Perry v. State

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 7, 2010
DocketPM No. 02-1591
StatusPublished

This text of Perry v. State (Perry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. State, (R.I. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DECISION
Petitioner Joseph Perry is before this Court on his application for post-conviction relief pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 10-9.1-1. Mr. Perry claims that the trial justice assigned to criminal court Case No. P1/94-0686A had an obligation to recuse himself, and that Mr. Perry received ineffective assistance of counsel. Mr. Perry's claims are based on the fact that the trial justice represented Mr. Perry almost two decades earlier in a Family Court matter. The facts of this case center on a conversation which took place in the Providence County Superior Court cell block in 1995 or 1996 wherein Mr. Perry allegedly informed his attorney that he had previously been represented by the trial justice.

I. Travel
In 1995, Mr. Joseph Perry and his cousin, David Perry were tried before Justice Needham on several counts.1 Although Joseph Perry was found guilty on the assault with a deadly weapon and conspiracy charges, the jury was deadlocked on the homicide count. The two Perry cousins received a second trial before Mr. Justice Sheehan on the homicide count in 1998. After several days of trial, Joseph Perry was found guilty of murder and sentenced to a term of life *Page 2 imprisonment. Notably, Mr. Perry does not presently question whether he committed the homicide2, nor does he suggest that Justice Sheehan remembered Mr. Perry.

II. Findings of Fact
Justice Sheehan, prior to his appointment to the Superior Court, represented Joseph Perry at two separate judicial proceedings in the Rhode Island Family Court in 1978 and 1980 when Mr. Perry was between 16 and 18 years old. In one of these instances, Mr. Perry had been charged with delinquency resulting from an alleged armed robbery of a drug store in Rumford, Rhode Island. During the period preceding his appointment to the bench, Justice Sheehan maintained an extensive criminal defense practice and represented countless clients.

Joseph Perry proceeded to the re-trial of the 1998 homicide and conspiracy charges before Mr. Justice Sheehan in 1998. During these proceedings, he was represented by Attorney Robert Mann. No conflict or alleged conflict was ever brought to the attention of Mr. Justice Sheehan. No conflict was ever disclosed on the record, nor was a mistrial requested for Judge Sheehan's former representation of Mr. Perry. Mr. Perry did not ask his attorney to tell the Judge of the alleged conflict. Mr. Perry did not object to Justice Sheehan presiding over the trial. Mr. Perry was convicted of murder in the first degree. Four years later, in 2002 he instituted this action for post-conviction relief. Judge Sheehan passed away in 2002. Mr. Perry's co-defendant, David Perry, also passed away several years ago. *Page 3

III. Discussion of Evidence
Mr. Perry requests several other findings of fact. This Court, after reviewing all of the evidence and testimony before it, is unable to make the findings. In particular, Mr. Perry suggests that he had a conversation with his attorney, Attorney Mann, in the cellblock of the Providence County Courthouse during the trial. Mr. Perry alleges that in this conversation, he informed Attorney Mann that Justice Sheehan represented him in the past. However, this Court cannot reach this finding of fact. Although Attorney Mann delivered a thorough and complete testimony, he had no recollection of this important event. Both Mr. Perry and Thomas Gatone — another individual professing that he was in the cell block at the time of the alleged conversation — presented testimony which was neither convincing nor credible.

Mr. Gatone's testimony was not credible. During his testimony, the Court found Mr. Gatone's demeanor, coupled with his contradiction of the dates of the alleged conversation, to severely impinge upon his credibility. After it was suggested that his timeline was incorrect, Mr. Gatone's own words were, "I can't remember day by day." Therefore, it was difficult to ascertain whether the alleged conversation with Attorney Mann occurred during the trial, before the sentencing, or at some other time. Given Mr. Gatone's lack of credibility, the Court cannot find that he witnessed any such conversation.

The Court did not find Mr. Perry credible. Not only was Mr. Perry's testimony completely self-serving, but he continually changed what happened when. Following his conviction, Mr. Perry filed an appeal with our Supreme Court in October of 1998. His appeal was heard and denied in 2001. Mr. Perry filed his original application for post conviction relief in March of 2002. This original application made no mention of Justice Sheehan's prior representation of Mr. Perry. It was not until amended applications were filed on March 17, 2005, *Page 4 seven years after his conviction, that Mr. Perry brought this issue to light. The amended application asserts that Mr. Perry disclosed Justice Sheehan's representation to Attorney Mann during pre-trial conversations. However, the testimony of both Mr. Perry and Mr. Gatone sharply conflict with the petition's timeline. The two witnesses apparently assert that the conversation wherein Attorney Mann was allegedly informed of Justice Sheehan's prior representation of Mr. Perry would have occurred, if at all, during the trial itself or shortly before the sentencing.

Attorney Mann testified during the course of the post-conviction trial. He carefully selected his words, and clearly attempted to recall the events of 12 years ago. The Court found Attorney Mann highly credible. While the counselor displaced an obligation of loyalty to his client, he answered questions directly, out of a commitment to his oath. Attorney Mann recalled Mr. Perry's case, but did not recall any discussion of a conflict regarding Justice Sheehan's prior representation of Mr. Perry. Attorney Mann credibly testified that when a conflict is suspected he routinely discusses that conflict at length with the client. Given the length and significance of Mr. Perry's trial, Attorney Mann testified that, had there been such a conflict, he would have had an in-depth discussion with Mr. Perry at a location outside of the courthouse cell block. During that conversation, the attorney and the client would discuss the strategic options and decide whether or not to disclose the potential conflict to the judge and whether to ask the judge to recuse himself. Attorney Mann does not recall having any such conversation or having been informed of an alleged conflict by Mr. Perry at this trial.

For all of the foregoing reasons, this Court is unable to find that Mr. Perry and Attorney Mann discussed Justice Sheehan's prior representation of Mr. Perry in the cell block of the Providence County Courthouse during Mr. Perry's trial. Similarly, the evidence before this *Page 5 Court does not lead to a finding that such a conversation took place between Mr. Perry and Attorney Mann at any time or any place, prior to Mr. Perry's sentencing.

The Court also finds no showing that Mr. Justice Sheehan was influenced by, or even knew that, he represented Mr. Perry some twenty years earlier. There has been no showing in the record that Mr. Justice Sheehan acted with any prejudice, malice, or predisposition against Mr. Perry. Nor does it appear that Mr. Justice Sheehan even recognized that there was a possible conflict. Even Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Perry v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-state-risuperct-2010.