JEFFREY D. JENDRO v. STATE OF MISSOURI

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
DocketSD37537
StatusPublished

This text of JEFFREY D. JENDRO v. STATE OF MISSOURI (JEFFREY D. JENDRO v. STATE OF MISSOURI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JEFFREY D. JENDRO v. STATE OF MISSOURI, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District

In Division

JEFFREY D. JENDRO, ) ) Appellant, ) ) No. SD 37537 v. ) ) Filed: December 6, 2023 STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF NEWTON COUNTY

Honorable James Nichols, Judge

AFFIRMED IN PART, DISMISSED IN PART

Jeffrey Jendro appeals the denial of his Rule 29.151 motion for postconviction

relief. We affirm the order in regard to points I, II, and III on appeal and dismiss points

IV and V.

Background

Movant Jeffrey Jendro was convicted by a jury of statutory rape in the first degree

and statutory sodomy in the first degree. This court affirmed his convictions. State v.

Jendro, 242 S.W.3d 752 (Mo.App. 2007).2 He raised two points in that appeal, both

1 Rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2008). 2 The facts underlying Jendro’s conviction are recited in the opinion affirming Jendro’s convictions on direct

appeal. See State v. Jendro, 242 S.W.3d 752 (Mo.App. 2007). Those facts will be repeated here only as they are necessary to review the Rule 29.15 motion. challenging portions of the prosecution’s closing arguments to the jury. Id. at 754. First,

Jendro claimed the trial court committed plain error in failing to stop the prosecution

from making statements that Jendro was an “animal” that should be “caged.” Id. Second,

he claimed that the trial court committed plain error in failing to intervene sua sponte to

prevent the prosecutor from urging the jury to convict Jendro because he posed a future

danger. Id. In its review for plain error, this court held that Jendro failed to show that

the purported errors resulted in a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice because the

challenged arguments “had no decisive effect on the outcome of the trial.” Id. at 754-55.

This court issued its mandate on January 15, 2008. On March 10, 2008, Jendro

filed a pro se motion to vacate, set aside, or correct judgment or sentence pursuant to Rule

29.15 in which he asserted 34 claims for postconviction relief. On the same day, the

motion court ordered the Missouri State Public Defender (“Public Defender”) to represent

Jendro on his motion for postconviction relief and granted 60 days to file an amended

motion. On March 26, 2008, counsel (“first counsel”) entered his appearance and

requested an additional 30 days to file an amended motion, which the trial court granted

on March 31, 2008, extending the deadline for filing of the amended motion to June 9,

2008. First counsel filed the amended motion for postconviction relief on June 6, 2008.

It contained three new claims and none of Jendro’s pro se claims. See Jendro v. State,

453 S.W.3d 333, 334 (Mo.App. 2014).

The motion court’s docket sheet reflects that no activity occurred in the case until

July 14, 2009, when Jendro, independently and unbeknownst to his counsel, filed a

motion requesting that first counsel be required to file a second amended motion that

included Jendro’s original pro se claims, or that first counsel be removed from the case

and another attorney appointed who would be allowed to file a second amended motion

2 to include those pro se claims. In response to the motion court’s order, first counsel

responded to Jendro’s motion on August 19, 2009. He admitted he did not provide

Jendro with a copy of the amended motion before he filed it, although he did correspond

with Jendro regarding potential claims. First counsel also stated that he did not include

Jendro’s pro se claims in the amended motion for postconviction relief, but that he

“attempted to identify meritorious claims demonstrating prejudice to Movant in the

underlying criminal case, after completing a thorough review of the underlying criminal

case.” Citing Rule 29.15(g), first counsel also stated, “Additional amended motions

cannot be filed at this late of date. Undersigned counsel believes the Court would not have

jurisdiction to entertain additional amended motions at this time.”

Despite counsel’s assertion regarding the filing of subsequent amended motions,

on March 22, 2010, the motion court ruled in a docket entry, without explanation, that

Jendro had been abandoned by counsel. The motion court then allowed first counsel to

withdraw from the case and again appointed the Public Defender (“second counsel”) to

represent Jendro. On August 15, 2011, second counsel filed a second amended motion. It

comprised the three claims raised by first counsel in the first amended motion plus the

34 hand-written claims from Jendro’s original pro se motion.

The motion court held an evidentiary hearing, receiving evidence and testimony

on the second amended motion on August 19, 2011. The matter was continued until

November 22, 2011, for further hearing. No hearing was held on that date, and the court’s

docket shows that it was subsequently continued multiple times. In May 2012, Jendro

filed, independently and without assistance from counsel, a “Motion for Order of Specific

Performance or in the Alternative for Substitution of Counsel,” in which he argued that

second counsel had “[n]eglected to [s]ubpoena, [d]epose or [i]nterview all [p]arties

3 [r]elevant to [p]etitioner’s [c]laims.” Second counsel filed a motion to withdraw; a third

attorney entered the case for Jendro.

The motion court entered an order on September 18, 2013, finding that second

counsel did not abandon Jendro. The order did not resolve any of Jendro’s postconviction

claims. Jendro filed a notice of appeal from the court’s order denying his motion. This

court held that Jendro’s appeal was premature because the order appealed from was not

a final judgment. See Jendro, 453 S.W.3d 333. In the opinion dismissing that appeal,

this court made two holdings that are significant here. First, we held that first counsel’s

motion was timely filed. Id. at 334. Second, we held that “[f]irst counsel . . . correctly

informed the motion court that it could not ‘entertain additional amended motions’

beyond the maximum of 90 days permitted by Rule 29.15(g) for the filing of an amended

motion.” Id. at 335. We also acknowledged the complicated procedural history of the

case as it stood at that time. Id. (“At this point—as often occurs when movants who are

represented by counsel begin filing their own pleadings—the procedural posture of the

case begins to get complicated.”).

After dismissal of the appeal, the case languished on the motion court’s docket for

over seven years. During this interim period, Jendro was represented, sequentially, by

three additional attorneys, his case was reassigned to three different judges, and he filed

numerous motions pro se. The continued hearing on his second amended motion for

postconviction relief was scheduled, canceled, and rescheduled multiple times. That

second portion of the hearing was finally held on September 16, 2021, ten years after it

began. The motion court entered its amended findings of fact and conclusions of law on

January 21, 2022, denying all of Jendro’s claims, both those filed by counsel in the first

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
State v. JENDRO
242 S.W.3d 752 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2007)
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278 S.W.3d 170 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2009)
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