Introduction
Donald McClendon (“Movant”) appeals from the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis denying his Rule 29.15 motion for post conviction relief without an evidentia-ry hearing. We affirm in part and remand in part.
Factual and Procedural Background
On May 30, 2003, officers responded to a call in Florissant, Missouri. The officers were told that someone matching Movant’s description was attempting to steal a car. The officers discovered Movant in a car in which the rear window had been broken, the interior ransacked and the steering column broken in a manner consistent with an attempt to start the vehicle without a key. Movant ran but officers apprehended him fifty yards from the car, with items from the car in his pockets. Movant was charged with the class D felony of attempted stealing of a motor vehicle in violation of Section 564.011. 1
Movant was charged as a prior offender pursuant to Section 588.016. At the time Movant was charged, the maximum punishment for a prior offender with a class D felony was ten years. On June 27, 2003, legislation reducing the sentencing enhancement under Section 588.016 took effect. Thereafter, the maximum punishment for a class D felony was reduced to “any sentence authorized for a class C felony.” The maximum punishment for a class C felony is seven years.
Before trial, Movant’s attorney mailed Movant a letter in which he advised Mov-ant that he could receive a maximum sentence of seven years if he went to trial. Movant alleges that the State offered Mov-ant a plea agreement with a maximum recommended sentence of seven years, which Movant rejected because he believed it was the maximum sentence. Movant alleges that he was first advised that the maximum sentence was ten years on the day of trial. Before trial, Movant attempted to enter a blind guilty plea. The court rejected the plea and the case proceeded to trial.
After a jury trial, Movant was found guilty and sentenced as a prior and persistent offender to nine years. Movant appealed and this court affirmed the sentence in
State v. McClendon,
Standard of Review
Our review of the motion court’s denial of post-conviction relief is limited to a determination of whether the motion court clearly erred in finding that counsel was not ineffective.
Helmig v. State,
Discussion
In his first point, Movant argues that the motion court clearly erred in denying his motion without an evidentiary hearing when trial counsel misinformed Movant as to the maximum sentence he could receive for the crime. More specifically, Movant alleges that trial counsel advised him that the maximum sentence for his crime was seven years’ imprisonment, when it was actually ten years. Movant claims that because he thought the maximum sentence was seven years he rejected the State’s offer to plead guilty and receive seven years and went to trial, where he received a sentence of nine years. Movant alleges that after the jury was selected, trial counsel informed him for the first time that the maximum sentence was ten years, rather than seven years. Movant claims he immediately asked to enter a blind guilty plea, but the court refused to accept the plea and went forward with the trial, eventually sentencing Movant to nine years’ imprisonment. Movant argues that the motion court erred in concluding that he had not received ineffective assistance of counsel and that he was not prejudiced. Respondent argues that Movant was not prejudiced because the trial court is not required to accept a guilty plea and because appellant’s assertions have “nothing to do with the fairness of his trial.”
To plead and prove ineffective assistance of counsel, the post-conviction movant must show that counsel’s performance did not conform to the degree of skill, care, and diligence of a reasonably competent attorney, and that the defendant was thereby prejudiced.
Strickland v. Washington,
Here, Movant has satisfied all three requirements and should have been granted an evidentiary hearing. As an initial matter, we note that the record does not refute Movant’s factual allegations. The legal file contains a letter from Mov-ant’s counsel dated September 12, 2003, stating in relevant part: “You are charged as a prior and persistent offender with: Attempt [sic] stealing of a motor vehicle. The minimum and maximum sentence you could receive for this charge is: One (1) day to Seven (7) years.” Emphasis in original.
The record also reflects that Movant attempted to enter into a blind plea agreement after the jury was sworn, which was rejected by the court. During sentencing Movant stated that he had not wanted to go to trial. When asked why he did not take the State’s offer, Movant stated “I mean, it’s seven years ... I believe we could have went down other avenues ...” Thus, Movant’s allegation that if he had known the maximum sentence he would have accepted the plea offer rather than going to trial is not refuted by the record. An evidentiary hearing would allow Mov-ant the opportunity to present more evidence regarding his claim that he was misinformed by counsel and would have accepted the State’s plea offer had he been properly informed as to the maximum length of the sentence.
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Turning to the second requirement, Movant pleaded facts, that, if true, warrant relief. The motion court found that Mov-ant was not entitled to relief because “at the time of trial, the question of the alteration of the range of punishment for prior and persistent offenders was undecided at the time of trial [sic] — as reflected by the memorandum of the Court of Appeals accompanying its summary affirmance of this case.” The motion court does not cite to any authority for this conclusion. However, it appears that the court is referring to
State v. Johnson,
In Johnson, this court reiterated that, under Section 1.160, 2 when the change of a sentencing structure for an offense occurs, the defendant must be sentenced according to the law in effect at the time of the offense unless a change occurred in the law creating the offense itself. Id. at 138. The court found that the amendment to Section 558.016 would therefore not apply retroactively, as it is not a statute creating offenses, but a statute permitting enhancement of sentences for prior and persistent offenders. See Id.
The motion court’s reasoning that the “questionable” retroactivity of Section 558.016 relieved his trial counsel’s duty to properly inform him of the
possible
consequences of trial is fundamentally flawed. First, it was hardly “questionable” that the lessened enhancement of prior and persistent offender sentences would take effect retroactively. The court expressed during sentencing its doubt that the change in sentencing statutes would apply retroactively.
3
Furthermore, although
Johnson,
which addresses the specific statute in question, had not yet been decided, the Supreme Court decision in
State ex rel Nixon v. Kelly
made clear that Section 1.160 required defendants to be sentenced under the law in effect
at the time the offense was committed.
Furthermore, the “questionability” of the law at the time the Movant was sentenced is immaterial. Trial counsel had a duty to inform Movant of the
possible
consequences he could face at trial. It is counsel’s duty to advise a client of the possible consequences he could receive if
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convicted at trial so that the client may make an informed decision as to whether to accept or reject a plea agreement.
Ayres v. State,
Finally, we examine the motion court’s finding “regardless of the allegedly erroneous advice, McClendon was not prejudiced, as he had no right to have a plea of guilty accepted, e.g.,
Tilton v. State,
In Ayres, this court found:
The matters alleged prejudiced Mov-ant because Movant claims he rejected the State’s plea offer on the advice of trial counsel. In reliance on trial counsel’s alleged erroneous information, Movant decided to plead not guilty and to go to trial, resulting in his receiving a ten-year sentence ... Had trial counsel provided Movant with accurate sentencing information, Movant allegedly would have accepted the State’s plea offer, and thus he would be serving a seven-year sentence rather than a ten-year sentence.
Id. at 834. (Internal citations omitted.) Similarly, here, Movant alleged that he would have accepted the State’s offer of seven years had he not been erroneously advised by counsel that the maximum punishment he could receive was seven years.
To demonstrate prejudice, the mov-ant must show a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the result of the trial would have been different.
Patterson v. State,
The motion court relied on
Tilton
to support its finding of no prejudice.
Tilton,
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Respondents cite multiple cases for the proposition that Movant was not prejudiced by the alleged misinformation:
Bryan v. State,
To deny a request for an eviden-tiary hearing, the record must conclusively show the movant is not entitled to relief.
Schmedeke v. State,
In his second point, Movant claims that trial counsel was ineffective for faffing to investigate and call witnesses. More specifically, Movant contends that four witnesses would have testified that Movant had a bicycle the night of the theft, proving that Movant had no need for the car and also impeaching the testimony of the officers who stated that Movant said he tried to steal the car because he had a “long walk home.” Movant also contends that one of those witnesses was also willing to testify that Movant had paper money and coins the night of the theft.
Regarding a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to investigate and call witnesses, a movant must plead and prove that: 1) trial counsel knew or should have known of the existence of the witness; 2) the witness could have been located through reasonable investigation; 3) the witness would have testified if called; and 4) the testimony would have provided a viable defense.
Hutchison v. State,
The potential testimony that Mov-ant was riding a bicycle does not offer a viable defense. The evidence that Movant was riding a bicycle does not refute the allegation that Movant was stealing the car. When the testimony of the witness negates an element of the crime for which a movant was convicted, the testimony provides the movant with a viable defense.
Whited,
Furthermore, the potential testimony that Movant had paper money and coins in his pocket also does not provide a viable defense to attempted stealing a motor vehicle. Movant argues that this testimony would have “challenged the prosecution’s allegation that the change found in [Movant’s] pants pocket had been taken from the vehicle.” However, Movant does not explain how the fact that Movant had money in his pocket earlier in the evening negates an element of the crime with which he was charged, and we find that it does not. Moreover, when Movant was caught, the officers found the car owner’s cellular phone in his pocket. Thus, even if Movant could refute the allegation that the change was from the car, he could not refute the allegation that he had in his possession a cellular phone that belonged to the owner of the car. Therefore, the motion court did not err in denying Mov-ant’s claim that his counsel was ineffective for failing to call witnesses. Point denied.
Conclusion
The judgment of the motion court is affirmed in part and remanded in part for an evidentiary hearing on Movant’s claim that trial counsel misinformed Movant that the maximum sentence he could receive if convicted at trial was seven years.
Notes
. All statutory references are to RSMo.2000 unless otherwise indicated.
. Section 1.160, as in effect at the time of Movant’s trial and sentencing, stated, in relevant part that no offense committed and no penalty incurred previous to or at the time when any statutory provision is repealed or amended, shall be affected by the repeal or amendment. The trial and punishment of all such offenses, and the penalties shall be had in all respects as if the provision had not been repealed or amended, except that if the penalty or punishment for any offense is reduced or lessened by an alteration of the law creating the offense prior to original sentencing, the penalty or punishment shall be assessed according to the amendatory law. The language of Section 1.160 changed in 2005.
. However, at sentencing, when Movant asked why he was not sentenced under the laws that changed, the trial court stated “Well, it’s my opinion — the law is that when the sentencing statutes change, but not the statute that creates the offense, the old statute controls for punishment, and that’s my opinion. [An assistant public defender] has a different opinion, and the Supreme Court and the Missouri Court of Appeals have not yet told us whether I’m right or wrong.”
