¶ 1. Defendant Leonard Parks appeals a superior court order granting summary judgment to the State on a post-conviction relief (PCR) petition in which defendant sought reversal of assault-and-robbery and larceny-from-a-person pleas based on his failure to explicitly waive important constitutional rights. Because the record lacks any evidence that defendant knowingly and voluntarily pled to the charges or that defendant deliberately relinquished the double jeopardy violation on the face of the charges, we reverse and vacate defendant’s convictions.
¶ 2. In October 2004, the State charged defendant with assault and robbery, and later added a habitual-offender charge, which exposed him to a potential life sentence. In August 2005, defendant and his attorney signed a notice-of-plea agreement with the State. The State agreed to strike the habitual-offender charge in exchange for defendant’s guilty pleas to the assault-and-robbery charge and one count of larceny from the person — added to allow the State to recommend an eight-to-fifteen-year sentence. Thus, the plea agreement, on its face, permitted multiple punishments for the same crime in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
¶ 3. The district court held a change-of-plea hearing, at which the trial judge would оrdinarily have engaged in a Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 11 colloquy with defendant to ensure defendant’s plea was knowing and voluntary. Instead, the trial judge gave a speech, directed at defendant, on the role of the State and jury in the criminal process, the rights afforded to defendants at trial, and sentencing considerations if defendant entered the plea. At no point during this speech did the judge inquire of defendant whether he understood the information or wished to continue with the plea despite its legal consequences.
¶ 4. Before accepting the plea, the district court questioned defense counsel as to whether defendant was being charged with the same crime twice. Counsel responded
¶ 5. At defendant’s sentencing hearing held in January 2006, the court again questioned defense counsel about the legal defense to the two charges. Counsel replied that “we waived [the defense] to get rid of the habitual offender.” Defendant was sentenced to five to ten years’ imprisonment on the assault-and-robbery conviction and zero to five years’ imрrisonment on the larceny-from-a-person conviction, to be served consecutively. On February 10, 2006, defendant filed a pro se motion for sentence reconsideration. The court denied the motion, noting: “[c]harge amended from habitual offender with life imprisonment under plea agreement — [defendant] received sentence lower than what prosecutor wanted.”
¶ 6. In March 2006, defendant filed a PCR petition, claiming that his plea agreеment was invalid because: (1) he did not waive the double jeopardy challenge to the two convictions; (2) he did not plead to the second charge; and (3) the court failed to determine whether his plea was voluntary in accordance with Rule 11. Both defendant and the State filed for summary judgment. The court granted the State’s motion, finding that defendant understood the purpose of the double charge, as well as its constitutional implications, and waived his defense in exchange for the State’s concession to drop the habitual-offender charge. This appeal followed.
¶ 7. On appeal, defendant renews his claim that the court’s failure to engage him in the required colloquy pursuant to Rule 11 rendered his plea involuntary. Furthermore, defendant argues that he did not waive the facial double jeopardy violation in his plea agreement, and that the agreement therefore violated his due process rights.
¶ 8. We turn first to defendant’s Rule 11 claim. The underlying purpose of Rule 11 is to ensure that a defendant’s plea is both knowing and voluntary.
State v. Morrissette,
¶ 9. Pursuаnt to Rule 11, the court may not accept a plea of nolo contendere unless
(1) the nature of the charge to which the plea is offered;
(2) the mandatory minimum penalty, if any, and the maximum possible penalty provided by law for the offense to which the plea is offered . . . ;
(3) that the defendant has the right to plead not guilty . . . ; [and]
(4) that if the defendant’s plea ... is accepted by the court there will not be a further trial of any kind, so that by pleading the defendant waives the privilege against self-incrimination, the right to trial by jury or otherwise, and the right to be confronted with the witnesses against the defendant; ....
V.R.Cr.P. 11(c). Furthermore, the court must inquire of the defendant whether he entered the plea willingly, or whether it was instead the “result of force or threats or of promises apart from a plea agreement.” V.R.Cr.P. 11(d).
¶ 10. The record before us evinces a wholesale failure by the trial court to engage defеndant in a Rule 11 colloquy. Notwithstanding Rule ll’s requirements, the trial judge did not personally address defendant at the change-of-plea hearing, except to ask for his plea on the assault-and-robbery charge. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(c). The trial judge in no way ensured that defendant understood the nature of the charges to which he was pleading. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(c)(1). He did not question defendant regarding defendant’s understanding of the potential sentence to which he would be subjeсt by pleading nolo. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(c)(2). Nor did the trial judge determine whether defendant understood his right to maintain a plea of not guilty. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(c)(3). Above all, however, the trial judge failed to ensure that defendant knew and understood that by pleading nolo he would waive important constitutional rights that are personal to defendant, including the right to a trial by jury. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(c)(4). Instead, the court made general remarks regarding the role of criminal trials in our justice system, the trial rights afforded to defendants, and some of the risks involved in pleading to the charges. While these statements were directed to defendant, they did nothing to ensure that defendant understood the information. Likewise, the court did not address defendant with respect to the serious double jeopardy violation presented by the plea agreement. Rather, the court asked defense counsel whether the two charges were essentially the same thing, and accepted counsel’s response without determining if defendant understood the due process rights involved and willingly relinquished them. Furthermore, the court failed to inquire of defendant whether he was entering the plea voluntarily. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(d). Finally, and most perplexingly, the court entered nolo contendere pleas on both charges despite the fact that defendant did not actually plead to the second charge, larceny from a person, in open court.
¶ 11. Post-conviction relief is “available when fundamental error is found in a court’s acceptance of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere.”
In re Hemingway,
¶ 12. This case differs in significant respects from those in which wе have found trial courts to be in substantial compliance with Rule 11. In
State v. Marku,
we found substantial compliance with Rule 11 where the court engaged in a dialogue with the defendant in open court about his understanding of the nature of the charges, the terms of the plea agreement, and the constitutional rights that he would forfeit as a result.
¶ 13. In contrast, the court in the instant case did not ask defendant to enter a plea on the second charge let alone question defendant with respect to his understanding of the plea agreement or the constitutional rights at stake before accepting either plea. The only record evidence that defendant voluntarily entered the plea was a signed notice-of-plea agreement, which simply set out the agreed upon charges without any reference to the legal consequences of the plea. Nor did defendant sign a waiver-of-rights form — which might, at the very least, have given the court some indication that he was knowingly entering into the agreement.
¶ 14. Given the trial court’s failure to satisfy itself that defendant’s plea was knowing and voluntary, we cannot agree with the State that to prevail in his PCR petition defendant must show he would not have pled to the charges but for the court’s Rule 11 violations. Rather, the facts here compel us tо follow our line of cases holding Rule 11 violations to be plain error regardless of a showing of actual prejudice. A trial court’s failure to satisfy any of the core objectives of Rule 11 — ensuring that the guilty plea is free of coercion, that the defendant understands the nature of the charges against him, and that the defendant is aware of the direct consequences of his plea — affects the defendant’s substantial rights.
State v. Thompson,
¶ 15. In
State v. Thompson,
we reversed the trial сourt where the court’s brief colloquy with the defendant did not assure us that the “defendant was aware of the direct consequences of entering the plea.”
¶ 16. Defendant’s claim that he did not deliberately waive the double jeopardy violation on the face of the plea agreement provides an additional ground for granting defendant’s PCR petition. The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Federal Constitution prohibits thе State from prosecuting a defendant twice for the same offense.
State v. Wiley,
¶ 17. To be sure, as with other constitutional rights, a defendant may voluntarily waive a double jeopardy claim. See
United States v. Stanwood,
¶ 18. In
Broce,
the United States Supreme Court held that the respondents’ knowing and voluntary guilty plea acted as a waiver of their potential double jeopardy claim.
¶ 19. On the contrary, in the case at hand, defendant’s pleas — to the extent that he can be said to have pled to both charges — were neither knowing and voluntary nor facially distinct. As explained in our Rule 11 analysis, we cannot say with any confidence that defendant understood the legal consequences of his plea agreement and willingly entered into it. Furthermore, the assault-and-robbery and larceny-from-a-person charges alleged the same facts and amounted to the same offense. Defendant’s situation more closely resembles the facts of
Menna v. New York,
wherein the Court held that “a plea of guilty to a charge does not waive a claim that — judged оn its face — the charge is one which the State may not constitutionally prosecute.”
¶20. A defendant who enters a guilty
or nolo
plea despite indictments that “evince on their face a double jeopardy violation must
expressly relinquish
his rights against double jeopardy” to effectively waive his right to challenge the constitutional violation.
Taylor,
¶ 21. Finally, the State’s contention that the plea agreement was overall favorable to defendant, allowing him to avoid the habitual-offender charge, in no way undermines our finding of fundamental error by the trial court. Typically, guilty pleas result from a plea bargain which, by nature, offers some incentive to the defendant to forfeit his or her constitutional rights to a jury trial. See Launius, 575 F.2d at 772. The fact that the defendant stands to gain something by entering into a plea agreement, however, cannot alone serve as proof of his willingness to do so despite the serious constitutional implications of such a decision. See id. Otherwise, every plea agreement would de facto meet the requirements of Rule 11.
¶ 22. To hold that defendant’s pleas here were knowing and voluntary would in effect overrule the provisions of Rule 11 — which were intended to promote the finality of guilty pleas and prevent collateral attack by requiring that trial judges enter a plea only after personally ensuring, on the record, that the defendant understands the consequences and willingly chooses to еnter the plea. See
State v. Yates,
Summary judgment is reversed, and the рlea is vacated. The matter is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
We note that, as a general matter, it is not good practice for the State to negotiate constitutionally infirm charges simply to allow it to recommend a lengthier sentence.
It remains unsettled whether, and under what circumstances, defense counsel may relinquish the right against double jeopardy on a defendant’s behalf. See, e.g.,
Watkins v. Kassulke,
