Peo v. Hughes ( 2024 )


Menu:
  • 22CA2213 Peo v Hughes 07-11-2024
    COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
    Court of Appeals No. 22CA2213
    El Paso County District Court No. 14CR1962
    Honorable David L. Shakes, Judge
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    Marshall M. Hughes,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ORDER AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART,
    AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
    Division IV
    Opinion by JUDGE PAWAR
    Navarro and Johnson, JJ., concur
    NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
    Announced July 11, 2024
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Caitlin E. Grant, Assistant Attorney
    General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
    Frank Law Office LLC, Adam Frank, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
    1
    ¶ 1 Defendant, Marshall M. Hughes, appeals the postconviction
    court’s order denying his ineffective assistance of trial and direct
    appeal counsel claims after a hearing. We reverse the denial of one
    claim, otherwise affirm, and remand the case with directions.
    I. Background
    ¶ 2 When Hughes returned from an overseas military deployment,
    his girlfriend, who lived in Virginia, A.B., met him in Colorado
    Springs. One night, they went to a bar where Hughes accused her
    of flirting with another patron, and they got into an argument. A.B.
    testified at trial that Hughes grabbed her and threw her to the
    ground outside the bar. When they returned to the hotel room they
    were staying in, Hughes destroyed the room, causing thousands of
    dollars in damage.
    ¶ 3 Over the next several months, they continued their
    relationship. A.B., her two-year-old daughter, and A.B.’s mother
    relocated to Colorado and moved in with Hughes. During this time,
    Hughes repeatedly accused A.B. of infidelity and repeatedly called
    her “whore,” “slut,” and “bitch.”
    ¶ 4 The prosecution charged Hughes with several offenses,
    including as relevant here, criminal mischief for destroying the
    2
    hotel room, third degree assault for his conduct outside the bar and
    in the hotel room, and multiple harassment counts.
    ¶ 5 The jury found Hughes not guilty of third degree assault and
    all but one of the harassment counts. The jury found him guilty of
    criminal mischief and the harassment count based on section 18-9-
    111(1)(h), C.R.S. 2023, for repeatedly insulting A.B. over the course
    of several months.
    ¶ 6 Hughes directly appealed his convictions, and a division of this
    court affirmed. People v. Hughes, slip op. at 23 (Colo. App. No.
    14CA2475, Sept. 1, 2016) (not published pursuant to C.A.R. 35(e)).
    He then filed the Crim. P. 35(c) petition that gave rise to this appeal.
    In it, he alleged multiple claims of ineffective assistance of trial and
    direct appeal counsel. The postconviction court held an evidentiary
    hearing and ultimately denied all of Hughes’ claims. The claims
    relevant to this appeal alleged that
    trial counsel was ineffective for failing to properly
    investigate the case and present testimony from the
    bouncer at the bar;
    both trial and appellate counsel were ineffective for failing
    to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    3
    harassment conviction because Hughes’ speech was
    protected by the First Amendment; and
    the cumulative effect of trial counsel’s deficient
    performance constituted ineffective assistance.
    ¶ 7 Hughes appeals the postconviction court’s order denying these
    claims. He argues that the postconviction court erred by
    (1) applying an incorrect legal standard to all his claims;
    (2) concluding that trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to call
    the bouncer as a witness at trial; (3) denying his claims based on
    the First Amendment argument as to both trial and direct appeal
    counsel; and (4) denying his cumulative effect claim.
    ¶ 8 We disagree with Hughes’ first two arguments. But we agree
    that the postconviction court erred by denying his First Amendment
    claim as to trial counsel. We therefore reverse the order denying
    that claim without addressing the related claim as to direct appeal
    counsel. Finally, we reject Hughes’ cumulative effect argument.
    II. Ineffective Assistance
    ¶ 9 To succeed on an ineffective assistance claim, the defendant
    must prove that (1) counsel’s performance was constitutionally
    deficient and (2) counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced the
    4
    defense. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984).
    The first prong, deficient performance, requires the defendant to
    prove that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard
    of reasonableness. Id. at 688. This prong requires us to indulge a
    strong presumption that counsel’s conduct fell within the wide
    range of professional assistance. Id. at 689.
    ¶ 10 Under the second prong, prejudice, the defendant must
    demonstrate a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s
    deficient performance, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different. Id. at 694. Failure to prove either prong is fatal to an
    ineffective assistance claim, regardless of whether defendant has
    proved the other prong. Id. at 700.
    ¶ 11 We review a postconviction court’s denial of ineffective
    assistance claims after an evidentiary hearing as a mixed question
    of fact and law. See People v. Corson, 2016 CO 33, ¶ 25. We defer
    to the postconviction court’s factual findings if they are supported
    by the record. Id. But we review the court’s legal conclusions de
    novo, including the determinations of whether the defendant
    adequately proved deficient performance and prejudice. See People
    v. Brown, 250 P.3d 679, 681 (Colo. App. 2010).
    5
    ¶ 12 With these standards in mind, we now address Hughes’
    challenges to the denial of his ineffective assistance claims.
    III. The Legal Standard Applied by the Postconviction Court
    ¶ 13 We disagree with Hughes’ argument that the postconviction
    court applied the wrong legal standard.
    ¶ 14 Hughes rightly points out that while deficient performance
    must be proved by a preponderance of the evidence, the burden of
    proof for prejudice is different and lower. Strickland, 466 U.S. at
    694; People v. Washington, 2014 COA 41, ¶¶ 22-27. As mentioned
    above, to prove prejudice a defendant must show only that there
    was a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would
    have been different but for counsel’s actions. Strickland, 466 U.S.
    at 694; Washington, ¶ 23. Hughes argues that the postconviction
    court erroneously applied the higher preponderance standard in its
    prejudice analysis.
    ¶ 15 We take Hughes’ point that when setting out the governing law
    in its order, the postconviction court wrote that “the defendant
    must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, each prong.” But
    the court also correctly articulated the defendant’s burden of proof
    for prejudice: “the defendant must demonstrate a reasonable
    6
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result
    of the proceeding would have been different.” And most
    importantly, in its substantive discussion of Hughes’ claims, the
    court applied the reasonable probability standard in all its prejudice
    analyses. We therefore reject Hughes’ argument that the
    postconviction court erred by applying an incorrect legal standard.
    IV. Claim Based on Failure to Investigate
    ¶ 16 Hughes next argues that the postconviction court erred by
    denying his claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
    discover and present testimony from a vital witness the bouncer
    at the bar.
    ¶ 17 The bouncer testified at the postconviction hearing that he
    saw Hughes and A.B. outside the bar in an argument the night
    Hughes destroyed the hotel room. The bouncer described A.B. as
    intoxicated, belligerent, and shoving Hughes. He testified that
    Hughes was trying to calm her down and Hughes never put his
    hands on her.
    ¶ 18 Like the postconviction court, we conclude that there was not
    a reasonable probability that this testimony would have changed
    the outcome of the trial. The jury found Hughes not guilty of the
    7
    assault, which A.B. testified occurred outside the bar. And the
    bouncer’s testimony did not bear directly on any other counts
    Hughes was convicted of (criminal mischief for destroying the hotel
    room and harassment for calling A.B. a bitch, whore, and slut).
    ¶ 19 Hughes argues otherwise, asserting that this testimony would
    have damaged A.B.’s credibility in general and therefore weakened
    her testimony that Hughes destroyed the hotel room. But A.B.’s
    credibility was already successfully challenged at trial. She testified
    that outside the bar, Hughes grabbed her by the back of the head
    and threw her to the ground. But on cross-examination, trial
    counsel confronted her with her previous statement that Hughes
    “never laid hands on me that night” and that she never felt
    threatened or intimidated that night. Thus, her credibility was
    already damaged, and the bouncer’s effect on her credibility would
    have been largely cumulative.
    ¶ 20 For these reasons, we conclude there was no reasonable
    probability that the bouncer’s testimony would have changed the
    outcome of trial. Hughes therefore failed to establish prejudice, and
    we need not address deficient performance before concluding that
    the postconviction court properly denied this claim.
    8
    V. Claims Based on the First Amendment
    ¶ 21 Hughes contends that both trial and direct appeal counsel
    were ineffective by failing to argue that the speech underlying the
    harassment conviction was protected by the First Amendment. We
    agree with Hughes that the postconviction court erroneously denied
    this claim as to trial counsel. Based on this conclusion, we need
    not address the claim involving direct appeal counsel.
    ¶ 22 We begin by explaining the free speech argument that trial
    counsel could have made. We then explain why failing to make it
    constituted deficient performance that resulted in prejudice.
    A. Governing Law and the Free Speech Argument
    ¶ 23 The harassment statute Hughes was convicted under provides
    that a person commits harassment if, with intent to harass, annoy,
    or alarm another, he “[r]epeatedly insults, taunts, challenges, or
    makes communications in offensively coarse language to, another
    in a manner likely to provoke a violent or disorderly response.”
    § 18-9-111(1)(h).
    ¶ 24 Our supreme court has long since addressed the tension
    between this statute and the right to freedom of speech enshrined
    in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and article 2,
    9
    section 10 of the Colorado Constitution. That court held that
    section 18-9-111(1)(h) does not violate the constitutional right to
    freedom of speech because it prohibits only fighting words, and
    there is no constitutional right to use fighting words. People ex rel.
    VanMeveren v. Cnty. Ct., 191 Colo. 201, 204, 551 P.2d 716, 719
    (1976). The court defined fighting words as “only those words
    which have a direct tendency to cause acts of violence by the
    persons to whom, individually, the words are addressed.” Id.
    ¶ 25 More recent opinions, including those from divisions of this
    court, have emphasized that the category of speech that can be
    considered fighting words is narrow and getting narrower. People in
    Interest of R.C., 2016 COA 166, ¶ 17 (“That the category of ‘fighting
    words has been shrinking is obvious the Supreme Court has
    overturned every single fighting words conviction it has reviewed
    since . . . 1942.”). And these cases have reiterated that fighting
    words are not defined by their offensiveness or substantive
    reprehensibility rather, they are defined by their tendency to
    10
    provoke a violent response from the person to whom they are
    addressed.
    1
    See id. at ¶ 13.
    ¶ 26 Whether words meet this standard is “an objective
    determination.” VanMeveren, 191 Colo. at 206, 551 P.2d at 720.
    To satisfy this objective standard, we must ask whether the words
    were, “‘as a matter of common knowledge, inherently likely to
    provoke a violent reaction’ from a reasonable person.” R.C., ¶ 13
    (quoting Coggin v. State, 123 S.W.3d 82, 90 (Tex. App. 2003)).
    ¶ 27 Although this is an objective determination to be made based
    on a reasonable person’s reaction, context matters. A fighting
    words determination must be made “on a case-by-case basis,
    considering all of the particular facts and circumstances.” Id. at
    22. This context includes that society is less comfortable now
    1
    The prosecution argues that People in Interest of R.C., 2016 COA
    166, cannot be considered in analyzing whether trial counsel’s
    performance was deficient because it was announced after the trial
    in this case. We rely on it here only for the long-established
    standard for what constitutes fighting words and the observation
    that fighting words are a narrow and shrinking category of
    unprotected speech. Both propositions were clearly established
    before R.C. was announced and before the trial in this case. See
    State v. Tracy, 2015 VT 111, ¶¶ 18-26 (discussing the Supreme
    Court’s fighting words opinions from 1942 to 2015). We therefore
    see no problem in relying on R.C. for these general principles.
    11
    than it was when the fighting words doctrine was established over
    eighty years ago with the idea that mere words can move a
    reasonable person to physical violence. See State v. Tracy, 2015 VT
    111, ¶¶ 36-37.
    ¶ 28 The speech at issue in this case is Hughes repeatedly calling
    A.B. a “whore,” “slut,” and “bitch.” Hughes argues that trial
    counsel was ineffective for failing to move for a judgment of
    acquittal (JOA) at the close of evidence on the ground that this
    speech did not rise to the level of fighting words and was therefore
    constitutionally protected, thereby leaving the prosecution with
    insufficient evidence of the harassment count. We agree and next
    explain why.
    B. Deficient Performance and Prejudice
    ¶ 29 To prove that trial counsel’s performance was deficient,
    Hughes had to overcome the presumption that the failure to move
    for JOA might have been sound trial strategy. See People v. Phipps,
    2016 COA 190M, ¶ 17. But we can discern no strategic reason not
    to move for JOA on the ground explained above.
    ¶ 30 We recognize that trial counsel testified at the postconviction
    hearing that he made a strategic decision to not raise this free
    12
    speech defense earlier at trial. Trial counsel explained that if he
    argued that Hughes’ speech was unlikely to elicit a violent response
    from A.B., the prosecution might have called a domestic violence
    expert to testify about how domestic violence victims react to verbal
    abuse. As trial counsel put it, this would have “expanded my
    battlefront.”
    ¶ 31 This was a strategic reason not to raise this defense before the
    close of evidence. But it is not a strategic reason for failing to move
    for JOA after the close of evidence at that point, the prosecution
    would have been unable to call a domestic violence expert. Put
    simply, there was no downside to moving for JOA on the ground
    that Hughes’ speech was constitutionally protected.
    ¶ 32 The prosecution suggests that trial counsel effectively made
    such a motion. But trial counsel’s JOA motion did not reference
    the fighting words doctrine. Instead, trial counsel said only, “I
    would move for acquittal as to all counts. I would waive argument
    as to all counts with the exception of [a count not relevant to this
    appeal].” Such a general motion, presented without argument, did
    not raise the specific substantive issue on which this ineffective
    assistance claim is based. We therefore conclude that there was no
    13
    strategic reason for trial counsel’s failure to move for JOA on the
    harassment count at issue here on free speech grounds.
    ¶ 33 Moreover, we conclude that had trial counsel made such a
    motion, there was a reasonable probability that it would have
    succeeded.
    ¶ 34 In general, calling a reasonable person a whore, slut, and
    bitch would not elicit an immediate violent response. These
    epithets are abusive, profane, and insulting. But the words
    themselves fall far short of inciting a reasonable person to
    immediate physical violence.
    ¶ 35 The postconviction court concluded otherwise based on the
    circumstances under which Hughes uttered the words. The court
    held that a free speech challenge “was not meritorious” because
    Hughes engaged in this speech “while [he] was violently destroying
    the hotel room, in circumstances where others heard the offensive
    insults, while [Hughes] was angrily flailing his hands over the
    victim, and causing the victim to roll up in a ball like a fetal
    position.” (Citations to the record omitted.)
    ¶ 36 Initially, we note that the first of these findings is unsupported
    by the record. A.B. was the only witness to the destruction of the
    14
    hotel room, and she did not testify that Hughes insulted her in a
    manner that could have supported the harassment count during
    that incident. The testimony the postconviction court cited to
    support its finding to the contrary was as follows.
    Trial Counsel: And from December right
    around the hotel room incident all the way
    through March . . . that period of time was
    horrible for you, right?
    A.B.: Correct
    Trial Counsel: Nonstop abuse, calling you slut,
    whore, constantly mistrusting you, making
    you go back to talk to cashiers to see if you
    had really slept with them, right? During that
    period of time, [A.B.], how many times did you
    call the police for help?
    A.B.: Once.
    A.B. did not specifically testify that Hughes called her any name
    while he destroyed the hotel room instead she testified generally
    that he repeatedly called her names over the course of several
    months.
    ¶ 37 Next, we question whether the record supports the
    postconviction court’s finding that Hughes engaged in the speech at
    issue while “angrily flailing his hands over [A.B.].” (Emphases
    added.) A.B.’s mother described an instance in which Hughes
    15
    called A.B. a slut and a whore. A.B.’s mother testified that Hughes
    had discovered that A.B. had slept with a man in Hawaii. When
    asked to describe what happened after Hughes discovered this,
    A.B.’s mother testified,
    I saw her sitting on the back steps and over
    the top of her hands flailing. I was in the
    house with the baby and walked out to observe
    it, because I didn’t want [Hughes] to hurt
    [A.B.]. And he was yelling at her. He found
    out the truth and, you know, what a bitch she
    is, calling her names, and then walked into the
    house. I was with the baby. Walked into the
    house and let me know in front of my
    granddaughter she’s a whore. Your daughter
    is a slut. She sleeps around. She’s sick. She
    needs help. I was pretty devastated . . . . [A.B.
    was s]itting in the backyard rolled up in a ball.
    ¶ 38 This testimony supports that Hughes engaged in the speech at
    issue in front of people other than A.B. and that he caused A.B. to
    “roll up in a ball.” The testimony is ambiguous, however, as to
    whose hands were flailing over the top of A.B. and whether those
    hands were flailing angrily.
    ¶ 39 Even accepting the postconviction court’s finding that Hughes’
    hands were flailing angrily over A.B., we nevertheless conclude that
    a JOA motion challenging the sufficiency of the evidence on First
    Amendment grounds was reasonably probable to succeed. The
    16
    record reveals that the circumstances surrounding the speech at
    issue were that Hughes was a verbally abusive and distrustful
    partner, and his relationship with A.B. was unhealthy, perhaps
    even toxic. But there was no evidence that Hughes used the
    epithets at issue in conjunction with threats or acts of physical
    violence.
    2
    See State v. Parnoff, 186 A.3d 640, 648-49 (Conn. 2018)
    (defendant’s threats to retrieve a gun and “shoot” and “fucking kill”
    water company employees on his property were not fighting words).
    ¶ 40 Considered in context, Hughes’ speech was certainly abusive,
    derogatory, and hurtful. But fighting words are a narrow class of
    speech that are unprotected because they would provoke violence in
    an average person. Speech must go beyond being merely “abusive”
    or “harsh [and] insulting” to lie outside the protection of the First
    Amendment. Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U.S. 518, 525 (1972) (citation
    omitted). We conclude that in the context of a verbally abusive,
    toxic, and distrustful relationship with allegations of infidelity, the
    use of the words “whore,” “slut,” and “bitch” would not induce an
    2
    Although A.B. did testify that Hughes pushed her in the hallway of
    their home, she did not testify that Hughes used the speech at issue
    here during that alleged incident. Moreover, the jury found Hughes
    not guilty of the counts related to that alleged incident.
    17
    immediate and violent response from the average person.
    Accordingly, these words fall short of the threshold for fighting
    words, and Hughes’ use of them was likely protected by the First
    Amendment. See, e.g., State v. Baccala, 163 A.3d 1, 13-16 (Conn.
    2017) (customer calling store manager a “fat ugly bitch” and “cunt,”
    and telling the manager, “fuck you, you’re not a manager” was
    constitutionally protected speech). There was therefore a
    reasonable probability that a motion for JOA on the section 18-9-
    111(1)(h) count would have been successful.
    ¶ 41 Because there was no strategic reason for failing to file a JOA
    motion and there was a reasonable probability the motion would
    have succeeded, we conclude that Hughes proved both deficient
    performance and prejudice as to trial counsel. In light of this
    conclusion, we need not address the related ineffective assistance
    claim as to direct appeal counsel because both claims seek the
    same relief: reversal of the section 18-9-111(1)(h) conviction.
    VI. Cumulative Error
    ¶ 42 Finally, Hughes argues that when all of trial counsel’s deficient
    performance is considered in the aggregate, it resulted in prejudice,
    entitling him to reversal of all his convictions. We disagree.
    18
    ¶ 43 We have identified only a single instance of deficient
    performance: trial counsel’s failure to move for JOA on the section
    18-9-111(1)(h) count. Even if we assume that trial counsel was also
    deficient for failing to present testimony from the bouncer, we
    conclude that the combined effect of that conduct did not deprive
    Hughes of his right to constitutionally effective assistance.
    VII. Disposition
    ¶ 44 The postconviction court’s order denying Hughes’ ineffective
    assistance claim based on trial counsel failing to challenge the
    section 18-9-111(1)(h) count is reversed. The postconviction court’s
    order is otherwise affirmed. The case is remanded to the
    postconviction court with directions to set aside Hughes’
    harassment conviction and conduct whatever further proceedings
    might be appropriate consistent with this opinion.
    JUDGE NAVARRO and JUDGE JOHNSON concur.

Document Info

Docket Number: 22CA2213

Filed Date: 7/11/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/12/2024