Scott, Carroll Glenn
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Opinion
I join in the Court's order denying applicant habeas corpus relief because he failed to prove that his appellate attorney did not advise him of his right to file a petition for discretionary review. As a separate matter, however, I think applicant is also barred by the doctrine of laches from raising this issue twelve years after his conviction was affirmed by the court of appeals.
I.
Applicant retained an attorney and his law firm to represent him at trial and, later, on appeal. A jury found applicant guilty of attempted capital murder and burglary of a habitation on November 8, 1991. The court of appeals affirmed his convictions on August 25, 1993. (1) In his application for a writ of habeas corpus filed in 2005, applicant made numerous allegations of ineffective assistance against his attorney, (2) including: 1) failure to investigate the case; 2) failure to investigate the applicable law; 3) failure to cite and argue the applicable law on a defendant's right to elect at trial; 4) failure to cite and argue the applicable law on a defendant's right to a jury instruction on lesser-included offenses at trial; 5) failure to move for a directed verdict; 6) failure to object to an incomplete jury verdict; 6) allowing applicant to suffer a double jeopardy violation; and 7) "abandon[ing] the appeal during the appellate process by failing to file the petition for discretionary review and failing to advise defendant of his appellate and postconviction remedy rights."
The written trial and appellate record refuted all of applicant's factual allegations except for the claim that his counsel abandoned him by failing to file a petition for discretionary review. The habeas court requested applicant's former attorney to respond to this last assertion. Counsel did so. He filed a three page affidavit setting out his recollections of this client, his trial, and his appeal after consulting with two other attorneys in his law firm. The attorney admitted that neither he nor his law firm still had the written file pertaining to applicant's case. This is not surprising. The trial was in 1991; the court of appeals rendered its decision in mid-1993; and applicant's counsel was not asked to submit an affidavit until June 10, 2005. That is almost twelve full years after applicant's conviction was affirmed on appeal.
The statute of limitations for filing a legal malpractice claim is two years; (3) the statute
of limitations for filing grievance claims against an attorney is four years. (4)
A reasonable
attorney should be able to rely upon the statute of limitations for malpractice or grievance
actions as a general guide for maintaining client files, at least in the absence of any comments
or complaints by the former client. I cannot fault applicant's former attorney for failing to
keep his written file on applicant's case for these past twelve years because applicant
apparently never suggested that his former attorney's representation was deficient until 2005. Nonetheless, applicant's attorney, aided by the official record, did a thorough job of
reconstructing his recollection of this client and his representation. His response to
applicant's numerous complaints of ineffective assistance was clear, coherent, and logical.
Regarding the complaint that he "abandoned" applicant on appeal, his former attorney stated: We raised all the issues that we raised at trial, and then some, e.g., the
improper admission of evidence, the lack of evidence, double jeopardy
violations, objections to the jury charge, refusing requested defense
instructions to the charge, etc. Unfortunately, his convictions were still
affirmed by the Third Court of Appeals. See Scott v. State, 861 S.W.2d 44
(Tex. App. - Austin, 1993, no pet.). Second, I have no independent
recollection of the circumstances involving the filing of a Petition for
Discretionary Review on Mr. Scott's behalf. If the opinion on direct appeal
affirmed the defendant's conviction, my firm's usual practice was to advise the
client that he or she had the right to file a PDR with the Court of Criminal
Appeals within a certain time. I had spoken with . . . the attorneys who
worked with me on this case, and neither has documentation of that being done
in this case. Therefore, all I can say is that it was our usual practice to advise
the client of the appellate decision, and of his right to file a PDR and we have
no reason to believe that was not done in this case. And what evidence is there that counsel's usual practice was not followed in this case?
Only applicant's bare assertion. Applicant made numerous assertions about his attorney's
representation, but all of them were refuted by the record except for this single one. On
applicant's assertion alone, the trial court recommended that applicant be given an out-of-time PDR. The chain of logic is as follows: But, as the Court observes, it is the applicant who must prove, by a preponderance of
the evidence, that his attorney was constitutionally deficient before he might be entitled to
relief on a writ of habeas corpus. (6) I think that applicant's unsupported claim-made twelve
years after the fact-is insufficient to prove his attorney actually failed to give him notice of
his right to file a PDR, especially because applicant's numerous other assertions against his
attorney were refuted by the written record. Those previous inaccurate assertions would
logically count against applicant's credibility on this final claim. Turning to the issue of tardiness, I also conclude that applicant is barred by the
doctrine of laches from obtaining relief on this claim. He has provided no explanation why
he waited twelve years after his conviction was affirmed to bring this claim. He has failed
to show any compelling circumstances which would call for equitable relief. There is no
suggestion that applicant's conviction was wrongly affirmed by the court of appeals, or that
giving applicant the opportunity to file a petition for discretionary review is likely to lead to
anything other than a pro forma exercise in futility.
1. Applicant did not file a PDR;
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