Peo v. McCoy ( 2024 )


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  • 22CA1905 Peo v McCoy 07-03-2024
    COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
    Court of Appeals No. 22CA1905
    Boulder County District Court No. 11CR126
    Honorable Norma A. Sierra, Judge
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    David Keith McCoy,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ORDER REVERSED AND CASE
    REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
    Division II
    Opinion by JUDGE GROVE
    Fox and Sullivan, JJ., concur
    NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
    Announced July 3, 2024
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Brittany Limes Zehner, Assistant Solicitor
    General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
    David Keith McCoy, Pro Se
    1
    ¶ 1 Defendant, David Keith McCoy, appeals the district court’s
    summary denial of his second Crim. P. 35(c) postconviction motion.
    We reverse the district court’s order and remand for further
    proceedings.
    I. Relevant Facts and Procedural History
    ¶ 2 McCoy’s appeal comes before us following his 2012 conviction
    and his first postconviction proceeding that began in 2017. This
    second postconviction proceeding began in 2021.
    A. Plea, Sentencing, and Direct Appeal
    ¶ 3 In 2012, McCoy pleaded guilty to conspiracy under the
    Colorado Organized Crime Control Act and possession with intent
    to manufacture or distribute between 25 and 450 grams of a
    schedule II controlled substance. In exchange for his guilty plea,
    the prosecution agreed to dismiss the remaining twenty-seven
    counts, including a special offender count and five habitual
    criminal counts. The parties stipulated that the court would
    sentence McCoy to thirty-five years in prison, and the court
    sentenced him in accordance with that agreement.
    ¶ 4 McCoy directly appealed his sentence, arguing that the district
    court did not make sufficient factual findings to support it and that
    2
    the court should not have relied on his prior convictions to impose
    an aggravated range sentence without an accompanying jury
    finding. A division of this court affirmed McCoy’s sentence. People
    v. McCoy, (Colo. App. No. 12CA2651, July 17, 2014) (not published
    pursuant to C.A.R. 35(f)).
    B. First Postconviction Proceeding
    ¶ 5 In 2017,
    1
    McCoy’s retained counsel, Thomas E. Henry, filed a
    Crim. P. 35(c) motion that argued plea counsel had been
    constitutionally ineffective. Specifically, Henry’s motion contended
    that plea counsel had
    enlisted a codefendant and McCoy’s sister to convince
    McCoy to take the plea offer;
    misled McCoy about the extent of her investigation,
    including telling him that (1) the dispatch and traffic stop
    recordings had been lost when she had never asked the
    1
    McCoy originally filed a pro se Crim. P. 35(c) motion in 2015 but
    asked the district court to either stay the proceeding or withdraw
    the 2015 motion without prejudice so that he could hire private
    counsel. The district court permitted McCoy to withdraw his 2015
    motion and granted him leave to refile a Crim. P. 35(c) motion so
    long as it was timely.
    3
    prosecution for them and (2) the codefendant and
    McCoy’s sister had no evidence that could help his case;
    misled McCoy about the legal arguments available to
    him, including telling him that (1) there was no need to
    file pretrial motions or raise evidentiary issues and
    (2) there was no defense strategy that could benefit him
    based on her review of the discovery;
    misadvised McCoy that (1) it was not important that he
    did not have counsel at the preliminary hearing and (2)
    the prosecution did not have to disclose the identity of
    the confidential informants;
    failed to discuss with McCoy a possible conflict of interest
    based on her prior representation of his ex-girlfriend;
    failed to advise McCoy that the sentence in the plea
    agreement was in the aggravated range and drug
    treatment would not be available in prison until 2020
    due to the lengthy sentence;
    told McCoy and others that McCoy had nine prior
    felonies for the sale and distribution of extensive
    quantities of drugs when he only had six prior felonies
    4
    involving smaller quantities of drugs and that, as a
    result, he would be unable to raise the issue of
    proportionality of his sentence;
    failed to advise McCoy that waiving a presentence report
    would affect his classification in prison;
    misadvised McCoy that the fact that other defendants in
    the same jurisdiction had received lower sentences on
    identical charges would have no impact on his plea
    bargain or sentencing; and
    told McCoy that proposed amendments to the felony drug
    statutes and the new habitual criminal statute would not
    apply to him.
    ¶ 6 However, despite citing the appropriate case law, Henry’s
    motion alleged no facts to establish that McCoy was prejudiced by
    plea counsel’s alleged deficient performance, as required under
    Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984) (ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim requires showing (1) that counsel’s
    performance was deficient and (2) that counsel’s deficient
    performance prejudiced the defendant).
    5
    ¶ 7 The prosecution pointed out this omission in its response to
    Henry’s motion, arguing that the district court should deny the
    motion without a hearing because McCoy had failed to allege
    prejudice namely, that the outcome of the plea process would
    have been different had McCoy received competent assistance from
    plea counsel. After the prosecution highlighted this flaw, Henry
    filed a reply stating that what McCoy would have done differently
    had plea counsel been effective was “a difficult question to answer
    today. The reply alleged only generally that McCoy “would have
    selected a different course of action had counsel made a concerted
    effort” to effectively advise and represent him.
    ¶ 8 The district court denied McCoy’s 2017 petition without a
    hearing because it failed to allege prejudice. In its denial order, the
    court noted that Henry’s motion contained not one sentence that
    attempt[ed] to prove that the outcome of the case was prejudiced.
    “In each of the claims listed in the 35(c) motion,” the court
    explained, McCoy “fail[ed] to state that the outcome of the case was
    altered by [plea] counsel’s allegedly deficient assistance.” The court
    also emphasized that “[w]riting that a question is difficult and then
    not answering it certainly d[id] not satisfy” McCoy’s burden, but
    6
    instead demonstrated “very little effort to show that the outcome of
    the proceeding would have been different if [plea] counsel had been
    effective.”
    ¶ 9 McCoy appealed the postconviction court’s order denying his
    claims without a hearing. A division of this court affirmed that
    order, concluding that McCoy failed to make any factual
    allegations to establish that he was prejudiced by plea counsel’s
    alleged deficient performance.” People v. McCoy, slip op. at ¶ 19
    (Colo. App. No. 17CA0590, Feb. 13, 2020) (not published pursuant
    to C.A.R. 35(e)).
    C. Second Postconviction Proceeding
    ¶ 10 In 2021, McCoy filed a pro se Crim. P. 35(c) motion alleging
    that he had received ineffective assistance from Henry in connection
    with the 2017 petition. McCoy alleged that Henry had
    been unauthorized to practice law in Colorado when he
    represented McCoy because his license was inactive;
    failed to allege facts, which were readily available, that
    would have established that plea counsel’s performance
    prejudiced McCoy and that would have prevented the
    7
    denial of McCoy’s first postconviction petition without a
    hearing; and
    failed to raise four additional meritorious claims: (1) that
    plea counsel failed to independently test the substances
    that McCoy was prosecuted for possessing; (2) that plea
    counsel misadvised McCoy about his sentencing
    exposure; (3) that plea counsel failed to investigate the
    validity of McCoy’s arrest after promising to do so; and
    (4) that McCoy’s speedy trial rights were violated.
    ¶ 11 One year after McCoy filed his second postconviction petition,
    the district court denied it without a hearing. In its order, the court
    found no merit to McCoy’s allegation that Henry was unauthorized
    to practice law in Colorado when he represented McCoy.
    Apparently consulting Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel (OARC)
    records for Henry, the court referenced disciplinary proceedings
    from 2007, 2009, and 2015 but determined that those proceedings
    either predated Henry’s representation of McCoy or “did not serve to
    suspend . . . Henry’s bar license.”
    ¶ 12 With respect to McCoy’s contention that Henry was ineffective
    because he failed to allege facts establishing that plea counsel’s
    8
    deficient performance prejudiced McCoy, the district court reframed
    McCoy’s argument. According to the district court, McCoy instead
    asserted that the denial of his first postconviction motion was per
    se proof of Henry’s deficient performance. The court rejected this
    argument, reasoning that it proved too much, because “such logic
    would grant every non-prevailing party in a case the opportunity to
    present an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.” Moreover, the
    court concluded that Henry’s motion “develop[ed] the legal
    requirement that prejudice to a defendant be demonstrated . . . and
    the motion assert[ed] . . . a disadvantage to . . . McCoy in the plea
    bargaining process due to [plea counsel’s] performance.”
    ¶ 13 Meanwhile, the district court cursorily addressed only one of
    the four claims that McCoy asserted had merit and should have
    been raised by Henry: that plea counsel misadvised McCoy about
    his sentencing exposure. The court found that McCoy’s argument
    that he would have proceeded to trial had he known he faced a
    potential sentence of forty-eight years rather than ninety-six years
    did not account for the possibility of consecutive terms or his
    exposure to longer sentencing based on his prior convictions. The
    9
    court also stated that Henry raised McCoy’s arguments in the first
    postconviction petition.
    ¶ 14 The district court ultimately concluded that “McCoy ha[d] not
    demonstrated that . . . Henry’s performance in presenting the [first
    postconviction petition] was deficient” or that McCoy would have
    obtained postconviction relief had Henry been effective. McCoy
    appeals.
    II. Timeliness
    ¶ 15 As an initial matter, all postconviction challenges to a
    conviction for a non-class 1 felony such as McCoy’s must be raised
    within three years of the conviction becoming final. § 16-5-402(1),
    C.R.S. 2023. If a defendant directly appeals a conviction, and it is
    affirmed, the conviction is final for purposes of section 16-5-402
    when the mandate issues in that appeal. People v. Hampton, 857
    P.2d 441, 444-45 (Colo. App. 1992), aff’d, 876 P.2d 1236 (Colo.
    1994).
    ¶ 16 But because ineffective assistance of postconviction counsel
    claims cannot be asserted until the conclusion of the prior
    postconviction proceeding and section 16-5-402(1) does not, by its
    terms, allow additional time beyond its three-year period for the
    10
    completion of such a postconviction proceeding, such claims will
    often be filed outside of the three-year window prescribed by section
    16-5-402. See People v. Clouse, 74 P.3d 336, 341 (Colo. App. 2002).
    However, an untimely postconviction claim may be considered if the
    court finds that the “failure to seek relief within the applicable time
    period was the result of circumstances amounting to justifiable
    excuse or excusable neglect.” § 16-5-402(2)(d). Thus, a court must
    assess the timeliness of such an ineffective assistance of
    postconviction counsel claim under the rubric of justifiable excuse
    or excusable neglect. Clouse, 74 P.3d at 341.
    ¶ 17 We review de novo whether the postconviction petition alleged
    facts that, if true, would constitute justifiable excuse or excusable
    neglect so as to entitle the defendant to a hearing on that question.
    People v. Chavez-Torres, 2019 CO 59, ¶ 11.
    ¶ 18 McCoy’s direct appeal of his conviction was affirmed and
    became final when the mandate issued on February 9, 2015. Thus,
    all postconviction challenges to his conviction had to be raised by
    February 9, 2018, unless McCoy could show justifiable excuse or
    excusable neglect. § 16-5-402(2)(d). McCoy filed his second
    postconviction petition on September 10, 2021, necessitating a
    11
    showing of justifiable excuse or excusable neglect. However, rather
    than assessing the timeliness of McCoy’s second postconviction
    petition under the rubric of justifiable excuse or excusable neglect,
    Clouse, 74 P.3d at 341, the district court incorrectly stated that the
    petition was timely because McCoy had filed it less than three years
    after the conclusion of his first postconviction proceeding.
    ¶ 19 Notwithstanding the district court’s erroneous timeliness
    analysis, McCoy’s second postconviction petition sufficiently
    demonstrated circumstances amounting to justifiable excuse or
    excusable neglect. McCoy detailed how, at the time that the
    mandate in his first postconviction proceeding was issued in July
    2020, measures responding to the COVID-19 pandemic prevented
    him from filing his second postconviction petition sooner.
    Specifically, McCoy cited limited judicial and prison operations and
    his confinement to his cell for twenty-three hours per day without
    access to resources needed to prepare his petition. These
    allegations, if true, would constitute justifiable excuse or excusable
    neglect, see Chavez-Torres, 11, and the People do not contest this
    on appeal.
    12
    ¶ 20 In sum, McCoy’s second postconviction petition fell outside the
    three-year window prescribed by section 16-5-402. The petition,
    however, pleaded justifiable excuse or excusable neglect sufficient
    to permit its consideration.
    III. Henry’s Licensure Status
    ¶ 21 Turning to the substance of the second postconviction
    petition, McCoy alleged that Henry was ineffective as postconviction
    counsel because he was unauthorized to practice law in Colorado
    when he represented McCoy due to his license being inactive. On
    appeal, McCoy contends that the district court erred by consulting
    OARC records and rejecting his claim based on information found
    in those records. We agree that this issue requires reversing the
    district court’s order and therefore do not reach McCoy’s remaining
    contentions.
    A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
    ¶ 22 We review de novo the denial without a hearing of a Crim. P.
    35(c) motion. People v. Chalchi-Sevilla, 2019 COA 75, ¶ 8.
    ¶ 23 A court may deny a defendant’s Crim. P. 35(c) motion without
    an evidentiary hearing when “the motion, files, and record in the
    case clearly establish that the allegations presented in the
    13
    defendant’s motion are without merit and do not warrant
    postconviction relief.” Ardolino v. People, 69 P.3d 73, 77 (Colo.
    2003); see Crim. P. 35(c)(3)(IV).
    B. Analysis
    ¶ 24 Rejecting McCoy’s claim that Henry was ineffective because he
    was unauthorized to practice law in Colorado, the district court
    appears to have relied upon OARC records to conclude that
    “Henry’s license was active during the time he represented . . .
    McCoy.” Specifically, the court stated that those records revealed
    disciplinary cases from 2007 and 2009 that predated Henry’s
    representation of McCoy and a case from 2015 in which Henry
    received a sixty-day suspension and a one-year period of probation
    that, according to the district court, “did not serve to suspend . . .
    Henry’s bar license.”
    ¶ 25 In his petition, however, McCoy stated that the OARC records
    for Henry “show that prior to 2017, which is when Henry actually
    filed McCoy’s postconviction motion, his license status was listed as
    inactive, thus demonstrating that he was not authorized to act as
    McCoy’s attorney.” And on appeal, McCoy asserts that the district
    court misunderstood his argument by focusing on Henry’s
    14
    disciplinary cases. According to McCoy, he is “not contending that
    Henry’s license was rendered inactive due to previous misconduct;
    he’s contending that it’s inactive because Henry suffers from some
    disability.”
    2
    Thus, McCoy argues, “the district court [wa]s . . .
    mistaken that Henry’s disciplinary history refuted McCoy’s claim.”
    ¶ 26 We cannot be certain what records the district court consulted
    in reaching its determination about Henry’s license status because
    neither its order nor the record on appeal contains this material. It
    appears most likely to us, however, that the district court consulted
    Henry’s publicly available online OARC records, Colo. Sup. Ct.
    OARC, Attorney/LLP Search & Disciplinary History,
    https://perma.cc/67VT-MCKX, which, as of the date of this
    opinion, display the following:
    2
    The People assert that we cannot consider this argument because
    McCoy raised it for the first time on appeal. According to the
    People, McCoy did not previously claim “that postconviction
    counsel’s license was inactive due to a disability, as opposed to a
    suspension or disciplinary proceedings.” Construing McCoy’s pro
    se motion broadly, see People v. Bergerud, 223 P.3d 686, 696-97
    (Colo. 2010), we note that it alleged that Henry’s “license status was
    listed as inactive,” an allegation consistent with his claim on appeal
    that Henry’s license was inactive due to a disability. That McCoy
    simply provided on appeal the reason behind Henry’s inactive
    license status does not render his argument inconsistent with the
    one he outlined in his motion.
    15
    Henry’s Online OARC Records
    ¶ 27 Consistent with McCoy’s description, the OARC records list
    Henry’s license status as “Disability Inactive.” But those records
    provide no additional information about this license status, such as
    16
    its underlying cause or, more importantly, its timeframe
    specifically, whether Henry’s license status was “Disability Inactive”
    when the district court apparently consulted those records, when
    Henry represented McCoy, or both.
    ¶ 28 Because we do not know which records the district court
    consulted, and because OARC’s online records lack necessary
    clarity about Henry’s “Disability Inactive” license status, we cannot
    take judicial notice of them in order to assess the merits of McCoy’s
    claim. See CRE 201(b)(2) (court may take judicial notice of facts not
    subject to reasonable dispute that are “capable of accurate and
    ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot
    reasonably be questioned”). We therefore cannot say that the
    information before us refutes McCoy’s allegation that Henry was
    unlicensed at the time that he filed the 2017 petition.
    3
    3
    Because we cannot take judicial notice of the status of Henry’s law
    license at the time that he filed the 2017 petition, we need not
    consider whether, as McCoy argues, it was inappropriate for the
    court to look beyond the files and records of the case to determine
    whether McCoy’s factual allegations were untrue. See Crim. P.
    35(c)(3)(IV); People v. Smith, 2017 COA 12, ¶ 19; People v. Davis,
    2012 COA 14, ¶ 10.
    17
    ¶ 29 Of course, as the People point out, it is true that any
    uncertainty about the status of Henry’s law license at the time that
    he filed the 2017 motion is not dispositive of McCoy’s claim.
    Indeed, “a majority of courts have rejected a per se rule that an
    attorney has provided ineffective assistance to a criminal defendant
    even when an attorney is suspended or disbarred during a criminal
    defendant’s trial.” Hodges v. People, 158 P.3d 922, 927-28 (Colo.
    2007). And on the record before us (and assuming that Henry was
    in fact on “disability inactive” status at the time that he filed the
    2017 petition), we cannot draw any conclusions as to Henry’s
    competence during his representation of McCoy. But that is exactly
    why McCoy’s claim should not have been summarily dismissed.
    Because McCoy advanced a claim that he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel based on his attorney’s lack of licensure, the
    district court should have referred it to the public defender for
    further investigation as required by Crim. P. 35(c)(3)(V). See People
    v. Kenny, 30 P.3d 734, 743-44 (Colo. App. 2000) (holding that “if an
    attorney is less than fully licensed,” a defendant’s claim of
    ineffective assistance based on the attorney’s status must be
    18
    resolved “by applying a case-by-case approach”), overruled on other
    grounds by West v. People, 2015 CO 5, ¶¶ 45-64.
    ¶ 30 Accordingly, we must reverse the order denying McCoy’s
    petition and remand with directions to serve a copy of McCoy’s
    second postconviction petition and this opinion on the office of the
    public defender with instructions for the public defender to file a
    timely response under Crim. P. 35(c)(3)(V).
    IV. Other Contentions
    ¶ 31 McCoy also contends that the district court erred by finding
    that Henry’s performance was not deficient and did not prejudice
    McCoy, and by refusing to address McCoy’s four remaining claims.
    Because we conclude that a remand is required to allow the public
    defender to review McCoy’s petition, we do not reach these
    contentions. See Chalchi-Sevilla, ¶ 25 (holding that “if a defendant’s
    pro se Crim. P. 35(c) motion presents at least one potentially
    meritorious claim, the postconviction court shall provide ‘a
    complete copy’ of the motion to appointed counsel”). We express no
    opinion concerning the merits of McCoy’s other contentions or the
    necessity for an evidentiary hearing. See id. at ¶ 26.
    19
    V. Disposition
    ¶ 32 We reverse the district court’s order and remand the case for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    JUDGE FOX and JUDGE SULLIVAN concur.

Document Info

Docket Number: 22CA1905

Filed Date: 7/3/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/12/2024