In re Kenneth Barber, Jr., Theodore C. Smith, Jr., Danielle M. Rousseau, John Burke

2018 VT 78, 195 A.3d 364
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 10, 2018
Docket2015-451, 2016-159, 2016-241, 2016-277
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2018 VT 78 (In re Kenneth Barber, Jr., Theodore C. Smith, Jr., Danielle M. Rousseau, John Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kenneth Barber, Jr., Theodore C. Smith, Jr., Danielle M. Rousseau, John Burke, 2018 VT 78, 195 A.3d 364 (Vt. 2018).

Opinion

EATON, J.

*368 ¶ 1. This case raises the question of whether this Court's decision in In re Bridger , 2017 VT 79 , --- Vt. ----, 176 A.3d 489 , regarding the requirements of Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(f) is retroactive to cases already final on direct review. We conclude that Bridger announced a new criminal procedural rule and that the new rule does not apply to cases where direct review was concluded at the time Bridger was decided. Thus, in those cases, pending or future collateral proceedings must be evaluated under pre- Bridger standards. Under the then-existing standard, we affirm the decisions in In re Barber , In re Smith , and In re Burke , and reverse and remand the decision in In re Rousseau.

¶ 2. The four petitioners in these consolidated appeals all pled guilty to criminal offenses between 2005 and 2013. After the appeal period had passed, they initiated collateral challenges to their convictions by filing post-conviction relief (PCR) petitions and argued that the plea colloquies in their criminal cases did not comply with Rule 11(f). The PCR courts denied their petitions and all petitioners appealed. While the appeals of those petitions were pending, this Court decided In re Bridger , 2017 VT 79 , --- Vt. ----, 176 A.3d 489 , holding that Rule 11(f) requires a plea colloquy to include the defendant's personal admission of the facts underlying the offense, that oral or written stipulations cannot satisfy the requirement, and that substantial compliance does not apply in determining whether the colloquy was satisfactory. Petitioners seek to apply the Bridger decision to their cases. 1

¶ 3. The threshold question is whether Bridger applies retroactively to cases where direct review was over, but a collateral proceeding was pending. At the outset, we recognize that Bridger itself was a collateral proceeding insofar as Bridger pled guilty and was sentenced in 2010 but did not challenge the adequacy of the plea until his PCR proceeding in 2015. Nonetheless, this Court reached the substantive issue and applied the holding to Bridger. Shortly thereafter, this Court applied Bridger to another pending collateral proceeding. See In re Gabree , 2017 VT 84 , ¶¶ 9-11, --- Vt. ----, 176 A.3d 1113 (concluding that plea did not comply with Rule 11(f) because petitioner did not independently affirm factual basis as required by Bridger ). Retroactivity was not raised by the parties in either appeal and the majority decisions did not address it. 2

*369 ¶ 4. Several other PCR appeals, which contained Rule 11(f) challenges, were placed on waiting status pending resolution of the Bridger appeal. After Bridger was decided, the parties filed supplemental briefing and the State argued that Bridger announced a new rule that should not be applied retroactively to these cases on collateral review.

¶ 5. This Court has not directly addressed the question of how retroactivity should be resolved for cases on PCR review. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the prospective or retroactive effect of a decision is a "threshold question" that should be decided at the time of the decision. Teague v. Lane , 489 U.S. 288 , 300, 109 S.Ct. 1060 , 103 L.Ed.2d 334 (1989). The Court explained that failure to address the issue initially may jeopardize "evenhanded justice" because the holding would not be applied to all similarly situated individuals. Id.

¶ 6. We agree that rather than waiting for a subsequent case in which to determine the scope of a rule's effect, retroactivity should be determined as a threshold matter, even if not specifically raised by the parties, and now adopt that procedure. Unfortunately, having not adopted this framework prior to Bridger , this Court did not reach the question at that time and now risks uneven application of the law, which the threshold determination is meant to preclude. Nonetheless, having now adopted this process, we turn to the question of Bridger's retroactive application.

I. Retroactive Application

¶ 7. The "general rule [is] that judicial decisions are applied retroactively." Am. Trucking Ass'ns v. Conway , 152 Vt. 363 , 377, 566 A.2d 1323 , 1332 (1989). However, this is not always the case when a new rule of law is announced. Several decades ago this Court adopted the common law rule that a change in the law will be given effect to cases on direct review. State v. Shattuck , 141 Vt. 523 , 529, 450 A.2d 1122 , 1125 (1982). Subsequently, this Court more precisely defined the bounds of retroactivity, explaining that our rule "does not differ in any significant respect from the federal rule." 3 State v. White , 2007 VT 113 , ¶ 11, 182 Vt. 510 , 944 A.2d 203 . In

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Bluebook (online)
2018 VT 78, 195 A.3d 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kenneth-barber-jr-theodore-c-smith-jr-danielle-m-rousseau-vt-2018.