¶ 1. Defendant filed a petition for a writ of eoram nobis in the criminal division, seeking to vacate a conviction from 1993 on the ground that his plea was not entered voluntarily. The court denied the motion, concluding there was no basis for a collateral attack on defendant’s plea. Defendant appeals, arguing his plea should be vacated because the sentencing court did not substantially comply with Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 11. We affirm.
¶ 2. In October 1992, the State charged defendant with assault and robbery. Defendant entered a plea agreement with the State in which he agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a sentence of two-to-twelve years. In March 1993, the trial court held a change-of-plea hearing and engaged defendant
¶ 3. In November 2010, long after his sentence had been served, defendant filed a pro se motion in the criminal division “pursuant to coram nobis” to “vacate/bring to trial/set aside” his 1993 conviction. Defendant claimed the plea was entered involuntarily because he was not told that the plea could be used to enhance a future sentence and he was under the influence of narcotics at that time. The motion alleged that he was currently serving a federal sentence that was enhanced based on his 1993 Vermont conviction. In a written order, the court denied the motion, ruling that defendant had failed to demonstrate the plea colloquy was inadequate and that there was no basis for a collateral attack on the plea. Defendant appealed.
¶ 4. On appeal, now represented by counsel, defendant raises arguments aimed at challenging the adequacy of the plea colloquy. He argues that at the change-of-plea hearing in 1993 the court failed to substantially comply with Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 11 and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. Although disagreeing on the merits, the State’s arguments are primarily aimed at alleged procedural deficiencies in defendant’s petition for relief. The State contends that defendant’s petition is improperly brought in the criminal division because defendant may not avail himself of coram nobis when post-conviction relief (PCR) proceedings are available to him, and that they are available in this case. Thus, the State argues that the petition should be dismissed without reaching the merits of defendant’s arguments.
¶ 5. We begin -with the threshold question of whether coram nobis relief is available to defendant. Coram nobis is an ancient common law writ. L. Yackle, Postconviction Remedies § 9, at 36 (1981). “At early common law, there was no remedy comparable to the modern motion for a new trial or, indeed, appellate review.”
Id.
§ 9, at 37. The writ was designed to fill this gap somewhat to correct errors of fact “affecting the validity and regularity of the judgment.”
Skok v. State,
¶ 6. Early on, the U.S. Supreme Court recognized the availability of a common law writ of coram nobis, describing it as a means “to bring . . . errors in matters of fact which had not been put in issue or passed upon and were material to the validity and regularity of the legal proceeding itself,” such as the minority or death of a party. Id. at 68. The Court described the writ narrowly as confined to addressing factual errors “of the most fundamental character” and not designed to raise questions such as newly discovered evidence, or the misbehavior or partiality of jurors. Id. at 69.
¶ 7. Following adoption of the federal habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. §2255, and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60, which abolished use of coram nobis in civil cases, “[i]t was far from clear that coram nobis was available in federal courts in 1948.” 3 C. Wright & S. Welling, Federal Practice and Procedure § 624, at 649 (4th ed. 2011). In
United States v. Morgan,
¶ 8. Therefore, under the modern-day formulation in federal courts “coram nobis is broad enough to encompass not only errors of fact that affect the validity or regularity of legal proceedings, ,but also legal errors of a constitutional or fundamental proportion.” 3 C. Wright
&
S. Welling,
supra,
§ 624, at 650 (footnotes omitted).
1
It remains, however, limited to situations where a defendant has no other remedy available.
United States v. Folak,
¶ 9. Because this federal law is procedural, states are not bound by it. State courts have adopted different approaches to the questions of whether coram nobis is available at all and, if so, whether it can be used to address both matters of fact and law. The uncertainty surrounding coram nobis is aptly described in the following quote:
Our decisions are in such confusion on the writ of coram nobis that no one can tell where we stand. In writing on the subject we have wobbled and bobbled like a lost raft at sea. But we are not alone, as other courts likewise seem to be without mast and compass when sailing this sea. Reference to the texts and reported decisions of foreign jurisdictions will show that other courts are in the same state of confusion. The writ of coram nobis appears to be the wild ass of the law which the courts cannot control. It was hoary with age and even obsolete in England before the time of Blackstone, and courts who attempt to deal with it become lost in the mist and fog of the ancient common law.
¶ 10. Nonetheless, some consistencies have emerged. As to viability of the remedy generally, most state courts recognize the writ “unless superseded or abolished by statute.”
Sanders,
¶ 11. As to the scope of relief available, the Supreme Court’s decision to extend coram nobis to fundamental or constitutional legal errors has generally, although not uniformly, been followed by state courts.
Skok,
In light of these serious collateral consequences, there should be a remedy for a convicted person who is not incarcerated and not on parole or probation, who is suddenly faced with a significant collateral consequence of his or her conviction, and who can legitimately challenge the conviction on constitutional or fundamental grounds.
Id. at 661.
¶ 12. In contrast, California has refused to expand the scope of coram nobis beyond its traditional application of providing a means to review newly discovered facts that affect the validity of the legal proceeding.
People v. Hyung Joon Kim,
¶ 13. Vermont decisions have long recognized the general availability of coram nobis. In
Beardsley v. Gordon’s Administrator,
¶ 14. In prior cases, defendants have attempted to rely on coram nobis in criminal proceedings, but for various reasons this
Court has not yet addressed the writ’s applicability to proceedings governed by the Vermont Rules of Criminal Procedure. See
State v. LeClaire,
¶ 15. Thus, we address this threshold legal question. As noted, coram nobis was originally part of this state’s common law.
Beardsley,
¶ 16. As noted, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that a federal prisoner’s right to petition for the common law writ of coram nobis was not abolished by the similarly worded Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) because such a petition is part of the original criminal case, not a separate civil proceeding.
Morgan,
¶ 18. Thus, although defendant is no longer serving his 1993 sentence, his allegation that the 1993 sentence is being used to enhance a current federal sentence puts him within the ambit of our PCR statute. In the context of a PCR proceeding, defendant can raise the issues referred to in his motion, including the adequacy of the Rule 11 colloquy and the effectiveness of trial counsel. See
In re Laws,
Affirmed.
Notes
While
Morgan
remains good law, the U.S. Supreme Court appears to have retreated from it somewhat in
Carlisle v. United States,
We note that while a PCR petition must be filed in the civil division “of the county where the sentence was imposed,” 13 V.S.A. § 7131, a petition for a writ of coram nobis must be brought in the court that rendered judgment, that is the criminal division.
In re Garceau,
