Stone v. State

255 P.3d 979, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2011 WL 2610807
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 2011
DocketS-13524
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 255 P.3d 979 (Stone v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. State, 255 P.3d 979, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2011 WL 2610807 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

We granted this petition to consider the narrow question of whether under the Federal Constitution a eriminal defendant's court-appointed counsel must, upon the defendant's demand after lawful sentencing pursuant to a plea agreement, file a petition for discretionary sentence review by this court when AS 12.55.120(a) precludes an appeal of right to the court of appeals. We now answer "yes" to that question.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

David Stone was charged with manslaughter, two counts of assault, and driving under the influence. Because Stone was already on probation from earlier unrelated convictions, the State also filed petitions to revoke his probation (PTRs). Represented by an attorney from the Public Defender Agency, Stone reached an agreement with the State reducing the manslaughter charge to criminally negligent homicide and then pleaded no contest to the four charges and the PTRs. The maximum term for Stone's most serious offense was 10 years of incarceration, 1 and the plea agreement required a composite sentence between 5 and 12 years. The superior court entered judgment and sentenced Stone to a total of 18 years with 4 years suspended for the four charges and to an additional 350 days for the PTRs, leaving Stone 9 years and 350 days to serve.

Soon after judgment was entered another attorney from the Public Defender Agency asked Stone if he wished to appeal his convietion or sentence. Stone responded that he believed his sentence was ilegal under Blakely v. Washington 2 and asked for both a motion under Criminal Rule 3 and an appeal. The attorney reviewed Stone's file, spoke with Stone's previous counsel, advised Stone that given the suspended portion of his sentence it did not exceed his plea agreement cap, 4 and concluded, "I do not believe you can appeal your sentence." The attorney took no further action.

Stone petitioned pro se for post-conviction relief, alleging that his sentence was illegal and excessive, and that the attorney's failure to object to or appeal from his sentence constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. But Stone abandoned his Blakely argument and instead argued that (1) all of the four charges against him should have merged into one charge under Whitton v. State, 5 thereby precluding his composite sentence, and (2) the sentence of 18 years with 4 suspended was "clearly excessive under the totality of *981 the cireumstances" of his case. Stone also argued that his attorney had been ineffective for failing to contest his sentence in the superior court and for failing to appeal the sentence after it was imposed.

An attorney was appointed to represent Stone, and Stone amended his petition. In this petition Stone abandoned his Whitton argument and instead argued that his composite sentence exceeded both the plea agreement range and the maximum 10-year sentence he could have received for the most serious charge against him, the latter of which violated Mutschler v. State 6 The State answered the petition by pointing to the four-year suspended portion of Stone's sentence and arguing that Stone was not sentenced in excess of either the plea agreement range or the statutory maximum for the most serious charge against him. Stone replied that it was nonetheless ineffective assistance of counsel to fail to appeal the sentence when Stone requested it, regardless of his arguments' merits.

The superior court denied Stone's application for post-conviction relief. The court first rejected Stone's Mutschler argument, concluding that the suspended portion of a sentence is not counted when measuring a composite sentence against a statutory maximum-only time served is considered. The court then concluded it was "unwilling to find that an attorney is ineffective on the sole basis that the attorney did not advance a meritless argument" because attorneys have an "ethical duty not to file frivolous pleadings."

Stone appealed to the court of appeals, arguing that it was ineffective assistance per se for his attorney to fail to file the requested appeal after entry of his sentence, and it was error for the superior court to deny his petition based on the merits of the arguments that would have been raised on appeal. Stone requested the restoration of his right to appeal his sentence.

The State argued that because Stone no longer questioned the legality of his sentence, it could not have been ineffective assistance of counsel to fail to appeal his sentence on that basis. But the State itself then raised a somewhat different question-whether, aside from questions about the legality of a sentence, it would be ineffective assistance of counsel to fail to file a sentence appeal limited narrowly to a claim of exces-siveness. 7 The State first noted that because Stone's sentence was entered under the terms of a plea agreement and the sentence was less than a specified maximum sentence, under AS 12.55.120(a) Stone had no right to appeal his sentence on the ground of exces-siveness. 8 The State conceded that Stone could have petitioned this court for our discretionary review of his sentence for exces-siveness," but argued that (1) whether to file a petition for discretionary sentence review was a decision left to counsel, not the client, and (2) Stone had not shown that the failure to file a petition for discretionary sentence review rose to the level of ineffective assistance of counsel.

Stone replied by acknowledging the difference between the right to appeal and the right to petition, but claimed he was entitled to appellate review regardless of the terminology that he had used. He further countered that the decision whether to seek appellate review belonged to the client, not the attorney.

*982 The court of appeals affirmed the superior court's decision, noting that throughout the course of the post-conviction-relief proceedings Stone had relied on, and then abandoned, a number of different substantive challenges to the legality of his sentence. The court also noted that Stone lacked the right to appeal the alleged exeessiveness of his sentence because under AS 12.55.120(a), defendants who plead no contest and are sentenced according to a plea agreement "often lose" that right. 9 The court declined to decide whether any and all appellate attacks on the severity of a sentence imposed under a plea agreement are foreclosed, holding only that reasonable judges and attorneys could have concluded that Stone had no right to appeal his sentence on the ground of exces-siveness. 10

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 P.3d 979, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2011 WL 2610807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-state-alaska-2011.