Bemore v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2025
DocketD084579
StatusPublished

This text of Bemore v. Super. Ct. (Bemore v. Super. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bemore v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 2/18/25

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

TERRY D. BEMORE, D084579

Petitioner, (San Diego County Super. Ct. Nos. CR84617, HC26799) v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY,

Respondent;

THE PEOPLE et al.,

Real Parties in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING on petition for writ of mandate. Polly Shamoon, Judge. Relief granted and remanded with instructions. Pamala Sayasane; and Cheryl J. Cotterill for Petitioner. Avram Frey for ACLU Foundation of Northern California; and Efaon Cobb for ACLU Foundation of San Diego and Imperial Counties, as Amici Curiae on behalf of Petitioner. Susanne C. Koski for Respondent. Summer Stephan, District Attorney, Linh Lam, Valerie Ryan and Martin E. Doyle, Deputy District Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest The People of the State of California. Jo E. Super, Chief Deputy Public Defender, and Jeremy Kennedy Thornton, Deputy Public Defender, for Real Party in Interest San Diego County Office of the Primary Public Defender.

INTRODUCTION Twenty-six years after Terry D. Bemore was sentenced to death for the 1985 torture- and robbery-murder of a store clerk, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals granted his petition for writ of habeas corpus and ordered the death judgment reversed. The court concluded Bemore had not received effective assistance of counsel because his trial counsel’s performance was “professionally unacceptable,” going so far as to find that lead counsel “essentially abdicated his role as a lawyer.” (Bemore v. Chappell (2015) 788 F.3d 1151, 1163, 1165.) Although not an independent basis for the Ninth Circuit’s reversal of the death judgment in 2015, Bemore, who is Black, produced evidence that his lead counsel engaged in racist conduct that affected his ability to adequately defend Bemore at trial. As a result of the extensive work by Bemore’s habeas counsel—including a collective 18 years of service from Pamela Sayasane and Cheryl Cotterill—Bemore was resentenced to life without parole in 2016. Four years later, in 2020, the California Legislature enacted the Racial Justice Act (RJA) (Stats. 2020, ch. 317, § 1), providing statutory authority for defendants to bring a petition for writ of habeas corpus to challenge criminal proceedings infected by racial, ethnic, or national origin discrimination. In 2022, the Legislature amended the RJA to apply retroactively, starting

2 January 1, 2024, to all cases in which a person with an RJA claim is

“currently serving a sentence in the state prison.” (Pen. Code, 1 § 745, subd. (j)(3); Stats. 2022, ch. 739, § 2.) This created a new avenue for Bemore to challenge his convictions on the specific basis of his lead counsel’s assertedly racist conduct. The Legislature also amended section 1473, subdivision (e) (section 1473(e)), to require trial courts to appoint habeas counsel upon request “if the petitioner cannot afford counsel,” and “either the petition alleges facts that would establish a violation of [the RJA] or the State Public Defender requests counsel be appointed.” With the potential for further relief from the alleged racism that may have tainted Bemore’s trial, Sayasane and Cotterrill conducted eight months of additional investigation to prepare another petition for writ of habeas corpus on his behalf under the RJA. Unsurprisingly, Bemore requested the trial court appoint Sayasane and Cotterill to represent him in this additional effort. The court granted Bemore’s motion for appointment of habeas counsel but, without notice or a hearing, it denied his request to select Sayasane and Cotterill to represent him. Instead, it appointed the San Diego Office of the Primary Public Defender (Public Defender) based on the provisions of section 987.2. Bemore, through Sayasane and Cotterill, then filed the instant petition for writ of mandate, asking us to direct the trial court to vacate its order appointing the Public Defender and grant his request to select Sayasane and/or Cotterill. Bemore asserts he was entitled to have Sayasane and Cotterill appointed as private counsel to represent him pursuant to new statutory provisions enacted by the RJA. We issued an order directing the

1 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

3 San Diego Superior Court (Superior Court) to show cause and directed the parties to address two questions: (1) whether section 987.2 is the exclusive path to appointment of counsel on postconviction RJA claims and (2) whether the Public Defender can be considered “available” for purposes of section 987.2 given the estimated one to two years it would need to come up to speed on Bemore’s RJA claim. The Superior Court filed a return answering our first question in the affirmative. But, in what we view as a problematic move, the Public Defender intervened and filed a return as a real party in interest, opposing the petition of Bemore, its client. Complicating matters further, the same deputy public defender who appeared on behalf of the Public Defender in this writ proceeding is also assigned to represent Bemore on his RJA claim. We now grant Bemore’s petition and the relief he requests. We hold as a matter of first impression that the RJA did not change the procedures currently in place for selecting and assigning counsel to represent indigent litigants in noncapital cases in the superior court. Section 987.2 continues to govern the selection of counsel to represent petitioners in postconviction habeas proceedings, including those that raise RJA claims. The provisions of section 987.2 do not give Bemore a right to have counsel of his choice selected to represent him; appointment of the Public Defender is given priority. (§ 987.2.) We next consider whether the trial court erred when it denied Bemore’s request for Sayasane and Cotterill to be selected to represent him. Section 987.2, subdivision (e) (section 987.2(e)), empowers trial courts to appoint private counsel, like Sayasane and Cotterill, upon a finding of “good cause” if the Public Defender is “unavailable.” But here the court erred when it placed the burden of demonstrating the Public Defender’s unavailability on Bemore.

4 It was the court’s duty to assess whether the Public Defender was available to prosecute Bemore’s RJA claim in a suitably prompt manner, not Bemore’s. (Harris v. Superior Court (1977) 19 Cal.3d 786, 795 (Harris).) The court also erred, given the exceptional history of Sayasane’s and Cotterill’s prior representation of Bemore, when it ruled that Bemore did not establish “good cause” for their selection under section 987.2 in the event the Public Defender was unavailable. (Harris, at p. 793.) Ordinarily, we would reverse and remand with directions to the trial court to assess in the first instance whether the Public Defender is available to represent Bemore, and if not, to appoint Sayasane and/or Cotterill. But after careful consideration we have determined that further proceedings are unnecessary because the Public Defender is disqualified from representing Bemore. By intervening as a real party in interest and asserting a position diametrically adverse to Bemore while maintaining he was a client, the Public Defender has breached its duty of loyalty. Consequently, the Public Defender is “unavailable” for appointment within the meaning of section 987.2. We therefore grant Bemore’s petition, vacate the trial court’s order appointing the Public Defender as habeas counsel, and direct the trial court to appoint one or both of Bemore’s requested attorneys.

5 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2 I. Trial and Judgment In 1985, Bemore and Keith Cosby were arrested for the murder of a liquor store clerk found dead late at night on the storage room floor. The clerk had been stabbed 37 times while bound, and the store’s safe was gone.

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