In the instant case, the Court of Appeals conflated the two standards of review, and therefore failed to properly analyze defendant's ineffective-assistance claims. Therefore, we reverse the Court of Appeals' holdings regarding those claims and remand the case to that Court for reconsideration of those claims in light of the analysis below.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Defendant lived with his girlfriend, Kanisha Fant. They quarreled throughout the night of December 9,
The next day, gunshots struck Vena's home. One bullet pierced Vena's neck, killing her. After the police arrived, defendant showed up at the scene and was taken into custody. The police lacked sufficient evidence to charge defendant, however, and he was released. The same day, without a search warrant, the police obtained Taylor's consent to search the bags containing defendant's belongings. They found several rounds of .357 ammunition. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives was alerted, and it obtained an arrest warrant for defendant's violation of federal law prohibiting a felon (which he was) from possessing ammunition.
In February 2013, an arrest warrant was issued and executed on defendant at his brother's apartment, where defendant had been staying. Because his brother was on parole, the police searched the apartment based on his brother's parolee status.
Defendant was charged with first-degree premeditated murder and felony-firearm, among other things. The prosecution's case relied, in part, on testimony about threats defendant had made to the victim's family on December 10 and evidence of the ammunition and gun found during the investigation. Regarding the threats, Linda Wilkerson, the sister of Vena's fiancé, testified that Vena said that defendant, throughout
Defendant was convicted of the lesser offense of second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, discharging a firearm into a building, MCL 750.234b, being a felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f, and possessing a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b. On appeal, defendant argued, among other issues, that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective, and the Court of Appeals remanded to the trial court for a Ginther
The trial court rejected defendant's claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, finding that counsel's performance was not deficient and that, in any case, defendant was not prejudiced. Defendant appealed. He also raised a host of unpreserved errors, asking that they be reviewed for plain error. For the reasons
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Questions of law, such as the applicability of legal doctrines to a given set of facts, are reviewed de novo.
III. ANALYSIS
The issue in this case involves the relationship between the standards for reviewing unpreserved claims that the trial court erred (which are reviewed for plain error) and related claims that trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective. Does a defendant's failure to demonstrate the former preclude him or her from being able to demonstrate the latter? This question arises because it is not uncommon for a defendant to challenge the same underlying error through both frameworks.
Our analysis begins with a simple examination of the elements of each standard of review. Under Strickland v. Washington , establishing ineffective assistance requires a defendant to show (1) that trial counsel's performance was objectively deficient, and (2) that the deficiencies prejudiced the defendant.
1) error must have occurred, 2) the error was plain, i.e., clear or obvious, 3) ... the plain error affected substantial rights ... [, and 4) ] once a defendant satisfies these three requirements, an appellate court must exercise its discretion in deciding whether to reverse. Reversal is warranted only when the plain, forfeited error resulted in the conviction of an actually innocent defendant or when an error seriously affected the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings independent of the defendant's innocence.[11 ]
A "clear or obvious" error under the second prong is one that is not "subject to reasonable dispute."
As an initial matter, the specific error that is the focus of each standard is different. It is the trial court's unobjected-to error that is the subject of plain-error review.
Examples are helpful. A defendant might appeal a trial court's obvious error of permitting a prosecutor to extensively reference the defendant's post-arrest, post- Miranda
Conversely, an error's lack of obviousness does not, without more, necessarily preclude an ineffective-assistance
By contrast, the errors underlying ineffective-assistance claims often are not apparent from the trial record but instead require additional evidentiary development.
Because facts outside the trial record could be critical to an ineffective-assistance claim, a court presented with such a claim coupled with a related plain-error argument cannot simply plug in the plain-error prejudice analysis for the ineffective-assistance prejudice analysis. As with the remaining elements of each claim, a court must evaluate the record evidence relevant to each independent legal claim.
Finally, Carines 's fourth prong-focusing on manifest injustice-lacks any analog in the Strickland test. In short, the elements of an ineffective-assistance claim evaluate counsel's performance, and while sometimes a trial court's error relating to the same underlying issue will have facts in common with that Sixth Amendment claim, the legal framework for each operates independently. All of this makes sense, given the different types of errors each test is meant to address. There is no easy shortcut when reviewing separate appellate claims of the court's and counsel's errors, even where those errors have as their focus the same underlying issue.
IV. APPLICATION
In this case, we conclude that the Court of Appeals impermissibly conflated the plain-error and ineffective-assistance standards at least twice. The first involved the admission of the ammunition and murder weapon. Defendant contends that this evidence was the fruit of an unlawful search under the Fourth Amendment. According to defendant, the search, which occurred at his father's home, was unlawful because his father lacked actual or apparent authority to consent to the police officers' request to search defendant's bags. The discovery of the ammunition among the belongings resulted in the involvement of the federal agents, which led to the arrest warrant and culminated in the execution of the warrant at defendant's brother's home. The search of that home was possible because of his brother's parolee status. And it was during that search that the murder weapon was found. Thus, according to defendant, the gun and ammunition were only discovered because of the initial illegal search of defendant's belongings and were therefore inadmissible.
It seems the Court's holding was based on Carines 's second prong, i.e., any error was not obvious. Indeed, by stating that the "available record [was] insufficient to establish a Fourth Amendment violation,"
The Court of Appeals made the same mistake in its evaluation of the admission of Vena's statements through the testimony of her fiancé's sister, Wilkerson. According to Wilkerson, Vena claimed that defendant had been threatening Vena's family. Defendant has contended on appeal that those hearsay statements
In its plain-error analysis of this issue, the Court of Appeals rejected defendant's argument for two reasons. First, it concluded that any error in admitting the testimony was not clear or obvious given
Defendant also claimed that his attorney was ineffective for failing to object to this hearsay evidence. In its consideration of that question, the Court simply noted that defendant's claim "must fail" because his plain-error claim failed.
The Court's second rationale was that defendant had not established plain error because he could not show that the admission of the statements prejudiced him-specifically, because the hearsay statements were relevant to establishing premeditation but the jury rejected premeditation by acquitting defendant of first-degree murder. But the Court could reach this conclusion only after properly applying Strickland , which requires considerations of defense counsel's actions and their effect in light of all of the evidence relating to that claim, including that developed at any evidentiary hearing.
That proper application is not evident in the Court's opinion. The Court parsed the testimony and the claims of error relating to it. It stated that even if "Vena's first statement to Wilkerson was inadmissible hearsay," defendant could not show prejudice.
The Court of Appeals did not address these additional statements in its ineffective-assistance analysis. But, in its plain-error analysis, the Court rejected defendant's argument because it was unclear whether Wilkerson gave an unresponsive answer or whether she answered by demonstrating the tone and manner in which Vena had made the statements. Seemingly, then, the Court thought any error in admitting this testimony was not clear or obvious (i.e., defendant failed to satisfy Carines 's second prong). Again, a defendant's failure to satisfy the second prong of Carines 's plain-error test (that the error was obvious) does not foreclose an ineffective-assistance claim, which evaluates questions separate from the obviousness of an error. But other than the error's lack of obviousness, the Court of Appeals offered no other reason for rejecting defendant's ineffective-assistance claim regarding these subsequent hearsay statements from Vena. Consequently, it either failed to address defendant's ineffective-assistance argument concerning the subsequent statements or it once again impermissibly conflated the plain-error and ineffective-assistance analyses.
V. CONCLUSION
In this case we hold that a defendant's inability to satisfy the plain-error standard in connection with a specific trial court error does not necessarily mean that he or she cannot meet the ineffective-assistance standard regarding counsel's alleged deficient performance relating to that same error. Courts must independently analyze each claim, even if the subject of a defendant's claim relates to the same error. Because the Court of Appeals failed to apply Strickland to defendant's ineffective-assistance claims, we reverse the Court of Appeals' holdings as to those claims and remand this case to the Court of Appeals to review those claims under the Strickland framework in light of the trial record and the record produced at the Ginther hearing.
Stephen J. Markman, Brian K. Zahra, Bridget M. McCormack, Richard H. Bernstein, Kurtis T. Wilder, concurs.
Clement, J., took no part in the decision of this case.
Notes
See Mich. Admin Code, R 791.7735(2) (permitting a parole agent to conduct a warrantless search of a parolee's property when the agent has reasonable cause to believe a parole violation exists).
People v. Ginther ,
People v. Randolph , unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered March 26, 2015 (Docket No. 321551), p. 1.
People v. Randolph , unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued November 24, 2015 (Docket No. 321551), pp. 6-10,
People v. Randolph ,
People v. Dupree ,
See, e.g., Gordon v. United States ,
Strickland ,
Strickland ,
See People v. Grant ,
People v. Carines ,
Puckett v. United States ,
Carines ,
See, e.g., Saro ,
Deck v. State ,
See generally United States v. Carthorne ,
Carines ,
The inverse is true as well. While counsel's failure to object to testimony or argument that the trial court properly admitted might rarely constitute ineffective assistance, see generally People v. Riley (After Remand) ,
Miranda v. Arizona ,
See, e.g., People v. Shafier ,
Gordon ,
See, e.g., People v. Carbin ,
See Ex parte Taylor ,
Indeed, the very reason for the plain-error framework, with its extra elements (particularly Carines 's fourth prong), is for instances in which defense counsel failed to preserve the argument by raising it in the trial court. See Carines ,
United States v. Caputo ,
See 3 LaFave, Criminal Procedure (4th ed.), § 11.7(e), p. 962 ("Appellate courts uniformly note that where a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel could be more fully developed by evidence outside the trial record, the preferable procedure is to present it initially in a setting that permits an evidentiary hearing.").
See Massaro v. United States ,
Id .
Id . ; see also Gov't of Virgin Islands v. Vanterpool ,
Ginther ,
See generally Segura v. United States ,
Randolph , unpub. op. at 6.
Id . at 5.
Id . at 5-6.
Id . at 6.
Id . at 5.
Id . at 10.
MRE 803(2) (defining an "excited utterance" as "[a] statement relating to a startling event or condition made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event or condition").
Randolph , unpub. op. at 4 ("While there is some evidence in the record to suggest that Vena was not overcome by the stress or excitement caused by the threat, that issue was not fully explored due to defendant's failure to object. Therefore, we cannot conclude that any error is clear or obvious.").
Id .
Id . at 10.
Id .
Id . (emphasis added).
Id . at 4 (quotation marks omitted).
Id .
To the extent the Court of Appeals held that none of Vena's hearsay statements could have prejudiced defendant under Strickland because they were relevant only to premeditation, the Court's opinion is unclear. Nor did the Court ever consider whether the statements could have been relevant for other purposes. Consequently, the Court's failure to apply Strickland to the ineffective-assistance claim requires a remand.
Because the above discussion is sufficient to resolve this appeal, we decline to consider the second question we asked the parties to brief, i.e., "whether the prejudice standard under the third prong of plain error ... is the same as the Strickland prejudice standard[.]" Randolph ,
