Lead Opinion
Williаm Lloyd Hill, a state prisoner serving a 35-year sentence, brings this petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
We now affirm, adopting the reasoning contained in the panel decision. Hill v. Lockhart,
We are careful to note that not every instance of a lawyer's failure to inform a client accurately of parolе eligibility will reach the level of a constitutional violation. As detailed in the panel opinion, in this case there is a reasonable probability that the result of the plea process would have been different but for the erroneous information:
Not only had Hill explicitly asked his counsel about the parole system in Arkansas, Tr. 23, but he had made clear that the timing of eligibility was the dis-positive issue for him in accepting or rejecting a plea bargain. He told his attorney that he considered it no bargain to forego a trial unless his eligibility would be sooner than seven years, which he understood to be the time he could serve with commutation of a life sentence. Tr. 24-26. The Plea Statement bears the signature of Hill's counsel, immediately below the words: "His plea of guilty is consistent with the facts he has related to me and with my own investigation of the case." J.A. 57. Given the attorney's knоwledge of his client's particular concern, a failure to check the applicable law was especially incompatiblе with the objective standard of reasonable representation in Strickland.
In some situations incorrect advice ~about parole will be merely a collateral matter, not significant enough to justify habeas relief. A lawyer's incorrect guess as to the actual time of parole, for example, would probably fall into that category. But here the misadvice was of a solid nature, directly affecting Hill's decision to plead guilty. Hill's lawyer had died by the time of the evidentiary hearing in the District Court, thus making it easier for someone to fabricate what the lawyer said, but the Distriсt Court believed Hill, and we cannot say that this determination of credibility was clearly erroneous. For a situation with some similarity, cf. Blair v. McCarthy,
We sustain the result reached by the panel, and the judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Garnett Thomas Eisele, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the East-em District of Arkansas.
Dissenting Opinion
joined by JOHN R. GIBSON, WOLLMAN, and MAGILL, Circuit Judges, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The Court's holding that an admitted killer's first degreе murder conviction must be set aside on his say-so that his now-deceased attorney's advice concerning parole eligibility misled him into accepting a plea bargain-one that clearly appears to have been in his best interests-is not required by the Constitution or by any decision оf the United States Supreme Court. Today's holding forgoes objective analysis of Hill's options at the time of his plea bargaining in favor of slippеry subjectivity. It opens the door to what may prove to be a flood of similar habeas claims. It represents a step I am not prepared to take.
I agree we cannot say the District Court’s findings are clearly erroneous. I disagree, however, with the conсlusion that these findings establish constitutionally inadequate performance by Hill’s attorney.
The claim that Hill asserts in the present proceeding is idеntical to the claim he made, and we rejected, over five years ago. See Hill v. Lockhart,
Our en banc decision was affirmed by the Supreme Court on prоcedural grounds. See Hill v. Lockhart,
I believe our original рanel decision was correct in holding that Hill’s claim lacks constitutional footing. First, I seriously doubt that the Sixth Amendment ever can be brought into play by аllegations of incorrect advice concerning parole eligibility. The subject of parole eligibility, though no doubt of keen interest to the accused, is simply not central to what plea bargaining is all about, namely, the obtaining of either reduced charges, a below-the-maximum sеntence, or both. Moreover, even indulging the assumption, without deciding, that a case might be found in which counsel’s advice concerning parоle eligibility is so far off the mark that the Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of competent counsel is violated, in my judgment this is not such a case. The advice given by Hill’s counsel certainly was not “gross[ ] misinform[ation]” on the order of that found in Strader v. Garrison,
