Coddington v. Langley

77 F. App'x 869
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 2003
DocketNo. 02-1490
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 F. App'x 869 (Coddington v. Langley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coddington v. Langley, 77 F. App'x 869 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

In this habeas corpus case, Mitchell W. Coddington claims that he received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court agreed and granted Coddington’s petition. As we disagree with that conclusion, we REVERSE.

I.

A.

On July 13, 1992, Mitchell Coddington pleaded no contest to one count of first degree Criminal Sexual Conduct (CSC) and two counts of second degree CSC under Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 750.520b-.520c (1991). The alleged victim was his three-year-old daughter. At sentencing Coddington filed a motion to withdraw his plea, which the court granted. He subsequently stood trial on all charges, but the jury failed to reach a verdict.

On October 15, 1993, before the commencement of a second trial, Coddington entered into another plea agreement with the government. Under this agreement, Coddington pleaded guilty to five counts of second degree CSC in return for the government’s dismissal of the first degree CSC counts, which carried the possibility of a life sentence.

During the hearing scheduled to ensure Coddington’s acceptance of the plea agreement was voluntary, the state trial judge had some difficulty establishing a factual basis for Coddington’s plea. A functionally illiterate man with documented cognitive disabilities, Coddington had trouble answering several questions designed to establish a factual predicate for the plea. JA 203, 344. Second Degree CSC requires proof that the defendant engaged in “sexual contact” with a person under thirteen years of age, Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.520c(1991), and is defined as any intentional touching of the victim’s intimate parts for the purposes of sexual arousal or gratification, id. at § 750.520a.

[871]*871During questioning by the court, Coddington initially said he touched “her private parts,” but when asked if he touched her vaginal area, Coddington said “no.” JA 350-51. When asked where he touched her, Coddington failed to answer. JA 351. He answered “yes” when asked if he deliberately touched the victim, but was unresponsive when asked why. JA 353. Later, he answered “yes” when asked if he touched the victim in a “sexual fashion,” then denied touching her for “sexual gratification.” JA 250, 352.

Adding to the confusion, Coddington faced considerable pressure from his mother and trial counsel to accept the plea. During the hearing, the trial court called two recesses to allow Coddington to confer with his attorney, Charles Novelli, and his mother, Mary Coddington. In each recess, Novelli and Coddington’s mother tried to persuade him to answer the questions fully so that the judge could accept his plea. His mother encouraged him to cooperate and take a lesser sentence because Coddington’s brother had received a 25-50 year sentence after he proceeded to trial on similar charges. JA 178. In the past, Coddington had relied heavily on his mother’s advice, and because she had suffered a heart attack during his first trial, he did not want to risk her health by subjecting her to a second trial. JA 181. Novelli tried to be even more persuasive. He was angry, raised his voice in trying to intimidate Coddington, and made Codding-ton feel “forced and coerced” into pleading guilty. JA 180-81.

After the final recess and after the final meeting with his counsel and mother, Coddington answered “yes” when asked if his contact with the victim was a “sexual touch.” JA 356. In response, the court “somewhat reluctantly” accepted his guilty plea and set a date for sentencing. JA 358. Coddington attempted to withdraw his guilty plea at sentencing, but the trial judge refused and sentenced him to prison for 5-15 years. JA 364-66.

B.

The State of Michigan appointed Jennifer A. Pilette to assist Coddington on appeal. At the time, Pilette had fifteen years of experience, nine of them with the State Appellate Defender’s Office, and had litigated over 500 criminal appeals. JA 276-77. After reviewing the lower court file, Pilette visited Coddington at the Hiawatha Regional Correctional Facility to discuss his appellate options on February 17,1994. JA 278.

During this meeting, Pilette counseled Coddington on his options for appeal. Her notes from the meeting reveal that they “[tjalked at length of plea withdrawal, [but did] not want risk of CSC 1.” JA 281. In other words, if Coddington were to challenge his guilty plea successfully, he likely would go to trial on first degree CSC charges with the potential of receiving a life sentence. JA 282. Pilette’s notes also indicate that she told Coddington that the trial judge had erroneously calculated Coddington’s prison term and explained that this would be a strong issue on appeal. JA 281-82.

Pilette also reviewed the transcript of Coddington’s plea hearing. JA 290. Her notes indicate that she recognized the existence of an appealable issue regarding the propriety-specifically the voluntariness-of the plea. During their meeting, Codding-ton told Pilette about the abusive behavior of his trial counsel at the plea hearing. JA 186. “I would have raised the [plea] issue on appeal,” Pilette later explained; “[i]t was [Coddington’s] decision based on the risk as reflected in my notes.” JA 300.

After their meeting, Pilette filed an appeal and a motion to remand in the Michigan Court of Appeals that addressed only the resentencing issue. The court granted [872]*872the motion, and the trial court on remand reduced Coddington’s sentence to 3-15 years. At no time did Pilette appeal the voluntariness of Coddington’s plea.

After the trial court resentenced Coddington, the original appeal remained pending in the Michigan Court of Appeals. Having prevailed on the only issue raised in the appeal, Pilette sought Coddington’s permission to withdraw the appeal. She sent him a proposed affidavit to that effect in prison, but she never received a response. By that time in his prison stay, Coddington no longer permitted anyone in the prison to read his mail because he feared that others would learn about the molestation of his daughter. JA 289. As an alternative, he instructed Pilette to send correspondence to his sister, who could then communicate with him. Pilette complied, but Coddington’s sister soon moved and left no forwarding address. Id.

Frustrated in her efforts to receive a written confirmation from Coddington expressing his desire to withdraw the appeal, Pilette filed a Motion for Guidance with the Michigan Court of Appeals on September 29, 1994. JA 86. In her motion, Pilette stated that she had met with Coddington earlier and that he had agreed not to challenge his conviction or sentence in any other respect than the one upon which relief had been granted. Id. In response to this pleading, the Michigan Court of Appeals dismissed Coddington’s appeal on November 8,1994. JA 85.

C.

When Coddington entered his guilty plea in 1993 and when he met with Pilette in 1994, the Michigan Parole Board generally granted parole to sex offenders once they had served their minimum sentences. After Coddington’s resentencing, however, Michigan’s parole practices changed. The new policy showed a preference for keeping sex offenders in prison for their full sentences.

Consistent with this new policy, the board denied Coddington’s parole application after he had served three years. JA 183. Soon thereafter, on June 27, 1997, Coddington filed a pro se petition seeking relief from judgment in Michigan state court. JA 107.

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

Related

Coddington v. Langley, Warden
541 U.S. 1066 (Supreme Court, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 F. App'x 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coddington-v-langley-ca6-2003.