Antonio Williams v. State of Mississippi

158 So. 3d 309, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 798091
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2015
Docket2013-CT-00575-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 158 So. 3d 309 (Antonio Williams v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonio Williams v. State of Mississippi, 158 So. 3d 309, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 798091 (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

LAMAR, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Antonio Williams filed a motion for post-conviction relief in the Hinds County Circuit Court. The circuit judge summarily denied his motion, and Williams appealed. We assigned his case to the Court of Appeals, which dismissed his motion for lack of jurisdiction. We granted Williams’s petition for certiorari, and we now affirm the circuit judge’s denial of his motion on the merits.

¶ 2. In 1982, Williams pleaded guilty to two counts of burglary. The trial judge sentenced him to three years’ imprisonment on one count, and five years’ imprisonment 1 on the other count. Then, in 1987, a jury convicted Williams of murder. The trial judge sentenced him to life without parole as a habitual offender under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-81, 2 based on his two prior burglary convictions. This Court affirmed Williams’s murder conviction in 1990. See Williams v. State, 566 So.2d 469 (Miss.1990). Williams subsequently filed several motions for post-conviction relief challenging his murder conviction, but those motions are irrelevant to this appeal. 3

*311 ¶ 3. On May 24, 2012, Williams filed a motion for post-conviction relief in the Hinds County Circuit Court. In it, Williams — for the first time — challenged his burglary convictions. Williams argued that “during the entry of his guilty pleas,” he was “denied his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel.” Specifically, Williams argued that his counsel failed to inform him' of an alleged speedy-trial violation before advising him to plead guilty to one of the counts. According to Williams, “this was an affirmative defense that was available to [him], and had [his] trial counsel properly advised [him] of this affirmative defense, [he] would not have entered a plea of guilty to that charge.” Williams also argued that his trial counsel “used coercion by promising [him] a suspended sentence” in the second count, when a suspended sentence allegedly was not statutorily available.

¶ 4. Williams concluded that, because of the alleged Sixth Amendment violation, his guilty pleas could not “be considered to have been given voluntarily and intelligently.” Thus, Williams posited, because of his counsel’s ineffectiveness, his “conviction and sentences [in the burglary cases] were illegal sentences.” Finally, Williams argued that he had been prejudiced by the alleged ineffectiveness, because his burglary convictions had been “used to charge [him] as an habitual offender [in his murder case].” He asked the circuit court to render both burglary convictions “null and void.”

¶ 5. The circuit judge summarily denied Williams’s motion, stating that “it plainly appears from the face of the motion, exhibits and prior proceedings in this case, that [Williams] is not entitled to post-conviction collateral relief, pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-27.” The circuit judge did not elaborate on his reasons for the denial, but it is clear from the language of his order that the denial was on the merits. It is also clear from Williams’s motion that he was challenging his burglary convictions and not his murder conviction.

¶ 6. Williams appealed, and we assigned the case to the Court of Appeals. But rather than reviewing Williams’s appeal on the merits, the Court of Appeals found that the circuit court had lacked jurisdiction to entertain Williams’s motion, because he had not obtained permission from this Court prior to filing there. Williams, 158 So.3d at 332, 2014 WL 2462998, at *2. As such, the Court of Appeals found that it, too, lacked jurisdiction and dismissed Williams’s appeal. Id. We granted Williams’s petition for certiorari. After review, we agree with Williams that the circuit court had jurisdiction to hear his motion, but we also find that the circuit judge did not err when he denied it.

¶ 7. The Court of Appeals found that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction because Williams had “failed to obtain permission from our supreme court to file his [motion],” citing Mississippi Code Section 99-39-7. But Section 99-39-7’s requirement that a defendant seek leave from this Court is inapplicable here, because Williams did not appeal his burglary convictions:

The motion under this article shall be filed as an original civil action in the trial court, except in cases in which the petitioner’s conviction and sentence have been appealed to the Supreme Court of Mississippi and there affirmed or the appeal dismissed. Where the conviction and sentence have been affirmed on ap *312 peal or the appeal has been dismissed, the motion under this article shall not be filed in the trial court until the motion shall have first been presented to a quorum of the Justices of the Supreme Court of Mississippi ... and an order granted allowing the filing of such motion in the trial court.

Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-7 (Rev.2007) (emphasis added). The Court of Appeals would have been correct to require Williams to file for leave in this Court if he was filing a motion for post-conviction relief in his murder case. But as stated earlier, it is clear to us from Williams’s motion and from his brief on appeal that he is challenging his burglary convictions. And because Williams did not appeal those convictions, leave from this Court is not required.

¶ 8. So while we agree with Williams that the circuit court had jurisdiction to hear his motion, we also find that the circuit judge did not err when he denied it. The circuit judge found that it “plainly appeared” from the face of Williams’s motion that he was not entitled to relief, and we agree. Mississippi Code Section 99-39-27(5) states:

Unless it appears from the face of the application, motion, exhibits and the prior record that the claims presented by those documents are not procedurally barred under Section 99-39-21 and that they further present a substantial showing of the denial of a state or federal right, the court shall by appropriate order deny the application.

Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-27(5) (Supp.2014) (emphasis added). Because we find that Williams’s motion presents no “substantial showing of the denial of a state or federal right,” we affirm the judgment of the circuit judge.

¶ 9. Williams first contends that he had a meritorious speedy-trial claim and that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to advise him of that. But a review of Williams’s motion reveals just the opposite. Williams alleges that he was arrested on September 2, 1980, for his first burglary charge, and that he did not plead guilty to that charge until July 27, 1982. But Williams also acknowledges that he was released on his own recognizance on January 13, 1981, and that he failed to appear for trial on February 3, 1981.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 3d 309, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 798091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-williams-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2015.