Brown v. State

2015 UT App 254, 361 P.3d 124, 797 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 266, 2015 WL 5894798
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 8, 2015
Docket20140387-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 254 (Brown v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State, 2015 UT App 254, 361 P.3d 124, 797 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 266, 2015 WL 5894798 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

*125 Memorandum Decision

ORME, Judge:

T1 Appellant Keith Scott Brown (Defendant) appeals the district court's dismissal of his petition for post-conviction relief, we agree the petition was untimely and affirm.

T2 In February 2011, Defendant pled guilty to one count of sodomy on a child, a first degree felony, and two counts of sexual abuse of a child, second degree felonies. On March 81, 2011, the district court sentenced him to concurrent statutory prison terms of ten years to life for the first degree felony and one to fifteen years on each of the see-ond degree felonies. Defendant did not seek to withdraw his guilty pleas at any time before sentencing, and he did not file a direct appeal.

T3 On November 6, 2012, more than a year and a half after he was sentenced, Defendant filed what he titled a "motion for misplea," seeking to set aside his guilty pleas on the ground that when he pled guilty, he was under the influence of medication that rendered him unable to knowingly and voluntarily plead guilty. Defendant did not claim that he was unaware that he was under the influence. Instead, he claimed that "he did not tell his attorney about his prescription drug use," although the attorney was apparently aware of a serious automobile accident that Defendant had been in only days before. 'The district court denied Defendant's motion, finding that his "pleas were knowing and voluntary because he showed no signs of impairment and because he expressly disavowed prescription drug use when asked at his initial appearance hearing." Defendant appealed, and this court summarily dismissed his appeal for lack of jurisdiction. See State v. Brown, 2013 UT App 99, ¶ 1, 300 P.3d 1289 (per curiam). Defendant filed petitions for a writ of certiorari in both the Utah Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. Both petitions were denied. State v. Brown, 308 P.3d 536 (Utah 2013); Brown v. Utah, -- U.S. --, 134 S.Ct. 544, 187 L.Ed.2d 370 (2013).

I 4 On November 25, 2018, Defendant filed a petition for post-conviction relief under Utah's Post-Conviection Remedies Act (the PCRA).. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-9-101 to -405 (LexisNexis 2012). Defendant claimed that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at the time his guilty pleas were entered due to trial counsel's incorrect advice about the consequences of pleading guilty and because trial counsel operated under several conflicts of interest when he urged Defendant to plead guilty. In addition, Defendant repeated his claim that his guilty pleas were not knowingly and voluntarily made because he was on pain medication when he entered them. The district court found that all of the pertinent facts supporting Defendant's ineffective-assistance claims were known to Defendant before he entered his pleas and that more than one year had passed before Defendant filed his PCRA petition 1 Although Defendant claimed that "he came to a realization about [the] real impact of his sentence at some point long after sentencing," the district court concluded that "coming to a better or more complete understanding of the practical import of his plea is different [from] coming to know new evidentiary facts. The record reflects that the pertinent facts were known to [Defendant] long before, more than a year before, [he] filed the present petition."

5 The district court also determined that "alll of the facts concerning the voluntariness of [Defendant]'s plea, particularly his injuries from a car accident and any medication [prescribed as a result], were known at the time of the plea, certainly were known [in the] six weeks between the plea [and sentencing.]" The court concluded that Defendant's challenge to the validity of his pleas was procedurally barred because he could have moved to withdraw his pleas but did not. Accordingly, the court denied Defendant's PCRA petition as untimely. Defendant appeals.

16 On appeal, Defendant first contends that he received ineffective assistance *126 of counsel in two respects. He contends that trial counsel "[alffirmatively misrepresented] the consequences" of Defendant's guilty pleas by assuring him that he would spend only "two to three years in prison" because trial counsel would "wine and dine" the Board of Pardons and Parole (the Board). Defendant also contends that trial counsel operated under various conflicts of interest, including that (1) trial counsel's "own daughter had business dealings with [Defendant]" that might have put her at risks similar to those faced by his known victims, (2) trial counsel "could have been called as a potential witness against" Defendant, (8) trial counsel was related to Defendant by marriage, and (4) trial counsel's "law firm had recently experienced negative media exposure that made [trial counsel] not want to draw any more media attention to his firm." Second, Defendant contends that his pleas were unknowing and involuntary because he was on pain medication at the time he entered his guilty pleas and because of trial counsel's "misinformation" regarding the consequences of his guilty pleas. "We review an appeal from an order dismissing or denying a petition for post-conviction relief for correctness without deference to the lower court's conclusions of law." Taylor v. State, 2012 UT 5, ¶ 8, 270 P.3d 471 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

T7 Under the PCRA, "[al petitioner is entitled to relief only if the petition is filed within one year after the cause of action has accrued." Utah Code Ann. § 78B-9-107(1) (LexisNexis 2012) 2 A cause of action accrues on the latest of several possible dates, including "the last day for filing an appeal from the entry of the final judgment of conviction, if no appeal is taken," and "the date on which [the] petitioner knew or should have known, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, of evidentiary facts on which the petition is based." Id. § 78B-9-107(@2)(a), (e). The PCRA also provides that

[the limitations period is tolled for any period during which the petitioner was prevented from filing a petition due to state action in violation of the United States Constitution, or due to physical or mental incapacity. The petitioner has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the petitioner is entitled to relief under this Subsection (8).

Id. § 78B-9-107(8). Defendant does not allege that any action by the State in violation of the United States Constitution, or any physical or mental incapacity, prevented him from timely filing his petition. Rather, relying on the later accrual date under section 78B-9-107(2)(e), he contends that his PCRA petition was timely filed and should not be time-barred because he filed it "within one year of recognizing the significance of his attorney's ineffective assistance of counsel."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 254, 361 P.3d 124, 797 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 266, 2015 WL 5894798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-utahctapp-2015.