Harper v. Washburn

479 P.3d 1101, 308 Or. App. 244
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 30, 2020
DocketA170892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 479 P.3d 1101 (Harper v. Washburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Washburn, 479 P.3d 1101, 308 Or. App. 244 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Submitted November 5, reversed and remanded December 30, 2020

BUFORD THOMAS HARPER, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Susan WASHBURN, Superintendent, Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution, Defendant-Respondent. Umatilla County Circuit Court 16CV32380; A170892 479 P3d 1101

Petitioner appeals from a judgment denying post-conviction relief for his claim that trial counsel was ineffective and inadequate for failing to ensure his guilty plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Petitioner alleges that the post- conviction court erred in permitting the superintendent to cross-examine peti- tioner on the differences between his original pro se petition for post-conviction relief and his later, attorney drafted, amended petition for post-conviction relief. Petitioner alleges this line of inquiry was irrelevant. The superintendent asserts that the questioning was permissible as impeachment for bias or self-interest and imputed petitioner’s credibility. Held: Setting aside the question of whether an omission in a prior pro se legal document can ever be admissible to impeach an assertion in a subsequent attorney drafted legal document, the superintendent failed to establish the relationship between the proffered impeachment evidence and a fact of consequence as required to establish relevance of impeachment evi- dence. That evidentiary error was not harmless. Reversed and remanded.

J. Burdette Pratt, Senior Judge. Jedediah Peterson and O’Connor Weber LLC filed the brief for appellant. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Colm Moore, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and James, Judge, and Haselton, Senior Judge. JAMES, J. Reversed and remanded. Cite as 308 Or App 244 (2020) 245

JAMES, J. Petitioner appeals from a judgment denying post- conviction relief for his claim that trial counsel was ineffec- tive and inadequate for failing to ensure his guilty plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Petitioner alleges that the post-conviction court erred in permitting the superinten- dent to cross-examine petitioner on the differences between his original pro se petition for post-conviction relief and his later, attorney drafted, amended petition for post-conviction relief. Petitioner alleges that this line of inquiry was irrele- vant. The superintendent asserts that the questioning was permissible as impeachment for bias or self-interest and imputed petitioner’s credibility. We agree with petitioner, and, concluding that the evidentiary error is not harmless, we reverse. Petitioner and four indicted coconspirators were each charged with felony murder following a premeditated and coordinated effort to commit a violent home invasion robbery in Douglas County. Petitioner and two of his code- fendants confessed on video. The confessions were corrobo- rated by independent evidence. Petitioner was arrested for both a probation viola- tion and the murder charges. He was incarcerated in the Douglas County Jail for approximately one year before he entered his plea and was sentenced. During that year, peti- tioner was moved between general population, administra- tive segregation, and isolation, based on his behavior, and spent approximately one-half of his incarceration in segre- gation or isolation. Petitioner’s jail records indicate that, when he was booked, petitioner mentioned dental pain and head pain, but his mental status screen was normal. Throughout that period of his incarceration, jail health records indicate that petitioner sought mental health services on three occasions, citing depressed mood, sleep disturbance, panic attacks, depressed appetite, headaches, anger control issues, and memory loss. Records also indicate that petitioner said he had “passed out a few times” and “sees things out of the cor- ner of his eye.” 246 Harper v. Washburn

The state offered petitioner a global plea deal per- taining to the three criminal cases he faced at the time: the murder case, an unrelated companion case based on petitioner’s possession of a shank in jail, and a probation violation. On the murder case, the prosecutor offered peti- tioner a sentence of 25 years incarcerated with the Oregon Department of Corrections, which petitioner accepted and pleaded guilty as contemplated. At the plea and sentencing hearing, the state laid out the factual basis for the charges against petitioner, and through his attorney, petitioner indi- cated that he did not contest the state’s recitation of the facts. Following his conviction, in a pro se petition for post-conviction relief, petitioner asserted a single claim that essentially alleged a failure to investigate and interview witnesses by trial counsel. That pro se petition alleged that trial counsel “fail[ed] to question any of my list of witnesses and they would have testified to facts not presented at trial that could have severely lessened the alleged crime from mur- der to manslaughter. Had trial court counsel done so, the D.A. would not have continued with a murder trial and I would have proceeded to jury trial and a jury would have found me not guilty.” Petitioner also asserted that his trial counsel told him “time and again that [he] had no hope and should just wait and see what kind of deal [he] could get from the D.A.” Petitioner’s appointed attorney subsequently filed an amended petition for post-conviction relief which sub- stantially reframed petitioner’s original pro se claim by asserting that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to ensure petitioner’s plea was knowing, intelligent, and volun- tary. In support of that reframed claim, the amended peti- tion alleged that “Petitioner was suffering from severe psychiatric symp- toms, including suicidal depression, insomnia, night ter- rors, panic attacks, memory loss and inability to eat. Petitioner’s psychiatric symptoms significantly interfered with Petitioner’s ability to knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waive his state and federal constitutional rights in pleading to the underlying criminal offense.” Cite as 308 Or App 244 (2020) 247

The amended petition alleged that trial counsel “was objectively unreasonable, under then existing pro- fessional norms, in failing to comprehend the severity of Petitioner’s psychiatric symptoms, failing to facilitate appro- priate treatment, and allowing Petitioner to waive his state and federal constitutional rights when he was not mentally capable of a knowing, voluntary and intelligent waiver.” The amended petition further alleged that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate, and appre- ciate the significance of, petitioner’s substance abuse, and “post-concussional syndrome,” in determining whether peti- tioner was capable of knowingly and intelligently entering a plea. Finally, the amended petition alleged that trial coun- sel was ineffective in failing to request a competence exam before advising petitioner to enter a plea. In support of his claims, among other things, peti- tioner submitted a declaration asserting that he was “unable to comprehend the circumstances and consequences” of his guilty plea. Petitioner stated that he had pleaded guilty because he was suicidal, significantly impaired by controlled substances, suffering from post-concussional syndrome, and desperate to escape his isolation cell at the Douglas County Jail. At the post-conviction trial, petitioner testified about the conditions of his confinement at the Douglas County Jail, including his time in administrative segrega- tion or an isolation cell. He testified that, while in a segre- gation cell, he had no interaction with other inmates, little interaction with correctional officers, and was confined 23.5 hours per day. He further explained that these conditions made him feel suicidal.

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Bluebook (online)
479 P.3d 1101, 308 Or. App. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-washburn-orctapp-2020.