Larry Dale PHILLIPS, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Alan H. Schreiber, Public Defender, and Stacey J. Pastel, Asst. Public Defender, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Carol Coburn Asbury, Asst. Atty. Gen., West Palm Beach, for appellee.
FARMER, Judge.
In this appeal from an order denying relief under rule 3.850, we reverse and remand with instructions to discharge the defendant on the basis of State v. Williams,
An appreciation of the burdens on trial judges and lawyers requires that we explain how we have come to make this retroactive application of Williams. A question of retroactive application can arise in two different settings in criminal cases: (1) those cases involving direct appeal of convictions not yet final, and (2) those cases involving collateral attack of convictions already final. As to direct appeal cases, the rule is found in Smith v. State,
"[a]ny decision of this [Supreme] Court announcing a new rule of law, or merely applying an established rule of law to a new or different factual situation, must be given retrospective application by the courts of this state in every case pending on direct review or not yet final."
As to collateral attacks on final convictions, the Florida rule is found in Witt v. State,
The federal rule for collateral relief cases is set forth in Teague v. Lane,
In this case, we deal with the issue whether to apply the holding in Williams, which originated in our decision in Kelly v. State,
The Williams holding fits logically within the rule of Witt (and, for that matter, Teague as well). Williams holds that the police manufacture of a highly addictive and death-causing substance, which police later sold near a local high school some of which was later lost and not returned to the police is governmental conduct so outrageous as to violate the due process clause. The Williams court concluded that the due process rights of defendants so ensnared require:
"that the courts refuse to invoke the judicial process to obtain a conviction where the facts of the case show that the methods used by law enforcement officials cannot be countenanced with a sense of justice and fairness."
We cannot imagine a constitutional holding more fundamental or major; we cannot describe a rule more implicit in the concept of ordered liberty than the condemnation contained in Williams. We thus have no difficulty extending the Williams holding to cases on collateral review. Surely it should at least apply to those cases as here involving the very same batch of offending substance (crack cocaine) at issue in the Williams and Kelly cases.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
GLICKSTEIN and POLEN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] As Justice Scalia explained in his concurring opinion in Harper, "[T]he true traditional view is that prospective decision-making is quite incompatible with the judicial power, and that the courts have no authority to engage in the practice." [e.o.] Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation, ___ U.S. at ___,
