Sanders v. State

564 S.W.3d 380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 2018
DocketNo. SD 35368
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 564 S.W.3d 380 (Sanders v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. State, 564 S.W.3d 380 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

DANIEL E. SCOTT, J.

We consider whether Hoeber v. State , 488 S.W.3d 648 (Mo. banc 2016), compels postconviction motion courts to categorically deem unreasonable such strategic concerns as trial counsel (Counsel) voiced here. Finding otherwise, we reverse a grant of postconviction relief and remand for further proceedings.

Background1

Colby Sanders (Movant) is serving five concurrent prison terms, effectively 40 *382years, from a jury trial for sex crimes against his child and stepchildren:

• 15 years for molesting stepdaughter B.S. (Count 1).
• 40 years for sodomizing B.S. (Count 3).
• 15 years for molesting second stepdaughter (Count 5).
• 40 years for sodomizing second stepdaughter (Count 6).
• 40 years for forcibly raping biological daughter (Count 7).2

Only Count 1 remains at issue: Movant charges IAC in not challenging the Instruction 5 verdict-director on Celis-Garcia grounds.3 The motion court initially denied this claim for lack of prejudice, citing State v. Rose , 421 S.W.3d 522, 529 (Mo. App. 2013), and Counsel's testimony that her defense theory was unitary (i.e. , all three victims were lying) rather than offense-specific. Movant filed notice of appeal on April 11, 2016.

Three weeks later, our supreme court handed down Hoeber , which stated that Celis-Garcia did not hold that a defendant "could not suffer prejudice from insufficiently specific verdict directors just because he employed a general or unitary defense." 488 S.W.3d at 657. Hoeber also disapproved Rose and similar cases to the extent they suggested otherwise. Id .

Hoeber led us to reverse the no-prejudice finding on prior appeal here, but did not end the case because "[t]he motion court did not address or make any findings whether [Counsel's] decision not to object was reasonable trial strategy per Strickland [ v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1986) ]." Sanders , 535 S.W.3d at 408. We considered the PCR record and U.S. Supreme Court precedent suggesting potential affirmance - even if failure to object was "pure oversight" - given Counsel's testimony that:

• Had she requested verdict-director specificity, she believed the prosecutor would have gotten all four incidents into the instruction.
• She "would have not been happy about that at all." To have "multiple incidents listed [in the instruction] and ... the jury then ask[ed] to reach a unanimous verdict," "would have been horrible, [and] would have been as if I was sending back trial testimony with the jury instruction."

Id . at 408-09.

Even so, we could not say from the record "as a matter of law" whether any finding, pro or con, would be clearly erroneous. Id . at 408-09. We needed the motion court to determine whether even a pure-oversight Celis-Garcia waiver could be "objectively reasonable ... in light of the testimony that there would be sound trial strategy reasons not to object." Id . at 409-10.

It must be the motion court that issues findings of fact and conclusions of law on all issues presented. Rule 29.15(k). Our *383review is limited, by rule, "to a determination of whether the findings and conclusions of the trial court are clearly erroneous. Rule 29.15(i). Without findings and conclusions by the motion court, our reviewing court must engage in a de novo review, which we are not permitted to do.

Id . at 410. We remanded for findings of fact and conclusions of law on whether Counsel's choices "were objectively reasonable." Id .4

Eighteen days after our mandate, the motion court summarily granted a new judgment based on the existing record. The court recognized that Counsel "was very experienced and skilled ... had practiced criminal law for 23 years ... first served as a federal public defender for thirteen years, and then began her own successful criminal practice in 2006," with an estimated "66 to 88 criminal jury trials" in her career.

Despite "pure oversight" in not objecting, the court also quoted and credited Counsel's testimony as follows (transcript cites omitted):

• "it 'would have been horrible' to have multiple incidents listed in the verdict director because '[i]t would have been as if I was sending back trial testimony with the jury instruction.' "
• "the prosecuting attorney would have requested that 'all alternative ways of committing the crime would have been submitted.' 'I strongly suspect that if I had raised that objection, I would have been stuck with four alternative ways, uh, going back to the jury about how this could have been committed. And I would not have been happy about that at all.' "
• Counsel's defense "was 'that the three girls were lying' " and Counsel believed Instruction 5 as given did not impact that defense.

Yet the motion court read Hoeber to categorically declare such concerns constitutionally insufficient, such that Counsel's testimony "that she did not want to highlight specific acts of molestation for the jury's consideration has been rejected as reasonable trial strategy by the Supreme Court." Feeling "compelled" by that interpretation to find IAC, the court vacated the Count 1 conviction, observing "that Movant is currently serving longer sentences on other counts from the same case, [so] this decision will have little practical effect."

Analysis

We credit the motion court's desire to scrupulously follow our supreme court's dictates, but had Hoeber "compelled" PCR, we need not have remanded for further findings. As to Strickland performance, we do not read Hoeber

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
564 S.W.3d 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-state-moctapp-2018.