Sammie Ford, Jr. v. Lorie Davis, Director

910 F.3d 232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 2018
Docket17-50336
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 910 F.3d 232 (Sammie Ford, Jr. v. Lorie Davis, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sammie Ford, Jr. v. Lorie Davis, Director, 910 F.3d 232 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

Sammie Ford sought habeas corpus relief, claiming ineffective assistance of counsel ("IAC") when his attorney failed to convey a plea offer to him. Relying on the state court's factual findings, the district court dismissed the petition as time-barred and procedurally foreclosed. Because the presumption of correctness extends to implicit findings of fact, we affirm.

I.

Ford was charged with aggravated robbery and possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver. After pleading not guilty, he was convicted and sentenced to forty years' concurrent imprisonment on each charge. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ("TCCA") refused his petitions for discretionary review and denied his applications for habeas corpus relief.

In November 2014, Ford filed two pro se federal habeas petitions, claiming, inter alia , that his attorney was ineffective in failing to inform him of a plea offer of eight years. The state asserted that the claim was time-barred under the one-year statute of limitations in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 ("AEDPA"), which period began to run on August 7, 2012-the date on which judgment became final. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244 (d)(1)(A). Ford responded that the period should have commenced on October 7, 2013-the date when he first discovered the plea deal by reading an affidavit submitted by his trial attorney. See id . § 2244(d)(1)(D).

The district court agreed, as "common sense" suggested, that Ford may have first learned of the plea offer through the affidavit. Because state habeas proceedings were pending in October 2013, the court tolled limitations until January 2014 and ruled that Ford's claim was thus timely. See id . § 2244(d)(2). After the state conceded that the IAC claim might not be procedurally barred, the court held the case in abeyance to allow Ford an opportunity to exhaust his claim in state court.

The TCCA dismissed the claim as a subsequent habeas application under TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO. ANN. art. 11.07, § 4(a) - (c). Texas law prohibits its courts from considering a successive habeas petition unless the factual basis of the claim was unascertainable through the exercise of reasonable diligence before the filing of the first application. See id. § 4(a)(1), (c). Upon Ford's return to federal court, his claim was accordingly denied as time-barred and procedurally defaulted. The district court concluded that the state court, by citing Article 11.07, § 4(a) - (c), had implicitly determined that Ford knew or could have reasonably discovered the plea offer before October 2013.

This court granted Ford a certificate of appealability to challenge that ruling. Specifically, we held that reasonable jurists could debate whether the state court had implicitly found that Ford knew about the plea offer before filing his first postconviction applications and whether that finding was subject to the presumption of correctness.

II.

We review "the district court's findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo, applying the same standard of review that the district court applied to the state court decision." 1 A state court's factual findings are presumed to be correct, and the applicant bears the burden of rebutting that presumption by clear and convincing evidence. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (e)(1). "This deference extends not only to express findings of fact, but to the implicit findings of the state court." 2 As long as there is "some indication of the legal basis for the state court's denial of relief," the district court may infer the state court's factual findings even if they were not expressly made. 3 Ford contends that the state court never made a factual finding to which we must defer. We disagree.

A.

Under AEDPA, a prisoner may file a habeas application within one year of the latest of four discrete events. See id . § 2244(d)(1). Among those are "the date on which the judgment became final by the ... expiration of the time for seeking [direct] review" and "the date on which the factual predicate of the claim ... could have been discovered through the exercise of due diligence." Id . § 2244(d)(1)(A), (D). On May 9, 2012, the TCCA refused Ford's petitions for discretionary review. His conviction thus became final on August 7, 2012, when he failed to file a petition for writ of certiorari within ninety days of that order. 4 Hence, absent a showing that a later date controls, AEDPA's one-year limitation period commenced on August 7, 2012.

Proceeding pro se , Ford maintains that the period should have begun on October 7, 2013, when he first discovered the factual predicate of his IAC claim. But the TCCA implicitly found otherwise when considering his later applications for state habeas relief. Indeed, Ford presented two key documents before the court: (1) his trial attorney's affidavit claiming that Ford had knowingly rejected the eight-year plea deal and (2) his own sworn statement averring that he would have accepted the deal had counsel conveyed it to him. Confronted with such conflicting evidence, the TCCA dismissed the petitions as an abuse of the writ under Article 11.07, § 4(a) - (c). Because that provision bars subsequent applications for which the factual basis was previously available, the state court necessarily found that Ford knew or could have reasonably known about the plea deal before filing his first petitions.

That implicit factual finding is subject to the presumption of correctness. See Garcia , 454 F.3d at 444. Ford's bare assertion that he learned of the plea offer by reading counsel's affidavit is not enough to overcome the presumption. "Absent evidence in the record," we will not "consider a habeas petitioner's bald assertions on a critical issue in his pro se petition ... , unsupported and unsupportable by anything else contained in the record, to be of probative evidentiary value." Ross v. Estelle , 694 F.2d 1008 , 1011 (5th Cir. 1983) (per curiam) (citations omitted). Because the state court would have considered Ford's habeas petitions had it believed his testimony, "its failure to grant relief [is] tantamount to an express finding against [his] credibility."

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Bluebook (online)
910 F.3d 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sammie-ford-jr-v-lorie-davis-director-ca5-2018.