Leger v. State

2017 UT App 217, 409 P.3d 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 24, 2017
Docket20150723-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2017 UT App 217 (Leger v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leger v. State, 2017 UT App 217, 409 P.3d 79 (Utah Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1 After Victim accused Nicholas J. Leger of beating, strangling, and raping her, Leger pled guilty to attempted aggravated sexual assault. Five years later, Leger petitioned for post-conviction relief, which the district court denied. Because we agree with the district court that the claims made in the petition were either time-barred or meritless, we- affirm the court’s denial of the petition.

BACKGROUND

¶2 In November of 2007, Victim and Leger walked into a grocery store to buy cigarettes. Victim’s face was red, bruised, and swollen; her lip was cut and swollen; and she had réd marks on her throat. "When Leger left Victim alone at the customer service counter, Victim passed a note, asking an employee to call the police. The employee complied and led Victim to a secure room, but not before Leger saw them and gave chase. Leger failed to reach Victim before she made it into the room, and he fled the store.

¶3 When the police arrived, Victim was crying, upset, and “nearly hyperventilating.” She reported that before coming to the store, Leger had “beat, strangled, bit, spit on, screamed obscenities at, threatened to kill, sexually assaulted, and ultimately raped” her. Police found Leger hiding at a friend’s house. He maintained that he had not raped Victim but had instead had “mad sex” with her. According to Leger, the marks' on Victim’s neck were the result of, consensual strangulation during sex. Victim disputed this, and at a preliminary hearing she testified that her relationship with Leger never involved consensual violent sexual behavior.

¶4 As a result of a plea bargain, Leger pled guilty to attempted aggravated sexual abuse in August of 2008. Shortly thereafter, he filed a pro se motion to withdraw his plea, which motion he abandoned at the sentencing hearing in October of that same year. Leger was sentenced to a prison term of three years to life. Leger did not appeal.

¶5 In November of 2013, Leger filed a petition for post-conviction relief; he claimed that there was newly discovered evidence in his case, his plea was not voluntary, and his trial counsel’s performance had been deficient. The State filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Leger’s claims were time-barred or, alternatively, failed as a matter of law. The district court agreed that all but one of Leger’s claims were untimely— because Leger was aware or should have been aware of the facts underlying the claims within one year after his .criminal case became final- — and granted the State’s motion in part. For the one remaining claim, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the district court denied the summary judgment motion and set an evidentiary hearing for the issue.

¶6 At the evidentiary hearing, the district-court heard testimony from trial counsel and Leger. The focus of the hearing was Leger’s claim that his trial counsel performed defi-ciently when he failed to retain a forensic nurse to review Victim’s injuries. In Leger’s view, a forensic nurse would have been able to show that Victim’s injuries were caused “3 to 5 days earlier” than the events in question. Trial counsel testified that Leger never mentioned to him nor gave him reason to believe that Victim’s injuries, were old. And because Victim’s injuries “were entirely consistent with the consensual sex that the defense intended to float at trial” — that is, a consensual strangulation defense — trial counsel determined that “hiring a forensic nurse to examine the injuries was not necessary.” This defense was consistent with Leger’s statements to police and trial counsel. The district court found that trial counsel performed effectively and that hiring a forensic nurse to testify that Victim’s injuries were old “would have been inconsistent with and detrimental to Leger’s defense.” 1 Accordingly, the district court denied Leger’s petition for post-conviction relief. Leger now appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶7 Leger argues that the district court erroneously granted summary judgment in .favor of the State on his petition for pqst-convietion relief. The district court’s errors, he contends, are four-fold: (1) the district court erroneously concluded that Leger’s challenge to the validity of his guilty plea was time-barred because he was aware of the facts supporting the challenge at the time he entered his plea; (2) the district court erroneously concluded that Leger’s claim that the State withheld exculpatory evidence was time-barred for the same reason; 2 (3) the district court erroneously--concluded that Leger’s ineffective-assistance claims were time-barred to the extent they relied on facts related to his challenge to the validity of his plea; and (4) the district court erroneously concluded that trial counsel provided effective assistance despite his failure to retain a forensic nurse.

¶8 For Leger’s challenges to the district court’s grant of summary judgment, we review the court’s ruling for correctness; we will affirm if “the record shows that there is -no genuine issue as to any- material fact and .that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Menzies v. State, 2014 UT 40, ¶ 30, 344 P.3d 581 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). And for Leger’s challenge to the district court’s denial of his-petition, “we review the post-conviction court’s legal conclusions for correctness- and its factual findings for clear error.” Tillman v. State, 2005 UT 56, ¶ 14, 128 P.3d 1123.

ANALYSIS

I.. Summary Judgment

¶9 The district court granted summary judgment in favor-of the State on all but one of Leger’s claims. In doing so, the court determined that at the time he entered his guilty plea, Leger “was aware, or through the exercise of reasonable diligence should have been aware” of the evidentiary facts supporting the claims on which the court entered summary judgment. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-9-107(2)(e) (LexisNexis Supp. 2017) (providing that a cause of action for post-conviction relief accrues when a petitioner “knew or should have known, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, of evidentiary facts on which the petition is based”). Accordingly, the court determined that those claims were time-barred because they were not brought “within one year after the cause of' action” accrued — in this case within one year from “the last day for filing an appeal from the entry of the final judgment of conviction.” See id. § 78B-9-107(l), (2)(a). 3

¶10 On appeal, Leger’s challenges to the grant of summary judgment fall into three categories: the voluntariness of his guilty plea, the withholding of potentially exculpatory evidence, and ineffective assistance of trial counsel.

A. Voluntariness

1Í11 In his petition for post-conviction relief, Leger alleged that his plea was not voluntary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT App 217, 409 P.3d 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leger-v-state-utahctapp-2017.