In re Brian Shannon

2021 VT 91, 268 A.3d 589
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 19, 2021
Docket2020-269
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
In re Brian Shannon, 2021 VT 91, 268 A.3d 589 (Vt. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2021 VT 91

No. 2020-269

In re Brian Shannon Supreme Court

On Appeal from Superior Court, Essex Unit, Civil Division

June Term, 2021

Mary Miles Teachout, J.

Matthew F. Valerio, Defender General, and Emily Tredeau, Appellate Defender, Montpelier, for Petitioner-Appellee.

David Tartter, Deputy State’s Attorney, Montpelier, for Respondent-Appellant.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson,1 Carroll and Cohen, JJ., and Mello, Supr. J., Specially Assigned

¶ 1. COHEN, J. In this post-conviction relief (PCR) action, the State appeals the PCR

court’s order granting petitioner’s motion to amend its previous order and vacate all thirteen

convictions for which petitioner entered pleas in 2014. The State argues that the PCR court erred

because contract law requires petitioner to be returned to the same position he was in before the

plea agreement as to all thirteen charges even though petitioner received and completed deferred

sentences for ten of these charges under the plea agreement. We affirm.

1 Justice Robinson was present for oral argument but did not participate in this decision. ¶ 2. Petitioner had two prior felony convictions when he was charged with three felony

counts of aggravated domestic assault in June 2012. In June 2013, while the June 2012 case was

awaiting trial, petitioner was charged with two new counts of aggravated domestic assault; one

count of felony driving while intoxicated (DWI), third or subsequent offense; and seven

misdemeanors. In January 2014, the State’s attorney sent petitioner’s lawyer a letter stating that

if petitioner was convicted of the 2012 charges, the State would seek a sentence enhancement in

connection with the 2013 charges. However, the law would not have permitted a habitual offender

enhancement to be added to the 2013 charges, because a defendant can only be charged as a

habitual offender if they commit a felony at a time when they already have three felony

convictions. See 13 V.S.A. § 11. Despite this mistake of law, the State, petitioner’s two attorneys,

and the trial judge in the 2012 case failed to catch the error. Although petitioner initially refused

to plead guilty to a felony before trial, several concerns arose at trial2 which motivated him to enter

a plea for the 2012 and 2013 cases.

¶ 3. In February 2014, petitioner agreed to plead no contest to three felonies, for which

the court sentenced him to one-to-five years on the three counts, two of the sentences to run

consecutively. On the remaining ten charges, petitioner pled no contest and received deferred

sentences with no required domestic-violence programming. At issue in the present case are the

ten deferred sentences.

¶ 4. Petitioner sought to withdraw his plea shortly after entering it because he learned

the Department of Corrections was going to require him to complete domestic violence

programming as a condition of the timing of his release from prison, despite the State not requiring

2 These concerns included petitioner’s fear that a family member who failed to appear as a witness could be arrested and charged with criminal contempt of court, the fact that the State dropped its initial plea offer, and the potential for the State to add a habitual-offender enhancement to his 2013 charges. 2 him to perform it as part of the plea agreement. The criminal division denied the motion to

withdraw.

¶ 5. In 2015, petitioner filed this PCR petition seeking to vacate his convictions from

the 2012 and 2013 cases due to ineffective assistance of counsel. In July 2020, the PCR court

found petitioner proved counsel was ineffective in failing to inform him that there was no risk as

a matter of law of a habitual offender sentence enhancement if he were to go to trial and be

convicted. The PCR court further found that petitioner proved he was prejudiced by the ineffective

assistance of counsel and his plea was not made on a voluntary basis because he did not have

accurate information. Based on these findings, the court granted petitioner’s PCR petition and

issued an order vacating all thirteen convictions for which petitioner entered pleas in February

2014.

¶ 6. In the interim, petitioner completed the terms of his ten deferred sentences, which

began in October 2014 and expired in October 2019, without incident. The terms of probation

required that petitioner not purchase, possess, or consume alcohol, submit to substance abuse

counseling and residential treatment if his probation officer required him to, and comply with other

standard conditions of probation. Because petitioner successfully completed the terms of his

probation, the ten charges resulting in the deferred sentences were expunged from petitioner’s

record by law.

¶ 7. Upon advice from new counsel, petitioner filed a motion to amend and/or

reconsider the PCR court’s July 2020 judgment so that it would not apply to any of the deferred

sentences in the plea agreement. The State opposed the modification, arguing that all charges

should be returned to their status prior to the plea agreement.

¶ 8. In October 2020, the PCR court granted petitioner’s request to amend its prior

decision. The PCR court did not respond to the State’s contract law claims, instead finding that it

lacked jurisdiction over petitioner’s deferred sentences and thus could not consider these

3 arguments. The PCR court examined 13 V.S.A. § 7131, which states that a court has jurisdiction

over a PCR action when a petitioner is “in custody under sentence” for the conviction being

challenged. 13 V.S.A. § 7131; In re Chandler, 2013 VT 10, ¶ 10, 193 Vt. 246, 67 A.3d 261. The

PCR court found petitioner was not “under sentence” for the charges that resulted in a deferred

sentence. It cited State v. Yates, where this Court held that a deferred sentence is not considered

a sentence unless a defendant violates the deferred sentence’s terms, and the court imposes a

sentence. 169 Vt. 20, 22, 726 A.2d 483, 485 (1999). Therefore, petitioner, who successfully

completed the five-year period covered by the deferred sentences, was never “in custody under

sentence” for those charges.

¶ 9. The PCR court similarly concluded here that it did not have jurisdiction to make

any ruling as to the ten charges that resulted in deferred sentences and it amended its July 2020

judgment accordingly. The court clarified that it vacated the convictions on petitioner’s three

remaining charges—the 2012 aggravated domestic assault felony, the 2013 aggravated domestic

assault felony, and the 2013 DWI felony—and left the ten deferred sentences and expungements

intact.

¶ 10. The State appeals the PCR court’s decision. It argues under contract law that

petitioner materially breached the plea agreement when he sought post-conviction relief for some

but not all the counts to which he pled no contest pursuant to the plea agreement. As a result, the

State asserts, petitioner should be placed in the same position he was in before the plea agreement,

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Related

In re Chandler
2013 VT 10 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2013)
In Re LaMountain
752 A.2d 24 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2000)
State v. Yates
726 A.2d 483 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
Verrill v. Dewey
299 A.2d 182 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1972)
Subud of Woodstock, Inc. v. Town of Barnard
732 A.2d 749 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
In re Gregory S. FitzGerald
2020 VT 14 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2020)
State v. Brooks
750 A.2d 1000 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2000)

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2021 VT 91, 268 A.3d 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brian-shannon-vt-2021.