WHITE v. THE STATE.
S17A1083
Supreme Court of Georgia
October 16, 2017
302 Ga. 315
NAHMIAS, Justice.
FINAL COPY
1.
On the night of April 28-29, 2012, Appellant participated in a home invasion in Eastanollee, Georgia, that resulted in the deaths of Martinez and Maldonado. On April 30, Appellant was arrested, and on May 3, attorney Drew W. Powell of the Mountain Judicial Circuit Public Defender‘s Office filed an
On January 16, 2013, attorney Jerilyn Bell of the Office of the Georgia Capital Defender filed an entry of appearance on Appellant‘s behalf, and on February 15, Emily Gilbert of the same office filed an entry of appearance. On October 15, 2014, Joseph W. Vigneri, another attorney with the Capital Defender‘s office, filed a nоtice of substitution for Bell as lead counsel.
On September 18, 2015, during the July 2015 term of the Stephens County
The following month, on October 15, 2015, the trial court received a handwritten letter from Appellant in which he requested to withdraw his guilty pleas.2 The court treated the letter as a pro se motion to withdraw guilty pleas.
On October 21, the court served the letter on the District Attorney and defense counsel and issued a rule nisi, copied to the “Georgia Public Defender Standards Council,” setting a hearing on December 1 to consider whether conflict counsel should be appointed for Appellant in light of the allegations in his handwritten letter against his present counsel. On November 5, Appellant, acting pro se, filed a motion to withdraw guilty pleas, claiming that the indictment was void, his pleas were invalid, the trial court erred in accepting the guilty pleas, and he received ineffective assistance of counsel. On November 12, Vigneri and Gilbert filed a motion to withdraw as counsel for Appellant.
On December 1, 2015, the case appeared on the trial court‘s 1:30 p.m. hearing calendar, but Appellant was unavailable, so the hearing was continued. At 1:45 p.m., the chief legal officer for the Georgia Public Defender Council (“GPDC“) filed an Objection to Jurisdiction and Statement of Interest that objected to the trial court‘s effort to control who represented Appellant and
the [GPDC] director has appointed Defendant White‘s case to William A. (Bill) Morrison. The Council has contracted with Mr. Mоrrison before on capital matters, and Mr. Morrison has had the necessary training to advise Defendant White on his motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
On December 11, the trial court granted Vigneri and Gilbert‘s motion to withdraw as counsel for Appellant and entered a separate order rescheduling the December 1 heаring to February 9, 2016, “for the purpose of hearing the merits of [Appellant‘s] Motion to Withdraw Guilty Plea.” The hearing was later continued to February 12, 2016.
At the outset of the February 12 hearing, the State orally moved to dismiss Appellant‘s pro se motions to withdraw guilty pleas on the ground that he was represented by counsel when he filed them. Morrison, who appeared as counsel for Appellant at the hearing, complained of the lack of notice that the State was going to move to dismiss. The court gave Morrison 10 days to respond to the State‘s motion and suspended the hearing for 60 days to allow Morrison time to investigate the medications that Appellant was on and his state of mind when he entered his guilty pleas. On February 23, Morrison filed an amended motion to withdraw guilty pleas, asking that Appellant‘s letter to the court and pro se
Morrison filed a timely notice of appeal on Appellant‘s behalf. After the trial court transmitted the record to this Court, the appeal was docketed to the April 2017 term and submitted for decision on the briefs.
2.
Appellant contends that a defendant in a capital case should be “deemed unrepresented” after the entry of sentence. Appellant cites no authority, however, for the novel proposition that a lawyer‘s representation of a criminal defendant, whеther facing the death penalty or otherwise, terminates the moment that a judgment of conviction and sentence is entered. Instead, he plucks a phrase from the last sentence of a Uniform Superior Court Rule on arraignment and argues that it means that a criminal defendant‘s attorney at arraignment represents the defendant from that point “throughout the trial,” but if the defendant chooses after the trial to file a pro se motion, the defendant is
More fundamentally, and contrary to Appellant‘s assertion, a holding that criminal defendants’ representation by counsel terminates automatically on the
A trial court in a criminal case has “plenary power over its orders and judgments during the term at which they are enterеd and may amend, correct, or revoke them, for the purpose of promoting justice,” as long as no notice of appeal has been filed. Hipp v. State, 293 Ga. 415, 416 (746 SE2d 95) (2013) (citation and punctuation omitted). This authority “‘extends to all orders and judgments save those which are founded upon verdicts.‘” Id. (citation omitted).
There may be some period of time after which it no longer would be reasonable to treat a convicted defendant who has not filed a timely appeal or motion extending the time to appeal, or a timely motion to withdraw his guilty plea, as still represented by his trial or plea counsel. See, e.g.,
Appellant attempts to distinguish Tolbert, Williams, and Cotton on their facts, asserting that in those cases, the pro se filings treated as nullities were filed during the course of litigation, and the criminal defendants were rеpresented by counsel both before and after the pro se filings. But Appellant also was represented by counsel both before and after his pro se filings, and like his motions, the pro se filings treated as nullities in Cotton and Williams were
The only filing that could be treated as a valid motion to withdraw Appellant‘s guilty pleas was the amended motion that his new counsel, Morrison, filed on February 23, 2016. By that time, however, the term of court during which Appellant entered his guilty pleas had ended, so the trial court no longеr had jurisdiction to grant a motion to withdraw guilty pleas. See Rubiani v. State, 279 Ga. 299, 299 (612 SE2d 798) (2005) (“‘It is well settled that when the term of court has expired in which a defendant was sentenced pursuant to a guilty plea, the trial court lacks jurisdiction to allow the withdrawal of the plea.‘” (citation omitted)). Accordingly, the trial court properly granted the Stаte‘s motion to dismiss.
3.
Appellant contends next that the February 23 amended motion to withdraw guilty pleas transformed his previous October 15 and November 5 pro se filings into filings made by his later-appointed counsel. But an amended motion is not a time machine that allows a litigant to change past events. Appellant invоkes the “relation back” doctrine for amendments of pleadings in civil actions, see
4.
Finally, Appellant contends that Vigneri and Gilbert provided ineffective assistance by filing their motion to withdraw as his counsel without first filing a motion to withdraw guilty pleas or a motion to stay the proceedings until substitute counsel was appointed. The Sixth Amеndment guarantees a criminal defendant the effective assistance of counsel in connection with his entry of a guilty plea. See Lee v. United States, 582 U. S. ___, ___ (137 SCt 1958, 1964, 198 LE2d 476) (2017). To demonstrate that Vigneri and Gilbert were constitutionally ineffective, Appellant was required to show that their “representation ‘fell below an objective standard of rеasonableness’ and that he was prejudiced as a result.” Id. (quoting Strickland v. Washington, 466 U. S. 668, 688, 692 (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984)). Whatever the merits of this ineffective assistance of counsel claim, Appellant did not raise it in the trial
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
Murder. Stephens Superior Court. Before Judge Caudell.
William A. Morrison, for appellant.
George R. Christian, District Attorney, Richаrd K. Bridgeman, Assistant District Attorney; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Notes
Appellant‘s letter said:
Honorable Caudell, 10-11-2015
My name is Wardell Deloun White. My case and Indictment No. is 2012-SU-CR-110CC. The purpose of this is to inform you that i would like to withdraw my plea for the following reasons: 1) I‘m not guilty. 2) Before and during the signing of my plea agreement, i was prescribe anti-psychotic mental health medicine, Zyprexa. Which causes confusion, distraughtness as well as irrational
thinking. I was pressured to believe that if i didn‘t take the plea agreement that i was going to receive the “Death Penalty“. I have also written the DA and Clerk of Court. Sincerely,
/s/
P.S. I was pressured by my defense team to take the plea while on mental health medicine. The medicine clouded my judgment and lead me to believe that i was guilty. Which I‘m not.
Before arraignment the court shall inquire whether the accused is represented by counsel and, if not, inquire into the defendant‘s desires and financial circumstances. If the defendant desires an attorney and is indigent, the court shall authorize the immediate appointment of counsel. Upon the call of a case for arraignment, unless continued for good cause, the accused, or the attorney for the accused, shall answer whether the accused pleads “guilty,” “not guilty” or desires to enter a plea of nolo contendere to the offense or offenses charged; a plea of not guilty shall constitute the joining of the issue. Upon аrraignment, the attorney, if any, who announces for or on behalf of an accused, or who is entered as counsel of record, shall represent the accused in that case throughout the trial, unless other counsel and the defendant notify the judge prior to trial that such other counsel represents the accused and is ready to proceed, or counsel is otherwise relieved by the judge.
