ALLEN v. DAKER (And Vice Versa)

858 S.E.2d 731, 311 Ga. 485
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 17, 2021
DocketS21A0091, S21X0092
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 858 S.E.2d 731 (ALLEN v. DAKER (And Vice Versa)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ALLEN v. DAKER (And Vice Versa), 858 S.E.2d 731, 311 Ga. 485 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

311 Ga. 485 FINAL COPY

S21A0091, S21X0092. ALLEN v. DAKER; and vice versa.

NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.

At a jury trial in 2012, Waseem Daker was found guilty of

malice murder and other crimes. Daker had hired or was appointed

four attorneys, all of whom were allowed to withdraw before or near

the beginning of the trial; he ultimately elected to expressly waive

his right to counsel so that he could represent himself (commonly

referred to as proceeding “pro se”) during the trial. After Daker was

convicted, however, he repeatedly asked for appellate counsel to be

appointed to represent him, but those requests were denied, so he

had to continue to represent himself. His pro se motion for new trial

was denied, and his pro se direct appeal resulted in his convictions

being affirmed.

In 2017, Daker filed a petition for habeas corpus asserting 438

grounds for relief, all of which the habeas court denied. In his subsequent application to this Court for a certificate of probable

cause to appeal, Daker specifically claimed only that the trial court

erroneously denied his constitutional right to appellate counsel and

that his requests for a determination of his indigency status for

purposes of having counsel appointed were improperly delegated to

and erroneously denied by the circuit public defender’s office. In

2019, this Court issued an order granting Daker’s application,

vacating the habeas court’s order with regard to the two claims that

Daker had raised in his application, and remanding the case with

direction to the habeas court to identify which of his 438 grounds

specifically implicate those claims, consider those grounds based on

the evidence already presented, and then issue thorough findings of

fact and conclusions of law as to those grounds.

On April 29, 2020, the habeas court entered a new final order,

in which it incorporated verbatim from its original order the findings

of fact and conclusions of law on Daker’s 438 grounds, all of which

the court summarily concluded were “without merit.” After

specifically analyzing the applicable law and the record with regard

2 to the two claims that Daker had raised in his application, however,

the habeas court concluded that “[t]he record does not show that

[Daker] voluntarily waived the right to counsel on appeal as

required” and that, in ruling that Daker was not indigent for

purposes of his post-conviction proceedings, the trial court “relied on

a previous determination of indigency from over a year earlier.”

Despite these specific conclusions, the habeas court also said that it

must remand the case to the trial court to determine if Daker was

entitled to appellate counsel — and then the habeas court ended the

order by saying that the entire habeas petition was denied.

Warden Marty Allen appeals the habeas court’s order, arguing

that the court erred in remanding the case to the trial court and that

this Court should remand the case to the habeas court to determine

if Daker was entitled to appellate counsel. In a cross-appeal, Daker

argues that the habeas court erred by not granting him a new direct

appeal based on the improper denial of his constitutional right to

appellate counsel; he asks this Court to decide that claim without a

remand to the habeas court.

3 As we explain below, regardless of whether Daker was indigent

at the time of his motion for new trial proceeding and direct appeal,

the habeas court specifically and correctly concluded based on the

record that Daker did not validly waive his right to appellate

counsel. Accordingly, we affirm the habeas court’s order to the

extent that it is consistent with that conclusion, and we reverse the

order to the extent that it summarily and inconsistently says that

Daker’s right-to-counsel claim is meritless or needs to be remanded

to the trial court and purports to deny the habeas petition as a

whole. We remand the case to the habeas court with direction to

grant relief to Daker in the form of a second, out-of-time direct

appeal so that he may start the post-conviction process anew in the

trial court, either with the assistance of counsel — appointed counsel

if Daker has been determined by the circuit public defender’s office

to be indigent at that time, or retained counsel if Daker has been

determined not to be indigent — or pro se if the trial court first

determines that Daker has validly waived his right to appellate

counsel.

4 1. Background.

The record shows the following.1

(a) The pretrial proceedings. On January 15, 2010, Daker was

arrested on charges related to the murder of Karmen Smith in Cobb

County in 1995. In a notice dated January 19, 2010, the Cobb County

Circuit Defender’s Office (“CDO”) informed Daker that it had

determined, after an interview of him and an investigation of the

information recorded on his application for the appointment of an

attorney, that he did not qualify for appointed counsel because his

“income exceed[ed] the guidelines for a court appointed attorney.”2

1 As the habeas court noted in its order, the record in this case is voluminous and complicated. The order describes the procedural history of the case to some extent, although that account includes a few inaccuracies and several immaterial date discrepancies, most of which appear to be due to the habeas court’s reference to the signing rather than the filing date for various trial court orders. At the hearing on the habeas petition, the criminal case record from the trial court and other documents were admitted into evidence, but only the prosecutor from Daker’s trial testified; the testimony included nothing relevant to the claims raised here beyond what is in the trial court record, and the habeas court made no specific reference to this testimony in its order. We provide a more detailed description of pertinent parts of the record as context for the discussion of the legal issues below. 2 OCGA § 17-12-2 (6) (C) defines “indigent person” in pertinent part as:

A person charged with a felony who earns . . . less than 150 percent of the federal poverty guidelines unless there is evidence that the person has other resources that might reasonably be used

5 On January 28, private attorney Brian Steel filed an appearance to

represent Daker. On April 1, a Cobb County grand jury indicted

Daker for malice murder, four counts of felony murder, two counts

of burglary, false imprisonment, and aggravated assault related to

Karmen Smith’s death, as well as aggravated battery of Nick Smith

and attempted aggravated stalking of Loretta Spencer Blatz. On

April 27, the trial court entered a consent order allowing Steel to

withdraw due to a “disagreement [with Daker] on how to proceed on

this case.”

At a hearing on May 4, 2010, the trial court asked the CDO to

appoint an attorney for Daker until he decided whether he wanted

to hire new private counsel; Michael Syrop, a CDO public defender,

then represented Daker at the hearing. On May 12, Syrop moved to

withdraw at Daker’s request. On June 9, the CDO filed an “Affidavit

of Indigency,” which said that “[u]pon consideration of the

to employ a lawyer without undue hardship on the person[ or] his or her dependents . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
858 S.E.2d 731, 311 Ga. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-daker-and-vice-versa-ga-2021.