State v. Smith ( 2016 )


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    07/29/2016 08:06 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
    294 Nebraska R eports
    STATE v. SMITH
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 311
    State of Nebraska, appellee, v.
    William E. Smith, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed July 29, 2016.     No. S-15-127.
    1.	 Postconviction: Constitutional Law: Appeal and Error. In appeals
    from postconviction proceedings, an appellate court reviews de novo a
    determination that the defendant failed to allege sufficient facts to dem-
    onstrate a violation of his or her constitutional rights or that the records
    and files affirmatively show that the defendant is entitled to no relief.
    2.	 Effectiveness of Counsel: Appeal and Error. When reviewing a claim
    of ineffective assistance of counsel, an appellate court reviews the fac-
    tual findings of the lower court for clear error.
    3.	 ____: ____. With regard to the questions of counsel’s performance or
    prejudice to the defendant as part of the two-pronged test articulated in
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), an appellate court reviews such legal determinations inde-
    pendently of the lower court’s decision.
    4.	 Postconviction: Constitutional Law: Proof. An evidentiary hearing
    on a motion for postconviction relief must be granted when the motion
    contains factual allegations which, if proved, constitute an infringe-
    ment of the movant’s rights under the Nebraska or federal Constitution.
    However, if the motion alleges only conclusions of fact or law, or the
    records and files in the case affirmatively show that the movant is
    entitled to no relief, no evidentiary hearing is required.
    5.	 Effectiveness of Counsel: Proof: Appeal and Error. To prevail
    on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984),
    the defendant must show that his or her counsel’s performance was
    deficient and that this deficient performance actually prejudiced the
    defendant’s defense.
    6.	 ____: ____: ____. To show prejudice under the prejudice component
    of the test in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    ,
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    80 L. Ed. 2d 674 
    (1984), the petitioner must demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that but for his or her counsel’s deficient performance,
    the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reason-
    able probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in
    the outcome.
    7.	 Effectiveness of Counsel: Appeal and Error. When analyzing a claim
    of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, courts usually begin by
    determining whether appellate counsel failed to bring a claim on appeal
    that actually prejudiced the defendant. That is, courts begin by assessing
    the strength of the claim appellate counsel failed to raise.
    8.	 ____: ____. Counsel’s failure to raise an issue on appeal could be inef-
    fective assistance only if there is a reasonable probability that inclusion
    of the issue would have changed the result of the appeal.
    9.	 ____: ____. When a case presents layered ineffectiveness claims, an
    appellate court determines the prejudice prong of appellate counsel’s
    performance by focusing on whether trial counsel was ineffective under
    the test in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    ,
    
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984). If trial counsel was not ineffective, then the
    defendant suffered no prejudice when appellate counsel failed to bring
    an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim.
    10.	 Indictments and Informations. Objections to an information or the
    content of an information should be raised by a motion to quash.
    11.	 Pleas: Indictments and Informations: Waiver. When a defendant
    enters a plea in a case, he waives objections to all defects in an infor-
    mation that can be reached by a motion to quash, except those defects
    which are of such a fundamental character as to make the indictment
    wholly invalid.
    12.	 Effectiveness of Counsel: Appeal and Error. When claims of a trial
    counsel’s performance are procedurally barred, an appellate court exam-
    ines claims regarding trial counsel’s performance only if the defendant
    assigns as error that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise
    trial counsel’s performance.
    13.	 Postconviction: Judicial Notice: Appeal and Error. A reviewing court
    considering a motion for postconviction relief may take judicial notice
    of the record in the direct appeal.
    14.	 Homicide: Words and Phrases. A “sudden quarrel” is a legally recog-
    nized and sufficient provocation which causes a reasonable person to
    lose normal self-control.
    15.	 Homicide. Although provocation negates malice, malice is not a statu-
    tory element of second degree murder in Nebraska.
    16.	 Postconviction: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not con-
    sider as an assignment of error a question not presented to the district
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    court for disposition through a defendant’s motion for postconvic-
    tion relief.
    17.	 Double Jeopardy: Statutes: Proof. In a double jeopardy analysis,
    where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two dis-
    tinct statutory provisions, the test to determine whether there are two
    offenses or one is whether each provision requires proof that the other
    does not.
    18.	 Appeal and Error. An appellate court may find plain error on appeal
    when an error unasserted or uncomplained of at trial, but plainly evident
    from the record, prejudicially affects a litigant’s substantial right and,
    if uncorrected, would result in damage to the integrity, reputation, and
    fairness of the judicial process.
    Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: Paul
    D. Merritt, Jr., Judge. Affirmed.
    William E. Smith, pro se.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Stacy M. Foust
    for appellee.
    Wright, Connolly, Miller-Lerman, and K elch, JJ., and
    Pirtle, Judge.
    K elch, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    William E. Smith appeals the district court’s order that
    denied his motion for postconviction relief without an evi-
    dentiary hearing. Smith asserts that he received ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel, that the district court erred in
    hearing his claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel
    at a hearing on his motion for new counsel, and that plain error
    permeates the record. Because we find no merit in Smith’s
    claims, we affirm.
    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Original Convictions
    and Sentences
    Smith was involved in an altercation in 2008. Consequently,
    the State charged Smith with one count of attempted second
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    degree murder, a Class II felony; one count of first degree
    assault, a Class III felony; and one count of use of a weapon
    to commit a felony, a Class III felony. Following a trial, a jury
    found Smith guilty of the crimes charged. Smith was sentenced
    to 25 to 35 years’ imprisonment for attempted second degree
    murder and 15 to 20 years’ imprisonment for first degree
    assault, to run concurrently. He was sentenced to 15 to 20
    years’ imprisonment for use of a weapon to commit a felony,
    to run consecutively with the other sentences.
    2. A ppellate History
    On direct appeal to the Nebraska Court of Appeals, Smith
    assigned and argued that the jury should have been instructed
    that if his intent to kill resulted from a sudden quarrel, he
    should have been convicted of attempted sudden quarrel man-
    slaughter. See State v. Smith, 
    19 Neb. Ct. App. 708
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 720
    (2012). He also assigned and argued that the jury should
    have been instructed that he acted in self-defense. We sum-
    marized the Court of Appeals’ reasoning in our subsequent
    further review of that opinion:
    [T]he Court of Appeals determined that a self-defense
    instruction was not warranted by the evidence. It further
    determined that Smith’s trial counsel could not have been
    deficient in failing to request an instruction on attempted
    sudden quarrel manslaughter, because at the time of the
    trial, that crime did not exist in Nebraska. The court
    reasoned that trial counsel could not have been ineffec-
    tive “for not anticipating how the courts would rule.”
    [State v. 
    Smith, 19 Neb. Ct. App. at 728
    , 811 N.W.2d at 738.]
    But the Court of Appeals concluded that under our deci-
    sion in [State v. Smith, 
    282 Neb. 720
    , 
    806 N.W.2d 383
         (2011)], the trial court had a sua sponte duty to instruct
    on attempted sudden quarrel manslaughter because it
    was a lesser-included offense of attempted second degree
    murder and there was some evidence of a sudden quarrel
    occurring immediately before the shooting. We granted
    petitions for further review filed by each party.
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    State v. Smith, 
    284 Neb. 636
    , 640-41, 
    822 N.W.2d 401
    ,
    407 (2012).
    On further review, we affirmed the judgment of the Court
    of Appeals, based on different reasoning. See State v. 
    Smith, supra
    . We held that “(1) the trial court had no duty to instruct
    on attempted sudden quarrel manslaughter in the absence of
    a request to do so and (2) Smith’s trial counsel was not
    ineffective in failing to request such an instruction.” 
    Id. at 654,
    822 N.W.2d at 415. But under the plain error doctrine,
    we held that Smith was entitled to a new trial at which
    the jury could be instructed on the distinction between sec-
    ond degree murder and voluntary sudden quarrel manslaugh-
    ter to determine whether Smith committed attempted second
    degree murder. Such an instruction, we held, was supported by
    the evidence.
    We reasoned that State v. Smith, 
    282 Neb. 720
    , 
    806 N.W.2d 383
    (2011), occasioned a significant change in the law after
    Smith’s case was tried and while it was pending on appeal. At
    the time Smith’s case was tried, voluntary manslaughter was
    an unintentional crime and the crime of attempted voluntary
    manslaughter did not exist. Therefore, there was no reason for
    Smith to request an instruction on attempted voluntary man-
    slaughter. We emphasized that voluntary manslaughter is not
    a lesser-included offense of second degree murder. Instead,
    we held that voluntary manslaughter is a lesser degree of
    homicide than second degree murder and that the two are dif-
    ferentiated only by the presence or absence of the sudden quar-
    rel provocation.
    Thus, where there is evidence that (1) a killing occurred
    intentionally without premeditation and (2) the defend­
    ant was acting under the provocation of a sudden quar-
    rel, a jury must be given the option of convicting of
    either second degree murder or voluntary manslaughter
    depending upon its resolution of the fact issue regard-
    ing provocation.
    State v. 
    Smith, 284 Neb. at 656
    , 822 N.W.2d at 417.
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    We rejected Smith’s remaining arguments, including his
    argument that the Court of Appeals erred in finding he was not
    entitled to a self-defense instruction in the first trial.
    3. Motion for New Counsel
    After we issued our opinion, Smith filed a motion for new
    counsel, seeking to dismiss his counsel, who had represented
    him on direct appeal. Smith made claims of ineffectiveness,
    including that his counsel had failed to disclose a conflict of
    interest. Without addressing Smith’s claims, the district court
    discharged Smith’s counsel and appointed him new counsel
    for the retrial of the attempted second degree murder charge.
    We summarize pertinent facts from the hearing on Smith’s
    motion for new counsel in more detail in the analysis sec-
    tion below.
    4. Plea
    In lieu of a new trial, Smith pled no contest on June 26,
    2013, to the amended charge of attempted voluntary man-
    slaughter. He was sentenced to 20 months’ to 5 years’ impris-
    onment, to be served concurrently with his sentence of 15 to
    20 years’ imprisonment for first degree assault. The sentence of
    15 to 20 years’ imprisonment for use of a weapon to commit a
    felony remained consecutive to the other sentences.
    5. Postconviction Proceedings
    On March 26, 2014, Smith filed an “Amended Verified
    Petition for Postconviction Relief,” which is the only post-
    conviction motion in the record before us. Smith essentially
    argued (1) that the theory of sudden quarrel provocation
    should have reduced his first degree assault conviction to third
    degree assault and (2) that his convictions for first degree
    assault and attempted voluntary manslaughter together vio-
    lated constitutional principles of double jeopardy. He used
    this contention as a basis for interrelated arguments about
    due process, ineffective assistance of trial counsel, trial court
    error, ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, appellate
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    court error, and disproportionate sentencing. Smith’s motion
    for postconviction relief did not raise claims concerning any
    conflict of interest.
    Following a hearing, the district court denied Smith’s
    motion for postconviction relief and denied an evidentiary
    hearing on the matter. It found no factual basis supporting
    Smith’s claims that his constitutional rights had been infringed
    so as to render his conviction void or voidable, and it found
    no showing that Smith’s trial counsel or appellate counsel had
    been deficient or that Smith had been prejudiced by any defi-
    ciency, if it had indeed existed.
    Smith now appeals.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Smith assigns, condensed and restated, (1) that the district
    court erred in denying his motion for postconviction relief
    without an evidentiary hearing despite Smith’s claims that his
    appellate counsel was ineffective; (2) that the district court
    erred in hearing his claims of ineffective assistance of appel-
    late counsel at the hearing on his motion for new counsel, prior
    to his motion for postconviction relief; and (3) that plain error
    permeates the record.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] In appeals from postconviction proceedings, an appel-
    late court reviews de novo a determination that the defendant
    failed to allege sufficient facts to demonstrate a violation of
    his or her constitutional rights or that the records and files
    affirmatively show that the defendant is entitled to no relief.
    State v. Determan, 
    292 Neb. 557
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 390
    (2016).
    [2,3] When reviewing a claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel, an appellate court reviews the factual findings of the
    lower court for clear error. State v. Branch, 
    290 Neb. 523
    , 
    860 N.W.2d 712
    (2015). With regard to the questions of counsel’s
    performance or prejudice to the defendant as part of the two-
    pronged test articulated in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), an appellate
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    court reviews such legal determinations independently of the
    lower court’s decision. State v. 
    Branch, supra
    .
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. Ineffective Assistance
    of A ppellate Counsel
    [4] Smith alleges that the district court erred in denying
    his motion for postconviction relief without an evidentiary
    hearing despite Smith’s claims that his appellate counsel was
    ineffective. An evidentiary hearing on a motion for post-
    conviction relief must be granted when the motion contains
    factual allegations which, if proved, constitute an infringe-
    ment of the movant’s rights under the Nebraska or federal
    Constitution. State v. Ware, 
    292 Neb. 24
    , 
    870 N.W.2d 637
    (2015). However, if the motion alleges only conclusions of
    fact or law, or the records and files in the case affirmatively
    show that the movant is entitled to no relief, no evidentiary
    hearing is required. 
    Id. [5,6] To
    prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel under Strickland v. 
    Washington, supra
    , the defendant must
    show that his or her counsel’s performance was deficient and
    that this deficient performance actually prejudiced the defend­
    ant’s defense. State v. Thorpe, 
    290 Neb. 149
    , 
    858 N.W.2d 880
    (2015). To show prejudice under the prejudice component of
    the Strickland test, the petitioner must demonstrate a reason-
    able probability that but for his or her counsel’s deficient
    performance, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different. State v. 
    Thorpe, supra
    . A reasonable probability is
    a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the out-
    come. 
    Id. [7-9] When
    analyzing a claim of ineffective assistance of
    appellate counsel, courts usually begin by determining whether
    appellate counsel failed to bring a claim on appeal that actu-
    ally prejudiced the defendant. State v. Sellers, 
    290 Neb. 18
    ,
    
    858 N.W.2d 577
    (2015). That is, courts begin by assessing
    the strength of the claim appellate counsel failed to raise. 
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    Counsel’s failure to raise an issue on appeal could be inef-
    fective assistance only if there is a reasonable probability
    that inclusion of the issue would have changed the result of
    the appeal. 
    Id. When a
    case presents layered ineffectiveness
    claims, an appellate court determines the prejudice prong of
    appellate counsel’s performance by focusing on whether trial
    counsel was ineffective under the Strickland test. State v.
    
    Sellers, supra
    . If trial counsel was not ineffective, then the
    defendant suffered no prejudice when appellate counsel failed
    to bring an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim. 
    Id. (a) Unchallenged
    Convictions
    Smith chiefly assigns that the trial court committed plain
    reversible error and abused its discretion when it denied his
    amended petition for postconviction relief without an eviden-
    tiary hearing. To support this assignment, Smith argues that
    appellate counsel was ineffective by failing to challenge his
    convictions for first degree assault and use of a weapon to
    commit a felony. But as a preliminary matter, we note that he
    attempts to combine this argument with a theory that he pled
    to a “reduced charge of attempted voluntary manslaughter
    [which] effectively erradicated [sic] and eliminated the charges
    of first degree assault and use of a weapon.” Brief for appellant
    at 21. However, this argument that his plea somehow vitiated
    the other convictions is procedurally barred because Smith did
    not challenge the charge of attempted second degree murder
    on remand.
    Smith appealed his three convictions to the Court of Appeals,
    which affirmed the convictions for first degree assault and use
    of a weapon to commit a felony but reversed the conviction
    for attempted second degree murder and remanded the cause
    for a new trial. This court affirmed the decision of the Court
    of Appeals. As a result, after remand, Smith’s convictions for
    first degree assault and use of a weapon to commit a felony
    were final judgments. See State v. Shannon, 
    293 Neb. 303
    ,
    
    876 N.W.2d 907
    (2016) (issuance of mandate by appellate
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    court is date judgment of conviction becomes final for pur-
    poses of postconviction review).
    [10,11] The only pending matter after appeal and remand
    was the retrial on the charge of attempted second degree
    murder. However, Smith pled no contest to the amended
    charge of attempted voluntary manslaughter. Rather than fil-
    ing a motion to quash or otherwise attacking the validity of
    the attempted second degree murder charge after remand, on
    double jeopardy grounds, for example, Smith entered his plea,
    which waived his right to challenge the retrial of that charge.
    Objections to an information or the content of an information
    should be raised by a motion to quash. See, Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 29-1808 (Reissue 2008); State v. Roucka, 
    253 Neb. 885
    , 
    573 N.W.2d 417
    (1998). When a defendant enters a plea in a case,
    he waives objections to all defects in an information that can
    be reached by a motion to quash, except those defects which
    are of such a fundamental character as to make the indictment
    wholly invalid. Nelson v. State, 
    167 Neb. 575
    , 
    94 N.W.2d 1
    (1959).
    Smith’s convictions for first degree assault and use of a
    weapon to commit a felony were final judgments, and his
    plea without challenging the information did not affect those
    convictions. Therefore, Smith’s contention—that his plea to
    a “reduced charge of attempted voluntary manslaughter . . .
    effectively eradicated and eliminated the charges of first degree
    assault and use of a weapon”—is without merit.
    We now turn to Smith’s primary argument that appellate
    counsel was ineffective on appeal by failing to challenge his
    convictions for first degree assault and use of a weapon to
    commit a felony. The basis of such challenge, Smith contends,
    would have been trial counsel’s failure to request a lesser-
    included instruction or an instruction on “sudden quarrel.”
    [12] First, the State correctly argues that any claims as to
    trial court error or ineffective assistance of trial counsel would
    be procedurally barred on postconviction review, because
    Smith had new counsel on direct appeal. See State v. Sellers,
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    290 Neb. 18
    , 
    858 N.W.2d 577
    (2015). When claims of a trial
    counsel’s performance are procedurally barred, an appellate
    court examines claims regarding trial counsel’s performance
    only if the defendant assigns as error, as Smith did in the
    instant case, that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing
    to raise trial counsel’s performance. See State v. Molina, 
    279 Neb. 405
    , 
    778 N.W.2d 713
    (2010). However, if trial counsel
    was not ineffective, then the defendant suffered no prejudice
    when appellate counsel failed to bring an ineffective assistance
    of trial counsel claim. State v. 
    Sellers, supra
    . As a result, any
    conclusion that Smith’s appellate counsel’s performance was
    ineffective in regard to the charges of first degree assault or use
    of a weapon to commit a felony would require us to find that
    trial counsel should have requested a lesser-included instruc-
    tion or an instruction on “sudden quarrel.”
    [13] Regarding Smith’s assertion concerning a lesser-
    included instruction, we must examine the record on direct
    appeal to determine whether the jury was instructed as to
    a lesser-included charge for first degree assault. A review-
    ing court considering a motion for postconviction relief may
    take judicial notice of the record in the direct appeal. State
    v. Parmar, 
    263 Neb. 213
    , 
    639 N.W.2d 105
    (2002); State v.
    Bennett, 
    256 Neb. 747
    , 
    591 N.W.2d 779
    (1999). In reference
    to the charge of first degree assault, the trial court did instruct
    the jury as to the lesser-included charge of third degree assault.
    There would be no lesser-included charge for use of a weapon
    to commit a felony. Smith was afforded the proper lesser-
    included instruction.
    [14,15] We next address Smith’s contention that appellate
    counsel should have argued that “sudden quarrel” also affected
    the charges of first degree assault and use of a weapon to com-
    mit a felony. A “sudden quarrel” is a legally recognized and
    sufficient provocation which causes a reasonable person to lose
    normal self-control. State v. Trice, 
    286 Neb. 183
    , 
    835 N.W.2d 667
    (2013). Although provocation negates malice, malice is not
    a statutory element of second degree murder in Nebraska. 
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    The same principle applies to first degree assault, because “[a]
    person commits the offense of assault in the first degree if he
    or she intentionally or knowingly causes serious bodily injury
    to another person.” See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-308(1) (Cum.
    Supp. 2014). Malice is not an element of first degree assault,
    and, as such, “sudden quarrel” would not be applicable to
    negate it. A similar rationale applies to use of a deadly weapon
    to commit a felony, which does not have malice as an element.
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-1205 (Cum. Supp. 2014).
    Smith also contends that State v. Butler, 
    10 Neb. Ct. App. 537
    ,
    
    634 N.W.2d 46
    (2001), stands for the proposition that because
    “provocation” can mitigate an intentional killing, it may also
    mitigate a charge of assault. However, Butler is distinguish-
    able because the Court of Appeals was addressing “provoca-
    tion” as it relates to a claim of self-defense in connection with
    an assault charge. In Butler, the Court of Appeals was discuss-
    ing Neb. Rev. Stat § 28-1409(4)(a) (Reissue 1995), which
    provided that the use of deadly force in self-defense is not
    justifiable if “‘[t]he actor, with the purpose of causing death or
    serious bodily harm, provoked the use of force against himself
    in the same 
    encounter.’” 10 Neb. Ct. App. at 553
    , 634 N.W.2d
    at 61.
    Smith’s appellate counsel did raise ineffective assistance
    of trial counsel for failing to request a self-defense instruc-
    tion on all charges. Both the Court of Appeals and this court
    rejected that claim. “Provocation” may have been related to
    Smith’s self-defense claim, but it would not act to mitigate
    his charge of assault; and the holding in Butler should not be
    interpreted for such a proposition.
    Accordingly, these assigned errors by Smith are with-
    out merit.
    (b) Appellate Counsel’s
    Conflict of Interest
    [16] Smith assigns as error that appellate counsel was inef-
    fective by representing him notwithstanding a conflict of
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    interest; however, Smith did not set forth this issue in his
    amended petition for postconviction relief. An appellate court
    will not consider as an assignment of error a question not pre-
    sented to the district court for disposition through a defendant’s
    motion for postconviction relief. State v. Thorpe, 
    290 Neb. 149
    , 
    858 N.W.2d 880
    (2015). Consequently, this issue shall not
    be addressed.
    (c) Double Jeopardy Violations
    Smith argues:
    All things considered, had appellate counsel assigned
    error to the [charges of first degree assault and use of a
    weapon to commit a felony], “double jeopardy” would
    have [forbidden] a retrial, and by the same token, the
    reduced charge of attempted [voluntary] manslaughter
    vitiates the first degree assault charge, which in turn
    negates the use of a weapon charge.
    Brief for appellant at 28. Again, the only count remanded
    for retrial was the attempted second degree murder charge
    and, as discussed above, the convictions for both first degree
    assault and use of a deadly weapon to commit a felony were
    affirmed and became final judgments. Any double jeopardy
    argument would have applied only to the charge of attempted
    second degree murder, and Smith assigns no error in regard
    to that charge.
    [17] Further, the offenses of first degree assault and
    attempted voluntary manslaughter do not violate double jeop-
    ardy. In a double jeopardy analysis, where the same act
    or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statu-
    tory provisions, the test to determine whether there are two
    offenses or one is whether each provision requires proof that
    the other does not. State v. Huff, 
    279 Neb. 68
    , 
    776 N.W.2d 498
    (2009), citing Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
    ,
    
    52 S. Ct. 180
    , 
    76 L. Ed. 306
    (1932). First degree assault and
    attempted voluntary manslaughter are two distinct offenses.
    As pointed out by the State, first degree assault requires
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    294 Neb. 311
    serious bodily injury to occur and attempted voluntary man-
    slaughter does not require any injury to occur. See, § 28-308;
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-305 (Supp. 2015); Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 28-201 (Supp. 2015).
    We find that Smith was not placed in double jeopardy by
    his appellate counsel’s actions; and therefore, Smith’s appel-
    late counsel was not ineffective in this respect.
    2. Hearing on Motion
    for New Counsel
    Smith assigns that the district court erred in hearing his
    claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel at a hear-
    ing on his motion for new counsel—claims which Smith
    asserts pertained to his motion for postconviction relief. Smith
    alleges that on April 8, 2013, a hearing was held regarding his
    claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, before his
    plea to attempted voluntary manslaughter. The bill of excep-
    tions for April 8 reflects that this allegation has no merit:
    THE COURT: Okay. This is the matter of State of
    Nebraska versus William E. Smith, CR08-1249.
    You’re Mr. Smith, sir?
    [Smith]: Yes, I am, sir.
    THE COURT: Thank you, sir.
    Excuse me.
    On March 28th, 2013, I entered a judgment in accord­
    ance with the mandate of the Nebraska Supreme Court,
    which vacated and set aside the conviction for attempted
    second degree murder, and ordered me to have — set a
    retrial with respect to that charge.
    . . . Smith had filed, on January 18th, 2013 — before
    we take up where we’re going with that, on January 13th
    — 18th, 2013, he filed a motion to dismiss current coun-
    sel and appoint new counsel. I issued an order after that
    was filed, saying I couldn’t do anything while that case
    was on appeal, because I didn’t have jurisdiction to do
    anything. So, when I entered judgment last week, or on
    - 325 -
    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
    294 Nebraska R eports
    STATE v. SMITH
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 311
    March 28th, I did say we’d go ahead and take up first this
    motion to dismiss.
    I have read the motion. I have some questions about it
    but I want to ask, first, . . . whether you still wish to pur-
    sue this motion or if you wish to withdraw it at this time.
    I don’t know, so I just want to make sure.
    [Smith]: I wish to pursue it, Your Honor.
    Clearly, the hearing on April 8 was only upon Smith’s motion
    to dismiss counsel, and he never objected to the hearing. The
    district court allowed Smith to make a record as to why he
    desired his counsel dismissed. Later in the hearing, Smith, not
    the court, attempted to initiate a dialog about postconviction
    relief, but the court declined to discuss it. Accordingly, this
    error has no merit.
    3. Plain Error
    [18] Finally, Smith assigns that plain error permeates the
    record. An appellate court may find plain error on appeal
    when an error unasserted or uncomplained of at trial, but
    plainly evident from the record, prejudicially affects a liti-
    gant’s substantial right and, if uncorrected, would result in
    damage to the integrity, reputation, and fairness of the judi-
    cial process. State v. Dubray, 
    289 Neb. 208
    , 
    854 N.W.2d 584
    (2014). Having already rejected all of Smith’s claims, we find
    no plain error.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we hold that the district
    court did not err in denying Smith’s motion for postconviction
    relief and denying an evidentiary hearing on the matter.
    A ffirmed.
    Heavican, C.J., and Cassel and Stacy, JJ., not participating.