Buda v. Stickman

149 F. App'x 86
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 2005
Docket04-2655
StatusUnpublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 149 F. App'x 86 (Buda v. Stickman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buda v. Stickman, 149 F. App'x 86 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

Allegedly at the recommendation of counsel, Edward A. Buda pleaded guilty to first degree murder in Pennsylvania in 1989 to avoid the death penalty. He sought and was denied a post-conviction evidentiary hearing in state court on whether his counsel rendered ineffective assistance in violation of the Sixth Amendment. In a habeas petition in the District Court, Buda again sought an evidentiary hearing to uncover facts related to his counsel’s allegedly ineffective assistance but that request was denied on the ground that he had not pursued his evidentiary hearing in Pennsylvania with sufficient diligence. Having reviewed Buda’s state court papers in light of the controlling statute and cases, we will vacate the judgment of the District Court and remand for an evidentiary hearing.

I.

In 1996, a man unknowingly walked into the burglary of his house in Wayne County, Pennsylvania and was shot to death by the intruder(s). Nearly a year later, Buda and three others were charged with, inter alia, criminal homicide. The County District Attorney filed notices of aggravating circumstances against three of the men as a predicate to seeking the death penalty. Buda was one of those men; the other two were Michael Wilson and David Mandeville. Wilson pleaded guilty to first degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison plus 40 to 80 years. Mandeville went to trial, where he was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison plus 8 to 18 years. The fourth confederate, Daniel Quarles, pleaded guilty to third degree murder, robbery and burglary and was sentenced to 18 to 36 years in prison. According to Buda, after Wilson and Quarles were sentenced, Buda pleaded guilty to first degree murder on the advice of counsel. In exchange for Buda’s plea, the Commonwealth dropped all other charges and promised not to seek the death penalty. In January 1998, Buda was sentenced to life in prison.

Buda did not directly appeal his sentence, but in November 1998 he filed a pro se petition for relief in the Wayne County Court of Common Pleas under the Commonwealth’s Post-Conviction Relief Act (PCRA). In the petition, Buda claimed that he was denied effective assistance of counsel leading up to his plea because his attorney “goaded [sic][him] of his right to trial by jury, in that counsel failed to advise [him] of the mitigating factors in [his] behalf regarding a sentence of death.” Buda also claimed that his counsel “failed to object to the degree of guilt, in that the trial court lacked a factual basis in accepting a guilty plea of first-degree murder,” and he sought discovery of “all investigative reports gathered in this case, and court transcripts of the same____”

In August 2000, while Buda’s PCRA petition was pending, he wrote to his sentencing judge to request transcripts of his guilty plea hearing. In that letter, Buda claimed that his lawyer leading up to sentencing was

very coercive in having me believe I would receive no lesser sentence than *88 the death penalty, even though now I realize I should have never been tried for a capital case since there is factual evidence of an independent cause for my co-defendant to want [the victim] dead, that I was under duress, [and] that I was heavily intoxicated....

Buda also claimed that he asked his present, court-appointed lawyer to secure the transcripts for him but that she had not done so. That attorney moved to withdraw her representation of Buda in January 2001 on the ground that his post-conviction claims were without merit, and that she could identify no other claims available to him.

In February 2001, the Court of Common Pleas noticed its intention to dismiss Buda’s PCRA claim and granted Buda’s counsel leave to withdraw. The Court ruled that Buda’s trial counsel could not have been ineffective in failing to advise him of mitigating factors regarding a death sentence because Buda was not sentenced to death. Further, the Court rejected Buda’s argument that his counsel “lacked a factual basis in accepting a guilty plea of first degree murder” because, by pleading guilty, Buda waived all issues “relating to the sufficiency of the evidence.” The Court did not directly address Buda’s request for further discovery, but concluded that “[n]o purpose would be served by any further proceedings.”

Just over two weeks later, Buda filed a pro se response to the Court’s notice in which he asserted ineffective assistance of his post-conviction counsel in failing to assert that Buda was denied effective assistance of trial counsel. Buda asked for an evidentiary hearing. In August 2001, the Court of Common Pleas denied Buda’s motion for post-conviction relief and again concluded that “no purpose would be served by any further proceedings.” Buda appealed to the Superior Court, which in August 2002 rejected Buda’s claim that his post-conviction counsel was ineffective and his original claim that his trial counsel had been ineffective, and adopted the Common Pleas Court’s reasoning as its own. In December 2002, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied Buda’s petition for allowance of appeal.

In January 2003, Buda filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, a petition later transferred to the Middle District of Pennsylvania. In that petition, Buda asked for a hearing to determine whether he had been denied his Sixth Amendment rights because his counsel advised him to plead guilty to first degree murder. A magistrate judge ordered a show cause hearing to be held on Buda’s petition in October 2003, but canceled the hearing upon a motion by the District Attorney.

In March 2004, the Magistrate Judge filed a Report and Recommendation (R & R) advising that Buda’s petition be denied. According to the Magistrate Judge, Buda’s essential argument for an evidentiary hearing was that Buda “received bad advice from trial counsel about possible defenses, the likelihood of the death penalty and the degree of murder that was appropriate under the facts and law[,] and that this bad advice caused him to plead guilty to murder in the first degree rather than go to trial.” The respondents argued that Buda failed to develop the factual basis for this claim in state court as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2). The Magistrate Judge agreed, concluding that Buda’s “bare” request for a hearing did not amount to the diligence required by § 2254(e)(2) as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 420, 437, 120 S.Ct. 1479, 146 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000). On March 14, 2004, the District Court adopted the R & R and denied *89 Buda’s petition for habeas corpus. This Court granted a certificate of appealability to Buda on November 24, 2004 on whether the District Court erred by denying Buda’s petition on the merits “without conducting an evidentiary hearing on [his] claim that his guilty plea is invalid based on the ineffective assistance of trial counsel in advising him to plead guilty to first-degree murder.” 1

II.

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Buda v. Stickman
292 F. App'x 187 (Third Circuit, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
149 F. App'x 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buda-v-stickman-ca3-2005.