In re Towne (2012-162)
[Filed 04-Oct-2013]
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@state.vt.us or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.
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No. 2012-162 |
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In re Edwin Towne |
Supreme Court |
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On Appeal from |
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Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, |
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Civil Division |
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March Term, 2013 |
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Geoffrey W. Crawford J. |
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Matthew F. Valerio, Defеnder General, Dawn Matthews, Appellate Defender and Nick Wanger,
Legal Intern, Montpelier, for Petitioner-Appellant.
William H. Sorrell, Attorney General, and John Treadwell, Assistant Attorney General,
Montpelier, for Respondent-Appellee.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Burgess and Robinson, JJ.
¶ 1. REIBER, C.J. Petitioner Edwin Towne appeals the trial court’s denial of his request for post-conviction DNA testing under Vermont’s Innocence Protection Act, 13 V.S.A. § 5561. We affirm the denial because the court correctly concluded that the results of the requested test would not have creatеd a “reasonable probability” of a different outcome at trial.
¶ 2.
Petitioner was convicted of murder in 1989. This Court affirmed
petitioner’s conviction on direct appeal in 1992. State
v. Towne,
¶ 3. On appeal, petitioner contends that the trial court misapprehended the applicable standard for granting post-conviction relief and that the DNA results would, in fact, have led to a reasonable probability of a more favorable outcome.
I.
¶ 4.
We have not previously addressed either the standard to be applied
by the trial court in deciding a request for post-conviction DNA testing under
the act or, indeed, our own standard for reviewing a trial court’s resolution
of that request. See In re Wiley,
¶ 5.
Determining the appropriate standard for considering requests under the
Innocence Protection Act is a question of statutory construction and,
therefore, a pure question of law that we review de novo. See Smith v.
Desautels,
¶ 6. The Innocence Protection Act provides a right to post-conviction testing under certain enumerated circumstances. See 13 V.S.A. §§ 5561 et seq. Before a trial court may grant a contested request for DNA testing, it must find, among other things, that:
A reasonable probability exists that the petitioner would not have been convicted or would have received a lesser sentence for the crime which the petitioner claims to be innocent of in the petition if the results of the requested DNA testing had been available to the trier of fact at the time of the original prosecution.
13 V.S.A. § 5566(a)(1) (emphasis added).
¶ 7.
A robust body of case law has sought to define the contours of the “reasonable
probability standard” in the context of claims of ineffective assistance of
counsel and improper failure to disclose exculpatory evidence. See Kyles v. Whitely,
¶ 8.
We hold that under our Innocence Protection Act, “[a] reasonable
probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” Strickland,
¶ 9.
When determining if the pеtitioner has shown a reasonable probability of
a different outcome, a court must take into account all of the evidence before
the jury, considering the trial as it actually unfolded. See Strickland,
Some of the factual findings will have been unaffected by the errors, and factual findings that were affected will have been affected in different ways. Some errors will have had a pervasive effect on the inferences to be drawn from the evidence, altering the entire evidentiary picture, and some will have had an isolated, trivial effect. Moreover, a verdict or conclusion only weakly supported by the record is more likely to have been affected by errors than one with overwhelming record support. Taking the unaffected findings as a given, and taking due account of the effect of the errors on the remaining findings, a court making the prejudice inquiry must ask if the defendant has met the burden of showing that the decision reached would reasonably likely have been different absent the errors.
Id. at 695-96.
¶ 10. We
take this opportunity to clarify that a petitioner sеeking post-conviction DNA
testing under the Innocence Protection Act does not need to show by a
“preponderance of the evidence that there is a reasonable probability” of a
different outcome. See In re Grega, 2003
VT 77, ¶ 7,
¶ 11. Similar
to the U.S. Supreme Court, we previously rejected—albeit in a non-precedential
manner—this precise accumulation of standards in the context of the prejudice
prong of an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim for two reasons: one,
because of the difficulty in defining what this awkward construction would mean
in practice, and, two, because of the further difficulty it would engender in
ascertaining on review whether a trial court applied the correct
standard. See In re Combs, No. 2012-027,
II.
¶ 12. Having
established the appropriate standard of review, we consider the trial court’s
resolution on cross-motions for summary judgment of petitioner’s request.
Summary judgment is appropriate if a “movant shows that there
is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled
to judgment as a matter of law.” V.R.C.P. 56(a).
“This Court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo, employing the same
standard as the trial court.”[2]
In re Barrows,
¶ 13. As
the trial court correctly recited, the determinative question in this case is
whether—assuming, as we must, the best case scenario for petitioner—the undisputed
material facts would demonstrate a reasonable probability of a different
outcome at trial. Under the rеasonable probability standard, we ask
whether the results petitioner desired from the DNA test would be “sufficient
to undermine confidence in the outcome” of the trial. Strickland,
¶ 14. As a
threshold matter, we note that petitioner requested mitoсhondrial DNA testing,
not nuclear DNA testing.[3]
MtDNA offers certain forensic advantages by virtue of
its relative cellular abundance. See United States v. Beverly,
[W]hile any given cell contains only one nucleus, there are a vast number of mitochondria. As a result, there is a significantly greater amount of mtDNA in a cell from which a sample can be extracted by a lab technician, as compаred to nuclear DNA. Thus, this technique is very useful for minute samples or ancient and degraded samples. In addition, mitochondrial DNA can be obtained from some sources that nuclear DNA cannot. For example, mtDNA can be found in shafts of hair, which do not have a nucleus, but do have plenty of mitochondria. Nuclear DNA can only be retrieved from the living root of the hair where the nucleus resides.
Id. at 529 (citation omitted).
¶ 15. But mtDNA also possesses certain inherent limitations. Its limited value to petitioner in this particular case is patent because of its inability to distinguish between matrilineal descendants. See id. (“[M]tDNA . . . is inherited only from the mother and thus all maternal relatives will share the same mtDNA profile, unless a mutation has occurred.”). MtDNA testing would not definitively establish that any of the hairs on the victim’s body came from petitioner’s former girlfriend’s son, who petitioner maintains actually committed the crime, but would instead indicate thаt the hairs could have come from him or any other people descended from a common matrilineal ancestor, including his mother. We conclude that a determination that the hair samples belonged to either defendant’s former girlfriend or her son would not cause our confidence in the trial’s outcome to waiver.
¶ 16. Although
petitioner denies the potential import of the easy interpersonal transference
of hair samples, jurors considered testimony from a defense witness premised on
precisely that basis. At trial, the defense called an examiner from the
Federal Bureau of Investigation who testified that none of the hair samples
collected from defendant’s car matched the victim’s hair, according to a
microscopic analysis. The testimony was presumably designed to call into
doubt the idea that the victim had ever been in petitioner’s car since hair is
transferred easily, yet none of the victim’s hair was found in the
vehicle. The examiner testified that hair can be transferred between
people and objects, offering examples of how that might occur. Even if mtDNA analysis established the hair samples belonged to the
ex-girlfriend or her son, because petitioner shared a home with them, the
examiner’s testimony would have permitted jurors to weigh the possibility that
petitioner himself was the agent for the deposition of the girlfriend’s or
son’s hair onto the victim’s body. The potential impact of this new DNA
evidence is simply too speculative and remote to call into doubt the jury’s
verdict. See Richardson,
¶ 17. The
relative insignificance of any potential new evidence from the requested
testing is compounded by the fact that a mtDNA match to petitioner’s ex-girlfriend or her son would
not contradict any evidence advanced by the State in its case. Indeed,
the State presented no forensic evidence at trial that any of the hairs found
on the victim’s body came from petitioner, and no biological evidence
implicating petitioner was found at the site where the body was discovered.
To the extent that the jury was permitted to infer that a comparison of
petitioner’s own hair with the samples might have yielded a match, it did so
based on petitioner’s own refusаl to submit to a nontestimonial
order under Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 41. See State v. Towne,
¶ 18. Petitioner’s
assertion that the State’s case was circumstantial misapprehends the nature of
our inquiry into the probability of a different outcome at trial. The
relative strength of a particular case has clear imрort in analyzing the
reasonable probability of a different outcome. See Strickland, 466
U.S. at 695 (noting that “a verdict or conclusion only weakly supported by the
record is more likely to have been affected by errors than one with
overwhelming record support” in considering whether inadequate assistance of
counsel constitutes prejudice). Here, however, a mtDNA
match to the ex-girlfriend or her son would not altеr the nature of the State’s
case because the DNA results would not call into question the
evidence—circumstantial or otherwise—upon which the jury convicted. At
trial, jurors heard evidence that defendant had driven the road where the
victim was last seen alive the on morning of her disappearance. Towne,
¶ 19. As part of his request for post-conviction DNA testing, petitioner posits that his ex-girlfriend’s son had the means and opportunity to kill the victim. Petitioner stresses that the son lived with his mother and petitioner in Richmond and Eden. Petitioner points out that his ex-girlfriend and her son were present when he purchаsed the gun later identified as the murder weapon and that the son had fired it on at least one occasion. He also notes that the location of the house he was building was no secret to anyone and that the son assisted him in construction, affording the son access to the foundation pillar where authorities discovered the weapon. And petitioner notes alleged inconsistencies in the testimony that provided the son with an alibi for the time of the abduction. Even assuming the truth of these assertions, the jury considered all of this testimony and evidence and nonetheless concluded that petitioner was guilty of the murder beyond a reasonable doubt. This evidence, regardless of how petitioner characterizes it, would remain the same even assuming the mtDNA analysis revealed the results for which petitioner hopes.[4]
¶ 20. We conclude that the most substantial result the available testing cоuld yield¾that the hair came from the girlfriend, her son, or someone in their matrilineal lineage¾would not sufficiently shake our confidence in the jury’s verdict in light of the other evidence available to jurors in reaching their decision. The mtDNA tests petitioner seeks would not create a reasonable probability of a different outcome at trial.
Affirmed.
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FOR THE COURT: |
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Chief Justice |
[1]
We acknowledge that we have, on occasion, mistakenly described a
petitioner’s burden in establishing the prejudice prong of an
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim using precisely the erroneous terms we
explicitly reject today. See Grega, 2003
VT 77, ¶ 7 (“[A] petitioner must show by a preponderance of the evidence that . . . there is a reasonable probability that,
but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the proceedings would have resulted in
a different outcome.”); In re Plante, 171 Vt.
310, 313,
[2] Since we review de novo, it is not critical to determine whether the trial court applied the correct standard in this case. In any event, we do not, as petitioner urges, take the trial court’s extraneous language with respect to the exculpatory value of DNA evidence in sex-assault cases to mean that it misunderstood the standard. To the extent that the court observed that DNA derived from semen not matching an alleged perpetrator of a sexual assault might tend to completely exonerate a defendant by virtue of the specific physical nature of such an attack, the trial court merely did so to demonstrate the opposite extrеme along the spectrum of confidence in a jury’s conclusion. The trial court correctly concluded that petitioner failed to carry his burden under the traditional understanding of the standard commanded by the term “reasonable probability.”
[3] It does not appear from the record that the hairs would be useful for anything other than this limited mitochondrial testing. As petitioner recognized in his amended petition, the direсtor of Vermont’s forensic laboratory indicated by affidavit only that the hair samples unsuitable for microscopic analysis at the time of the trial “could [now] be subjected to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analysis.”
[4] We need not decide whether a test result definitively identifying the son as the source of the hair would create a reasonable probability of a different outcome. Given the available technology, that result is not possible.
