Randy Scott Meyers v. State of Iowa
This text of Randy Scott Meyers v. State of Iowa (Randy Scott Meyers v. State of Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-0935 Filed July 13, 2023
RANDY SCOTT MEYERS Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Marlita A. Greve,
Judge.
Randy Meyers appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.
AFFIRMED.
Katherine N. Flickinger of Hastings & Gartin Law Partners, LLP, Ames, for
appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Sheryl Soich, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Chicchelly and Buller, JJ. 2
CHICCHELLY, Judge.
Randy Meyers appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief
(PCR). He alleges his trial and appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance
by failing to ensure the State complied with the statute of limitations for two of the
four offenses with which he was charged. We find Meyers cannot prove his
counsel breached an essential duty by opting not to object to the amended trial
information. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s denial of his application.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
On March 7, 2007, the State charged Meyers with two counts of sexual
abuse in the third degree. An amended trial information was formally approved on
February 8, 2008, which included those two charges and two additional counts:
lascivious acts with a minor and distribution of a schedule II controlled substance
to a person under eighteen years of age. All of the acts were alleged to have
occurred between September 1, 2004, and January 21, 2005. At the time the
offenses were committed, the statute of limitations for the two additional charges
was three years. See Iowa Code § 802.3 (2005) (providing a three-year limitations
period for felonies not otherwise specified and for aggravated and serious
misdemeanors).
Following a bench trial, the court found Meyers guilty of all four counts
charged. Meyers was sentenced to serve a total of seventy-seven years in prison
with each count running consecutively. Our supreme court upheld his convictions
for sexual abuse and lascivious acts with a minor.1 See State v. Meyers, 799
1 Meyers did not appeal from his conviction for distribution of a controlled substance to a minor. 3
N.W.2d 132, 135 (Iowa 2011). Meyers filed a pro se PCR application in June 2011.
The application was amended in December 2020. The district court denied the
PCR application in its entirety in May 2022. Meyers filed a timely appeal, which
we review de novo. See Linn v. State, 929 N.W.2d 717, 729 (Iowa 2019).
II. Discussion.
“To prevail on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the claimant must
satisfy the two-prong test by proving that his trial counsel failed to perform an
essential duty and prejudice resulted.” State v. Majors, 940 N.W.2d 372, 391 (Iowa
2020) (citation omitted) (describing the two-prong test for ineffective assistance of
counsel claims set out in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)).
With regard to the first prong, we presume counsel performed competently unless
proven otherwise by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. Our test is measured
objectively against the prevailing professional norms. Id. To establish the
prejudice required of the second prong, “the claimant must prove by a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s failure to perform an essential duty, the result of
the proceeding would have been different.” Id. (citation omitted). This second
prong requires a showing that “the probability of a different result is ‘sufficient to
undermine [our] confidence in the outcome’ of the trial.” Id. (citation omitted)
(alteration in original). “A defendant’s inability to prove either element is fatal.” Id.
(citation omitted).
Meyers alleges his trial counsel breached an essential duty by failing to
object to the addition of two offenses after the expiration of the statute of limitations.
Being a three-year window, the statute of limitations for both of the added charges
expired on January 21, 2008—eighteen days before the amended trial information 4
was formally approved. See Iowa Code § 802.3. Nonetheless, the State argues
Meyers’s claim must fail because Meyers was well-aware of the two additional
charges throughout the pre-trial process. In fact, the State initially filed an
application to amend the trial information for the purpose of adding the additional
charges against Meyers on November 16, 2007—well within the limitations period.
However, the parties were involved in plea negotiations that would not require the
amendment of the trial information. After plea negotiations proved unsuccessful,
the court held a hearing on the State’s motion and ultimately formally approved the
amended trial information on February 8.
We find the State’s focus on the November 16 filing appropriate here. It
was at this time that Meyers and his counsel made a strategic decision not to object
to the State adding charges. Meyers could have objected to the suitability of
amendment,2 but doing so was not an essential duty of counsel. After all, criminal
defendants frequently agree to permit the State to add new charges by amending
a trial information, rather than insist on the filing of a separate information, for a
variety of reasons. These reasons range from continuing present bond conditions
to preferring matters be tried in a single case rather than costly successive
prosecutions. Meyers had ten days in which to respond to the State’s amended
pleading in November. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.441(4) (setting forth deadline to
respond to an amended pleading); Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.34(2) (establishing that
2 The State concedes that the two additional charges were not “wholly new and different” and thus not properly subject to amendment. See State v. Vandermark, 965 N.W.2d 888, 891–92 (Iowa 2021) (applying the well-established principle that “an amendment charge[s] a wholly new and different offense where the amended charge both increase[s] the potential punishment and charge[s] an offense with different or additional elements”). 5
“[s]ervice and filing of written motions, notices, orders and other similar papers
shall be in the manner provided in civil actions”). If Meyers had timely objected to
the application for amendment in November, the State in all likelihood would have
remedied the situation by filing a separate trial information charging the third and
fourth offenses—with plenty of time left before expiration of the statute of
limitations.
As Meyers’s trial counsel explained in the postconviction matter, the
additional charges were “all part and parcel in [his] view of the State’s theory of the
case.” Consequently, the State likely could have filed a successful motion for
joinder of the second trial information with the first, resulting in exactly the same
trial unfolding with exactly the same outcome. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.6(1).
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