DocketNumber: S18A0827
Judges: Melton
Filed Date: 8/20/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
**281The procedural posture of this appeal is somewhat unique. However, as explained more fully below, the appeal essentially amounts to an effort by Michelle Hall, who was represented by counsel in her **282first appeal, to pursue a second direct appeal, which is not authorized by Georgia law and which we are without jurisdiction to consider on the merits. See Milliken v. Stewart,
By way of background, Hall was convicted of malice murder and family violence aggravated assault in Coweta County Superior Court in 2009, and her convictions were affirmed by this Court in her first direct appeal, where she was represented by counsel. See *529Hall v. State,
As an initial matter, we must note that, while this Court is in no position to dictate the parameters of relief granted by the Eleventh Circuit, the relief granted by the Eleventh Circuit in this case is not available. In Georgia, the normal remedy for ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in a situation where the defendant has not suffered a complete denial of counsel in his or her first direct appeal is a new **283trial, not just a new appeal. As this Court explained in Trauth v. State,
where ... a pro se defendant has been improperly denied counsel for his first appeal, he is entitled to relief in the form of having counsel appointed "to determine if there is any justifiable ground for an appeal from the original convictions, and if such determination is in the affirmative, ... file[ ] and prosecute[ ] [a new direct appeal] with [the] benefit of counsel." [ Roberts v. Caldwell,230 Ga. 223 , 224,196 S.E.2d 444 (1973) ]. ... [However,] [i]t is important to note that cases ... in which a defendant is improperly deprived of any attorney at all for his first appeal are distinguishable from those cases where a defendant has an attorney who prosecutes the defendant's first appeal but renders ineffective assistance for that appeal. In cases where a defendant has an ineffective appellate attorney who prosecutes the defendant's first direct appeal, the defendant is not entitled to a new appeal as a remedy for that counsel's ineffectiveness. See, e.g., Milliken [, supra] (habeas court erred in ordering second direct appeal as remedy for appellate counsel's ineffectiveness in failing to raise meritorious issue in first appeal). See also Richards [, supra] (Where the defendant was represented by counsel in his first direct appeal in 1993 [ Richards v. State,263 Ga. 65 ,428 S.E.2d 84 (1993) ], and his conviction was affirmed in that appeal, the defendant could not obtain an out-of-time appeal nine years later, as he was "not entitled to a second direct appeal from his judgment of conviction"). Instead, the proper remedy to ameliorate an appellate counsel's ineffectiveness for failing to raise a meritorious issue on appeal is "to order a new trial." Milliken,supra, 276 Ga. at 714 ,583 S.E.2d 30 .
Moreover, as the United States Supreme Court has stated with respect to the powers of a federal court to grant habeas relief:
Habeas lies to enforce the right of personal liberty; when that right is denied and a person confined, the federal court has the power to release him. Indeed, it has no other power; it cannot revise the state court judgment; it can act only on the body of the petitioner. [Cit.]
Fay v. Noia,
In short, the Eleventh Circuit fashioned a remedy in this case that would require the State to create a procedure unknown to our courts-a second direct appeal-rather than mandating that a writ of habeas corpus releasing Hall be granted unless the State provides an adequate remedy for the ineffective assistance of her appellate counsel. The trial court could have provided such an adequate remedy by granting Hall a new trial. In this regard, a new trial is actually a more comprehensive remedy for Hall than a second direct appeal, as a new trial would provide Hall with an opportunity to present her case anew to a jury, whereas a second appeal would only provide her with the opportunity to seek a new trial. But Hall has not yet provided the district court's mandate to the trial court and requested that the judgment against Hall be set aside. At that point, the State could either dismiss the indictment or proceed with a new trial.
With that said, however, we can address this case based on only the procedural posture in which it has arrived, and "it is the duty of **285this Court to inquire into its jurisdiction" with respect to that procedural posture. (Citation omitted.) Sanders v. State,
Appeal dismissed.
Hines, C.J., Benham, Hunstein, Nahmias, Blackwell, Boggs, and Peterson, JJ., concur.