¶ 1. At the time of Myron C. Dillard's plea in this case, all parties mistakenly believed that due to a "persistent repeater" penalty enhancer, he was facing mandatory life imprisonment at trial. With that understanding, Dillard accepted the State's offer to drop the penalty enhancer as well as a false imprisonment charge (on which the defendant faced a maximum ten-year bifurcated sentence), in exchange for the defendant's "no contest" plea. Dillard
¶ 2. Subsequently, Dillard discovered that the mandatory life imprisonment sentence never applied to him. In reality, at the time of the plea bargain, the maximum penalty he faced on the charge to which he pled was the same forty-year sentence that he "bargained for" in his plea. He now seeks to withdraw his plea on grounds of manifest injustice and ineffective assistance of counsel.
¶ 3. The fact that a defendant was misinformed about the maximum penalty applicable to his crime does not necessarily demonstrate manifest injustice, "when the maximum sentence communicated to the defendant is higher, but not substantially higher, than the actual allowable sentence." State v. Cross,
Background Facts
¶ 4. The charges against Dillard arose out of an armed robbery that took place in December 2009. Tracy Yarnell Lira was sitting in the driver's seat of her car in a Shopko parking lot in Menasha when a man opened the passenger side door and sat in the front seat. He threatened Lira with a gun, telling her "drive and don't look at me," and directing her to drive around the area as he demanded money and asked her about her personal life. Eventually he directed her to turn near some apartments and to wait and count to thirty before driving away.
¶ 5. With Lira's help, investigators prepared a composite sketch of the robber. Dillard's probation agent saw the sketch and thought it looked like Dillard, so he became a suspect. Investigators showed Lira a photo array of potential suspects that included Dillard's photo, but Lira was unable to identify Dillard as her attacker in that array. Subsequently, however, while surfing the internet on her own, Lira found a photo of Dillard in a web site showing photos of Wisconsin sex offender registrants. She contacted police to tell them that she thought Dillard was her attacker.
¶ 6. Dillard was arrested and charged with two counts, armed robbery in violation of Wis. Stat. § 943.32(2)
¶ 7. The State offered Dillard a plea agreement under which the State would drop the persistent repeater allegation and would drop the false imprisonment charge altogether, in exchange for Dillard's pleading no contest to an armed robbery charge. As his attorney explained to him during the negotiation process, this meant that his maximum penalty would fall from life imprisonment with no possibility of parole on the first charge, plus ten years' imprisonment on the second charge (of which a maximum of seven years would be initial confinement),
¶ 8. Dillard accepted this offer and was convicted pursuant to the plea agreement in August 2011. In October, the court sentenced him to the maximum of
¶ 9. Subsequently, Dillard moved to withdraw his plea on the basis that it was not knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently entered into because he "misunder[stood] . . . the direct consequences of his plea," in that, in reality, the persistent repeater enhancer was never applicable. Specifically, the persistent repeater enhancer was a legal impossibility because it only applies if, "of the 2 or more previous convictions [required to trigger persistent repeater status], at least one conviction occurred before the date" of one of the other convictions, Wis. Stat. § 939.62(2m)(b)l., whereas all of Dillard's prior convictions supporting the persistent repeater allegation happened on the same date. Dillard also argued that withdrawal should be permitted because his attorney's failure "to understand the applicable law and advise him he could not be sentenced as a persistent repeater" deprived him of the effective assistance of counsel.
¶ 10. In the postconviction hearing, the State conceded that no persistent repeater enhancer ever applied to Dillard's case. In considering Dillard's motion to withdraw the plea, the circuit court heard testimony from Dillard and his trial counsel at a Machner
¶ 11. Testimony by Dillard and his attorney at the Machner hearing left open the possibility that Dillard might have accepted the plea even if the persistent repeater enhancer had never been charged. His attorney testified that if she had been aware that the enhancer was legally inapplicable, she still would have advised him to take the plea. This is because the State had agreed to recommend eight years in prison, which she thought was a good bargain. And, in response to questioning by the circuit court, Dillard acknowledged that if the court's actual sentence had been the same as the sentence the State recommended — i.e., eight years' initial confinement instead of twenty-five — that Dillard would have been satisfied. Still, Dillard insisted that "getting rid of the persistent repeater" was the most significant part of the plea deal, to him.
¶ 12. At the conclusion of the Machner hearing, the court denied Dillard's motion to withdraw the plea, explaining as follows:
I think the [State v. Denk,2008 WI 130 , ¶ 71,315 Wis. 2d 5 ,758 N.W. 2d 775 ] case is squarely on point here. I think [Dillard] got the benefit of the bargain. Upon questioning from the court, he would have been*340 satisfied with my sentence if I went along with his attorney's recommendation, he would have been satisfied if I went along with what the State — as far as what their recommendation is, and the only reason we're here on appeal is because I did not go along with those recommendations and I gave him the maximum sentence which he knew he could have received from me. This is all a matter, in my opinion, from listening to him, now that he's got the sentence he doesn't like it and now he wants to appeal it and find a way to do so.
As far as ineffective assistance of counsel.. . there has to be some type of prejudice. In this case there's not. There's many reasons why he entered this plea. Although they say that the persistent repeater. .. was important, I believe that the other acts' evidence of the almost identical type crime taking place with a sexual assault and that evidence coming in on this case would have been devastating to any type of defense in this case, and that's, in my opinion, the reason why he reached this agreement because, as counsel indicates in her letter and here in testimony, there are a lot of negatives and she still would have recommended, even if the persistent repeater would automatically be dismissed, that she would have recommended this to him.
So I'm going to find that there's no prejudice whatsoever, even if there is any ineffective assistance, which I don't think there is. Therefore, I'm going to dismiss the motion, and I guess we go on to the Court of Appeals.
This appeal follows.
Analysis
¶ 13. After conviction and sentencing, a defendant seeking to withdraw a plea must demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that withdrawal is required to correct a manifest injustice. State v. Bentley,
¶ 14. When the defendant pleaded guilty based upon a mistaken understanding of the law, whether the plea may be withdrawn depends on whether the defendant received the benefit of the plea bargain despite the mistake of law. Id., ¶ 70. The fact that the actually-applicable penalty for the crime was lower, but not substantially lower, than the penalty the defendant thought he was facing at the time of the plea, does not undermine the plea. Cross,
¶ 15. Similarly, in Denk, the court rejected a defendant's motion to withdraw a plea due to a legal mistake because despite the mistake the defendant there received "exactly what" he had bargained for. Denk,
¶ 16. In his motion to withdraw his plea, Denk argued that, in reality, the particular type of paraphernalia he possessed never supported the felony paraphernalia charge but only a misdemeanor paraphernalia charge. Id., ¶¶ 23-24. He argued that this mistake of law rendered his plea bargain unknowing and involuntary, providing only an "illusory" benefit. Id., ¶ 23. The court rejected Denk's reasoning, pointing out that, even if Denk were correct about whether his paraphernalia possession was chargeable as a felony, he still received the benefit of his bargain because it "substantially minimized his exposure." Id., ¶ 76-77.
¶ 17. While Dillard's case bears superficial similarity to Denk, the reasoning in Denk does not extend to excuse the mistaken understanding about the legally
¶ 18. The same factors are present here. First, the legal mistake that marred the plea negotiations relates to the charge to which Dillard eventually pled, the armed robbery charge. The persistent repeater enhancer is not a separate charge and had no viability except as an allegedly applicable penalty enhancement on the armed robbery charge. Second, the consequence that Dillard bargained for in the plea — eliminating the persistent repeater enhancer (as well as the false imprisonment charge) and thereby eliminating the risk that he would be sentenced to spend the remainder of his life in prison — was actually a legal impossibility.
¶ 19. Like the mistake in Denk, the mistake at issue in Cross was much less substantial than the mistake in Dillard's case, amounting to a five-year difference in the total maximum applicable penalty. Cross,
¶ 20. For similar reasons, Dillard's plea withdrawal is also justified under the theory of ineffective assistance of counsel. In the plea withdrawal context, a defendant's plea may be withdrawn due to the ineffective assistance of counsel if trial counsel's performance was deficient and the defendant demonstrates "a reasonable probability that, but for [that deficiency], he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial." Bentley,
¶ 21. Finally, although we agree with the circuit court that Dillard may have taken the plea offer even if he had not thought he was facing a mandatory life sentence, and that Dillard may have chosen not to appeal if his ultimate sentence had been closer to the state-recommended eight years of incarceration, neither factor overcomes the fundamental error of law that pervaded the plea negotiations and sentencing here. The difference between mandatory life incarceration, i.e., a guarantee that one will die behind bars, and a maximum of twenty-five years' incarceration, i.e., a guarantee that at the very most one will face twenty-five years in prison, is substantial and undermined the fundamental integrity of this defendant's plea. Eight years has a nice ring to it. But a recommendation is just
By the Court. — Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2011-12 version unless otherwise noted.
The enhanced penalty on the false imprisonment charge would have been bifurcated so as to impose, at maximum, seven years of initial confinement and at least three years of extended supervision. See Wis. Stat. §§ 940.30, 939.62(l)(b) and (2), 939.50(3), and 973.01(2).
In a letter discussing the plea offer, Dillard's attorney mistakenly stated that his sentence on the armed robbery charge under the plea bargain would be bifurcated as "20 years of Initial Confinement and 20 years of Extended Supervision."
State v. Machner,
Though the circuit court remarked that it did not "think" that there was "any ineffective assistance," the arguments below also focused, mainly, on the prejudice prong.
