Rowland v. State

219 P.3d 1212, 289 Kan. 1076, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 1079
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 20, 2009
Docket98,351
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 219 P.3d 1212 (Rowland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. State, 219 P.3d 1212, 289 Kan. 1076, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 1079 (kan 2009).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beier, J.;

This case arises out of a denial of movant Jerry L. Rowland’s K.S.A. 60-1507 motion after appointment of counsel *1078 and a preliminary hearing. Rowland attempts to pursue a claim that the evidence against him was insufficient, as well as alleging ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel. The peculiar procedural path of Rowland’s claims compels us to reexamine the procedure to be followed when a criminal defendant alleges ineffective assistance of counsel during direct appeal or on K.S.A. 60-1507 motion.

Factual and Procedural Rackground

The State charged Rowland with one count of aggravated burglary, one count of rape, and one count of aggravated criminal sodomy. At trial, the victim, R.C., testified that she woke up to discover Rowland standing in the doorway’ of her bedroom. Although she struggled with Rowland, he overpowered her and penetrated her anally and vaginally.

As Rowland left, R.C. further testified, she followed him, locking the exterior door to her apartment behind him. She then saw Rowland reach through a window and unlock the door, and she immediately took refuge in a bathroom. She called police from her cell phone. While on the phone, R.C. could hear Rowland walking around her apartment. Rowland also banged on the bathroom door once but did not try to enter the room, even though the bathroom door had no lock.

During defense counsel’s cross-examination of R.C., he established that (1) Rowland had been a friend of R.C.’s boyfriend; (2) R.C. did not like Rowland; (3) R.C. did not scream for help; (4) R.C.’s cell phone had been next to her bed during the attack; and (5) R.C. called her boyfriend and her mother from the bathroom before she called the police.

Kathy Gill-Hopple, an advanced registered nurse practitioner who examined R.C. on the morning of the crimes, testified at trial that R.C. had told her during the exam:

“[S]he was at home asleep in her bed about 7:00 in the morning, and she woke up and her neighbor, [Rowland], was on top other, ripping her underwear .... She tried to push him off other, and he pushed her back down, and then she said he was inside of her. . . .
*1079 “. . . She was pushing him, and finally he left. At that point she got up and locked the door, went into the bathroom, called her mother and her boyfriend, and while she was in the bathroom, he came back through the kitchen window. She locked the bathroom door, and he was banging on the door and asked who [she] was calling. Then she said he got his stuff and left.”

The jury convicted Rowland of aggravated burglary and of attempted rape as a lesser included offense of rape. It deadlocked on the aggravated criminal sodomy charge.

On direct appeal to our Court of Appeals, Rowland argued that the trial judge erred by failing to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication. He also argued that he was denied his right to counsel, to due process, and to a fair trial because:

“Defense counsel confessed guilt in opening statement, and then placed [Rowland] on the stand and elicited a confession to the crime from him. In closing, counsel argued to the jury that [Rowland] should be found guilty of lesser included offenses of the charged offenses, even though [Rowland] had asserted his innocence. Finally, counsel also failed to request an instruction on voluntary intoxication that would have informed the jury that [Rowland] had a defense to the charges.”

The Court of Appeals panel ruled that the omission of a jury instruction on voluntary intoxication was not clearly erroneous, because the record did not demonstrate that Rowland was unable to form the requisite intent to commit rape because alcohol or drags impaired his mental faculties. State v. Rowland, No. 90,128, unpublished opinion filed July 23, 2004.

The panel also rejected Rowland’s argument that his trial counsel was ineffective. After reciting the two-pronged standard for such claims — objectively unreasonable performance by counsel and prejudice arising from that performance — the panel’s entire discussion of the merits of the claim was contained in one brief paragraph. It read:

“The record provides no evidence the defendant’s representation at trial constituted a breakdown of the adversarial system of justice. Every allegation concerning trial counsel’s admissions of the defendant’s guilt is unsubstantiated by the record on appeal.” Rowland, slip op. at 2.

The defense had not requested a remand to the district court for a hearing on the ineffective assistance of counsel claim under *1080 State v. Van Cleave, 239 Kan. 117, 120, 716 P.2d 580 (1986), and the panel had not required one. Rather, the panel characterized Rowland’s claim as one of the few ineffective assistance claims that could be decided on direct appeal on the record as it stood at that time. Rowland, slip op. at 1-2 (citing State v. Carter, 270 Kan. 426, 433, 14 P.3d 1138 [2000]).

Rowland later filed the pro se K.S.A. 60-1507 motion that is the subject of this appeal. He argued that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of aggravated burglary and attempted rape. To support this claim, Rowland asserted that R.C.’s testimony at trial contradicted information she had provided to the police.

“[R.C.] initiated communication with law enforcement and gave die following statements!:] ‘[T]hat [Rowland] ripped her underwear off[;] that [Rowland] entered the home a second time through tire kitchen windowf; and] that she had locked the bedroom door.’
“When testifying under oath, [R.C.’s] testimony differed] from the testimony she gave initially to officers, under oath she testified[: (1)] ‘that [Rowland] pulled her panties to the side, that they weren’t off[;] (2) that there wasn’t a lock on the bathroom door[;] and (3) that she saw [Rowland] reaching in the window from the kitchen.’ ”

Rowland’s sufficiency challenge also relied upon what he asserted was an absence of evidence of his specific intent and, otherwise, to prove he raped R.C.

In addition, Rowland’s pro se motion argued that his trial “counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” He contended that his counsel’s failure to challenge inconsistencies in R.C.’s testimony affected the outcome of the trial.

The district judge rejected Rowland’s motion after appointing counsel and conducting a preliminary hearing to entertain legal arguments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 P.3d 1212, 289 Kan. 1076, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-state-kan-2009.