Walter Cardin v. United States ( 2020 )


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  •                                RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 20a0011p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    WALTER CARDIN,                                             ┐
    Petitioner-Appellant,       │
    │
    >        No. 18-5389
    v.                                                  │
    │
    │
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                  │
    Respondent-Appellee.         │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
    Nos. 1:11-cr-00093-1; 1:16-cv-00201—Travis R. McDonough, District Judge.
    Argued: October 24, 2019
    Decided and Filed: January 9, 2020
    Before: KETHLEDGE, BUSH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Derek A. Woodman, WILMER CUTLER PICKERING HALE AND DORR, LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Perry H. Piper, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE,
    Chattanooga, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Derek A. Woodman, Daniel S. Volchok,
    WILMER CUTLER PICKERING HALE AND DORR, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.
    Perry H. Piper, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for
    Appellee. Walter Cardin, Butner, North Carolina, pro se.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. Walter Cardin moved in the district court to vacate his
    sentence under the federal habeas statute (28 U.S.C. § 2255). Cardin had been hospitalized two
    No. 18-5389                             Cardin v. United States                            Page 2
    days before the motion was due, so his sister signed it for him. Yet for that reason the district
    court denied the motion. Cardin also moved—after his release from the hospital—to add his
    own signature to the § 2255 filing. The district court denied that motion too. We reverse.
    Walter Cardin was convicted of fraud in federal court and began serving a 78-month
    prison sentence in June 2013. We affirmed his conviction and sentence, see United States v.
    Cardin, 577 F. App’x 546 (6th Cir. 2014), and his criminal judgment became final on June 8,
    2015. Cardin thereafter worked with his sister, Natalie Cardin, to prepare a motion to vacate his
    sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The deadline for filing that motion was June 8, 2016. See
    28 U.S.C. § 2255(f).
    On June 6, 2016, however, Cardin was unexpectedly hospitalized. The following day,
    Natalie Cardin filed the § 2255 motion in Cardin’s name. The motion presented claims under the
    Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution, and was signed “Walter A. Cardin by Natalie J.
    Cardin.” In a footnote, Natalie Cardin declared “under penalty of perjury” that she was “attorney
    in fact, P.P. for Walter A. Cardin” and that Cardin was incarcerated and “otherwise unavailable
    to sign this motion and submit it in a timely manner.” On June 8, Cardin was released from the
    hospital and returned to prison.
    There matters stood for more than two months, until the district court sua sponte entered
    an order stating that “the Court is considering dismissing the instant § 2255 motion” on the
    ground that it had been signed by Natalie Cardin rather than by Cardin himself. One might have
    expected that order to direct Cardin to show cause as to why the filing was proper; but instead
    the court invited the government to explain why it was not. A few weeks later—in September
    2016—the government duly filed a response arguing that the motion should be dismissed on the
    ground that Natalie Cardin lacked standing to file it as a “next friend” for her brother.
    Just over a week later, Cardin responded with a pro se “motion for leave to amend 2255
    motion,” which—being out of the hospital now—he signed for himself. The motion sought
    leave only for Cardin to add his own signature to the original motion, which presumably would
    have swept away any doubts as to whether the court had power to adjudicate it. In support,
    Cardin attached a letter from his case manager at the Federal Bureau of Prisons, who stated that
    No. 18-5389                            Cardin v. United States                            Page 3
    Cardin had indeed been hospitalized from June 6 to June 8, 2016. Cardin also attached a legal
    document, executed in April 2015, by which he had granted Natalie Cardin “unlimited” power of
    attorney to act on his behalf. And Cardin recited in his motion that the reason he had been
    hospitalized was a “medical emergenc[y]” related to a condition about which the district court
    had heard before—specifically at “Page 10” of the Presentence Investigation Report prepared in
    connection with Cardin’s sentencing. Finally, Cardin stated that Natalie Cardin had acted “with
    my expressed consent and in my best interest” when she filed the original § 2255 motion.
    There matters stood again for almost 18 months, with Cardin continuing to serve a
    sentence that he claimed was unlawful. Finally—in March 2018, twenty-one months after
    Cardin had filed his § 2255 motion—the district court entered an order in which it denied that
    motion and the motion to amend. Rather than rule on the merits of Cardin’s claims, however, the
    court held that Natalie Cardin had failed to do two things: first, to “provide an adequate
    explanation” as to why Cardin himself could not have filed the original § 2255 motion on June 7,
    2016; and second, to show that she was “truly dedicated” to Cardin’s best interests when she
    filed it. Order at 3–4. And on those points the court refused to consider any of the information
    provided in Cardin’s motion to amend—on the ground that Natalie Cardin alone bore the burden
    “clearly to establish the propriety of her status.” Hence the court denied the motions.
    We review the district court’s denial of Cardin’s § 2255 motion de novo. Greer v. United
    States, 
    938 F.3d 766
    , 770 (6th Cir. 2019). As an initial matter, we set to one side the question
    whether Natalie Cardin’s “unlimited” (and apparently undisputed) power of attorney to act on
    her brother’s behalf should have been enough, by its own force, to treat the § 2255 motion as one
    filed by Cardin himself. So treated, the motion plainly would have been brought by a party (i.e.,
    Cardin himself) with Article III standing to litigate the claims therein. But neither party has
    briefed that issue, so we turn to an issue they have briefed, namely whether Natalie Cardin had
    “next friend” standing to file the § 2255 motion.
    The “next friend” doctrine is a device to determine when a motion for collateral relief
    brought by a person who does not have standing to pursue that relief should be deemed brought
    by a person who does. For a next friend “does not himself become a party to the habeas corpus
    action in which he participates, but simply pursues the cause on behalf of the detained person,
    No. 18-5389                             Cardin v. United States                             Page 4
    who remains the real party in interest.” Whitmore v. Arkansas, 
    495 U.S. 149
    , 163 (1990). The
    doctrine has “two firmly rooted prerequisites[.]” 
    Id. “First, a
    ‘next friend’ must provide an
    adequate explanation—such as inaccessibility, mental incompetence, or other disability—why
    the real party in interest cannot appear on his own behalf to prosecute the action.” 
    Id. “Second, the
    ‘next friend’ must be truly dedicated to the best interests of the person on whose behalf he
    seeks to litigate[.]” 
    Id. Obviously those
    two requirements were met here if one considers the entire record before
    the district court, notably the motion to amend. Cardin was undisputedly hospitalized in the days
    before his § 2255 motion was due, which undisputedly left him unable to provide the signature
    that his sister provided on his behalf. The district court thought that explanation inadequate
    because, in the court’s view, Cardin should have filed the motion earlier in the one-year
    limitations period. But that reasoning would shorten from 365 days to 362 the limitations period
    specified by Congress. Moreover, Cardin’s hospitalization was unexpected rather than planned;
    and the reality is that a great deal of legal work typically gets done in the 72 hours before a filing
    deadline. The courts should not impose on litigants (much less pro se ones) standards of
    diligence that nobody meets in practice. More to the point, the question as to capacity is simply
    whether Cardin could have signed the § 2255 motion on June 7, 2016—a question whose answer
    is undisputedly no—not whether Cardin should have put himself in a position to sign and file
    that motion some time before.
    Equally plain is that Natalie Cardin was acting in her brother’s best interests when she
    signed the § 2255 motion for him. Cardin himself expressly told the court as much in his motion
    to amend. And on this point the power of attorney makes clear that Cardin had categorically
    endorsed any actions—specifically including any actions in “litigation”—that Natalie Cardin
    chose to take on his behalf. Hence the doctrine’s requirements were plainly met.
    Yet the district court held otherwise because it refused to consider any of the information
    provided in Cardin’s motion to amend. In doing so, the court noted, correctly, that “[t]he burden
    is on the ‘next friend’ clearly to establish the propriety of his status and thereby justify the
    jurisdiction of the court.”    
    Whitmore, 495 U.S. at 164
    .        But from that premise the court
    concluded, mistakenly, that “[a]n explanation offered by [Cardin] himself, after the fact, does not
    No. 18-5389                            Cardin v. United States                             Page 5
    establish that Ms. Cardin has next friend standing.” That the putative next friend bears the
    burden of proving her status does not mean that the prisoner’s own views, when he can express
    them, are beside the point. To the contrary, courts routinely consider the prisoner’s statements in
    determining whether a putative next friend is an actual one. See, e.g., 
    Whitmore, 495 U.S. at 165
    –66; Gilmore v. Utah, 
    429 U.S. 1012
    , 1014 (1976) (Burger, C.J., concurring in the
    termination of stay); West v. Bell, 
    242 F.3d 338
    , 341–42 (6th Cir. 2001); Centobie v. Campbell,
    
    407 F.3d 1149
    , 1150–51 (11th Cir. 2005) (per curiam).
    Nor does it matter that Cardin’s explanation as to why he needed his sister’s help came
    after the § 2255 motion was filed. That explanation came after the fact precisely because Cardin
    had been incapacitated before. Moreover, the question here is not whether—at the moment the
    § 2255 motion was filed, or a day later, when the limitations period expired—the district court
    had before it all the evidence necessary to determine Natalie Cardin’s status as a next friend. To
    the contrary, federal courts routinely enter show-cause orders that direct parties, after the fact of
    a filing, to set forth facts necessary to the court’s jurisdiction. Instead, the question here is
    simply whether, on June 7, 2016, Natalie Cardin acted as Cardin’s next friend when she signed
    the § 2255 motion for him. And in answering that question, no rule of law required or permitted
    the district court to disregard the information set forth in Cardin’s motion to amend.
    The district court’s March 8, 2018 order is reversed, and the case remanded for
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-5389

Filed Date: 1/9/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/9/2020