S22A0964. JOHNSON v. THE STATE.
S22A0964
SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA
March 15, 2023
PINSON, Justice.
SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA
March 15, 2023
The Honorable Supreme Court met pursuant to adjournment.
The following order was passed:
It appearing that the attached opinion decides a second-term appeal, which must be concluded by the end of the December Term, it is ordered that a motion for reconsideration, if any, must be received in the Supreme Court E-Filing/Docket (SCED) System by 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 22, 2023.
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA
Clerk‘s Office, Atlanta
I certify that the above is a true extract from the minutes of the Supreme Court of Georgia.
Witness my signature and the seal of said court hereto affixed the day and year last above written.
Thuise Ba, Clerk
In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: March 15, 2023
S22A0964. JOHNSON v. THE STATE.
PINSON, Justice.
Over the past two decades, this Court has applied an absolute rule that anything filed by a criminal defendant on his or her own while still represented by counsel is a “legal nullity.” In this case, we asked the parties and amici whether that rule is correct. In other words, is a pro se filing made by a defendant who is actually or presumptively represented by counsel always a nullity?
For the reasons set out below, we now answer that question in the negative. Although a defendant does not have a constitutional or statutory right to represent himself while he is also represented by counsel, nothing in our Constitution or Code prohibits such “hybrid representation,” either. And courts otherwise have broad discretion to control their processes and the conduct of those
Our decisions adopting and applying the contrary rule are virtually unreasoned. At most, these decisions point out that a defendant does not have a right to hybrid representation—but of course, not having a right to do something does not mean one is prohibited from doing it. And our decisions offer nothing further in support of an absolute rule against recognizing a pro se filing by a counseled defendant. Put simply, those decisions were just wrong.
And this error is not harmless. After a judgment of conviction, defendants have a short window within which they can preserve their right of appeal, but absent an order allowing their counsel to withdraw, they are presumptively represented by counsel. In cases like this one, where counsel for some reason fails to take the steps that would preserve the right to appeal, an attentive and diligent defendant could save the appeal with a simple pro se filing, but our nullity rule leaves the defendant powerless to do so. And after our
In sum, our absolute nullity rule has no basis in either Constitution or statute, and it is virtually unreasoned, in conflict with our own decisions, and potentially destructive of the appeal rights of criminal defendants. Stare decisis does not require us to perpetuate a legal rule that is so obviously and harmfully wrong, and so we overrule our past decisions to the extent they held that a pro se filing by a counseled defendant is always a legal nullity.
As a result, our past decisions recognizing that courts retain discretion to allow hybrid representation control. This means a court has the discretion to recognize a timely and otherwise procedurally proper pro se filing made by a defendant who is still formally
In this case, this means that the trial court must be given the chance in the first instance to determine whether to recognize any of the defendant‘s pro se post-conviction filings and consider them on their merits. We therefore vacate the judgment and remand with direction, as explained more fully below.
1. Garry Deyon Johnson was convicted of malice murder and robbery in connection with the 1997 killing of Irene Shields. Johnson was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole plus a consecutive 20-year term.2 The judgment of conviction and
On December 12, 2000, Johnson‘s lead trial counsel, Jack Boone, filed a motion to withdraw, which the trial court granted on the same day. Johnson‘s other appointed attorney, Luther McDaniel, did not move to withdraw at that time or any time thereafter.
The next day, Johnson filed a pro se “Extraordinary Motion for New Trial.”3 Two days later, Johnson sent a letter to the trial court clerk requesting his trial transcript, stating that “[a]t this time I have no attorney and wish to proceed with my appeal pro se.” In January 2001, Johnson again wrote to the clerk, requesting copies of filings, and the clerk responded with the requested materials.
In September 2001, in response to further correspondence from Johnson, the clerk sent a letter informing him that an attorney, Paul David, had been appointed for his appeal and that Johnson would
Johnson continued corresponding with the clerk on his own. The record shows correspondence through August 2004, followed by a more-than twelve-year gap until December 2016, when Johnson sent a letter asking for various filings. In April 2017, Johnson sent a letter to the clerk stating that he had never gotten a ruling on his motions for new trial, that his trial attorneys were deceased or not practicing law, and that he was indigent.
In December 2017, Johnson‘s current appellate counsel entered an appearance in the case. At counsel‘s request, the court appointed
In December 2018, the trial court entered a consent order granting Johnson leave to file an “out of time motion for new trial and appeal.” Hearings were held on the motion in December 2018, May 2019, and May 2021. On January 28, 2022, the trial court denied the motion.
Through counsel, Johnson filed a notice of appeal on February 21, 2022. When the appeal was docketed in this Court, we initially dismissed it. We explained that the December 13, 2000 motion for new trial was a legal nullity because it was filed pro se at a time when Johnson was presumed to be represented by counsel, relying on White v. State, 302 Ga. 315, 319 (2) (806 SE2d 489) (2017);5 the
But on reconsideration, we vacated the dismissal order and reinstated the appeal. In doing so, we asked the parties and invited amici curiae to address whether “a pro se filing made by a defendant who is actually or presumptively represented by counsel [is] always a nullity.”6
2. The answer to this legal question should be an easy “no.” Although defendants in Georgia do not have a constitutional or statutory right to hybrid representation, neither is there any constitutional or statutory prohibition against it, and courts otherwise have broad discretion to control their processes and those appearing before them. See, e.g.,
(a) We begin with the concept of “hybrid representation.” Speaking generally, hybrid representation refers to when a defendant acts on his or her own behalf in court while he is at the same time represented by counsel. See, e.g., Cargill v. State, 255 Ga. 616, 622 (3) (340 SE2d 891) (1986), overruled on other grounds, Manzano v. State, 282 Ga. 557, 560 (3) (b) (651 SE2d 661) (2007).
In the courts of our State today, there is no right to hybrid representation. No such right is recognized under the
No person shall be deprived of the right to prosecute or defend, either in person or by an attorney, that person‘s own cause in any of the courts of this state.
But the mere absence of a right to hybrid representation says nothing about whether hybrid representation may be permitted. Put
Some of our decisions have recognized this distinction. Soon after we first recognized that the right to hybrid representation had been eliminated from the current Georgia Constitution, we made clear that this change did not affect trial courts’ discretion to allow hybrid representation. As we put it at the time, “although a defendant may not insist on acting as co-counsel, the trial court may,
The above decisions recognized that courts have discretion to allow hybrid representation when a defendant seeks to actively represent himself as co-counsel. A couple of other decisions suggested that this discretion also covered the decision whether to allow the more limited form of hybrid representation where a counseled defendant seeks merely to submit his own pro se filings. In Eagle v. State, 264 Ga. 1, 3 (5) (440 SE2d 2) (1994), the defendant filed a pro se brief in addition to the one submitted by his counsel. Noting that the defendant was represented by counsel and that he had no right to hybrid representation, we said that “the additional claims raised in Eagle‘s pro se brief will not be considered.” Id. And in Smith v. State, 267 Ga. 372, 378 (12) (477 SE2d 827) (1996), we declined to “separately consider[]” a counseled defendant‘s “untimely supplemental enumerations of error filed pro se.” Although we declined to recognize the pro se filings of counseled defendants in these decisions, we did not suggest that a court‘s discretion to allow hybrid representation (or not) worked any
(b) But our decisions on pro se filings by counseled defendants soon lost the thread.
It started innocently enough: In Johnson v. State, 266 Ga. 775, 779 (9) (470 SE2d 637) (1996), we held that a trial court erred in “addressing the merits” of a motion for new trial filed pro se by a counseled defendant on the issue of ineffectiveness of trial counsel “while [the defendant] was still being represented by the trial counsel.” This conclusion was not necessarily inconsistent with our prior decisions acknowledging a court‘s discretion to allow hybrid representation as a general matter. The problem in Johnson was not the defendant‘s attempt at hybrid representation as such, but that the defendant had brought—and the trial court had addressed—a pro se claim of ineffective assistance based on the conduct of the very counsel who was still representing him. Id. And our conclusion was not that the pro se filing itself was entirely without effect—to the contrary, we remanded the case for the trial court to “consider the
But after Johnson was decided, we began citing it for a different and much broader proposition: an absolute rule that pro se filings made while a defendant is represented by counsel are “invalid,” Ware v. State, 267 Ga. 510, 511 & n.2 (2) (480 SE2d 599) (1997), or put another way, “unauthorized and without effect,” Cotton v. State, 279 Ga. 358, 361 (5) (613 SE2d 628) (2005). See also Britt v. Conway, 283 Ga. 474, 476 n.3 (660 SE2d 526) (2008) (citing Johnson in concluding that pro se filing challenging trial court order did not put that order “at issue” on appeal because “an appellant does not have the right to be represented by counsel and also to represent himself” (cleaned up)). More recently, we have described
Unlike some of our earlier decisions addressing hybrid representation after the Constitution of 1983 was ratified, these decisions leave no apparent room for courts to exercise discretion to allow hybrid representation—not even in the limited form of a pro se filing. Instead, they each rejected the pro se filing at issue based only on the fact that a defendant was counseled when the pro se filing was made. See, e.g., Sims, 312 Ga. at 303 n.2 (“the pro se filings . . . are legal nullities because Sims was still represented by counsel when he filed them“) (emphasis added); White, 302 Ga. at 319 (2) (“The trial court therefore correctly treated [the defendant‘s] pro se filings as legal nullities, because he was represented by counsel when he made them.“) (emphasis added); Johnson v. State, 300 Ga. 252, 256 n.6 (2) (794 SE2d 60) (2016) (”Appellant was represented by counsel when he filed that [speedy trial] demand, so it was invalid.“) (emphasis added); State v. Porter, 288 Ga. 524, 529 n.2 (2) (c) (4) (705 SE2d 636) (2011) (“This [speedy trial] demand was filed while [the defendant] was represented by counsel. For this reason, the [courts below] correctly ruled that the demand had no legal effect.“)
The absolute rule applied in these decisions—that a pro se filing by a counseled defendant is a nullity, full stop—is not only in outright conflict with our earlier decisions recognizing a court‘s discretion to allow hybrid representation. Compare Rivera, 282 Ga. at 362 (8); Colwell, 273 Ga. at 638-639 (3); Isaacs, 259 Ga. at 731 (24); Hance, 258 Ga. at 650 (1). It is also based in an explanation that is both cursory and obviously wrong. When these decisions offer any support at all for this absolute rule, they pin it only on the point that a defendant in Georgia no longer has the right to hybrid representation. See, e.g., Lopez v. State, 310 Ga. 529, 536 (5) (852 SE2d 547) (2020) (“[A] criminal defendant ‘does not have the right to represent himself and also be represented by an attorney.’ [Cit.]
Thus, a pro se filing by a represented party is a legal nullity without effect.“) (emphasis added); Dos Santos, 307 Ga. at 154 (3) (“Dos Santos‘s pro se motion to withdraw her pleas was unauthorized and without effect, because she had no right to represent herself at the same time she was represented by a lawyer“) (emphasis added); Tolbert v. Toole, 296 Ga. 357, 363 (3) (767 SE2d 24) (2014) (“A criminal defendant in Georgia does not have the right to represent himself and also be represented by an attorney, and pro se filings by represented parties are therefore ‘unauthorized and without effect.‘“) (emphasis added); see also White, 302 Ga. at 319 (2) (quoting that exact language from Tolbert); Smith v. State, 297 Ga. 214, 216 (4) (773 SE2d 209) (2015) (same). This is true, but it is not support for the absolute rule that follows. Not having a protected right to do something, without more, does not mean one is not allowed to do that thing. Yet these decisions offer nothing else to justify a flat prohibition against pro se filings made by counseled defendants.
(c) This wrong turn in our precedent is not a harmless one.
The problem rears its head in the important period right after
And some of our more recent decisions have foreclosed arguments that might have relieved the harsh effect of that rule. First, we have rejected arguments that a pro se filing could be treated as valid where a defendant who was formally represented at trial was effectively without counsel at the time of a post-conviction filing. In Tolbert, we held that a trial court‘s on-the-record “indication” that it would grant a motion to remove counsel and counsel‘s later filing of a motion to withdraw were not enough to show that the defendant was no longer represented. Tolbert, 296 Ga.
We acknowledged this “unfortunate” consequence in Dos Santos, but we pointed out that defendants whose appeal rights were frustrated by ineffective assistance of counsel “have a remedy” because they “may seek an out-of-time appeal in the trial court or in habeas corpus.” Dos Santos, 307 Ga. at 159 (5). See, e.g., Jones, 308 Ga. at 338 (holding that defendant was entitled to merits consideration of her motion for out-of-time appeal where she alleged her failure to file an appeal was due to trial counsel‘s abandoning her after sentencing).9 The option of seeking an out-of-time appeal
In sum, after Cook, the potential that the nullity rule will apply in a way that prevents defendants from ever exercising their rights of appeal and other post-conviction review is even greater. In cases where a defendant‘s counsel fails to preserve those rights—whether because of abandonment or some other reason—and the defendant cannot secure an order allowing withdrawal in time, those rights are
3. For all of these reasons, we asked the parties in this case and amici to address the nullity rule in its current form. Their collective response is telling. Although they differ some in their views on the
So the question reduces to whether to follow our decisions that have applied the absolute nullity rule. When we consider whether to
In rare cases, however, following a past decision would do more harm to the rule of law than overruling it would. Our nullity rule presents one of those rare cases. As we have explained at length above, that rule is not only wrong but obviously so; unreasoned (bordering on accidental); in conflict with our own decisions; and can and does work genuine harm to important review rights of even the
So we overrule our past decisions to the extent that they hold that pro se filings by counseled defendants are always legal
4. Having overruled the nullity rule in its absolute form, we are left with our past decisions that correctly recognized that courts retain discretion to allow hybrid representation. See Rivera, 282 Ga.
We expect that courts will exercise discretion to recognize pro se filings by counseled defendants sparingly. As some amici note, hybrid representation usually “creates more problems than [it] can solve,” United States v. Couch, 758 Fed. App‘x 654, 656-657 (10th Cir.
Because we expect that the recognition of pro se filings by counseled defendants will be the exception and not the rule, unless the record indicates that the court recognized the filing, it will be presumed that the court did not do so. So when a court chooses to recognize such a filing—as when trial counsel has failed to act within the prescribed time period to preserve the defendant‘s right to appeal and the defendant timely makes a pro se filing that would preserve that right—it should make that exercise of discretion clear on the record.14 That decision whether to recognize a pro se filing by
In so holding, “we do not undo what has been done” with respect to any pro se filings in cases that have already been adjudicated through direct appeal. See Cook, 313 Ga. at 504 (3) (e). We have “long followed” the “pipeline” approach for determining how new rules of criminal procedure apply to criminal cases. Id. at 504 (4). Under this approach, “a new state rule of criminal procedure will be applied to all cases then on direct review or not yet final.” Id. (cleaned up). Thus, our holding here applies to future cases and those pending cases whose direct appeals have not yet been adjudicated.
5. Which brings us back to Johnson‘s case. When we asked the parties and amici to address the nullity rule, we did so with the understanding that, to the extent the trial court‘s order purported to rule on Johnson‘s out-of-time motion for new trial, Cook would
Our holding today leaves open the possibility of a merits review for Johnson down the road, but not in this appeal. That is because the only order currently before us is the January 28, 2022, order denying Johnson‘s out-of-time motion for new trial. That order does not purport to rule on any motion other than the now-non-cognizable out-of-time motion for new trial. It does not purport to rule on the December 13, 2000 “Extraordinary Motion for New Trial,” or on either of Johnson‘s other two pro se motions filed before that, see note 2. In fact, the order on its face reflects the court‘s view that those earlier motions were invalid, describing Johnson‘s efforts to
Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction. All the Justices concur.
Notes
Those decisions include but are not limited to Meheux, 309 Ga. at 858; Ringold, 309 Ga. at 446; Pounds, 309 Ga. at 384 (4); Ricks, 307 Ga. at 169-170; and Dos Santos, 307 Ga. at 154-155 (3).
We also disapprove any language in our prior decisions suggesting that pro se filings by counseled defendants are always nullities. See, e.g., Dougherty, 315 Ga. at 188 (noting that earlier appeal was dismissed because pro se motion for new trial that trial court had ruled on was “a legal nullity“); Walker, 308 Ga. at 752-753 (1) (noting with tacit approval our holding in Tolbert that because “Tolbert was represented by counsel when he filed his pro se notice of appeal,” his notice of appeal was “a legal nullity“); Jones, 308 Ga. at 338 (noting in dicta that defendant “could not have filed” a notice of appeal while she was still formally represented by counsel and that “any pro se filing in this regard would have been a nullity“); Sims v. State, 312 Ga. 303, 303 n.2 (862 SE2d 507) (2021) (noting in dicta that pro se motions that trial court had not ruled on were “legal nullities“); Howard v. State, 307 Ga. 12, 12 n.1 (834 SE2d 11) (2019) (noting that earlier appeal was dismissed because pro se motion for new trial that trial court had ruled on was “a nullity“); Veal v. State, 301 Ga. 161, 167 (3) n.3 (800 SE2d 325) (2017) (noting in dicta that defendant‘s pro se motion to vacate conviction “had no legal effect“); State v. Porter, 288 Ga. 524, 529 n.2 (2) (c) (4) (705 SE2d 636 (2011) (noting in dicta that courts below had correctly ruled that pro se defendant‘s speedy-trial demand “had no legal effect“).
Similarly, any Court of Appeals decisions are overruled to the extent they hold that pro se filings by counseled defendants are always legal nullities, and any language in any Court of Appeals decisions suggesting the same is disapproved.
Johnson has argued in the alternative that, despite the absence of an order permitting the withdrawal of co-counsel McDaniel, the order permitting the withdrawal of lead counsel Boone should be construed as extending to McDaniel as well. In support of this contention, Johnson cites Uniform Superior Court Rule 4.5, which at the time provided:
[t]he entry of appearance or request for withdrawal by an attorney who is a member or an employee of a law firm or professional corporation shall relieve the other members or employees of the same law firm or professional corporation from the necessity of filing additional entries of appearance or requests for withdrawal in the same action.
Johnson contends that Boone and McDaniel should be treated as members of the same “law firm” or “professional corporation” for purposes of the withdrawal because both attorneys were appointed by the Indigent Defense Committee and acted in concert to represent him. We are not persuaded.
