Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
Dеfendant, Deborah S. Grenko, appeals the order summarily dismissing her pro se petition filed under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122 — 1 through 122 — 8 (West 2002)). Defendant argues the circuit court applied the wrong standard in dismissing her petition at the first stage of postconviction proceedings and she raised the gist of a meritorious claim. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In September 1999, a jury convicted defendant of solicitation of murder for hire (720 ILCS 5/8 — 1.2 (West 1996)). In October 1999, the trial court sеntenced defendant to 30 years’ imprisonment. This court affirmed defendant’s conviction on direct appeal. People v. Grenko, No. 4—99—0892 (April 5, 2002) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
In December 2002, defendant filed a pro se postconviction petition. The 61-page petition was accompanied by exhibits numbered 1 to 59b and set forth many alleged errors. These alleged errors included the following: (1) jurors slept during trial; (2) defense counsel was ineffective for, among other things, failing to seek a fitness hearing; (3) the jurors were exposed to prejudicial news articles; (4) the prosecution and defense counsel made improper statemеnts during trial; and (5) the charging instrument was flawed. In February 2003, the circuit court, concluding the claims in the petition were frivolous and patently without merit, denied the petition. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, defendant аsserts the circuit court erred by applying the wrong standard and dismissing her petition. Defendant contends the circuit court improperly examined the merits of her allegations at the first stage, instead of determining whether the рetition set out the gist of a meritorious claim. Defendant cites three examples of the court’s alleged failure to apply the appropriate standard and then simply concludes she stated the gist of а meritorious claim.
The State argues defendant challenges only the trial court’s reasoning in dismissing her postconviction petition and not the correctness of the court’s decision. The State concludes defendant has thus forfeited consideration of the merits of the decision. In the alternative, the State addresses defendant’s three contentions and argues the court’s decision was proper.
By enacting the Act, the legislature provided a remedy for those defendants who suffered a substantial violation of constitutional rights at trial. See People v. Edwards,
If the petition states the gist of a claim and the petition is not dismissed, the petition proceeds to the second stage, where, if necessary, counsel is appointed for defendant and the State may file responsive pleadings. See Edwards,
We agree with the State that defendant’s arguments on appeal are flawed because they challenge the trial court’s reasoning but not the ultimate decision. Defendant’s briefs failure to address the merits of the decision makes it difficult for us to ascertain and resolve the issues raised. Generally, such a failure would result in a finding that the appellant forfeited consideration on appeal. See 210 Ill. 2d R. 341(e)(7) (“Points not argued are waived”); see also Elder v. Bryant,
Defendant argues that the circuit court improperly dismissed her claim that she was denied a fair trial because jurors were sleeping during her trial. To support her assertion, defendant attached a notarized letter from her mother and her own affidavit, both stating some jurors slept through the trial. Defendant failed to alert the trial court to the sleeping jurors during the trial.
The State contends that because defendant failed to alert the court to the sleeping jurors during the trial, the issue is waived. The State relies upon People v. Silagy,
In Silagy, our supreme court found the defendant forfeited, on direct appeal, consideration of his argument he was denied a fair trial because a juror was seen sleeping. Silagy,
This court in People v. Donley,
We agree with Nix and apply Silagy’s forfeiture rule to defendant’s postconviction argument. The purpose of the doctrine of waiver is “to bring alleged errors to the attention of the trial judge and allow thаt judge an opportunity to correct them, to give the reviewing court the benefit of the judgment and comments of the court below, and to prevent unlimited litigation and unnecessary review of matters which could better be corrected in the court below.” People v. Dunn,
The judge’s presence in the courtroom assures defendants fair trials. The Supreme Court of Illinois has observed that “without the trial judge’s presence in the courtroom, there is no judicial authority which can observe, cure, and deter objectionable conduct which may have the effect of prejudicing the defendant in the minds of the jury.” People v. Vargas,
Waiver is not usually appropriate at the summary-dismissal stage. People v. Newbolds,
For the stated reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s order dismissing defendant’s postconvictiоn petition.
Affirmed.
McCullough, j., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I believe defendant has stated the gist of a constitutional claim. Allegations that three named jurors slept during her trial for solicitation of murder for hire is sufficiently troubling to allow the petition to proceed to the second stage of postconviction review.
When Donley,
The majority says it disagrees with the ruling in Donley. Does that mean Donley is overruled? Or is this case somehow distinguishable because it involves jurors rather than a slumbering judge?
The trial judge here says perhaps one or more jurors simply closed their eyes during lengthy proceedings. That sounds like fact-finding or perhaps idle speсulation. The majority suggests clever defendants and their lawyers may ignore sleeping jurors during trial and then argue about the ill effects of such peaceful repose after the adverse verdict.
I am confident the trial judges of Illinois can prevent such problems. The issue is not whether future defendants will make such claims. The issue is whether defendant’s claim entitles her to the second stage of the postconviction process. Applying waiver to her argument at the summary-dismissal stage is not appropriate. One purpose of the postconviction process is to review alleged errors that were not corrected at trial or on appeal. Nothing has changed since the decision in Donley. Unless a compelling reason exists to ignore Donley, we should respect precedent.
