People v. Niffen ( 2019 )


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    Appellate Court                             Date: 2018.12.31
    12:57:25 -06'00'
    People v. Niffen, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 150881
    Appellate Court   THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
    Caption           JOSEPH L. NIFFEN, Defendant-Appellant.
    District & No.    Fourth District
    Docket Nos. 4-15-0881, 4-15-0882 cons.
    Filed             October 31, 2018
    Decision Under    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Adams County, Nos. 11-CF-648,
    Review            12-CF-175; the Hon. Robert K. Adrian, Judge, presiding.
    Judgment          Reversed and remanded.
    Counsel on        James E. Chadd, Jacqueline L. Bullard, and Zachary A. Rosen, of
    Appeal            State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Springfield, for appellant.
    Gary L. Farha, State’s Attorney, of Quincy (Patrick Delfino, David J.
    Robinson, and Kathy Shepard, of State’s Attorneys Appellate
    Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
    Panel             JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Justices DeArmond and Turner concurred in the judgment and
    opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1       Defendant, Joseph L. Niffen, is serving a total of 39½ years’ imprisonment for unlawful
    possession of a methamphetamine precursor (720 ILCS 646/20(a)(2)(E) (West 2012)) and
    anhydrous ammonia (720 ILCS 646/25(a)(1) (West 2010)). He appeals the summary
    dismissal of his pro se petition for postconviction relief (see 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a) (West
    2014)). In addition, in his brief, he challenges the imposition of fines by the Adams County
    circuit clerk and the clerk’s retention of $1901 of his bond money to cover those purported
    fines. We find arguable merit in one of the claims of his petition, but we lack subject-matter
    jurisdiction to review the clerk-imposed fines or the retention of the bond money. Therefore,
    we merely reverse the summary dismissal and remand this case for further postconviction
    proceedings.
    ¶2                                       I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3        On July 19, 2012, defendant entered a negotiated guilty plea to one count of unlawful
    possession of a methamphetamine precursor (720 ILCS 646/20(a)(2)(E) (West 2012)) in
    Adams County case No. 12-CF-175 and one count of unlawful possession of anhydrous
    ammonia (720 ILCS 646/25(a)(1) (West 2010)) in Adams County case No. 11-CF-648. The
    trial court sentenced him to consecutive terms of 15 years’ imprisonment for the
    methamphetamine precursor and 24½ years’ imprisonment for the anhydrous ammonia.
    ¶4        The written sentencing order also included the following: (1) “Court Costs, VCVA
    [(Violent Crime Victims Assistance)], and Penalties,” with no listed monetary
    denominations; (2) a “Crime Lab fee of $100.00” in both cases; (3) an “Assessment (per
    Cannabis/Controlled Substances Act) of $3000/$1000”; (4) $100 for “Meth”; (5) $5 for
    “Spinal Cord”; and (6) $1325 restitution.
    ¶5        Also, in “Payment Status Information” sheets in both cases, the circuit clerk imposed the
    following assessments: $50 for “Court,” $100 for “Violent Crime,” $10 for “Medical Costs,”
    $10 for “Lump Sum Surcharge,” $15 for “Child Advocacy Fee,” and $5 for “State Police
    Ops.”
    ¶6        Defendant never filed a motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. Nor did he take a direct
    appeal.
    ¶7        On July 13, 2015, defendant filed a pro se petition for postconviction relief. One of his
    claims was that on approximately July 26, 2012, he wrote defense counsel a letter requesting
    that he file a motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. (As we already have noted, no such motion
    ever was filed.) In a “Sworn Affidavit,” which was attached to his petition, defendant stated:
    “1. That while housed at the Graham Correctional Center I sent a letter to my
    retain [sic] counsel requesting that he fil[e] a [m]otion to withdraw my plea. That in
    the body of my letter I complained about the length of a sentence I had received[,]
    telling my [a]ttorney that I would have one foot in the graveyard by the time I was
    released from prison. That also I told my [a]ttorney that the factual basis information
    was inaccurate and[,] based upon my prior guilty pleas[,] I thought it would be
    grounds for withdrawing my plea.”
    ¶8        On October 2, 2015, by written order, the trial court summarily dismissed the
    postconviction petition. The court reasoned: “The *** issue concerning counsel’s failure to
    -2-
    file a timely motion to withdraw the guilty plea is without merit because [defendant] could
    have filed the motion pro se and been appointed counsel. Further, the motion[,] even if
    filed[,] would have been without merit.”
    ¶9                                             II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 10                        A. The Three Stages of a Postconviction Proceeding
    ¶ 11       The Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 to 122-7 (West 2014))
    provides a remedy for defendants who have suffered a substantial violation of their
    constitutional rights at trial. People v. Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d 239
    , 243-44 (2001). In a
    noncapital case, the Act contemplates that a postconviction proceeding will advance through
    as many as three stages to determine whether such a constitutional violation occurred. 
    Id. at 244
    .
    ¶ 12       At the first stage, the trial court independently reviews the postconviction petition and
    decides, within 90 days after its filing, whether “the petition is frivolous or is patently
    without merit.” 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a)(2) (West 2014). If the court decides that the petition
    is frivolous or patently without merit—or, in other words, that it lacks any “arguable basis
    either in law or in fact” (People v. Hodges, 
    234 Ill. 2d 1
    , 17 (2009))—the court will
    summarily dismiss the petition in a written order. 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a)(2) (West 2014).
    That is what the court did in the present case.
    ¶ 13       If, within 90 days after the filing of the petition, the trial court does not summarily
    dismiss it, the petition will advance to the second stage. Defense counsel will be appointed, if
    necessary (see 725 ILCS 5/122-4 (West 2014)), and the State will move to dismiss the
    petition, or else the State will answer it (see 
    id.
     § 122-5). The question at the second stage is
    “whether the petition and any accompanying documentation make a substantial showing of a
    constitutional violation.” Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d at 246
    . In answering that question, the trial
    court takes as true “all well-pleaded facts that are not positively rebutted by the trial record.”
    People v. Pendleton, 
    223 Ill. 2d 458
    , 473 (2006). If no showing of a substantial constitutional
    violation is made, the court dismisses the petition. Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d at 246
    .
    ¶ 14       Alternatively, if the petition and its attached documentation make a substantial showing
    of a constitutional violation, the petition will advance to the third stage for an evidentiary
    hearing. 
    Id.
     At the third stage, the petition and its accompanying documentation no longer are
    taken to be true. Instead, the court resolves any questions of fact and determines credibility,
    as in a bench trial. Pendleton, 
    223 Ill. 2d at 473
    . The defendant bears the evidentiary burden
    of making a substantial showing of a constitutional violation. 
    Id.
    ¶ 15                          B. The First-Stage Issue of Whether Defendant’s
    Pro Se Petition Is Frivolous or Patently Without Merit
    ¶ 16        In his petition for postconviction relief, defendant claimed that defense counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by ignoring a letter from him in which he requested defense counsel to
    file a motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. For two reasons, the trial court concluded that this
    claim lacked any potential merit. First, defendant “could have filed the motion pro se and
    been appointed counsel.” Second, “the motion[,] even if filed[,] would have been without
    merit.” The State agrees with defendant, and so do we, that those two reasons are inconsistent
    with Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d 239
    .
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    ¶ 17        In Edwards, the defendant alleged in his pro se postconviction petition that, soon after
    pleading guilty, he requested defense counsel to file an appeal and that defense counsel failed
    to do so. 
    Id. at 242
    . Because it would have been impossible to pursue an appeal without first
    filing a motion to withdraw the guilty plea (see Ill. S. Ct. R. 604(d) (eff. Aug. 1, 1992)), the
    petition was construed as additionally criticizing defense counsel for failing to file a motion
    to withdraw the guilty plea (Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d at 242
    ). The trial court summarily
    dismissed the petition because it stated no grounds for withdrawing the guilty plea and,
    therefore, failed to show that the defendant suffered any prejudice from defense counsel’s
    allegedly deficient performance. 
    Id.
     The supreme court overturned the summary dismissal
    because no attorney had ever reviewed the plea proceedings for error and it would have been
    unreasonable to require the pro se defendant to perform such a review and provide legal
    grounds for withdrawing his guilty plea. 
    Id. at 257
    . Until an attorney was appointed, who
    would “be able to consult with [the] defendant regarding his claim and explore in more detail
    the factual and legal ramifications of [the] claim,” it was premature “to conclude that [the]
    defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel [was] so completely lacking in
    substance that it [was] frivolous or patently without merit.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 18        If, in Edwards, a defendant who accused his defense counsel of ignoring his request to
    file a motion to withdraw his guilty plea did not have to provide, at the first stage of the
    postconviction proceeding, any grounds for withdrawing his guilty plea, it must follow that
    the same defendant, earlier, in the original proceeding, did not have to file a pro se motion to
    withdraw his guilty plea, since such a motion would have had to provide grounds for
    withdrawing his guilty plea (see Ill. S. Ct. R. 604(d) (eff. Aug. 1, 1992)). Therefore, contrary
    to the trial court’s rationale in the present case, the fact that defendant never filed a pro se
    motion to withdraw his guilty pleas did not invalidate his claim that defense counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by disregarding his request to file a motion to withdraw his guilty
    pleas.
    ¶ 19        It would have been, after all, understandable if defendant had relied on defense counsel to
    comply with his request and had refrained from filing such a motion himself, since we
    prohibit defendants from filing pro se motions while they are represented by counsel, except
    posttrial motions alleging ineffective assistance, and we instruct trial courts to reject such
    attempts at “hybrid representation.” People v. Stevenson, 
    2011 IL App (1st) 093413
    , ¶ 30.
    (Presumably, defendant did not intend to ask his defense counsel to argue his own ineffective
    assistance.) By accepting the trial court’s rationale, we would penalize defendant for
    complying with our own prohibition.
    ¶ 20        Although, as the State concedes, the trial court’s reasons for rejecting this claim at the
    first stage were erroneous, the State reminds us that we should review the summary dismissal
    de novo, without any deference to the court’s reasoning, and that if we can find in the record
    any valid basis for the summary dismissal, we should affirm it. See Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d at 247
    ; People v. Relwani, 
    2018 IL App (3d) 170201
    , ¶ 20, appeal allowed, No. 123385 (May
    30, 2018). The State argues the petition deserved to be summarily dismissed for
    noncompliance with section 122-2 of the Act (725 ILCS 5/122-2 (West 2016)). Section
    122-2 required that the petition “have attached thereto affidavits, records, or other evidence
    supporting its allegations or *** state why the same [were] not attached.” 
    Id.
     Although
    defendant attached to his pro se petition an “affidavit,” in which he averred that he had sent
    defense counsel a letter requesting that he file a motion to withdraw his guilty pleas, and
    -4-
    although the lack of a notarization on the “affidavit” did not make the petition frivolous or
    patently without merit (see People v. Allen, 
    2015 IL 113135
    , ¶ 34), the State disputes that that
    the “affidavit” satisfied section 122-2. The State argues that to satisfy section 122-2,
    defendant additionally had to attach to his petition a copy of the letter he claimed to have sent
    to defense counsel or that, alternatively, he had to explain why a copy of the letter was not
    attached. In support of its argument, the State cites People v. Delton, 
    227 Ill. 2d 247
     (2008),
    and People v. Anderson, 
    287 Ill. App. 3d 1023
     (1997). Actually, neither of those cases
    supports the State’s argument.
    ¶ 21        In Delton, the defendant was serving a sentence of imprisonment for the aggravated
    battery of some police officers. Delton, 
    227 Ill. 2d at 249
    . He claimed, in his pro se
    postconviction petition, that his trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    investigate his allegation that the police officers had been harassing him for a long time,
    thereby causing him, during the traffic stop in question, to reasonably believe he needed to
    defend himself from physical aggression by them. 
    Id. at 251
    . The defendant attached to his
    petition excerpts from the transcript of his trial—and nothing else. 
    Id. at 255-57
    . He did not
    attach his own affidavit. 
    Id. at 257
    . The excerpts from the transcript, standing alone, had no
    tendency to corroborate the allegation, in his pro se petition, that he told trial counsel before
    the trial that the police officers had been harassing him. 
    Id.
     The problem in Delton was that
    the trial transcript was the only thing attached to the defendant’s petition and the transcript,
    by its terms, corroborated nothing. The supreme court never suggested that an affidavit by
    the defendant, if he had provided one, would have been insufficient as corroboration.
    ¶ 22        The defendant in Delton argued to the supreme court that it was readily inferable why his
    petition lacked corroborative documentation: a subpoena was necessary to obtain police
    disciplinary records. 
    Id.
     While agreeing that a subpoena was necessary to obtain such
    records, the supreme court pointed out that this was no excuse for the defendant because he
    himself was the one who had made the complaint against the police officers. 
    Id. at 257-58
    .
    “Because [the defendant] filed the charges, he could easily have supported his petition with a
    copy of the complaint he filed against [the police officers] or with the specifics about the
    filing of that complaint if, in fact, he had filed one.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 258
    . Thus,
    according to the supreme court, “the specifics about the filing of that complaint”—meaning,
    apparently, an affidavit by the defendant setting forth the specifics—would have served just
    as well as “a copy of the complaint.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 23        In Anderson, the defendant alleged in his pro se postconviction petition that about three
    weeks after pleading guilty, he sent his attorney a letter stating he wanted to withdraw his
    guilty plea and that counsel never replied. Anderson, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 1026. “No affidavits
    or supporting documents were attached to the petition.” Id. We do not see anywhere in
    Anderson where the First District stated that the corroborative documentation had to be a
    copy of the letter that the defendant allegedly had sent to defense counsel. Rather, the First
    District stated that the petition “lack[ed] any supporting documents, such as the alleged letter
    written by [the] defendant.” (Emphases added.) Id. at 1032. By observing that “the instant
    defendant did not attach any affidavits or any supporting documents to his petition,” the First
    District seemed to imply that an affidavit by the defendant would have sufficed. (Emphasis
    added.) Id.
    ¶ 24        In the present case, not only in his petition but also in his affidavit, defendant describes
    the substance of his letter to defense counsel, and he states he sent the letter to defense
    -5-
    counsel and that defense counsel never responded. The State objects that the petition and the
    affidavit lack an indispensable supporting document: a copy of the letter. But the purpose of
    supporting documentation pursuant to section 122-2 is to “show[ ] that the verified
    allegations [of the petition] are capable of objective or independent corroboration.” People v.
    Collins, 
    202 Ill. 2d 59
    , 67 (2002). A purported copy of the letter would not have served that
    purpose. It would have been just another writing by defendant, like his petition and his
    affidavit. A purported copy of the letter would not have been “objective or independent
    corroboration” that he actually sent the letter to defense counsel and that defense counsel
    received it. 
    Id.
     Only defense counsel could corroborate that he received the letter. See People
    v. Rogers, 
    372 Ill. App. 3d 859
    , 867 (2007) (“Here, it can easily be inferred that [the]
    defendant could not attach her correspondence to the petition because any correspondence
    would have been in the possession of her attorney and thus not readily available to [the]
    defendant.”). Therefore, we are unconvinced by the State’s argument that the corroboration
    requirement in section 122-2 justified the first-stage rejection of defendant’s claim that
    defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance by disregarding his request to file a motion to
    withdraw his guilty pleas.
    ¶ 25       Because the Act does not permit the partial summary dismissal of a postconviction
    petition, we need not address defendant’s additional claim that defense counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by representing him while under a conflict of interest. See People v.
    Romero, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 140205
    , ¶ 27 (“If a single claim in a multiple-claim
    postconviction petition survives the summary dismissal stage ***, then the entire petition
    must be docketed for second-stage proceedings[,] regardless of the merits of the remaining
    claims in the petition.”); People v. White, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 130007
    , ¶ 33 (“We have no need
    to address any of the other claims in the petition because partial summary dismissals are not
    permitted during the first stage of a postconviction proceeding.”).
    ¶ 26                              C. Clerk-Imposed Fines and Bond Money
    ¶ 27       Defendant complains of fines that the circuit clerk, as distinct from the trial court,
    imposed upon him in the “Payment Status Information.” Although a circuit clerk can have
    statutory authority to impose fees, a circuit clerk never has authority to impose fines because
    a circuit clerk is not a judge and imposing fines as part of a sentence is exclusively a judicial
    act. People v. Smith, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 121118
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶ 28       The trouble is, the supreme court recently held as follows:
    “The appellate court is constitutionally vested with jurisdiction to review final
    judgments entered by circuit courts. The recording of a fine is a clerical, ministerial
    function and is not a judgment—void or otherwise. Therefore, the improper recording
    of a fine is not subject to direct review by the appellate court.” People v. Vara, 
    2018 IL 121823
    , ¶ 23.
    In short, the “Payment Status Information” is not part of the trial court’s judgment.
    Therefore, we lack jurisdiction to review it. See 
    id.
     And, in fact, appellate defense counsel
    candidly admits as much in a supplemental brief, which he filed after the issuance of Vara
    (“If Vara is not modified or changed upon rehearing, then the State’s position that this court
    lacks jurisdiction to vacate fines that were improperly imposed by the circuit court clerk
    would be correct.”).
    -6-
    ¶ 29       Even so, defendant argues, “a sentencing court’s improper delegation of authority to the
    clerk to [impose a fine]—purporting to give the clerk authority he or she does not have—is
    an issue that may still be challenged.” In this context, defendant refers to the trial court’s
    imposing upon him a violent crime victims assessment in an unspecified amount and leaving
    it to the circuit clerk to specify the amount. But this issue has nothing to do with the
    judgment that defendant appeals. He appeals the summary dismissal of his postconviction
    petition, which contains no mention of the violent crime victims assessment. “A notice of
    appeal confers jurisdiction on the reviewing court to consider only the judgments or pertinent
    parts specified in the notice.” People v. Patrick, 
    2011 IL 111666
    , ¶ 21; see also People v.
    Smith, 
    228 Ill. 2d 95
    , 104 (2008). Because the violent crime victims assessment and the
    retention of defendant’s bond money are extraneous to the summary dismissal order, which
    defendant specifies in his notice of appeal, we lack subject-matter jurisdiction to consider
    those issues. See Patrick, 
    2011 IL 111666
    , ¶ 21; Smith, 
    228 Ill. 2d at 104
    .
    ¶ 30                                      III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 31       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this case for
    further proceedings.
    ¶ 32      Reversed and remanded.
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 4-15-08814-15-0882 cons.

Filed Date: 2/4/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/4/2019