D. Standley v. State

2025 MT 205N
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 2025
DocketDA 24-0513
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 MT 205N (D. Standley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. Standley v. State, 2025 MT 205N (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

09/09/2025

DA 24-0513 Case Number: DA 24-0513

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 205N

DONNIE LEE STANDLEY,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

STATE OF MONTANA,

Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Sixth Judicial District, In and For the County of Sweet Grass, Cause No. DV-20-17 Honorable Brenda R. Gilbert, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Donnie Lee Standley, Self-Represented, Deer Lodge, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Tammy K Plubell, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Patrick Dringman, Sweet Grass County Attorney, Daniel Guzynski, Special Deputy County Attorney, Big Timber, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: July 9, 2025

Decided: September 9, 2025

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating

Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not

serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this

Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana

Reports.

¶2 Donnie Lee Standley (Standley) appeals the August 1, 2024 order of the Sixth

Judicial District Court denying his second or subsequent request for post-conviction relief

(PCR). Standley argues the District Court erred in determining that his petition was

time-barred and in concluding he failed to introduce new evidence.

¶3 This is Standley’s third appeal related to his incest conviction. See State v. Standley,

2019 MT 204N, 397 Mont. 553, 455 P.3d 445 (Standley I) and Standley v. State, 2023 MT

28N, 411 Mont. 391, 524 P.3d 75 (Standley II). On April 6, 2016, Standley was charged

with incest. Following jury trial, the jury found Standley guilty of incest. Standley was

sentenced to 100 years in prison with a 25-year parole restriction. Standley appealed his

conviction asserting plain error review was necessary for the district court’s failure to

instruct the jury on the requisite mental state and also argued ineffective assistance of trial

counsel for failing to object to the district court’s jury instructions and for failing to submit

the proper mental state instruction. On August 20, 2019, this Court declined to invoke

plain error review and concluded the district court “fully and fairly instructed the jury, and

thus the claimed error has not implicated a fundamental right nor is the Court convinced

that failure to review the claimed error would result in a manifest miscarriage of justice,

2 leave unsettled the question of the fundamental fairness of the trial or proceedings, or

compromise the integrity of the judicial process.” Standley I, ¶ 6. Standley then filed a

pro se petition for PCR on April 14, 2020, raising claims of ineffective assistance of

counsel (IAC) as to his trial and appellate counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, and various

abuses of discretion by the district court. Following the State’s response, the District Court

dismissed Standley’s petition for PCR. Standley again appealed and on February 14, 2023,

this Court affirmed the District Court’s denial of his PCR petition. Standley II, ¶ 31. As

Standley did not seek certiorari of this denial to the U.S. Supreme Court, his original PCR

petition became fully adjudicated.

¶4 On April 19, 2024, over a year after we affirmed the District Court’s denial of

Standley’s PCR petition, he filed a Notice of Intent to Amend Post-Conviction in the

district court. On August 1, 2024, the District Court issued an order concluding the

evidence Standley asserted in his Notice was evidence “that would have been available

during the year after his conviction became final, and is therefore, not newly discovered.”

The District Court then concluded that Standley raised “no grounds for relief in his Notice

that could not have reasonably been raised in his original petition. See State v. Root,

314 Mont. 186, ¶ 12, 64 P.3d 1035.” Standley appeals this order.

¶5 We review a district court’s denial of a petition for post-conviction relief to

determine whether the court’s findings are clearly erroneous and whether its conclusions

of law are correct. Mascarena v. State, 2019 MT 78, ¶ 4, 395 Mont. 245, 438 P.3d 323.

When seeking to reverse a district court’s denial of a petition for post-conviction relief, a

petitioner bears a heavy burden. Mascarena, ¶ 4.

3 ¶6 Once Standley’s conviction became final, he had one year to file a petition for

post-conviction relief. Section 46-21-102(1), MCA. A conviction becomes final when, if

an appeal is taken to the Montana Supreme Court, “the time for petitioning the

United States [S]upreme [C]ourt for review expires.” Section 46-21-102(1)(b), MCA.

Section 46-21-102(2), MCA, provides for an exception to the general one-year limit and

extends the filing deadline where a petitioner asserts newly discovered evidence that shows

petitioner’s innocence. Mascarena, ¶ 6. The new evidence, if proved and when viewed in

the light of the evidence as a whole, must show that the petitioner did not engage in the

criminal conduct for which he was convicted. Mascarena, ¶ 6; Wilkes v. State, 2015 MT

243, ¶ 15, 380 Mont. 388, 355 P.3d 755. A petitioner has one year from the discovery of

this evidence, or from when the evidence reasonably should have been discovered, to file

the petition. Section 46-21-102(2), MCA.

¶7 Standley’s conviction became final on November 18, 2019—90 days after this

Court issued its opinion on Standley’s direct appeal on August 20, 2019. He timely filed

his original PCR petition on April 14, 2020. The District Court considered the petition,

denied it, Standley appealed that denial, and on February 14, 2023, this Court affirmed its

denial in Standley II. At no time during the proceedings on Standley’s original PCR

petition did Standley seek to amend his petition nor did he seek review of the denial with

the U.S. Supreme Court. Thus, his original PCR petition became fully adjudicated May 15,

2023, 90 days after issuance of Standley II. On April 19, 2024, Standley filed a Notice of

Intent to Amend Post-Conviction in the District Court. It is unclear if Standley intended

this document to be his PCR petition or if he intended to file an additional document. Even

4 if Standley’s Notice of Intent to Amend Post-Conviction were treated as an actual petition,

despite his attempt to characterize it as an amendment, it would not be an amendment to

his fully adjudicated original PCR petition but rather a second or subsequent PCR petition,

as no amendment was sought or made in that proceeding.

¶8 Pursuant to Section 46-21-105(1)(b), MCA, “[t]he court shall dismiss a second or

subsequent petition by a person who has filed an original petition unless the second or

subsequent petition raises grounds for relief that could not reasonably have been raised in

the original or an amended original petition.” Thus, unless Standley could show newly

discovered evidence showing his innocence that could not have been raised on direct appeal

or in his original PCR petition, a subsequent PCR petition would be precluded as untimely

and successive. Section 46-21-105(1)(b), MCA. The District Court correctly determined

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Related

State v. Root
2003 MT 28 (Montana Supreme Court, 2003)
Wilkes Jr. v. State
2015 MT 243 (Montana Supreme Court, 2015)
Mascarena v. State
2019 MT 78 (Montana Supreme Court, 2019)
Standley v. State
2023 MT 28N (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 MT 205N, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-standley-v-state-mont-2025.