State v. Cheatham

292 P.3d 318, 296 Kan. 417
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 2013
DocketNo. 95,800
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 292 P.3d 318 (State v. Cheatham) 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
State v. Cheatham, 292 P.3d 318, 296 Kan. 417 (kan 2013).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Biles, J.:

In this capital murder case resulting from a double homicide and shooting of a third victim, Phillip D. Cheatham, Jr. [419]*419was convicted and sentenced to death. On direct appeal to this court, he claims he was denied his light to a fair trial due to ineffective assistance of counsel. Cheatham characterizes his trial attorney’s performance as a “cornucopia of. . . ineptness” based on both performance deficiencies and conflict of interest.

We bifurcated his ineffectiveness arguments from other claimed trial errors and remanded to the district court for an evidentiary hearing pursuant to State v. Van Cleave, 239 Kan. 117, 716 P.2d 580 (1986) (appellate court discretion to remand ineffective assistance of counsel allegations upon sufficient showing in a direct appeal). During that proceeding, the State disputed that Cheatham received ineffective assistance during the guilt phase but stipulated Cheatham’s attorney was ineffective during the trial’s penalty phase. See K.S.A. 2010 Supp. 21-4624 (requiring a jury to first decide a defendant’s guilt before reconvening to determine whether to impose the death penalty). The district court, which we refer to throughout this opinion as “the Van Cleave court,” reversed the death sentence because of that stipulation and ordered a new sentencing trial.

As to the guilt phase, the Van Cleave court agreed with some of Cheatham’s claims. It determined counsel was deficient in failing to file a statutorily required notice of alibi defense, as well as entering into an improper attorney fee agreement and generally lacking the experience required to try a capital murder case. The court went so far as to observe that Cheatham’s attorney “had no business taking on a death penalty case.”

But despite these findings, the court upheld Cheatham’s convictions. It found there was no showing of “a reasonable probability that, but for those deficiencies . . . the outcome of the guilt phase would have been any different.” Now before this court, Cheatham challenges several of the Van Cleave court’s rulings and its ultimate conclusion. We disagree with the Van Cleave court.

We hold that trial counsel’s representation denied Cheatham the fair trial he is guaranteed by both the federal and state constitutions. Specifically, we hold that counsel’s performance was deficient in several respects, which were most seriously problematic when he volunteered to the jury that Cheatham had a prior vol[420]*420untary manslaughter conviction and referred repeatedly to his client as a “professional drug dealer” and “shooter of people.” This denied Cheatham his right to a fair trial. We hold further that under the circumstances in this case counsel’s fee arrangement created an actual conflict of interest that adversely affected the adequacy of Cheatham’s defense. We reverse his convictions and remand the case for a new trial. This renders the other issues on appeal moot.

Factual and Procedural Background

The underlying murder trial arose after the shooting deaths of Annette Roberson and Gloria Jones and the severe wounding of Annetta Thomas at a Topeka residence on December 13, 2003. Thomas told police officers at the scene that two men entered the residence, conversed for a while, and then drew handguns and began shooting. She said she knew one of the two shooters as “KP” or “Phil.” She did not know the other man. “KP” was later identified as Cheatham.

Five days after the shootings, the State charged Cheatham with two counts of first-degree premeditated murder for the deaths of Roberson and Jones; one count of attempted murder and one count of intentional aggravated battery for shooting and then beating Thomas; and one count of criminal possession of a firearm. The State predicated the firearm’s charge on Cheatham’s 1995 voluntary manslaughter conviction.

Sometime after the shooting, but prior to his arrest, Cheatham telephoned Ira Dennis Hawver, a Kansas attorney, who at the time represented Cheatham on unrelated drug charges in Shawnee County. At the Van Cleave hearing, Hawver testified that Cheat-ham advised him during their telephone conversation that Cheat-ham was being accused of killing Roberson and Jones and shooting Thomas. Hawver said he responded by saying, ‘Well, you know, that’s ridiculous becausé you’re in Chicago and were headed that way.”

Cheatham was arrested in Chicago on December 31 under a different name and for a different offense. He was eventually extradited to Kansas, where the public defender’s office was initially [421]*421appointed to represent him. Two days after Cheatham’s first appearance in district court, Hawver became counsel of record in the murder case at Cheatham’s request, and the public defender’s office withdrew.

At the time he accepted Cheatham’s representation in this multiple murder case, which would soon transform into a capital murder proceeding, Hawver was a sole practitioner residing outside of Ozawlde, Kansas, in what Hawver described as a busy country law practice. Hawver estimated his legal business in 2005 as “high volume,” comprising about 60 percent civil cases and 40 percent criminal. He said he appeared in area courts nearly every day. His criminal caseload consisted of both misdemeanors and felonies, such as burglaries, theft, and drug-related felonies. As he later testified, his practice ran “the gamut, whatever walked into the office.”

Prior to accepting Cheatham’s representation, Hawver had tried three noncapital murder cases—two as lead counsel and one as cocounsel. All three occurred before 1985—at least 20 years before Cheatham’s capital murder trial. Hawver told the Van Cleave court that he had tried approximately 70 jury trials in his career but had never tried, or participated in the defense of, a death penalty case before accepting Cheatham’s. Hawver was not on the list maintained by the Board of Indigents’ Defense Services (BIDS) as a “death-qualified” private counsel, i.e., an attorney specifically trained to defend capital cases under standards required by that agency. See K.A.R. 105-3-2 (any BIDS appointed attorney in capital case shall be a prequalified death penalty attorney). He was on the standard criminal case appointment list for Jefferson County but not Shawnee County, where Cheatham’s case was filed.

Hawver agreed to Cheatham’s representation knowing Cheat-ham did not have money to pay for Hawver’s time or to reimburse expenses for investigators, consultants, expert witnesses, travel, photocopying, or the other substantial out-of-pocket costs usually associated with a capital murder case. Hawver later testified he never intended to use his own money to advance expenses on Cheatham’s behalf. There was no written fee agreement.

[422]*422Hawver also testified that Cheatham promised to pay a $50,000 attorney fee, but his testimony conflicts as to whether this was a flat or contingency fee. Early on, Hawver swore in an affidavit the fee would be owed only if Cheatham was acquitted, stating “I agreed to represent Mr. Cheatham on the murder charges in exchange for his promise to pay $50,000 for my time, if he was found not guilty on the charges.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 P.3d 318, 296 Kan. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cheatham-kan-2013.