Eberle v. Warden, Mansfield Correctional Institution

532 F. App'x 605
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 2013
Docket12-4213
StatusUnpublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 532 F. App'x 605 (Eberle v. Warden, Mansfield Correctional Institution) 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
Eberle v. Warden, Mansfield Correctional Institution, 532 F. App'x 605 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge.

In September 2006, Jeffrey Eberle pled guilty in an Ohio court to aggravated murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole. Eberle did not appeal. Nearly three years later, however, Eberle filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea, which the Ohio courts ultimately denied in December 2010. A year later, Eberle sought habeas relief in federal district court. The state urged that Eberle’s time-barred petition should be dismissed and the district court agreed. We do too and AFFIRM its order dismissing Eberle’s habeas petition.

I. BACKGROUND

Jeffrey Eberle pled guilty in September 2006 to aggravated murder under Ohio state law. Represented by counsel, Eberle admitted that he “purposely and with prior calculation” caused the death of Michael Fish. Eberle specifically agreed that on the night of December 14, 2005, he and Jason Evick took Fish to a secluded location where Eberle assaulted Fish with a shovel. Fish died of blunt force trauma. In exchange for his plea, the prosecution dismissed all other charges against Eberle. Eberle was sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after serving 20 years.

Eberle did not appeal from his sentence or conviction but, nearly three years after he was sentenced, he filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea on July 20, 2009. The motion was based largely on the work of Orrin Nordstrom, a private investigator who tracked down potential leads in Eberle’s case from May 2007 to December 2008. In it, Eberle complained that his trial counsel failed to tell him the contents of an allegedly damaging statement that a witness, Ryan Goodman, planned to make at trial, despite Eberle’s request to learn what Goodman had to say. Eberle also faulted his counsel for failing to investigate the potential testimony of Amanda Fugate, Evick’s girlfriend at the time of Fish’s *607 murder, who allegedly told police that Evick admitted to killing Fish. And springing from this last factual bit, Eberle finally alleged that the prosecution’s failure to disclose Evick’s admission violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963). To support his claims, Eberle attached affidavits from Goodman, the witness, and Nordstrom, the investigator, and submitted one himself. Eberle’s bottom-line claim was that he would not have pled guilty had he known of Goodman’s statement and Evick’s admission.

The trial court denied Eberle’s withdrawal motion on September 23, 2009. Eberle sought review in the state court of appeals. As before, he claimed only that he would not have pled guilty but for counsel’s ineffectiveness and the government’s misconduct. During oral arguments, the appellate panel sua sponte asked whether Eberle’s plea was invalid because the trial court wrongly informed Eberle that he was subject to a mandatory five-year term of postrelease control if and when he was released from prison. (The court intuited an error because the crime to which Eberle pled guilty, aggravated murder, is an unclassified felony in Ohio that does not carry a mandatory postrelease-control term. See State v. Clark, 119 Ohio St.3d 239, 893 N.E.2d 462, 470 (2008)). The court requested supplemental briefing on the issue, and asked the parties to weigh in on whether Eberle’s case should be returned to the trial court for further proceedings.

On the merits of Eberle’s claims, the appellate court affirmed the trial court’s denial on August 2, 2010. On the postrelease-control issue, however, the court decided that the trial court erred in its explanation. That error, though, did not necessitate sending the case back down for resentencing; instead, the reviewing court simply vacated the postrelease-control portion of the lower court’s sentencing entry. The Ohio Supreme Court denied Eberle leave to appeal on December 15, 2010.

A year later, on December 13, 2011, Eberle filed his federal habeas corpus petition setting forth the same grounds of relief raised in his withdrawal motion— constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel and governmental misconduct. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The magistrate judge concluded that Eberle’s petition was time-barred under two alternative time-limit provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996). Under the first, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A), the statute of limitations expired in October 2007, one year after the deadline passed to appeal the September 2006 state-court judgment. Despite Eberle’s arguments to the contrary, the magistrate judge found that neither Eberle’s plea-withdrawal motion nor the state appellate court’s sentence modification served to restart the one-year statute of limitations under § 2244(d)(1)(A). Under the second applicable limitations provision, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(D), the magistrate judge found that the petition was still untimely, even if the court agreed with Eberle that the clock was tolled while his plea-withdrawal motion wended its way through the state courts.

The magistrate judge then considered whether Eberle was entitled to equitable tolling, which might otherwise save his late-filed petition, finding he was not because his failure to file on time did not unavoidably arise from circumstances beyond his control. After finally concluding that Eberle’s claim of actual innocence was untenable, the magistrate judge recommended that Eberle’s time-barred petition be dismissed.

*608 The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report. In doing so, it evaluated a supplemental affidavit from Nordstrom — narrating Nordstrom’s unsuccessful efforts to obtain an affidavit from Fugate directly — that Eberle submitted along with his objections to the magistrate judge’s report. Even with the supplemental affidavit, the court maintained that Eberle still failed to establish a credible claim of actual innocence that would allow it to consider his otherwise untimely claims. The district court dismissed Eberle’s petition but granted him a certificate of appealability that enables review of “the procedural statute of limitations issue” raised in Eberle’s case. We turn to that now. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253.

II. ANALYSIS

We review a district court’s dismissal of a time-barred habeas petition de novo, but assess its factual findings — to the extent it makes any — under the deferential dear-error standard. King v. Bobby, 433 F.3d 483, 489 (6th Cir.2006); Souter v. Jones, 395 F.3d 577, 584 (6th Cir.2005).

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Bluebook (online)
532 F. App'x 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eberle-v-warden-mansfield-correctional-institution-ca6-2013.