence of the crime. The Comptroller also denied Brown‘s application to cure the defect, so Brown filed suit in federal court for civil-rights violations.6
In the meantime, the Harris County District Attorney appointed a special
Concurring with the special prosecutor‘s report, the District Attorney filed an amended motion to dismiss in March 2019, stating (1) no credible evidence inculpates Brown in the capital murder crime for which he was convicted and sentenced to death, and (2) he “is actually innocent” of that crime. Brown filed a brief supporting the amended motion, but the Houston Police Officers Union, as amicus curiae, opposed it on the basis that the district court lacked jurisdiction to re-dismiss the criminal case against Brown nearly four years after the original dismissal. After holding two hearings on the matter, the district court granted the amended motion and issued the following order:
The Court WITHDRAWS its Order of Dismissal signed on June 8, 2015 in Cause No. 1035159, and substitutes the following in its stead:
For the reasons stated in the State‘s Amended Motion to Dismiss, filed with this Court on March 1, 2019, the Court ORDERS that the criminal action docketed in this Court as Cause No. 1035159 is DISMISSED due to Alfred Dewayne Brown‘s actual innocence.
The court‘s formal declaration of actual innocence became final when no appeal was taken.
With the amended dismissal order in hand, Brown timely filed his second application for compensation under the Tim Cole Act.8 Although Brown‘s application checked all the statutory boxes, including the requisite actual-innocence determination, the Comptroller denied the compensation claim with the following explanation:
It is not clear that the district court had jurisdiction to withdraw and reenter a dismissal, or enter a second dismissal in Mr. Brown‘s case. Consequently, the amended motion to dismiss and the order of dismissal do not clearly indicate on their face that Mr. Brown is entitled to compensation under [the Act].
When the Comptroller subsequently denied Brown‘s application to cure,9 Brown invoked this Court‘s exclusive, original mandamus jurisdiction, which is the only
II. Tim Cole Act
Under the Tim Cole Act, formerly known as the Texas Wrongful Imprisonment Act, “a wrongfully imprisoned person may seek compensation from the state for the period of wrongful imprisonment.”12 The Act provides three distinct methods of establishing eligibility for compensation, all of which require a determination of innocence in some form or fashion.13 Brown seeks compensation solely under Section 103.001(a)(2)(C), which requires that
- he “has served in whole or in part a sentence in prison under the laws of this state“;
- he “has been granted relief in accordance with a writ of habeas corpus“;
- “the state district court in which the charge against [him] was pending has entered an order dismissing the charge“; and
- “the district court‘s dismissal order is based on a motion to dismiss in which the state‘s attorney states that [i] no credible evidence exists that inculpates [Brown] and [ii] the state‘s attorney believes that [he] is actually innocent of the crime for which [he] was sentenced.”14
To make a claim for compensation under the Act, Brown had to timely file an application for compensation with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts and submit the following:
- “a verified copy of the . . . court order, motion to dismiss, and affidavit, as applicable, justifying the application for compensation“; and
-
“a statement provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and any county or municipality that incarcerated the person on whose imprisonment the claim is based in connection with the relevant sentence verifying the length of incarceration.”15
On receipt of an application for compensation, the statute charges the Comptroller with determining (1) “the eligibility of the claimant” from the face of the verified documents and (2) “the amount of compensation owed to an eligible claimant.”16 The Comptroller must make both determinations within 45 days and, if the claim is denied, state the reason for the denial.17 This mandamus proceeding concerns the Comptroller‘s determination that Brown is not eligible for compensation.
As to that matter, the Comptroller does not dispute that Brown timely filed the required documents, including the State attorney‘s and convicting court‘s affirmative declarations that Brown is actually innocent of the capital-murder charge for which he was sentenced. Nor is Brown‘s satisfaction of the actual-innocence standard at issue. Rather, the focus of dissension is the Comptroller‘s authority to reject the district court‘s determination that it had jurisdiction to amend the dismissal order to include a declaration that Brown is actually innocent. Whether or not the Comptroller is empowered to do so turns on the proper construction of the Tim Cole Act and its application to the undisputed facts. These are questions of law we review de novo,18 starting with Section 103.051(b-1) of the Tim Cole Act, which articulates the Comptroller‘s authority with respect to eligibility determinations:
In determining the eligibility of a claimant, the comptroller shall consider only the verified copies of documents filed under [Section 103.051(a)(2)]. If the filed documents do not clearly indicate on their face that the person is entitled to compensation under Section 103.001(a)(2), the comptroller shall deny the claim. The comptroller‘s duty to determine the eligibility of a claimant under this section is purely ministerial.19
Given the express statutory constraints on the Comptroller‘s eligibility determinations, the parties primarily join issue on his authority to look behind the verified documents to revisit the district court‘s jurisdictional findings. Secondarily, Brown argues that the Comptroller substantively erred in concluding the district court lacked jurisdiction to amend the dismissal order when the actual-innocence determination became legally and factually supportable.
III. Discussion
A.
The Comptroller contends that the district court‘s amended dismissal order is facially void (or at least ambiguous as to the court‘s jurisdiction) because it indicates
Based on the dates and sequence of events stated in the amended dismissal order, the Comptroller conducted an independent inquiry into the district court‘s jurisdiction to issue the actual-innocence dismissal order and concluded, contrary to the district court, that the court‘s general jurisdiction over the case had terminated by virtue of the prior dismissal order. In the Comptroller‘s view, Garcia v. Dial, in which the Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) held that trial courts have no jurisdiction to reinstate a criminal case after dismissal,20 controls the jurisdictional question, and the CCA‘s opinion in Curry v. Wilson, which holds that general jurisdiction may continue as to some matters even after dismissal,21 does not.
In contrapose, Brown asserts the Act means what it says: (1) the eligibility determination may be based “only” on the verified documents filed with the application and is limited to the “face” of those documents; (2) on the face of the documents Brown “is entitled to compensation under Section 103.001(a)(2)” because those documents show he has satisfied the Tim Cole Act‘s express requirements; (3) the Comptroller has a purely ministerial duty to confirm Brown‘s eligibility for compensation based on the verified documents; and (4) going behind the district court‘s order to make a de novo jurisdictional determination is not a “ministerial act” contemplated by the statute. In the alternative, Brown argues the jurisdictional question is settled by Curry rather than Garcia.
Because we hold that the Comptroller‘s purely ministerial duty does not include revisiting the district court‘s adjudication regarding jurisdiction, we do not reach the alternative issue.
B.
Jurisdictional questions run the gamut from the obvious to the abstruse. They may be settled as a matter of law or involve mixed questions of law and fact. But we have said that uncertainty of a legal issue does not preclude a legal determination from being ministerial.22 To the contrary, it is just that because “[a]n official ‘has no discretion or authority to misinterpret the law[.]‘”23 The issue here is who has the power to make the jurisdictional determination, and the statute is clear on that point: when the state‘s attorney and the convicting court issue documents in the proper form declaring a claimant actually innocent, the Comptroller must take those documents, if verified, at face value.
Whether a dismissal order has been issued by the court in which the criminal charge was pending is a matter that should be fairly ascertainable from the required application documents, individually or collectively,
question is quintessentially judicial, but most critically, is statutorily committed to the district court that issues the dismissal order and was specifically adjudicated by the district court in this case.25 To conclude that the Comptroller‘s ministerial duty includes de novo review of the district court‘s legal determination runs counter to the statutory language and the division of power the Legislature enacted.
By express language, section 103.001(a)(2)(C) commits to the district attorney and the convicting court the power and privilege to make the innocence determination necessary to issue the documents that made Brown eligible for compensation under the Tim Cole Act.26 To support a compensation claim, those documents must be verified, meaning substantiated under oath or affidavit and thus subject to a penalty for perjury.27 And on fulfillment of these requirements, the Comptroller must determine eligibility based “only” on the verified documents. Here, the recitations in the dismissal order do not, on their face, invalidate the district court‘s order. In deciding that the court lacked jurisdiction, the Comptroller stepped out of his statutorily defined ministerial role.
In arguing otherwise, the Comptroller relies principally on In re Phillips28 and In re Allen,29 but that reliance is misplaced. These cases do not support the proposition that the Comptroller‘s
ministerial duty to determine eligibility includes independently evaluating laws governing the jurisdiction of criminal courts.
In re Phillips is a Tim Cole Act case involving the Comptroller‘s statutory duty to determine the amount of compensation due to an eligible claimant.30 Subject to certain conditions, an eligible claimant is entitled to compensation equal to: (1) $80,000 per year for time served in prison (pro-rated as appropriate); and (2) compensation for unpaid child support that became due during the period of incarceration plus interest on arrearages that accrued during that time.31 The claimant in Phillips was subject to a default child-support judgment in the amount of $304,861.74, which was obtained without the State‘s participation.32 Although the claimant requested compensation based on
We described the Comptroller‘s statutory obligation to determine the amount of wrongful-imprisonment compensation owed under the Act as “exclusive,” “ministerial,” and not controlled by an arrearages judgment in a child-support enforcement proceeding.34 Rather, the Comptroller‘s “ministerial duty under the Act is to conduct an independent and accurate calculation” of the compensation owed to the claimant.35 That calculation is “dictated by the controlling state law on arrearages and interest” and is “plainly ministerial,” because it involves
“law and arithmetic” and officials have “‘no discretion or authority to misinterpret the law’ or the rules of arithmetic.”36
Phillips is distinguishable because, unlike the ministerial duty to calculate compensation, the Comptroller‘s ministerial duty to determine eligibility is specifically defined and conscribed by the Tim Cole Act.37 Depending on the ground under which compensation is sought, the statute gives the Governor, the courts, and the prosecuting attorney the exclusive authority to issue qualifying documents and explicitly requires the Comptroller to take those documents at face value when they are verified.38 This duty is “ministerial” because “the law clearly spells out the duty to be performed by the official with sufficient certainty that nothing is left to the exercise of discretion.”39
The verified documents Brown submitted “clearly indicate on their face” that he is entitled to compensation because they are the type of documents that establish eligibility for compensation and they include all the elements Section 103.001(a)(2)(C) of the statute requires. The documents show that (1) Brown was incarcerated under the laws of this state; (2) he obtained habeas corpus relief; (3) the convicting state district court entered an order dismissing the charge for which he was convicted and sentenced; and (4) the state court‘s dismissal order was based on the state‘s attorney‘s motion to dismiss, which cited the absence of credible inculpating evidence and stated counsel‘s belief
The Comptroller‘s reliance on In re Allen41 similarly falls short. That case does not, as the Comptroller suggests, authorize him to conduct an analysis to confirm the legal validity of verified court documents. Allen is a Tim Cole Act case that involved a claim of eligibility under Section 103.001(a)(2)(B), which authorizes compensation when habeas relief is itself granted on the basis of actual innocence.42 At issue was the meaning of the term “actual innocence” as used in the Act.43
In Allen, we noted that two types of “actual innocence” claims are recognized under habeas law: (1) substantive claims asserting a “bare claim of innocence based solely on newly discovered evidence,” known as Herrera claims, and (2) procedural claims involving constitutional error that “probably resulted in the conviction of one who was actually innocent,” known as Schlup claims.44 Despite the different standards, we held that both are compensable under the Tim Cole Act because “actual innocence” is an essential part of both Herrera and Schlup claims and the Act does not distinguish between types of “actual innocence” determinations.45
The CCA had granted Allen habeas relief under a Schlup-type claim that was intertwined with a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel.46 A Schlup claim‘s more lenient standard avoids the “Herculean task” of obtaining habeas relief purely from new evidence that “unquestionably establish[es]” actual innocence.47 The issue in Allen was not whether the CCA‘s habeas determination was correct, but whether Schlup-type actual-innocence claims are compensable under the Tim Cole Act. We held that they are, and most importantly, that “[t]he judgments of the criminal courts are taken as established” for purposes of evaluating a compensation claim under the Act.48 We further held that, whether specifically stated or not, the CCA‘s habeas opinion clearly indicated on its face that habeas relief was based on the court‘s finding of actual innocence because “[a]ctual innocence [is] an essential part of the Schlup claim, [and] without the court finding actual innocence, the writ would [have been] denied.”49
To be sure, the Comptroller had a duty to ensure habeas relief satisfied the statute‘s requirement that relief was in fact based on a finding of actual innocence.
In that regard, the statutory scheme invokes a separation-of-powers construct that is similar in effect to one we considered in an election case involving a referendum petition. In In re Woodfill, we held that the city council‘s ministerial duty to act on a referendum petition did not permit it to independently evaluate the petition‘s validity.51
In Woodfill, City of Houston residents filed a referendum petition seeking to overturn a city ordinance.52 The City Charter gave the city secretary the sole authority to certify the referendum petition, and once she did, the city council had a “ministerial duty” to choose between repealing the ordinance or placing it on the ballot for a popular vote.53 Despite being duly certified, the city council rejected the petition on the basis that certain pages of the petition were invalid.54 We held that the city council‘s ministerial duty was triggered by the city secretary‘s certification, and on the happening of that event, the council had “no discretion to reevaluate the petition[.]”55
We explained that if the city council “cannot independently evaluate the petition as a predicate to its ministerial duty to act, then it may not decide for itself that the petition is invalid[.]”56
Unlike the city council in Woodfill, the Comptroller is required to make an eligibility determination under the Tim Cole Act. But akin to Woodfill, there is a predicate to his “purely ministerial” duty that commits qualifying determinations to someone else.57 Here, the district court had the authority, and the obligation, to evaluate its jurisdiction to issue a dismissal order. The statute does not charge the
The Comptroller describes the eligibility determination as a gatekeeping function that protects the public fisc from wrongful payments and argues that he must not only determine whether the application documents are the types of documents the statute requires but also whether those documents are legally valid. While the Legislature could have made such a policy choice, that is not the scheme the Legislature enacted. Instead, the Legislature erected stringent substantive and procedural hurdles to help protect the public purse while at the same time ensuring reparations are made to the wrongfully imprisoned. In that scheme, the judiciary is cast in the role of the gatekeeper,58 and by requiring a finding of actual innocence, the Act ensures a claimant is “within the ‘narrow class of cases’ implicating a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”59
The Tim Cole Act‘s administrative process for settling wrongful-imprisonment claims reflects a balancing of policy choices.60 And in that balance, criminal courts are charged with determining their own jurisdiction to issue an actual-innocence order. When the judge of a proper court signs such an order, the statute requires the Comptroller to accept the court‘s legal and factual determinations. “The imperfection of humanity means that the state may make mistakes, but that possibility does not vitiate the government‘s interest in avoiding injustice.”61
Under the statute as enacted, the Comptroller can determine only whether the required dismissal order has been issued, not whether it was correctly issued as a legal or factual matter. Whether this division of authority adequately protects the public fisc while serving the ends of justice requires a weighing of interests that is committed to the Legislature.62 Our only objective is to ascertain legislative intent as expressed in the statutory language.63 Affording the Act the meaning its language plainly dictates, the Comptroller exceeded his ministerial duty by looking beyond the verified documents to reverse the district court‘s determination that it had jurisdiction to clear Brown‘s name by amending the original dismissal order to declare him actually innocent.
IV. Conclusion
Alfred Dewayne Brown‘s application checked all the statutory boxes, and as a purely ministerial matter, he is eligible for
Eva M. Guzman
Justice
Opinion Delivered: December 18, 2020
