LaQuinn D. Evans v. State of Maine , 2020 ME 36 ( 2020 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                         Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2020 ME 36
    Docket:   Kno-19-216
    Argued:   March 2, 2020
    Decided:  March 26, 2020
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HUMPHREY, HORTON, and CONNORS, JJ.
    LAQUINN D. EVANS
    v.
    STATE OF MAINE
    GORMAN, J.
    [¶1] During a hearing on LaQuinn D. Evans’s petition for post-conviction
    review, the Unified Criminal Docket (Knox County, Wheeler, J.) announced that
    it would grant Evans’s petition. As the court began to issue that decision from
    the bench, a witness’s interruption led the court to resume the hearing.
    Ultimately, the court denied Evans’s petition. Evans appeals. In the unique
    circumstances of this case, we conclude that Evans must receive a new hearing
    on his petition.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] On August 4, 2017, Evans was charged by complaint with one count
    of trafficking in prison contraband (Class C), 17-A M.R.S. § 757(1)(B) (2018).
    Evans accepted the State’s plea offer, waived indictment, and pleaded guilty. On
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    October 4, 2017, the court entered a judgment and commitment sentencing
    Evans in accordance with the plea deal.
    [¶3]    On February 15, 2018, Evans filed a timely petition for
    post-conviction review, alleging ineffective assistance by his plea counsel.
    See 15 M.R.S. § 2128-B(1) (2018). In November of 2018, the court—the same
    justice who had accepted Evans’s guilty plea and sentenced him—held an
    evidentiary hearing on Evans’s petition.
    [¶4] At the hearing, Evans’s post-conviction counsel conducted extensive
    direct     examination       of   Evans’s      plea    counsel.         Before     the    State’s
    cross-examination of the witness, the court took a recess and, in a discussion in
    chambers during that recess, told counsel that it had “heard enough evidence
    to make at least a preliminary decision, which would end up in leading me to a
    resentencing.”1 Upon resuming the hearing, the court announced that it was
    “prepared to state on the record all of the things that provide a basis for my
    decision, or I can also write a decision.” The court then began to announce its
    decision from the bench.
    1The record does not contain a transcript or recording of the in-chambers conversation. This is
    a quotation from the court’s statement upon returning to the bench.
    3
    [¶5] Evans’s plea counsel, still in the courtroom as a potential witness,
    interrupted to say that she “would like to be able to put on a defense.” This
    interjection sparked a colloquy between the court and the State, after which the
    court permitted the State to cross-examine Evans’s plea counsel. Evans opted
    not to testify at the hearing. Six months later, the court denied Evans’s petition.
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶6] We do not reach the merits of Evans’s underlying petition because
    we conclude that the judgment must be vacated on procedural grounds. After
    hearing only a portion of the evidence, the court caused both parties to believe
    that the hearing was over and that Evans was to receive a new trial. See
    Jusseaume v. Ducatt, 
    2011 ME 43
    , ¶¶ 9, 11-15, 
    15 A.3d 714
    . In the middle of
    announcing its decision, the court was reminded by a witness—Evans’s plea
    counsel—that there was more evidence to be considered. The court then
    permitted more evidence to be presented and, after hearing all of the evidence,
    reached a decision very different from the one it originally announced. We
    conclude that the confluence of these unusual events has irredeemably
    tarnished the appearance of fairness in the proceeding. See State v. Bard, 
    2018 ME 38
    , ¶ 50, 
    181 A.3d 187
    . Accordingly, we vacate the court’s judgment and
    4
    remand for a new hearing on Evans’s post-conviction petition, to be conducted
    by a different justice.
    [¶7] Our decision is a narrow one, limited to these extraordinary facts.
    We hold simply that, in the unique circumstances of this case, the process at
    Evans’s hearing was insufficiently protective of the need for “public trust and
    confidence in the procedures employed by the courts.”
    Id. ¶ 52.
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated. Remanded for a new hearing
    on Evans’s petition for post-conviction review, to
    be conducted by a different justice.
    James M. Mason, Esq. (orally), Handelman & Mason LLC, Brunswick, for
    appellant LaQuinn D. Evans
    Natasha Irving, District Attorney, and Elizabeth Noble, Asst. Dist. Atty. (orally),
    Prosecutorial District VI, Rockland, for appellee State of Maine
    Knox County Unified Criminal Docket docket number CR-2018-171
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY