STATE v. CARON
Supreme Court of Vermont
155 Vt. 492, 586 A.2d 1127
Affirmed.
In re Charles Crannell
No. 11-039
Supreme Court of Vermont
October 19, 2012
2012 VT 85, 192 Vt. 406, 60 A.3d 632
Present: Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Burgess and Robinson, JJ.
Opinion Filed October 19, 2012
Ross Feldmann of Gravel and Shea, A Professional Corporation, Burlington, Amicus Curiae for Petitioner.
Matthew F. Valerio, Defender General, Anna Saxman, Deputy Defender General, and Dawn Matthews, Prisoners’ Rights Office, Montpelier, for Amicus Curiae Office of the Defender General.
¶ 1. Burgess, J. Appellant Charles Crannell appeals the decision of the Rutland Civil Division that he is no longer entitled to an appointed attorney to handle his post-conviction relief (PCR) proceedings. Appellant’s previously assigned counsel filed a notice of withdrawal under
¶ 2. Assuming that Bailey and the current
¶ 3. Appellant was convicted of first-degree murder in 1995. His conviction was affirmed on direct appeal, and in 2001 he filed a PCR petition in Rutland Superior Court citing numerous grounds for relief, including the violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, ineffective assistance of counsel, prosecutorial misconduct and the violation of his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. For close to the next nine years, appellant was represеnted by many different assigned counsels, through both the Defender General’s Prisoners’ Rights Office and through the Defender General’s independent contractor system of assigned conflict counsel.
¶ 4. Throughout his PCR proceedings, appellant’s representation sparked a series of skirmishes where appellant’s various attorneys were either withdrawing or being replaced due to ethical conflicts or other reasons.1 In April 2010, appellant’s latest lawyer from the Prisoners’ Rights Office filed a motion to withdraw under the current
¶ 6. At the time appellant filed his PCR motion in 2001,
¶ 7. Following the 2004 decision in Gould, the Legislature amended
proceeding[s] which may have more than a minimаl effect on the length or conditions of detention where the attorney considers the claims, defenses, and other legal contentions to be warranted by existing law or by a
nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law.
¶ 8. When appellant filed his PCR petition in 2001, however, he had an unconditional right to representation under the then-existing
¶ 9. The Defender General objects to this conclusion, arguing that appellant had no right to representation under
Reversed and remanded.
¶ 11. Dooley, J., concurring. While I agree that we must reverse the decision to deny appellant counsel and agree that the version of
¶ 12. We are a judicial system that highly values expeditious resolution of cases presented to us. Ninety-one percent of civil cases in Vermont are disposed of within two years; in Rutland County where this case originates the figure is over ninety-five percent. See Vermont Judiciary, 2011 Civil Division Statistics, tbl. 3(b), http://www.vermontjudiciary.org/JC/Shared%20Documents/2011-Superior.pdf. While PCR cases have taken a little longer, ninety-two percent are disposed of within three years. See id. tbl. 3(h). I do not have complete information on this point, but it is likely that this case is the oldest, or close to the oldest, civil case in Vermont.
¶ 13. This case never moved forward at all for seven years, while a number of lawyers were appointed to represent appellant and each withdrew for various reasons. Indeed, almost all the visible action over those seven years involved the appearance and withdrawal of lawyers, often under the cloud of claims from appellant that they had conflicts of interest or were doing nothing to prepare the case. There were long stretches in which appellant had no lawyer. To the extent there was action on the case — for example, the filing of amendments to the PCR complaint — it was done by appellant and not the lawyer reprеsenting appellant. It is very hard to read the file in this case without concluding that the counsel-appointment system in PCR cases is seriously broken.
¶ 15. The second action is the stipulation under which appellant’s final lawyer, Rory Malone, was appointed. The first lawyer to appear for appellant in 2001 was an attorney in the Defender General’s Office. Appellant challenged the appointment because he claimed that the publiс defender who handled his appeal did not provide effective assistance of counsel and that created a conflict of interest for any employee of the Defender General. In response to that challenge, the attorney withdrew, only to reappear to replace the lawyer who moved out of state.6 That immediately started another round of contention on whether the attorney in
¶ 16. Finally, in May 2008, now almost seven years after the case was filed, appellant agreed to be represented by another lawyer in the Defender General’s Office, Rory Malone. The agreement, which was reduced to writing, provided that: (1) another case in which appellant claimed that the State lost part of his property would be dismissed; (2) Rory Malone would represent appellant in PCR proceedings related to his trial and conviction; and (3) the Defender General would hire conflict counsel to conduct a “merits review” with respect to appellant’s claim that appellate counsel, in the appeal from his conviction and in a separate return of property claim, rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. There was no provision concerning a merits review of appellant’s PCR with respect to conduct оf the trial, apparently because a merits review had been done in 2003 and again in 2006. Appellant signed this agreement.
¶ 17. On the surface, it appeared that the case finally began to move. In status conference after status conference counsel reported on consulting an expert witness on effectiveness of trial counsel and eventually consulting a second expert. Indeed, appellant’s counsel was so firm on trial preparation that the State retained an expert witness to respond to apрellant’s case. As it turned out — though it was not disclosed to the court — the Defender General was conducting yet another merits review of appellant’s case that resulted in the one-sentence withdrawal of
¶ 18. In the brief filed in this Court, the Defender General states that he had “several attorneys review the case and was unable to find a legal expert to testify on behalf of Mr. Crannell.” As is true in this case, following Bailey, this statement is wholly unsupported by the record because the Defender General refuses to disclose thе process he followed, making limited and selective disclosures when they support his interest.
¶ 19. Approximately three weeks after counsel withdrew in this case and the Defender General informed the court that it would pay for no further representation, appellant filed a fifty-two page amendment to his PCR petition. It represents a complete statement of appellant’s claims, which include claims of ineffective assistance of counsel both in the trial court and on appeal, denial of a right to a speedy trial, prosecutorial misconduct and loss of exculpatory evidence. Because none of appellant’s lawyers ever worked to reach a complete and agreed-upon complaint in this case, and because the Defender General’s “merits review” is wholly secret, it is impossible to determine what counsel, outside counsel, or experts relied upon to determine the merit of appellant’s claims or whether they evaluated all the claims.
¶ 20. As I stated in Bailey, I would follow the decision in People v. Demarest, 801 P.2d 6 (Colo. App. 1990), and not allow abandonment of representation wherе the lawyer has been legally
¶ 21. In his brief, the Defender General argues that the “right to withdraw” belongs to him and is not reviewable by the courts, and, therefore, no waiver can occur. I fail to understand the logic of this argument. A waiver is an intentional relinquishment оf a known right that can occur by conduct. See Hixson v. Plump, 167 Vt. 202, 206, 704 A.2d 1159, 1161 (1997). Calling the Defender General’s power to withdraw a “right” is not inconsistent with a waiver. Nor is the inability of the courts to review the grounds for withdrawal inconsistent with a waiver. I do not accept the extreme position that the Defender General can abandon representation without warning or explanation and despite prolonged delay and totally inconsistent conduct. In my view, if the Defender General is going to deny financial support for representation, he must do so expeditiously and сannot first grant financial support after a merits review, and then thereafter deny it with no judicial review.
¶ 22. The majority responds that we do not have to reach the waiver question, even though raised on appeal,8 and with lip service that the lapses in representation of appellant are “wholly unsatisfactory” and the Defender General should investigate “breakdowns, if any, in the system of assigned counsel” and “improvements that might be made in the management of such
¶ 23. In reaching this position, I am not arguing that appointed counsel can be required to extend representation that violates ethical mandates. Nor am I arguing that a lawyer cannot change position on whether a case is frivolous. I am arguing instead that the Defender General has waived the ability to withdraw under
¶ 24. Consistent with my rationale, I would go further than merely reversing the trial court decision. I do not know how many other cases in the system resemble this one, but we should act now to prevent such reoccurrence. We should provide by rule that the Defender General has a specific, relatively short time to decide whether he will provide representation and that he is bound by that decision, unless he makes a reviewable showing of good cause for withdrawal.9 Meanwhile, we should abandon any pretext that representation is occurring pending the review.
