Carter v. Huhn

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 6, 2024
Docket4:24-cv-00630
StatusUnknown

This text of Carter v. Huhn (Carter v. Huhn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Huhn, (E.D. Mo. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

WILLIAM CARTER, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) No. 4:24-CV-00630 NCC ) VALERIE HUHN, ) ) Respondent. )

OPINION, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is before the Court upon petitioner William Carter’s application for writ of habeas corpus brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. [ECF No. 1]. The Court has reviewed the application for writ and finds that it should be summarily dismissed. Background After forcibly removing his 16-year-old neighbor from her home and sexually assaulting her, petitioner William Carter was charged in the Circuit Court of Macon County with forcible sodomy, kidnapping, first-degree burglary, felonious restraint, and deviate sexual assault. He entered a plea of not guilty by reason of mental disease or defect (NGRI) in the transferee Circuit Court of Adair County, Missouri. The plea was accepted, and he was committed to the custody of the Missouri Department of Mental Health (DMH). Carter remains a detainee in DMH and now petitions this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 for a writ of habeas corpus, challenging the determination by the Missouri Circuit Court that he is not entitled to unconditional release. Petitioner is currently detained in Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, Missouri. Pertinent Prior Litigation History In January 2000, Carter was charged in the Circuit Court of Macon County with forcible sodomy, kidnapping, first-degree burglary, felonious restraint, and deviate sexual assault. The charges arose from an incident in which petitioner removed a sixteen-year-old female victim from

a neighboring home, took her to his own home, and sexually assaulted her. The case was transferred on a change of venue to Adair County Circuit Court. On January 21, 2002, the Circuit Court accepted Carter's plea of NGRI and ordered that he be committed to the custody of DMH for care and treatment. Petitioner applied for conditional release from DMH custody less than a month later. Following an evidentiary hearing, the Circuit Court denied petitioner’s application. The Missouri Court of Appeals for the Western District affirmed. State v. Carter, 125 S.W.3d 377 (Mo. Ct. App. W.D. 2004). Although petitioner argued that the Circuit Court's finding that he suffered from a mental disease or defect was not supported by substantial evidence and was against the weight of the evidence, the Court of Appeals held that “[a]n insanity acquittal creates a presumption of

continuing mental illness,” and that, “[a]s long as the presumption of continuing mental illness has not been broken following an acquittal by reason of insanity, the burden of proof need not shift to the State and remains on the insanity acquittee to prove that he no longer has a mental disease or defect rendering him dangerous to himself or others.” Id. at 380 (citations omitted). The Court of Appeals held that the Circuit Court, as fact-finder, could properly have disbelieved petitioner’s evidence suggesting that he no longer suffered from a mental disease or defect, and that its “finding that petitioner continues to suffer from a mental disease or defect was supported by substantial evidence and was not against the weight of the evidence.” Id. at 382. Triggered by petitioner’s application for conditional release, the State evaluated petitioner and commenced a separate proceeding to have him involuntarily committed as a sexually violent predator (SVP) under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 632.495. In 2003, a jury found petitioner to be an SVP and, based on that finding, the Circuit Court entered a separate judgment committing petitioner to the

custody of DMH under § 632.495. The Missouri Court of Appeals for the Western District affirmed the judgment on appeal. In re Care and Treatment of Carter, No. WD63327, 147 S.W.3d 872 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004). In June 2015, Carter filed a second application for conditional release from his NGRI commitment. The Circuit Court denied petitioner’s application for conditional release as moot. The Circuit Court reasoned that any relief granted to petitioner on his application for conditional release under section Mo. Rev. Stat. § 552.040.10 would not afford him “any effectual relief” because petitioner would remain civilly committed under the SVP Act. Accordingly, the trial court held that “as long as [Carter] remains a[n] SVP under civil commitment pursuant to [the SVP Act], any relief granted under Section 552 is moot.” State v. Carter, 551 S.W.3d 573, 575 (Mo. Ct. App.

2018). The Missouri Court of Appeals for the Western District reversed, drawing the analogy between petitioner's dual commitment under chapters 552 and 632 and a criminal defendant who is sentenced to concurrent terms of incarceration for separate offenses. Courts have held that a defendant's challenge to less than all the convictions giving rise to concurrent sentences is not moot, since a defendant might be “‘subject ... to disabilities and legal consequences unique to th[e] [challenged] offense.’” Id. at 576 (quoting State v. Reynolds, 819 S.W.2d 322, 326 (Mo. 1991)). The Missouri Court of Appeals held that the same principle should apply to petitioner’s dual commitments and should permit him to seek release from one commitment order even while the other remained in effect. The Court of Appeals explained that petitioner’s two commitment orders, and his potential release from those commitment orders, were subject to separate statutes, having separate standards and procedural requirements: [c]ivil commitments pursuant to an NGRI plea and an SVP determination are each subject to statutory procedures for securing release. Conditional release from an NGRI commitment can be sought pursuant to section 552.040.10, and unconditional release can be sought from an NGRI commitment pursuant to section 552.040.5. Conditional release from an SVP commitment can be sought pursuant to section 632.498.3. In either case, the court entertaining the application is bound to consider statutory factors, subject to the standard and burden of proof specified by statute. To suggest, however, that a court can deem moot an application filed pursuant to one basis for civil commitment simply because the applicant is concurrently committed pursuant to the other basis for civil commitment is to deprive the committed person of any opportunity to secure release. A concurrently committed person must be able to start somewhere. Though Carter cannot be actually released from confinement given his concurrent SVP commitment, he is nonetheless entitled to a hearing and a determination with respect to whether grounds supporting conditional release from his NGRI commitment have been established.

Id. at 576-77. The Missouri Court of Appeals remanded the case to the Circuit Court for further proceedings on petitioner's conditional-release application. Id. at 578. On remand, petitioner filed a pro se application for unconditional release from his NGRI commitment. See State v. Carter, 614 S.W.3d 74, 76-78 (Mo. Ct. App. 2020). On March 15, 2019, the Circuit Court held an evidentiary hearing at which petitioner (represented by appointed counsel) elected to proceed solely on his application for unconditional release. The Circuit Court denied petitioner's application for unconditional release on August 15, 2019, in an eleven-page judgment containing detailed findings of fact.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robert Flieger v. Paul K. Delo, Superintendent
16 F.3d 878 (Eighth Circuit, 1994)
Johnie Cox v. Larry Norris
133 F.3d 565 (Eighth Circuit, 1998)
Beaulieu v. Minnesota
583 F.3d 570 (Eighth Circuit, 2009)
State v. Reynolds
819 S.W.2d 322 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1991)
Tommy Joe Stutzka v. James P. McCarville
420 F.3d 757 (Eighth Circuit, 2005)
State v. Carter
125 S.W.3d 377 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)
In re the Care & Treatment of Carter
147 S.W.3d 872 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)
State v. Carter
551 S.W.3d 573 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Carter v. Huhn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-huhn-moed-2024.