Ashe v. Styles

39 F.3d 80, 1994 WL 601881
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1994
DocketNos. 94-6545, 94-6573
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 39 F.3d 80 (Ashe v. Styles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashe v. Styles, 39 F.3d 80, 1994 WL 601881 (4th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Chief Judge ERVIN wrote the opinion, in which Judge MURNAGHAN and Senior Judge PHILLIPS joined.

OPINION

ERVIN, Chief Judge:

Lloyd Ashe, a North Carolina inmate, brought this habeas corpus proceeding to challenge the sentence he received under his guilty plea to a state second-degree murder charge, contending that the sentence imposed did not comport with the terms of the plea agreement and thus that his plea was made involuntarily and in violation of his constitutional due process rights. The district court referred the petition to a magistrate judge, who issued a memorandum and recommended granting the writ. The district court reviewed the issues to which objection were made, agreed with the magistrate judge and ordered that the writ be issued. North Carolina appealed. Jurisdiction in this court is proper under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2254. For the reasons set forth below, we now reverse [and remand].

[82]*82I.

Clinton Odom was killed in 1974 in a failed robbery attempt. At the time of death, the police concluded that the death was from accidental or natural causes. In 1983, however, Ted Killian was arrested on unrelated charges, and informed the police of the involvement of himself and several other people, including Ashe, in Odom’s death.

Ashe, who by then was serving time in prison on an unrelated safecracking conviction, was charged with first-degree murder, exposing him to a possible sentence of life imprisonment. Ashe and his attorney entered into negotiations with the district attorney, which yielded fruit in a plea bargain. Under the agreement, Ashe agreed to plead guilty to second-degree murder. The “Transcript of Plea” form that Ashe signed on March 14, 1983 indicated that in return:

The term of imprisonment shall be no more than 50 years, and the defendant shall be sentenced as if the offense took place after the passage of the Fair Sentencing Act.

J.A. 36. Prior to the enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act, North Carolina sentencing was “indeterminate,” meaning that judges imposed sentences that included a maximum and minimum time of imprisonment, creating a floor and ceiling. The general approach taken under the Fair Sentencing Act, however, was to establish presumptive sentences for various classes of crimes and to allow for upward or downward departures based on written findings by the sentencing court of aggravating or mitigating circumstances. Thus, while punishment for second degree murder prior to the Fair Sentencing Act ranged from two years to life imprisonment, the Fair Sentencing Act imposed a presumptive sentence of fifteen years imprisonment with a maximum term of life or fifty years.1

During the hearing on the plea agreement, the sentencing judge summarized the terms of the agreement as follows:

I don’t know what — the prearrangement in this ease is very similar to the previous one; that the imprisonment shall be no more than fifty years, and sentenced as if the presumptive sentencing law — or the fair sentencing law was in effect. But Mr. Lindsay is not the guarantor of what the sentence will be within the framework of that negotiation. You understand that? A: Yes, sir.

J.A. 41. Later during the same hearing, the judge made the following comments:

The prosecutor and your lawyer have informed the Court that these are the terms and conditions of your plea. When I say these, these that follow. The term of imprisonment shall be no more than fifty years. You shall be sentenced as if the offense took place after the passage of the fair sentencing act.
But that’s as to maximum sentence. Your sentence will still have to be set by me. And I’ll take into account parole opportunities one had under the law as it was in 1974, whenever this crime occurred; and also any other cooperation he gives.
Is this correct as being your full plea agreement?
A: Yes sir.

J.A. 43. The sentencing hearing included Ashe, Killian and a third member of the robbery/murder party, Carl Hickey. All three pleaded guilty. Ashe received a sentence of not less than 30 nor more than 40 years, consecutive to his other sentences. Hickey received not less than 25 nor more than 35 years. Killian, who had confessed and had changed his life significantly since the time of the 1974 murder, received a flat sentence of 20 years, and the judge noted as he sentenced him that he was “taking into consideration I was to try to sentence you as if this were a fair sentencing case, taking into consideration aggravating and mitigating factors and presumptive sentence of fifteen years.” J.A. 104. Thus, while the judge [83]*83gave a flat sentence to Killian, he did not give one to Ashe, even though their plea agreements apparently were almost identical. Neither Ashe nor his lawyer objected to this discrepancy at the time.

Back in prison, Ashe began to file motions for appropriate relief. He filed his first motion for appropriate relief, which did not identify the discrepancy between the plea agreement and the sentence as a basis for relief, on September 12, 1984; it was filed pro se, and there was never any disposition of it. He filed a second motion, also not addressing the discrepancy between the plea agreement and the sentence, on April 12, 1989, also pro se, which was considered and denied by superior court judge J. Marlene Hyatt on May 17,1989. In a brief, two-page order, she considered the merits of the claims and found that the allegations set forth no probable grounds for the relief requested. In addition, she stated:

THAT the defendant’s failure to assert any other grounds in his motion shall be subject to being treated in the future as a BAR to any other claims, assertions, petitions, or motions that he might hereafter file in this case, pursuant to GS 15A-1419.

J.A. 128.

Nevertheless, Ashe filed a third motion, again pro se. J.A. 130-32. This motion addressed no issue other than that the terms of his plea bargain were not carried out and thus that his plea was not voluntary. In the prior two motions Ashe used standard printed forms that allowed him to check off which federal or state laws allegedly were violated and then provided a space for enumeration of the facts supporting the allegations. In contrast, Ashe hand wrote his third motion for appropriate relief; in the process, although he identified the alleged wrong, i.e., the discrepancy between his plea agreement and his sentence, he did not indicate the federal or state law that made this a proper basis for a motion for appropriate relief. Judge Hyatt also handled this motion, and despite her prior warning of procedural bar, she addressed the motion on the merits and denied it. J.A. 133-34.

Ashe then filed his first § 2254 petition in federal district court on April 13, 1992. The district court referred the petition to a magistrate judge, who issued a memorandum in which he articulated Ashe’s claim as folVv’s:

Petitioner’s plea agreement was breached when the state-court sentencing judge imposed a minimum and maximum sentence rather than a sentence under the Fair Sentencing Act, as promised by the state and agreed to by the court in petitioner’s Transcript of Plea.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F.3d 80, 1994 WL 601881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashe-v-styles-ca4-1994.