Dee Farmer v. Circuit Court of Maryland for Baltimore County Attorney General of the State of Maryland Richard H. Rison

31 F.3d 219, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 20672, 1994 WL 410023
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 1994
Docket92-6299
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 31 F.3d 219 (Dee Farmer v. Circuit Court of Maryland for Baltimore County Attorney General of the State of Maryland Richard H. Rison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dee Farmer v. Circuit Court of Maryland for Baltimore County Attorney General of the State of Maryland Richard H. Rison, 31 F.3d 219, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 20672, 1994 WL 410023 (4th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Senior Circuit Judge PHILLIPS wrote the’opinion, in which Circuit Judge K.K. HALL and Circuit Judge MURNAGHAN joined.

*220 OPINION

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:

When Dee Farmer, 1 incarcerated in federal prison, sought to pursue Maryland post-conviction relief proceedings to challenge two state convictions, the Maryland courts refused to entertain her petitions because she could not appear personally in the proceedings. When she then petitioned for federal habeas relief and sought to be excused from the state remedies exhaustion requirement or to be considered to have met the requirement because of the impossibility imposed by Maryland’s position, the federal district court dismissed her petition for failure to exhaust, declining to consider that she had effectively exhausted her remedies or to excuse the failure, on the authority of our decision in Whittlesey v. Circuit Court for Baltimore County, 897 F.2d 143 (4th Cir.1990). Because we conclude that Whittlesey is factually distinguishable in critical respects, hence not controlling, and that the district court therefore erred in dismissing on its authority for failure to exhaust, we vacate and remand for further proceedings.

I.

During 1986, Farmer was convicted of a number of federal and state crimes committed in the State of Maryland. The interrelated consequences of those convictions gave rise to the issues presented in this case.

On May 7, 1986, Farmer was convicted by a jury in Maryland state court of theft, forgery, and related offenses. (Case No. 85-CR-3221). On May 23,1986, she pled guilty in United States District Court for the District of Maryland to two counts of credit card aceess device fraud. On June 23, 1986, she was sentenced on the federal conviction to a total of twenty years, imprisonment. On July 30,1986, she was sentenced on her Maryland conviction in No. 85-CR-3221 to fifteen years imprisonment, consecutive to her twenty-year federal sentence. On the same date, July 30, 1986, she was convicted in Maryland state court, pursuant to asn agreed statement of facts, of giving a false statement to a police officer, (Case No. 86-CR-3175) and of theft. (Case No. 86-CR-3966). In No. 86-CR-3175, the false statement case, she was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment consecutive to the twenty-year federal sentence and to the fifteen-year state sentence in No. 85-CR-3221; and in No. 86-CR-3966, to one year for her theft conviction, concurrent to the other state sentences. 2 The net effect of all this was the imposition of a thirty-year state sentence consecutive to the federal twenty-year sentence.

Incarcerated in federal prison on her twenty-year federal sentence, Farmer began in 1988 a series of pro se state and federal collateral attacks on the two state convictions upon which her combined thirty-year sentences consecutive to the federal sentence were based. 3

A first federal habeas petition, filed on July 11,1988, sought to challenge the imposition of state sentences consecutive to the federal and the state courts’ jurisdiction. It *221 was dismissed on the merits on August 18, 1988. No further proceedings on it were taken.

A second federal habeas petition, again seeking to challenge the imposition of consecutive state sentences and adding claims of involuntariness of her guilty (agreed statement) plea, and of conviction for uncharged crimes, was filed on December 11, 1988. A Magistrate Judge recommended that it be dismissed without prejudice for failure to exhaust, on June 5, 1989.

Immediately after the filing of this recommended disposition of her second federal ha-beas petition, Farmer resorted to the Maryland state courts in a persistent series of efforts to exhaust her state remedies. On July 18, 1989, she filed a petition for post-conviction relief (styled “Habeas Corpus”) in Maryland state court, claiming involuntariness of her guilty plea, and conviction on improper evidence. This petition was dismissed on July 28,1989, on the grounds that Farmer lacked standing, being then confined for her federal conviction, not for the state conviction she sought to challenge.

Faced with this fundamental terrier to exhausting state remedies, Farmer took a detour back into the federal courts to seek a way around it. In a civil rights action filed on October 10, 1989, and later amended, she challenged the constitutionality of the state’s postconvietion procedure on the basis that, as applied by the lack-of-standing ruling, it denied her access to the courts.

While this action was pending, she returned to the state courts with a second petition for post-conviction relief filed on December 19, 1989. In this, she sought to challenge the state court’s earlier lack-of-standing ruling on the basis of dicta in a recent state appellate court decision, and added a claim of denial of counsel in Case No. 86-CR3175 (the false statement case).

A hearing on this state court petition was set for March 27, 1990 to consider the challenge in No. 85-CR-3221. Farmer, then incarcerated in the federal penitentiary at Terre Haute, Indiana, requested that the state court order that arrangements be made to transport her at state expense to Maryland for appearance at the hearing. The request was denied. On the date set for the hearing, the state court dismissed the petition without prejudice, because Farmer was not present, on the basis that because Rule 4-406(d) of the Maryland Rules of Procedure in Post-Conviction Proceedings gives a petitioner the right to be present, the court could not proceed without her presence. The same course was followed when Farmer could not appear at a separate hearing set for April 24, 1990, to consider the challenge in Case No. 86-CR-3175. Farmer was then advised that the hearing in this latter ease would be reset at her request whenever she could personally appear, and that she should seek the services of a public defender. Shortly thereafter, the state court struck its March 27, 1990 order dismissing the petition in No. 85-CR-3221, revising it to conform to its order of “postponement-until-petitioner-can-appear” advice to Farmer in respect of Case No. 86-CR-3175. An attempted appeal from that order was dismissed by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals on May 17,1990, because the order was not a final judgment.

Faced with this impasse, Farmer then petitioned the Maryland trial court for a Writ of Mandamus compelling a hearing on her postconviction petitions. This was denied on February 5, 1991.

In the meantime, back in federal court, Farmer had lost on her second habeas petition and was soon to lose on her civil rights action challenging Maryland’s post-conviction procedures as denying her access to the courts. As had been recommended by the Magistrate Judge, Farmer’s second federal habeas petition was dismissed on September 21, 1990, for failure to exhaust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 F.3d 219, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 20672, 1994 WL 410023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dee-farmer-v-circuit-court-of-maryland-for-baltimore-county-attorney-ca4-1994.