State of Iowa v. Leonard Terrell Haynes ( 2014 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 13-1057
    Filed December 24, 2014
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    LEONARD TERRELL HAYNES,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, David F.
    Staudt (pre-plea) and George L. Stigler (pre-plea, plea, and sentencing), Judges.
    Leonard Haynes appeals from the judgment and sentence entered
    following his guilty plea to possession of a controlled substance, third offense,
    and operating while intoxicated. AFFIRMED.
    Tod J. Beavers of Law Offices of Tod J. Beavers, P.C., Des Moines, for
    appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kyle Hanson, Assistant Attorney
    General, Thomas J. Ferguson, County Attorney, and Brian Williams, Jeremy
    Westendorf, Brad Walz, and Shana Schwake, Assistant County Attorneys, for
    appellee.
    Heard by Danilson, C.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ.
    2
    PER CURIAM.
    Leonard Haynes appeals from the judgment and sentence entered
    following his guilty plea to possession of a controlled substance, third offense,
    and operating while intoxicated. We affirm.
    I.     Background Facts and Proceedings
    In October 2011, police observed Haynes driving a vehicle with expired
    registration.   Police activated emergency lights to conduct a traffic stop, and
    Haynes “slow rolled” for thirty seconds or so before coming to a stop as if he was
    attempting to conceal contraband.     Police approached Haynes’s vehicle and
    noticed Haynes’s mouth was filled with flakes of marijuana, and Haynes was
    “continuously swiping his tongue all around his mouth trying to clean out the
    marijuana.”     When he spoke, police smelled “a very strong odor of fresh
    marijuana.”     When asked how much marijuana he had eaten, Haynes first
    replied, “[N]ot that much,” but then said he had not eaten any marijuana. Haynes
    stated he had smoked marijuana approximately twenty minutes earlier so “that’s
    what it must be from.”
    Haynes had slurred speech and bloodshot, watery eyes.               Police
    performed field sobriety tests and invoked the implied consent procedure.
    Haynes refused to submit a sample for chemical testing.
    Haynes was charged with possession of a controlled substance, third
    offense, in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(5) (2011), and operating while
    intoxicated, in violation of section 321J.2. Haynes retained attorney Raphael
    Scheetz and pled not guilty.
    3
    In July 2012, the court allowed attorney Scheetz to withdraw and
    appointed the public defender. Due to the public defender’s “heavy overload of
    cases,” the district court appointed attorney Ryan Tang. In November 2012, the
    court allowed attorney Tang to withdraw and reappointed the public defender.1
    Public Defender Dustin Lies was appointed to represent Haynes.
    Meanwhile, Haynes decided he wanted to plead guilty.            A guilty-plea
    hearing was held on February 28, 2013, but aborted after the district court noted,
    “the court has determined the defendant’s heart is not in taking his plea at this
    time.” The court set Haynes’s case for a jury trial on March 19, with a final
    pretrial conference set for March 15.
    On March 15, Haynes voiced complaints about attorney Lies’s
    representation and requested a new attorney.          The court denied Haynes’s
    request for a new attorney and concluded the hearing, stating Haynes’s trial
    would start the following week. Less than two hours later, Haynes reappeared
    before the court with attorney Lies and entered a plea of guilty. Following the
    hearing, the court accepted Haynes’s plea and set a sentencing hearing for June
    3.
    On March 21, Haynes filed a handwritten document raising concerns he
    had with the plea proceedings. On March 27, the court entered an order treating
    Haynes’s filing as a motion in arrest of judgment and setting it for hearing on
    June 3.
    1
    Meanwhile, a warrant had been issued for Haynes’s arrest following his failure to
    appear; as a condition of the warrant being removed, Haynes agreed to waive his right
    to have a trial within one year of his arraignment.
    4
    At the hearing on June 3, the court brought up Haynes’s motion in arrest
    of judgment and received Haynes’s argument on the motion. Without formally
    discussing its ruling, the court implicitly denied the motion by proceeding to the
    sentencing portion of the hearing. Following the hearing, the court entered an
    order sentencing Haynes to a suspended prison term for the possession charge
    and thirty days in jail for the operating-while-intoxicated charge.          Haynes
    subsequently filed a motion to reconsider, and the court reduced the thirty-day
    sentence to a ten-day sentence.
    Haynes appeals.
    II.    Motion in Arrest of Judgment
    Haynes raises several issues concerning the denial of his motion in arrest
    of judgment. We turn first to his claim that “error occurred when [his] pro se
    motion in arrest of judgment was not heard and ruled on within the mandatory
    thirty days of the filing of the motion.”
    “A motion in arrest of judgment shall be heard and determined by the court
    within 30 days from the date it is filed, except upon good cause entered in the
    record.” Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.24(3)(f). “The time provision of the rule is intended to
    expedite disposition of criminal cases.” State v. Hilleshiem, 
    305 N.W.2d 710
    , 718
    (Iowa 1981) (discussing rule 2.24(3)(f), formerly numbered as rule 23(3)(f)).
    “[T]he rule plainly implements interests of the accused and the public in having
    prosecutions expeditiously concluded, [h]owever, unlike rule [2.33 (speedy trial)],
    no express sanction is provided for a violation.” 
    Id. (internal citation
    omitted); see
    Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.33(2)(b) (“If a defendant indicted for a public offense has not
    waived the defendant’s right to a speedy trial the defendant must be brought to
    5
    trial within 90 days after indictment is found or the court must order the
    indictment to be dismissed unless good cause to the contrary be shown.”).
    Here, on March 21, 2013, six days after Haynes entered his guilty plea, he
    filed a handwritten document, stating:
    On day approx.: 3-1-13 I entered your court complaining
    about my position with my case. Very uncomfortable with my
    Public Defender (Dustin Lies). I was refused to drop Mr. Dustin
    Lies at pretrial 3-15-13 after he continued to lye [sic] about my offer
    from the State (Shana). Judge Stigler was present that day. I don’t
    feel Judge was fair to me and I like for the minutes of these court
    appearances to be pulled up for investigation, because Mr. Dustin
    Lies will be caught lying to me and you. Mrs. Shana for the State
    offered me less time than my public defender asked for in court on
    3-15-13.
    Dustin Lies (Public Defender) never looked out for my best
    interest nor spoke in my favor.
    I’m a student at Hawkeye College, a single parent (five year
    old daughter) and work everyday for Arline Properties (Boss
    Roger).
    Dustin Lies refused to speak for his client in any good way.
    P.S. May I have a response. I like to be heard. Leonard
    Haynes.
    On March 27, the court entered an order indicating it was treating Haynes’s filing
    as a motion in arrest of judgment and setting it for hearing on June 3. The matter
    was heard and implicitly denied on June 3, forty-four days after expiration of the
    thirty days provided for in rule 2.24(3)(f).
    Even if the district court had no good cause for the delay in ruling on
    defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment beyond the expiration of the thirty days
    provided for in rule 2.24(3)(f), such delay does not require reversal where no
    injurious effect was shown. See 
    Hilleshiem, 305 N.W.2d at 718
    . Here, Haynes
    does not offer any explanation how the delay was to his detriment. He was not in
    custody during the relevant time period, and he did not challenge the date of the
    6
    hearing. We cannot find any indication of prejudice in this record. In short,
    Haynes has not shown any “injurious effect” by the delay. See 
    id. In any
    event, as just mentioned, on March 27, the court entered an order
    setting Haynes’s motion for hearing on June 3. If Haynes was concerned with
    the timeliness of the hearing, he could have—and should have—objected and
    requested an earlier hearing. See State v. Anderson, 
    308 N.W.2d 42
    , 50 (Iowa
    1981) (“[N]o express sanction is provided for a violation of [rule 2.24(3)(f)]. The
    record does not show that defendant requested a speedy ruling on the motion for
    new trial or that he was prejudiced by the delay.      Therefore, we impose no
    sanction under this record.”); see also Lamasters v. State, 
    821 N.W.2d 856
    , 862
    (Iowa 2012) (“‘It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that issues must
    ordinarily be both raised and decided by the district court before we will decide
    them on appeal.’” (quoting Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa
    2002))). We affirm on this issue.
    Haynes also contends “the whole record shows no judgments can be
    pronounced on [his] two pleas of guilty.” See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.24(3)(a) (“A
    motion in arrest of judgment . . . shall be granted when upon the whole record no
    legal judgment can be pronounced.”). In support of this claim, Haynes alleges
    defense counsel lied about the plea offer where “the State offered [him] less time
    than [defense counsel] asked for in court on 3-15-13.” Our review of this claim is
    for abuse of discretion. See State v. Myers, 
    653 N.W.2d 574
    , 581 (Iowa 2002)
    (“We review a denial of a motion in arrest of judgment for abuse of discretion and
    will reverse only if the ruling was based on reasons that are clearly unreasonable
    or untenable.”).
    7
    At the March 15 hearing, the parties discussed the proposed plea
    agreement:
    STATE: The State will be recommending on Count I a five-
    year prison sentence, suspended, the $750 fine would also be
    suspended, and in Count II the State will be recommending 365
    days, all but two of that suspended. Those two counts are to be
    concurrent with each other, and the defendant would be placed on
    one to two years supervised probation.
    COURT: Do you agree with that, Mr. Lies?
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes, Your Honor. On the felony it
    would be the two to five years probation, one to two years on the
    Operating While Intoxicated, both of those counts running
    concurrent. That is in agreement with what we understood the plea
    agreement to be.
    COURT: Did you hear, Mr. Haynes, what the attorneys just
    said?
    DEFENDANT: Yes
    COURT: And do you agree with that, that that is the
    agreement?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    The court accepted Haynes’s pleas and further stated, “You understand the
    penalties attached to these pleas.”
    Thereafter, at the June 3 hearing, Haynes argued his claim that defense
    counsel lied about the plea agreement.2 The following colloquy ensued:
    COURT: Well, first, let’s define our terms. What offer are
    you talking about, Mr. Haynes?
    DEFENDANT: Well, the offer which I knew about was one to
    two years [probation] and two days in jail and that is what I was
    clear of.
    COURT: And who told you about that offer?
    DEFENDANT: Well, she [prosecutor Schwake] came into the
    courtroom that day. She spoke that day.
    COURT: So she again spoke to you as well?
    DEFENDANT: She spoke to the court once she—once you
    sent for her and brought her up. She mentioned that same offer.
    Then he [defense counsel Lies] stood up and added more.
    COURT: Well, are talking about things that occurred during
    the guilty plea proceeding?
    2
    The same judge presided over both the March 15 and June 3 hearings.
    8
    DEFENDANT: During the acceptance of the—yeah, what
    she was offering.
    COURT: Well, that is on the record. So whatever the—what
    is the plea on this or that agreement on this, Ms. Schwake?
    STATE: Your Honor, on Count I, the agreement was for a
    five-year suspended prison sentence. The $750 fine would be
    suspended, substance abuse evaluation and 180-day driver’s
    license revocation, law enforcement initiative fees, a D.A.R.E.
    surcharge and for that count the defendant would be placed on two
    to five years supervised probation. On Count II, the agreement
    would be for a 365-day jail sentence, all but two of that to be
    suspended, the $1250 fine, that the defendant would be placed on
    one to two years supervised probation on that count. That he
    complete a drinking drivers school and that he complete a
    substance abuse evaluation and any recommendations in that
    evaluation.
    COURT: Is that your understanding as well, Mr. Lies?
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: That was my understanding, Your
    Honor, and to make the record clear I had discussed that at length
    with Mr. Haynes. He had mentioned many times that there was a
    previous offer made and I would know he’s had prior attorneys on
    this case. I explained to him that that was the offer at this point. I
    also explained to him I would be more than happy to represent him
    at trial if that’s the route he chose. I also advised him given his
    multiple past felonies he could be facing an enhancement as a
    habitual violator and the State was not doing that at this point. I
    told him that was not to dissuade him from any choices he might
    make, but whatever he wanted to do is what we would follow
    through with. He’s been hostile and borderline threatening. I did
    try to work with him and get that understanding and at points he
    would indicate to me that he understood that offer, wanted to
    accept that offer. However, he was under the impression at some
    point that he was being offered just one year or one to two years of
    probation. I advised him that was not the case. I believe the court
    advised him as well on the record during the plea proceeding. [3]
    But I think that’s his major issue, I guess among other things. My
    understanding is what Ms. Schwake explained. That has always
    been my understanding in what I have attempted to convey to Mr.
    Haynes.
    COURT: What other plea has been offered to you?
    DEFENDANT: Well, that is to me, the question?
    COURT: Yes.
    3
    The court did state the terms at the hearing earlier in the day on March 15. Also, at the
    February 28 hearing, the court told Haynes if he accepted the State’s plea offer,
    “[Y]ou’re going to be on probation for two to five years and if you mess up the probation,
    you can go to prison. You understand that,” to which Haynes responded, “Yeah.”
    9
    DEFENDANT: She [prosecutor Schwake] spoke different
    from what he did the prior time she was present in front of us. She
    added on what he requested after she had spoke. This is the first
    time I—the second time I heard her speak about her offer. The she
    upgraded it, so—
    COURT: Are you telling me that you and Ms. Schwake had a
    personal one-on-one conversation?
    DEFENDANT: No, I said—no, I’m not. I’m saying when you
    brought her up here on March the 15th I believe. Sometime in
    March, she offered one to two years and—you actually—she
    spoke, but didn’t speak about—he [defense counsel Lies] raised up
    after her and added on the fact—
    COURT: The record reflects what was said. So we’re not
    going to plow that ground again. Nobody faked the record on you
    and it reflects what it said. So we will go from there. Ms. Schwake,
    what is your recommendation?
    STATE: Your Honor, the State would request that you follow
    the recommendations as set forth by the State.
    COURT: Okay. Mr. Lies.
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: Your Honor, to clarify what Mr.
    Haynes’s misunderstanding is, during the plea proceeding Ms.
    Schwake did indicate the plea agreement. She did not, however,
    mention the two to five years of supervised probation on Count I
    which would be applicable for the felony charge. She didn’t
    mention that and I stated on the record so that the deal would be
    preserved, the two to five years of probation, which is what Mr.
    Haynes is referring to. But that is my understanding and that is
    what in my estimation is a very generous plea offer given Mr.
    Haynes’s history and the circumstances.
    Haynes’s challenge essentially boils down         to defense counsel’s
    clarification of the full terms of the plea agreement at the March 15 hearing,
    where defense counsel stated, “On the felony it would be the two to five years
    probation, one to two years on the Operating While Intoxicated, both of those
    counts running concurrent. That is in agreement with what we understood the
    plea agreement to be.” Haynes then stated he agreed counsel accurately stated
    the plea agreement.
    Considering the explanation provided by defense counsel in response to
    Haynes’s argument on his motion in arrest of judgment, Haynes’s personal
    10
    agreement that defense counsel had accurately stated the plea agreement, and
    the fact that a two to five year term of probation was the most lenient sentence
    allowed by law for Haynes’s felony possession offense,4 we conclude the district
    court did not abuse its discretion in denying Haynes’s claim that defense counsel
    “lied” about, or added time to, the plea agreement.
    Haynes also challenges defense counsel’s representation, claiming
    attorney Lies “never looked out for [his] best interests” and “refused to speak for
    [him] in any good way.”5 As Haynes argued at the June 3 hearing:
    DEFENDANT: . . . Supposed to be the honest truth out
    there. Yeah, my record—you know I explained it to him [defense
    counsel Lies] privately. Ain’t the best record, but it sure ain’t a gang
    banger record. In the times I had got caught with some drugs here
    was a joint in ‘02 and they say that I swallowed a joint now and that
    was about all. . . . [But the] only thing he was showing me is what
    is against me. I was explaining to him I was you to try to clear me
    up a little bit. You see how I been doing. I showed him my—
    COURT: What should [defense counsel] have done to clear
    you up?
    DEFENDANT: I mean he’s done nothing to try to—
    COURT: That isn’t the question. The question is what
    should he have done to clear you up?
    DEFENDANT: He should have spoke to the courts on my
    better behalf.
    COURT: What should he have said?
    DEFENDANT: Explaining, well, this man prior to the two or
    three drug cases, usage cases he picked up since he been here 13
    years, the man in custody of his daughter, he have—he the head
    man, take her to school, he feeds her, he pays rent for her. The
    man—he could have brushed my character up a little bit.
    The court expressed doubt that the State would have dismissed the charges
    against Haynes or offered a more lenient plea agreement than a suspended
    4
    See Iowa Code § 907.7(1)-(2) (setting the minimum and maximum probation terms).
    5
    Insofar as Haynes claims he “repeatedly requested Dustin Lies replacement,” we
    address that issue below in conjunction with his claim regarding the denial of substitute
    counsel.
    11
    sentence. Haynes disagreed, reiterating his claim that the State would have
    given him “one to two years [probation]6 and two days in jail.” The court then
    stated:
    Let’s end this, sir. Because that sentencing option is not one
    that’s on the floor. A class D felony in the state of Iowa carries a
    not more than five years in prison and whether that is actual
    commitment or suspended sentence, that is what it carries. There
    is no option for a one to two year in jail sentence on the possession
    third. So nobody told you that.
    Insofar as Haynes claims defense counsel failed to secure a sentence not
    allowed by statute for his felony conviction, his claim is not persuasive. Haynes
    was caught eating marijuana by police, and he admitted to driving twenty minutes
    after smoking marijuana.      As the district court noted, Haynes has a serious
    criminal history, including a conviction for first-degree murder.7 We agree with
    defense counsel’s observation that the State’s plea offer was “very generous”
    “given Mr. Haynes’s history and the circumstances.” Considering these facts and
    circumstances, we affirm the district court’s implicit denial of Haynes’s motion in
    arrest of judgment.8
    III.   Substitute Counsel
    Haynes challenges the denial of his requests for a new attorney to replace
    defense counsel Lies and the court’s failure to properly inquire into the need for
    substitute counsel. We review this claim for abuse of discretion. See State v.
    6
    At the aborted March 15 plea hearing, Haynes claimed the prosecutor offered him one
    year probation.
    7
    The Presentence Investigation report indicates an Illinois conviction for first degree
    murder with a twenty-year prison sentence. Haynes was discharged from parole for that
    offense in 2001.
    8
    In any event, as we note below, Haynes failed to preserve error on his remaining
    challenges relating to his motion in arrest of judgment.
    12
    Lopez, 
    633 N.W.2d 774
    , 778 (Iowa 2001) (“Our review of a district court’s denial
    of a request for substitute counsel is for abuse of discretion.”).
    A defendant has a right to counsel at all critical stages of the criminal
    process. State v. Boggs, 
    741 N.W.2d 492
    , 506 (Iowa 2007). No defendant,
    however, has an absolute right to be represented by a particular counsel. State
    v. Kirchner, 
    600 N.W.2d 330
    , 333 (Iowa 1999).            The grounds to justify the
    appointment of substitute counsel include a conflict of interest, irreconcilable
    conflict, or a complete breakdown in communication between the defendant and
    counsel. 
    Boggs, 741 N.W.2d at 506
    ; State v. Martin, 
    608 N.W.2d 445
    , 449 (Iowa
    2000). The court must balance the defendant’s right to counsel of his choice and
    the public’s interest in the prompt and efficient administration of justice. Hannan
    v. State, 
    732 N.W.2d 45
    , 55-56 (Iowa 2007).
    When the court receives a request from a defendant for substitute
    counsel, the court has a “duty of inquiry.” State v. Wells, 
    738 N.W.2d 214
    , 219
    (Iowa 2007). Here, Haynes claims he requested substitute counsel for defense
    counsel Lies at the hearings on February 28, March 15, and June 3.
    A.     February 28 hearing.
    Although    Haynes     expressed     dissatisfaction   with   attorney   Lies’s
    representation at the February 28 hearing, Haynes did not request attorney Lies
    be substituted with new counsel. The following colloquy took place on the issue
    of defense counsel’s representation at the February 28 hearing:
    COURT: Are you satisfied with the representation that Mr.
    Lies has provided for you?
    DEFENDANT: I had—It’s the best I had to get—It’s the best I
    had to—
    COURT: We don’t do that. It has to be a yes or no.
    13
    DEFENDANT: I mean I wasn’t really satisfied with nobody
    who I was appointed to, I just ain’t have no money to have my own
    representative so I didn’t complain too much. I got to roll with the
    punch.
    COURT: Okay. Mr. Haynes, are you satisfied with the
    representation that Mr. Lies provided you or not? Yes or no.
    DEFENDANT: As of now, yes.
    COURT: No, yes or no.
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    The court then aborted the guilty plea hearing and scheduled trial, noting “the
    defendant’s heart is not in taking his plea at this time.” Because we do not
    interpret Haynes’s remarks as a request for substitute counsel, we therefore
    conclude Haynes did not preserve error as to the February 28 hearing. See
    
    Lamasters, 821 N.W.2d at 862
    (reiterating issues must be both raised and
    decided by the district court before we will decide them on appeal).
    B.     March 15 hearing.
    Haynes did lodge a request for new counsel that the court addressed—
    and denied—at the March 15 hearing. At that hearing, the following colloquy
    took place as Haynes explained the reason for his request:
    DEFENDANT: I am—well, I am really trying to say we having
    a conflict of view. We don’t view things the same and he seem to
    can’t remember what he’s telling me about my offers, that I have
    been trying to accept. But every time I accept, he changing it and
    adding more to the offer and, you know, don’t seem like we can
    never be on the same page.
    [More discussion between Haynes and the court about the
    sentence Haynes believed was offered by the State.]
    COURT: That is not an offer and no one would ever make an
    offer to you because that is not a sentence. That is, standing out
    there alone, meaningless. I have told you before, the options are
    not more than five years. You go to prison, not more than five
    years, suspended or deferred judgment.             There is no such
    sentence as one year probation standing alone on this charge. If
    you tell me something that you have not told me, I will consider
    your offer, but if all you’re going to do is go this circuitous route of
    14
    meaningless drivel, I will tell you that you’re going to stay with Mr.
    Lies.
    Upon our review of the record, we cannot say the district court abused its
    discretion in denying Haynes’s request for substitute counsel. The court inquired
    into Haynes’s concerns about defense counsel’s representation and determined
    Haynes’s request was based on his general complaints regarding his counsel’s
    failure to gloss his significant criminal history and obtain a plea offer that included
    an invalid sentence for his felony offense. Haynes failed to establish sufficient
    cause to justify substitute counsel. Haynes was given more than an adequate
    opportunity to voice his complaints to the court, and the court reasonably
    exercised its discretion in denying his request for substitute counsel.
    Moreover, even if the court had delved further into Haynes’s complaint,
    Haynes has not shown he was prejudiced by the court’s denial of his request.
    The district court did not accept a plea from Haynes at that hearing; instead, the
    court adjourned the hearing and left Haynes’s trial scheduled for the following
    week. Within several hours, Haynes reappeared before the court with attorney
    Lies, stating he wanted to enter a plea. The following exchange took place:
    COURT: Mr. Haynes, do you feel you have had an adequate
    opportunity to talk to your attorney and get his advice as to how you
    should proceed?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    COURT: And earlier this date we had a recorded
    conversation, we made a record about your intent or desire at that
    time to remove Mr. Lies as your attorney. Do you remember that
    conversation that occurred roughly an hour or so ago?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    COURT: And that was on the record and by that I mean
    there was a reporter, this reporter there, and she took down
    everything that was said in that proceeding. Do you understand
    that?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    15
    COURT: And at that time it was your intent to remove Mr.
    Lies as your counsel. And so I would ask you at this point whether
    Mr. Lies has now answered any and all questions that you had of
    concern as to what you’re doing here now?
    DEFENDANT: Yes.
    Because Haynes had apparently resolved his dispute with attorney Lies by the
    time he entered his plea, any argument he was prejudiced by the court’s failure
    to appoint substitute counsel would be unpersuasive. A defendant must show
    the grounds to justify substitute counsel, and the court has considerable
    discretion whether to grant substitute counsel. See 
    Boggs, 741 N.W.2d at 506
    ;
    see also State v. Mott, 
    759 N.W.2d 140
    , 148-49 (Iowa Ct. App. 2008). We affirm
    on this issue.
    C.    June 3 hearing.
    At the June 3 hearing, set forth in relevant part above, Haynes again
    discussed his dissatisfaction with attorney Lies’s representation.     He did not,
    however, renew his request for substitute counsel, and in fact, appeared to
    represent himself. Indeed, at the hearing, attorney Lies informed the court, “I
    have had little to no contact with Mr. Haynes, Your Honor. He’s been hostile,
    would be putting it nicely, towards me and doesn’t have a lot of contact with me
    . . . .”
    Even assuming at this point the court had a duty to inquire about the
    breakdown in communication, see State v. Tejeda, 
    677 N.W.2d 744
    , 750 (Iowa
    2004) (“[T]here is a duty of inquiry once a defendant requests substitute counsel
    on account of an alleged breakdown in communication.”), Haynes’s claim still
    fails because he cannot show prejudice. See State v. Lopez, 
    633 N.W.2d 774
    ,
    779 (Iowa 2001) (“[A] defendant must show prejudice when the court denies a
    16
    motion for substitute counsel.”). The facts and circumstance discussed above
    provided a factual basis for Haynes’s plea, and the plea offer presented by the
    State was “very generous” considering the facts and circumstances of this case.
    We affirm on this issue.
    IV.    Guilty Plea
    Haynes contends “error occurred when [his] two pleas of guilty were
    accepted even though the pleas were the result of the court’s threat to [him],
    were not voluntary and intentional, and did not have a factual basis.” We do not
    reach these claims because they are not properly before us. “A defendant’s
    failure to challenge the adequacy of a guilty plea proceeding by motion in arrest
    of judgment shall preclude the defendant’s right to assert such challenge on
    appeal.” Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.24(3)(a).
    Haynes’s motion in arrest of judgment did not raise claims regarding the
    voluntariness or factual basis of his guilty plea, only the issues addressed above.
    State v. Rodriguez, 
    804 N.W.2d 844
    , 848 (Iowa 2011) (holding a failure to file a
    motion in arrest of judgment prevents challenges to a guilty plea on appeal).
    Accordingly, he cannot challenge these aspects of the plea proceeding on
    appeal.
    V.     Conclusion
    Upon consideration of the claims properly before us, we affirm the
    judgment and sentence entered following Leonard Haynes’s guilty plea to
    possession of a controlled substance, third offense, and operating while
    intoxicated.
    AFFIRMED.