Billy E. Melton v. Commonwealth of Kentucky ( 2022 )


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  •                 RENDERED: NOVEMBER 4, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2021-CA-0103-MR
    BILLY MELTON                                                       APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM MONROE CIRCUIT COURT
    v.               HONORABLE DAVID L. WILLIAMS, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 04-CR-00089
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                             APPELLEE
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: JONES, MAZE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
    MCNEILL, JUDGE: On December 21, 2005, a jury convicted the appellant, Billy
    Melton, of murder, two counts of rape in the first degree, complicity to commit
    tampering with physical evidence, and intimidating a witness. He was sentenced
    to life imprisonment. See Melton v. Commonwealth, No. 2006-SC-000080-MR,
    
    2007 WL 4139640
    , at *1 (Ky. Nov. 21, 2007). This is an appeal from an order of
    the Monroe Circuit Court denying Billy Melton’s July 17, 2019 motions to vacate
    his 2005 conviction and sentence pursuant to CR1 60.02, and for the presiding
    judge to recuse. Upon review, we affirm.
    I. CR 60.02 Motion
    In sum, Melton’s CR 60.02 motion at issue in this appeal was properly
    denied because it presented arguments Melton either could have made in prior
    proceedings, did make in prior proceedings, or that he was otherwise procedurally
    barred from making due to the time limitations set forth in the civil rule. Before
    discussing the substance of those arguments, however, it is necessary to review the
    history of this case, starting with the relevant facts of Melton’s underlying
    conviction, which the Kentucky Supreme Court summarized when it resolved
    Melton’s direct appeal:
    Melton was indicted on various offenses arising
    from the death of Jodi Pace. On September 17, 2004,
    Pace, a fourteen-year-old, had gone to spend the night
    with Kassandra Hudson, her eighteen-year-old friend.
    Together the girls contacted Melton to see if he could
    obtain methamphetamine for them. After several calls,
    Melton agreed to pick up the girls.
    Amanda Coe, Melton’s cousin, lived with him at
    the time of the incident. Melton, Coe, and Coe’s baby
    went to pick up Pace and Hudson. Upon arriving at
    Melton’s home in Tompkinsville, Pace and Hudson were
    informed that Melton had not yet obtained the
    methamphetamine for them. While they waited, Coe
    1
    Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure.
    -2-
    witnessed Melton giving the two girls a handful of pills
    and marijuana. Coe testified that Melton gave them
    [Lorcet], Percocet, Oxycontin, Xanax, and an
    unidentified pill. At some point Melton agreed to
    provide Pace and Hudson with one gram of
    methamphetamine each in return for sex. Shortly after
    that, Melton had sexual relations with the girls.
    Pace and Hudson began to question Melton about
    the methamphetamine, so he gave them more pills.
    According to the testimony of Scottie Key and Clinton
    Rowe, Melton then had sexual relations with both girls
    again, although they were then passed out. Key and
    Rowe, who had shared a cell with Melton after his arrest,
    came forward and testified concerning various statements
    he had made in their presence in which he had bragged
    about the events that night. The testimony of Key and
    Rowe confirmed the sex-for-methamphetamine theory.
    In addition, both testified that on various occasions
    Melton had specifically said he had given the drug
    Seroquel to Pace.
    At some point in the early hours of September
    18th, Coe informed Melton that Pace was not well and
    that they should get her help. Melton refused and
    threatened to harm Coe if she attempted to use the phone.
    Later that morning, Melton was informed that Pace was
    unresponsive. Melton, aware that Pace had overdosed,
    delayed calling for help in order to give Coe time to
    collect the pill bottles and dispose of them in the woods
    adjoining his property. Further, Melton threatened to
    harm Coe if she told authorities what had happened.
    Once the pills were removed and Hudson was hidden,
    Melton called 911 for an ambulance.
    An ambulance was dispatched to Melton’s
    residence at 9:21 a.m. During his conversation with the
    911-operator, Melton claimed he did not know who the
    girl was. He stated that she had arrived with three other
    girls the evening before. Further, Melton stated that the
    -3-
    girls were visiting with Coe when he went to sleep on the
    couch, but that Pace had not responded when they tried to
    wake her that morning. Pace was taken to the hospital
    and pronounced dead on arrival by the Monroe County
    Deputy Coroner.
    Once the ambulance left with Pace, Melton and
    Coe took Hudson back and dropped her off near her
    home. As a result of the night’s events, Hudson was also
    taken to the hospital. It was there that officers found her
    later on September 18th.
    Officers from the Kentucky State Police (KSP)
    became involved shortly after Pace arrived at the
    hospital. KSP Detectives interviewed Melton on the
    afternoon of September 18, 2004. Melton provided a
    story similar to that given to the 911-operator. With
    Melton’s written consent, the officers searched Melton’s
    house, his car, and the surrounding property. As a result
    of that search, the officers recovered various pill bottles,
    rolling papers, and a can modified for use with
    methamphetamine.
    Melton was subsequently interviewed at the
    Monroe County Sheriff’s office. KSP Detective Atwood,
    having obtained a conflicting story from Coe, gave
    Melton his Miranda warnings and began a taped
    interview. Once again, Melton told the detective that
    four girls had arrived the night before to visit Coe.
    Melton repeated his assertion that no alcohol or drugs
    were used while he was present and that Pace had been
    fine when he went to sleep. When questioned, Melton
    did admit to having sexual relations with two of the girls.
    Melton told Detective Atwood that it had been a “group
    deal” with the two girls. After completing his statement,
    Melton admitted that marijuana had been used. He stated
    he had not mentioned it because he did not believe it was
    a drug. After further reflection, Melton told Detective
    Atwood that if he gave him the tape of the first interview,
    he would give him another statement. Detective Atwood
    -4-
    informed Melton that he could not do that, but that he
    would listen to anything Melton wanted to say. Melton
    made no further statements. Melton was arrested
    following this interview.
    An autopsy on Pace revealed that the cause of
    death was an overdose of Seroquel. Lab reports also
    revealed the presence of Xanax, oxycodone, and
    hydrocodone. Given the circumstances surrounding
    Pace’s death, officers obtained a rape collection kit on
    both Pace and Hudson. After obtaining a warrant, a rape
    suspect collection kit was obtained from Melton. Lab
    tests showed that samples of DNA taken from both Pace
    and Hudson matched Melton’s DNA. In addition,
    Hudson’s sample contained DNA from an unknown
    source.
    Melton, 
    2007 WL 4139640
    , at *1-2. After rejecting Melton’s only two contentions
    on direct appeal – that the trial court had erred by denying his motions to continue
    the trial and for a change of venue – the Court affirmed Melton’s conviction and
    sentence.
    Thereafter, Melton initiated a variety of post-judgment proceedings,
    some of which overlapped during the years that followed. On October 19, 2009,
    pursuant to RCr2 11.42, Melton filed a motion to vacate, claiming his trial counsel
    had been ineffective because, among other reasons, his trial counsel had reason to
    question his competency prior to his trial but failed to request a hearing; and
    because his trial counsel had failed to consult with a pathologist to discredit the
    2
    Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure.
    -5-
    testimony of Dr. Tracey Corey, the Commonwealth’s medical examiner, who had
    testified that Pace died as a result of an overdose of Seroquel. Melton v.
    Commonwealth, No. 2009-CA-2271-MR, 
    2011 WL 2078590
    , *3-5 (Ky. App. May
    27, 2011). The trial judge summarily denied Melton’s motion; this Court affirmed;
    and the Kentucky Supreme Court denied discretionary review.
    On January 3, 2014, Melton filed a petition for writ of mandamus
    against Judge Eddie Lovelace, who had presided over his trial. We dismissed his
    petition on May 14, 2014, for his failure to pay the requisite $5.00 filing fee.
    Melton v. Lovelace, No. 2014-CA-000047-OA.
    On October 2, 2013, Melton filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus
    in the Monroe Circuit Court. His petition was denied on August 18, 2014. And, in
    a March 25, 2015 order, this Court affirmed, explaining that the argument he had
    advanced in his petition – that his conviction was void ab initio because he was
    allegedly not evaluated concerning his competency to stand trial – had already
    been presented to the trial court and this Court in his RCr 11.42 proceedings; and
    that because Kentucky law had already provided Melton a more appropriate forum
    for his grievance, habeas corpus relief was not available to him. Melton v.
    Commonwealth, No. 2014-CA-001466-MR. On February 10, 2016, the Kentucky
    Supreme Court denied discretionary review. Melton v. Commonwealth, No. 2015-
    SC-000172-D.
    -6-
    On August 10, 2020, Melton filed another petition for writ of
    mandamus, this time against Judge David L. Williams, who presided over his CR
    60.02 motion. This Court denied the petition on November 25, 2020. Melton v.
    Williams, No. 2020-CA-0502-OA. Melton did not seek further review.
    And with that in mind, we step back to July 17, 2019, when Melton
    filed the CR 60.02 motion at issue in this matter before the Monroe Circuit Court.
    There, he made three3 contentions. First, he argued the trial court had erred in
    failing to raise and address the issue of his competency sua sponte because, he
    believed, it had been on notice prior to his trial of facts sufficient to place his
    competence to stand trial in question. He asserted the “trial court was fully aware
    of his prior existing and readily debilitating, and often incapacitating over-
    medicating, in conjunction with an IQ score of 58, all duly influenced by the
    lifetime of mental problems which plague him and interfere with his ability to
    meaningfully interact with others.” Thus, as he had done in his October 19, 2009
    RCr 11.42 motion, and also in his October 2, 2013 writ petition, Melton contended
    a new trial was warranted because he had not been provided a pretrial competency
    hearing.
    3
    Melton listed four “issues” in his CR 60.02 motion, but his fourth essentially repeated his
    second; both asserted, in somewhat differing language, that the circuit court had erred by failing
    to provide him a competency hearing prior to his trial.
    -7-
    For his second and third arguments, recall that in the RCr 11.42
    proceeding he initiated in 2009, Melton had faulted his trial counsel for failing to
    consult with a pathologist to discredit the testimony of Dr. Tracey Corey, the
    Commonwealth’s medical examiner who had testified that Pace died as a result of
    an overdose of Seroquel. Resolving that issue in his prior appeal, this Court had
    explained, “Melton does not offer any evidence that he knew of a specific expert
    who was willing to testify in a manner helpful to the defense or of what such
    testimony would consist.” Melton, 
    2011 WL 2078590
    , at *5.
    However, in 2019, Melton found an individual he deemed an expert,
    who was willing to testify in a manner helpful to his defense, and who had indeed
    supplied him with an extensive affidavit detailing what his expert testimony would
    be. The “expert” in question was Douglas H. Rank, a fellow inmate who had been
    a licensed physician and psychiatrist. Rank stated in his affidavit that his opinion
    was based upon his review of the following documents:
    1. FINAL DIAGNOSIS on PACE, JODI ME-04-832
    (“J.P.”) Completed by Tracey Corey, MD, on 11/08/2004
    (Exhibit #1)
    2. POST MORTEM EXAMINATION OF THE BODY
    OF PACE, JODI ME-04-832 Completed by Tracey
    Corey, MD, on 09/19/2004 (Exhibit #2)
    3. TRANSCRIPTION from the trial of Billy Melton,
    10/28/2005, starting at 3:09:15 p.m. These are the
    remarks by the Commonwealth Attorney, Charlton C.
    Hundley, to Billy Melton’s jury. (Exhibit #3)
    -8-
    4. Medication Follow-Up Sheet, Lifeskills, Inc. for Billy
    Melton, 8-12-02 through 10-27-04.
    5. “Fatal Overdoses Associated with Quetiapine,” by
    Loralie J. Langman, et. al. Journal of Analytical
    Toxicology, Vol. 28, September 2004.
    6. Physician’s Desk Reference (“PDR”)
    As to the substance of his opinion, it was three-fold. Citing item “4”
    of the documents he reviewed – which listed the various medications Melton had
    been prescribed prior to Melton’s trial – he agreed with Melton’s contention that
    Melton had been over-medicated prior to trial, and that his competency to stand
    trial therefore should have been in question. Next, he opined that his experience,
    the documentation he had reviewed, as well as the medical literature available prior
    to Melton’s trial, all indicated that Pace could not have died from ingesting
    Seroquel; that oxycodone or hydrocodone could not have contributed to Pace’s
    death; and that Melton could not have had sexual intercourse with Pace while she
    was physically helpless. Lastly, he concluded Dr. Corey was unreasonable, and
    perhaps negligent, in concluding otherwise.
    From Rank’s affidavit, Melton formulated his second and third CR
    60.02 arguments. Regarding his second argument, Melton contended Rank’s
    opinion constituted “new evidence” of which he had only recently become aware;
    and that because it completely exonerated him, Rank’s opinion entitled him to a
    -9-
    new trial “under the umbrella of CR 60.02(e)[4] and/or (f).” Regarding his third
    argument, Melton contended he was entitled to a new trial because Rank’s affidavit
    demonstrated Hudson and Coe – two of the witnesses examined at his trial – must
    have committed perjury when they testified Melton had provided Pace Oxycontin
    and Lorcet prior to her death; and that Dr. Corey must have presented false
    evidence at trial.
    The circuit court denied Melton’s motion. Over the course of its April
    24, 2020 order to that effect, as well as an August 28, 2020 order overruling
    Melton’s subsequent petition for reconsideration, the circuit court explained its
    reasoning. First, it noted Melton had previously asserted – in his RCr 11.42
    motion – that his ability to cognitively function was a basis for setting aside his
    conviction; and that the courts had already addressed that issue. Second, it found
    that the passage of over fifteen years between Melton’s final sentence and CR
    60.02 motion was not a reasonable amount of time and was far too long to warrant
    granting Melton’s requested relief. Third, it explained:
    This Court cannot ascertain any evidence of a conclusive
    or clear and convincing character that evinces fraud in
    the proceeding. Melton’s basis for his motion relies
    heavily on an affidavit submitted by Douglas H. Rank.
    4
    Below, Melton cited nothing indicating, per CR 60.02(e), that his judgment of conviction “is
    void, or has been satisfied, released, or discharged, or a prior judgment upon which it is based
    has been reversed or otherwise vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have
    prospective application.” Nor does he cite this specific provision in his appellate brief; nor, for
    that matter, does the record support such a contention.
    -10-
    Mr. Rank. A former physician, is currently serving a
    fifteen (15)-year sentence for assaulting a patient with a
    sword.[FN]
    [FN] See Commonwealth v. Douglas Rank,
    Kenton Circuit Court 10-CR-00186
    Mr. Rank surrendered his license to practice medicine in
    February of 2011. Based upon these facts, this Court
    cannot determine that Mr. Rank’s allegations are credible
    enough to support the granting of a CR 60.02 trial.
    Melton now appeals, reasserting his CR 60.02 arguments. Regarding
    his first argument, no error occurred. It is well-established that the remedy
    provided under CR 60.02 is extraordinary and only available to raise issues that
    could not have been raised in other proceedings. McQueen v. Commonwealth, 
    948 S.W.2d 415
     (Ky. 1997). CR 60.02 is unavailable “to raise claims which could and
    should have been raised in prior proceedings, but, rather, ‘is for relief that is not
    available by direct appeal and not available under RCr 11.42.’” Sanders v.
    Commonwealth, 
    339 S.W.3d 427
    , 437 (Ky. 2011) (quoting Gross v.
    Commonwealth, 
    648 S.W.2d 853
    , 856 (Ky. 1983)). Here, as the circuit court
    noted, Melton argued in his RCr 11.42 motion that his purported inability to
    cognitively function served as a basis for relieving him of his judgment. Further,
    the circuit court correctly noted that issue was addressed and resolved in those
    prior proceedings. If Melton’s lack of competence was as clear and obvious prior
    to his trial as Melton continues to represent, the issue also could have, and should
    -11-
    have, been raised in his direct appeal pursuant to RCr 10.26 for palpable error
    review.
    Regarding his second and third arguments, both are untimely. To
    begin, the operative time limits specified in CR 60.02 commence after the entry of
    judgment, not the finality of any appellate or post-judgment proceedings. Meredith
    v. Commonwealth, 
    312 S.W.2d 460
    , 462 (Ky. 1958). Thus, to the extent Melton
    asserts “perjury or falsified evidence” as bases for a new trial, his fifteen-year
    delay precluded him from making such arguments. See CR 60.02(c) (providing
    such arguments must be made no later than one year after entry of judgment).
    Moreover, while Rank’s “expert” opinion might be “new” to Melton,
    it is not “new evidence” within the meaning of CR 60.02(b), let alone new
    evidence of such “an extraordinary nature,” per CR 60.02(f), that it could not have
    been discovered within one year of his conviction.5 As our Supreme Court
    explained in Foley v. Commonwealth, 
    425 S.W.3d 880
    , 887 (Ky. 2014), relative to
    both CR 60.02(b) and (f),
    “Newly discovered evidence is evidence that could not
    have been obtained at the time of trial through the
    exercise of reasonable diligence.” Commonwealth v.
    Harris, 
    250 S.W.3d 637
    , 642 (Ky. 2008). See also
    Sanders v. Commonwealth, 
    339 S.W.3d 427
    , 437 (Ky.
    2011) (holding that CR 60.02 allows appeals based upon
    claims of error that “were unknown and could not have
    5
    CR 60.02(b) requires any motion based upon “newly discovered evidence” to be made no later
    than one year after entry of judgment.
    -12-
    been known to the moving party by exercise of
    reasonable diligence and in time to have been otherwise
    presented to the court”). Certainly, testimony in the form
    of an expert’s opinion is “evidence” in the literal sense.
    KRE 702. But an expert’s opinion cannot fit the
    definition of “newly discovered evidence” unless it is
    based upon underlying facts that were not previously
    known and could not with reasonable diligence have
    been discovered. An opinion consisting simply of a
    reexamination and reinterpretation of previously known
    facts cannot be regarded as “newly discovered evidence.”
    There would be no finality to a verdict if the facts upon
    which it was based were perpetually subject to whatever
    reanalysis might be conceived in the mind of a qualified
    expert witness.
    Here, Rank’s “expert opinion” was based entirely upon his
    reexamination and reinterpretation of facts that were either known – or in Rank’s
    view, should have been known – prior to Melton’s trial. Indeed, even the medical
    literature Rank cited in his review – including the edition of the “Physician’s Desk
    Reference” he relied upon – predated Melton’s trial. Therefore, even if Rank’s
    opinion could be lent credence as “evidence,” it did not qualify as “new evidence”
    capable of invoking CR 60.02.
    Our Supreme Court has warned that because of the desirability of
    according finality to judgments, CR 60.02(f) must be invoked only with extreme
    caution, and only under most unusual circumstances. Cawood v. Cawood, 
    329 S.W.2d 569
     (Ky. 1959). That is most definitely not the case in this matter: Melton
    merely made arguments that have, could have, or should have been made prior to
    -13-
    his trial, reinforcing that nothing has changed, and no extraordinary circumstance
    has come into being, since his 2005 conviction. We therefore affirm the circuit
    court’s decision to deny his motion.
    II. Recusal Motion
    In conjunction with his CR 60.02 motion, Melton also sought to have
    the presiding judge, David L. Williams, recuse. He argued Judge Williams was
    biased against him and therefore incapable of fairly resolving his CR 60.02 motion
    because: (1) he was Judge Williams’ blood relative; and (2) he owed Judge
    Williams an outstanding sum of money for legal services then-attorney Williams
    rendered for him in 1982 in connection with a prior charge of theft. On appeal, he
    argues Judge Williams erroneously denied his motion.
    However, we reemphasize that Melton’s CR 60.02 arguments were
    procedurally barred regardless. That aside, Melton’s contentions that he is related
    to Judge Williams and owed him money were: (1) denied by Judge Williams in his
    dispositive order; and (2) supported only by Melton’s unsworn allegations. We
    will not accept conclusory allegations as proof in this regard. “The burden of proof
    required for recusal of a trial judge is an onerous one. There must be a showing of
    facts of a character calculated seriously to impair the judge’s impartiality and sway
    his judgment.” Alred v. Commonwealth, Jud. Conduct Comm’n, 
    395 S.W.3d 417
    ,
    429 (Ky. 2012) (internal quotation marks and footnotes omitted). Consequently,
    -14-
    we will not assume for purposes of this appeal that Judge Williams and Melton are
    related; that Melton owed him money; or that any bias existed.
    III. Conclusion
    The Monroe Circuit Court committed no error. We therefore
    AFFIRM.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Billy Melton, pro se                     Daniel Cameron
    West Liberty, Kentucky                   Attorney General of Kentucky
    Perry T. Ryan
    Assistant Attorney General
    Frankfort, Kentucky
    -15-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021 CA 000103

Filed Date: 11/3/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2022