William Meagher was charged in 1979 in the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida, with three counts of armed robbery, three counts of kidnapping, and two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. During several periods over the next three years he was adjudged incompetent and committed to the Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services. In April 1982, the state circuit court judge found Meagher competent to stand trial.
Pursuant to plea negotiations, Meagher entered into a plea agreement with the State. In exchange for his plea of nolo contendere, the State agreed to nolle prose-qui a second information which also had been filed against him, and to enter a nolle prosequi on all charges but the armed robbery count in the instant case. The State further agreed to a sentence of twenty years to run concurrently with a ten year sentence he was currently serving in Bro-ward County and with any time he was to serve as the result of a pending case against him for federal parole violation.
The transcript from Meagher’s sentencing hearing reveals an inconsistency in the terms of the plea agreement. During the early part of the hearing, the circuit judge initially stated in his conversation with petitioner that the twenty year sentence would run “concurrent with the time [petitioner] served in Broward County ... and ... concurrent with any other time [he was] given in the Federal Parole on the case pending against [him].” Towards the end of the plea colloquy, however, the judge orally imposed the sentence to run “concurrent to the time that [petitioner] was sentenced in Broward County. In addition, it will be consecutive with any Federal Parole violation that may occur in the near future.” (emphasis added). Neither Meagher, who was at the time assisted by counsel, nor the State called attention to this inconsistency. The judge’s written judgment and commitment order, dated April 29, 1982, specifically stated that Meagher’s sentence was to run concurrent with any pending federal parole violation.
The petitioner timely appealed to the Florida Third District Court of Appeal on the issue of competency, which he had reserved for appeal at the time he entered his nolo contendere plea. The court affirmed per curiam. Meagher v. State,
In October 1984, Meagher filed pro se his first Motion to Vacate Judgment and Sentence pursuant to Rule 3.850 of the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, claiming that his plea was involuntary on four grounds unrelated to the issue at bar.
Nearly a year later, on April 3, 1986, Meagher received a Notice of Parole Revocation from the United States Parole Commission, dated January 7, 1985.
Based on this new information, Meagher filed a second pro se Rule 3.850 motion on July 31, 1986. He argued in the second motion that his plea was involuntary because the notice of parole violation did not comport with his understanding of the plea agreement, as reflected in the judgment and commitment order. On August 12, 1986, he filed a memorandum in support of his second motion for postconviction relief, restating the issues and facts supporting the motion. The state circuit court denied the motion on October 1, 1986, and Meagher timely appealed.
Meagher then turned to the federal courts and filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, alleging that his plea was unlawfully induced and involuntary in violation of his fifth and fourteenth amendment rights to due process. In response to yet another show cause order, the State argued that petitioner had failed to exhaust all available state remedies by neglecting to raise the issue on direct appeal or in the first Rule 3.850 motion, thereby creating a procedural bar to the assertion of this ground of relief in
Principles of comity and a concern for the orderly administration of justice preclude a federal district court from entertaining a petition for a writ of habeas corpus without restriction. One such limitation is procedural default. Under the doctrine of Wainwright v. Sykes,
Florida law prohibits a motion for post-conviction relief when the defendant could have, but did not assert his claim on direct appeal. See, e.g., Jones v. State,
A second or successive motion may be dismissed if the judge finds that it fails to allege new or different grounds for relief and the prior determination was on the merits or, if new and different grounds are alleged, the judge finds that the failure of the movant or his attorney to assert those grounds in a prior motion constitutes an abuse of the procedure governed by these rules.6
Meagher’s present claim did not become ripe until his receipt of the Parole Commission’s notice of action on April 3, 1986, some four years after his direct appeal in 1982. He was entitled to rely on the trial court’s written judgment and commitment
Similarly, Meagher could not possibly have challenged the voluntariness of his plea in his first motion for postconviction relief. Both the state trial court and the United States magistrate emphasized that the notice of action by the Parole Commission was dated January 7, 1985, but that the first motion to vacate was not decided until January 17,1985, giving Meagher sufficient time to amend or supplement his pending motion. Although the notice of action was dated ten days before the trial court’s ruling, it was not received by Meagher until April 1986. He had no reason to suspect that the Parole Commission’s action would diverge from the terms of the State’s agreement. Where petitioner can show “facts relevant to issues in the cause that could not have been discovered at the time the first petition was filed” there is no abuse of procedure under the strictures of Rule 3.850. Witt v. State,
Nor do we agree with the magistrate’s conclusion that the petitioner’s failure to note the inconsistency in the trial judge’s oral pronouncements during the sentencing hearing operated as a procedural bar to a consideration of the claim in a second motion for postconviction relief. The terms of the plea agreement were that his twenty year sentence was to run concurrently with both his Broward County sentence and any pending case against him for violation of federal parole. The trial judge confirmed these terms with Meagher at the beginning of the hearing and put them in writing in his judgment and commitment order. Given these circumstances, the trial judge’s reference to “consecutive” running of the sentence at a later point in the hearing must be characterized as mere inadvertence. We also take notice of the fact that the State did not recognize or detect the inconsistency at the time of the sentencing, nor did it ever suggest that such inconsistency might operate as a procedural bar.
The State next faults Meagher’s alleged failure to comply with several technical requirements for filing his second Rule 3.850 motion. First, the rule requires that the motion be made under oath. Although Meagher did this, the motion did not include by reference his memorandum in support thereof, which therefore was not covered by the oath. The supporting memorandum itself, however, was subscribed, sworn to and properly notarized. Scott v. State,
Second, a procedural bar is not warranted by Meagher’s failure to state the reasons why the claim was not raised in the former motion as required under sub-part (d) of the Rule. As noted above, the petitioner was proceeding pro se in both of his motions for postconviction relief as well as in his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Allegations of a pro se complaint are held to less stringent standards than formal pleadings drafted by lawyers. Haines v. Kerner,
Third, we find that Meagher substantially complied with Rule 3.850’s requirement that the movant set out the facts substantiating his allegations, in this case, that the plea was obtained involuntarily. The supporting facts stated by the petitioner in the second motion were as follows:
The plea was the result of an agreement that a (20) twenty year sentence would be imposed, said sentence to be served concurrently with any time the defendant may be required to serve pursuant to the Federal detainer lodged against him.
The plea was entered by the defendant with the understanding that if he was required to serve any time in Federal custody pursuant to the detainer, the sentence imposed in the instant case would be served ‘simultaneously’ with same.
This case is clearly different from McElroy v. State,
In summary, we hold that the facts of this case establish sufficient cause and prejudice under the test of Wainwright v. Sykes, supra, to warrant escape from procedural default. Because Meagher was not aware of his claim until April 1986, pursuing the issue either on direct appeal in 1982 or in his first Rule 3.850 motion in October 1984 was a factual impossibility. Prejudice from the default arises because he sacrificed his right to a trial in exchange for an allegedly illusory sentence. An allegation that the defendant would not have pleaded nolo contendere if he had known that the sentence would not run .concurrent to the parole violation sentence will support federal habeas relief. Justice v. Texas,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Meagher raised four claims:
1) That he was coerced into entering the agreement under threat of being placed in the county jail strip cell;
2) That psychotropic medications he was taking at the time of the plea prevented his ability to enter into it voluntarily;
3) That the competency issue was nondisposi-tive, entitling him to withdraw it; and
4) That he was denied a copy of his competency hearing at the time of the appeal.
In addition, Meagher alleged ineffective assistance of counsel on the ground that his attorney had failed to pursue these issues on appeal.
. Apparently, the fifteen month lapse between issuance of the notice and Meagher’s receipt of it resulted from postal delay, the notice allegedly having been found in the mails without a wrapper.
. In a detailed order the trial court gave the following reasons for denying Meagher postcon-viction relief:
1) Petitioner failed to satisfy the technical oath requirements of making the rule 3.850 motion under oath, because the oath executed on the motion did not include the memorandum in support of the motion, nor did the motion incorporate by reference the memorandum.
2) The motion failed to comply with sub-part (d) of Rule 3.850 which requires the petitioner to include "[i]f a previous motion or motions have been filed the reason or reasons why the claim or claims in the present motion were not raised in the former motion or motions."
3) The properly sworn part of the motion “[failed] to set out facts which substantiate the allegation that the plea was involuntary and that he lacked knowledge of its consequences.”
4) Even if petitioner had filed a facially sufficient motion, the ground alleged for postconviction relief was incorrect, since the parole revocation order "does not state that the unexpired portion of his federal sentence is to be served consecutively to his state sentence. Thus, that sentence can run concurrently with his state sentence.”
5) Petitioner could have, but failed to raise the issue in his first Rule 3.850 Motion, as the parole revocation order was dated January 7, 1985, giving him sufficient time to amend or supplement his pending motion prior to it being ruled upon on January 17, 1985.
. The State also maintained, incorrectly, that "[e]ven after the receipt of the ‘Notice of Action’ from the United States Parole Commission that forms the basis of the instant claim, petitioner waited more than a year before moving for post-conviction relief on that ground in the trial court.” Meagher filed his second motion to vacate on July 31, 1986 — only four months after his receipt of the notice on April 3, 1986.
. Here, the State argued on the merits that ”[d]efendant has made no showing that the report reflects any change not contemplated when the plea was entered. Even if such a showing could be made ... defendant does not allege or prove that the State was in any way responsible.”
.The comparable federal rule against abuse of successive petitions in habeas cases is contained in Rule 9(b), Rules Governing § 2254 Cases in the United States District Court.
. Subsequent to oral argument, Meagher filed a pleading entitled "Corrected Clarification of Relief Requested,” in which he withdrew his original prayer to vacate his guilty plea and remand
