Steven E. Thomas appeals from the district court’s order dismissing his application for post-conviction relief following an evidentiary healing. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
In early February 2002, a fire destroyed the interior of Thomas’s mobile home. Thomas, who called 911, told investigators that he lit candles upon arriving home from a bar, smoked a cigarette in bed, and later awoke and went to the store to buy more cigarettes. Thomas stated that, when he returned from the store, his home was in flames. A local fire investigator who arrived at the scene that day concluded in his report that the cause of the fire was undetermined.
The day after the fire, a woman from an escort service called the police to inform them that Thomas had admitted to her that he burned his home for insurance proceeds. The escort told the police that, prior to the fire, Thomas had stated that he was going to burn his home to collect insurance proceeds and that Thomas called the day after the fire to tell her that he had gone through with his plan. The escort allowed the police to set up surveillance in her apartment and she invited Thomas over. While at the escort’s apartment, Thomas confessed to the escort that he had lit his bedding on fire with candles in order to collect the proceeds from his recently-purchased renter’s insurance.
Thomas was charged with first degree arson. I.C. § 18-802. At trial, the escort testified concerning Thomas’s confession, and the video from the escort’s apartment containing Thomas’s confession was played for the jury. The jury found Thomas guilty. Thomas appealed and this Court affirmed his judgment of conviction and sentence.
State v. Thomas,
Thomas filed a pro se application for post-conviction relief and a motion for the appointment of counsel. Thomas’s motion for post-conviction counsel was granted, and Thomas filed an amended application for post-conviction relief. Thomas’s post-conviction applications contained claims of ineffective assistance of both trial and appellate counsel. After an evidentiary hearing at
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In order to prevail in a post-conviction proceeding, the applicant must prove the allegations by a preponderance of the evidence. I.C. § 19-1907;
Stuart v. State,
III.
ANALYSIS
A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may properly be brought under the post-conviction procedure act.
Murray v. State,
A. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
1. Failure to communicate
Thomas argues his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to communicate with him. At oral argument before this Court, Thomas asserted that the overarching claim in his application for post-conviction relief was a failure by his trial counsel to communicate with him. Thomas asserts that he mailed three letters to his attorney during three consecutive months and never received a response. Thomas’s letters requested discovery from his attorney and asked his attorney to file various motions on his behalf. The state asserts that, because Thomas’s amended petition does not contain a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failure to communicate and because that claim is not addressed in the district court’s opinion, Thomas is precluded from raising it before this court.
Fox v. State,
For the purpose of this opinion, we will assume that Thomas properly preserved this claim by arguing it before the district court. The Idaho appellate courts have recognized the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for counsel’s failure to communicate.
See, e.g., Parrott v. State,
2. Failure to adequately prepare for trial
Thomas argues that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel based on his attorney’s failure to adequately prepare for trial and investigate his ease. The state counters by arguing that the district court’s order is supported by substantial evidence and not based on a misapplication of law, and Thomas has failed to demonstrate otherwise.
Determining whether an attorney’s pretrial preparation falls below a level of reasonable performance constitutes a question of law, but is essentially premised upon the circumstances surrounding the attorney’s investigation.
Gee v. State,
In this case, Thomas asserts that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial attorney failed to investigate the escort’s motivation for testifying against him and failed to aggressively cross-examine the escort. At his post-conviction hearing, the following exchange between Thomas and his post-conviction attorney occurred:
Q. How do you think — your perceived failure of [trial counsel’s] examination of [the escort], how do you think a different approach might have changed the outcome of your trial?
A. I think if he would have been aggressive, that it would have been brought out that she did have a motive.
Q. And what did you believe that motive was?
A. That she had been previously busted for prostitution and tried to make the very best deal possible to keep herself out of trouble.
Q. How did you know that she had been previously busted?
A. It was just a suspicion that I had.
The record demonstrates that Thomas’s trial counsel did extensively cross-examine the escort. Thomas’s brief contends that “there is a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different if Mr. Thomas had been allowed to review the discovery and if there had been testimony countering Mr. Thomas’s alleged motive to set the fire or further discrediting the escort.” However, Thomas’s allegations about the escort possibly receiving some benefit for her testimony are pure speculation. Further, there is no likelihood that such evidence would have affected the outcome of Thomas’s trial, where his conviction was based on his own taped confession, not the escort’s testimony. Therefore, the district court was correct in denying Thomas’s claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel based on his attorney’s alleged failure to investigate the escort and failure to more aggressively cross-examine her.
Thomas generally argues that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to spend more time on his case and failing to do as Thomas requested in his letters. For example, Thomas argues that his attorney was ineffective for failing to provide the discovery that Thomas requested-the taped confession Thomas made to the escort. Thomas alleges that, had this discovery been provid
ed,
“The constitutional requirement for effective assistance of counsel is not the key to the prison for a defendant who can dredge up a long series of examples of how the case might have been tried better.”
Ivey v. State,
3. Failure to investigate witnesses
Thomas argues that his trial attorney provided ineffective assistance by failing to investigate certain witnesses and failing to call them at trial to establish his lack of motive. Thomas also asserts that his trial attorney failed to file his “motion to dismiss or otherwise articulate the arguments contained therein.”
In a post-conviction proceeding challenging an attorney’s failure to pursue a motion in the underlying criminal action, the district court may consider the probability of success of the motion in question in determining whether the attorney’s inactivity constituted incompetent performance.
Boman v. State,
In this ease, Thomas testified that he believed his case would have been dismissed if trial counsel had filed his motion to dismiss because the state “could not prove motive or intent.” Thomas argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and possibly call various witnesses who he claims would have testified to his lack of motive to commit arson. The evidence that Thomas indicates would attest to his lack of motive would have come from various state agencies and representatives that were providing Thomas with assistance since his release on parole. These agencies include the Idaho Parole Commission, EL ADA Weatherization, Ada County Welfare Office, Idaho Vocational Rehabilitation Department, Goodwill Easter Seals, and the Intermountain Hospital.
Motive is not an essential element of any crime unless it is made so by statute.
State v. Radabaugh,
To the extent that Thomas is arguing that individuals from these state agencies and rehabilitation programs could have offered testimony to counter that offered by the escort — that Thomas burned his home for insurance proceeds — his claim also fails. It is not enough to allege that a witness would have testified to certain events, or would have rebutted certain statements made at trial, without providing through affidavit, nonhearsay evidence of the substance of the witnesses’ testimony.
Hall v. State,
Even if we assume that Thomas’s trial attorney failed to communicate adequately with Thomas — thereby demonstrating deficient performance in accordance with the
Strickland
test — Thomas has not demon
strated
B. Corpus Delicti in Arson Cases
Thomas argues that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to file his motion to dismiss and failing to argue that a fire is presumed accidental and that the corpus delicti rule requires that, in arson cases, there be corroborating evidence that a fire is of incendiary origin. Thomas claims it was improper for his finding of guilt to stand on his confession alone and that there was no corroborating evidence introduced at trial. Thomas asserts that, “had trial counsel articulated these principles as the basis of his objection to the introduction of Mr. Thomas’s confession and his motion for acquittal, there is a reasonable probability that the district court would have granted his motion.”
Additionally, Thomas argues that his appellate counsel “performed deficiently by failing to argue that the corpus delicti rule in arson cases is distinct and that there was insufficient evidence to support” his conviction. Thomas also asserts that, based on some similarities between other jurisdictions and Idaho case law on arson and corpus delicti, “there is a reasonable probability that, had appellate counsel raised these arguments on appeal, the outcome would have been different.” The state contends that Thomas’s claim has no merit because the argument he is suggesting appellate counsel should have made is contrary to Idaho law.
Corpus delicti prohibits the conviction of a criminal defendant based upon nothing more than the defendant’s own confession to prove that the crime occurred.
See State v. Tiffany,
To prove a crime generally, the state must provide evidence of three broad elements: (1) that an injury occurred; (2) that criminal agency was involved in causing the injury; and (3) the identity of the person who caused the injury.
See id.
at 75,
However, although a defendant’s extrajudicial admission, standing alone, is insufficient to support a conviction, only slight corroborating evidence is necessary, and the corroborating evidence need not be sufficient to establish
each
element of the corpus delicti.
Tiffany,
In Idaho’s only case discussing the requirement of corpus delicti in the context of arson, the Idaho Supreme Court stated that “the corpus delicti in a ease of arson in the second degree is established by proof that the prohibited burning occurred as a result of a criminal agency.”
State v. Johnson,
In
Tiffany,
the defendant argued that the trial court improperly denied her motion for judgment of acquittal because the state had not proved the corpus delicti for her convic
tion
Additionally, Tiffany argued that the trial court erred in failing to give two proffered jury instructions that would have required that the jury find that the victim died from criminal means without considering Tiffany’s confession. The Court disagreed stating that “we have never required that the fact that a crime occurred must be proven independent of the defendant’s extrajudicial statements.”
Id.
at 918,
Thomas asserts that his trial and appellate attorneys performed deficiently by failing to argue that the corpus delicti rule in arson cases is distinct and requires proof that the fire is of incendiary origin. Other jurisdictions have held that corpus delicti in arson cases requires a showing that the fire was of incendiary origins before admitting a confession, or in order to sustain a finding of guilt.
See, e.g., Thomas v. State,
Much like the testimony of the pathologist in Tiffany, in this case the fire investigator testified that, although his report concluded that the cause of the fire was undetermined, he noticed various red flags that the case had raised for him, such as Thomas’s recent purchase of renter’s insurance and inconsistencies between Thomas’s description of his actions on the evening of the fire and the physical evidence. The fire investigator testified that Thomas’s videotaped confession to the escort and description of how he started the fire was consistent with the information that the fire investigator received from the scene. Similar to the evidence in Tiffany, in this case there was evidence of a fire, there was evidence that the fire occurred in a period where Thomas was the sole occupant of the home, and the fire investigator testified that Thomas’s confession about how he started the fire was consistent with the physical evidence. As the Supreme Court stated in Tiffany, Idaho law has never required the fact that a crime occurred be proven independently of a defendant’s confession.
In addition to the testimony of the fire investigator that Thomas’s confession regarding how he started the fire was consistent with the physical evidence, there was also testimony from the escort that Thomas told her about his plan to burn his home before the fire occurred. Furthermore, there was Thomas’s purchase of renter’s insurance approximately one month before the fire occurred, even though Thomas lived in the home three months prior to purchasing insurance. Regardless of whether we apply Idaho’s current law of corpus delicti requiring slight corroboration or apply the standard from these other jurisdictions as Thomas suggests his attorneys should have
IV.
CONCLUSION
The district court correctly dismissed Thomas’s post-conviction claims of ineffective assistance of counsel because Thomas failed to meet his burden of proof by demonstrating how he was prejudiced by his attorney’s inaction. Additionally, the district court correctly dismissed Thomas’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel based on his corpus delicti arguments because Thomas would not have been successful on either his motion to dismiss or an appeal claiming insufficiency of the evidence. Therefore, the order of the district court dismissing Thomas’s post-conviction application is affirmed. No costs or attorney fees are awarded on appeal.
