United States of America, Ex Rel. Ellis O. Partee v. Michael P. Lane and James H. Thieret

926 F.2d 694
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1991
Docket90-1302
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 926 F.2d 694 (United States of America, Ex Rel. Ellis O. Partee v. Michael P. Lane and James H. Thieret) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America, Ex Rel. Ellis O. Partee v. Michael P. Lane and James H. Thieret, 926 F.2d 694 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

BAUER, Chief Judge.

In 1983, a DuPage County jury found Ellis Partee guilty of armed robbery. The trial court entered judgment on this conviction and sentenced Partee to 30 years of imprisonment. After pursuing appeals in the Illinois court system, Partee sought habeas corpus relief in the district court. Partee claimed, among other things, that his trial counsel’s failure to subpoena an important alibi witness deprived him of his sixth amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. The district court agreed and granted Partee the writ. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse.

I

On September 19, 1982, an armed man wearing eyeglasses robbed a gas station in Darien, Illinois. When the station was free of customers, the man emerged from his hiding place in the garage area of the station and surprised Cary Kos, the sole attendant on duty. He ordered Kos to empty the cash box into a briefcase he was carry *696 ing. The man then pulled out a gun, grabbed Kos, and ordered him to unlock the back office of the station, but Kos did not have the key. The man then fled the station, making off with $300 to $400 dollars. About one month later, Ellis Partee was pulled over for a traffic violation. Partee had in his possession glasses and a briefcase similar to the ones described by Kos as belonging to the robber, so the police seized these items and took Partee’s picture for a photographic lineup. The police then brought in Kos, who identified Partee’s briefcase and glasses as being similar to the robber’s. Kos then was shown an array of five photographs, and he picked out Partee as the man who robbed the station. 1 Partee was charged with armed robbery, and an assistant public defender was appointed to represent him.

Partee’s defense from the outset was that, at the time of the robbery, he was visiting his friend Zernalia Keesee in Joliet, Illinois. The record reveals that Partee’s counsel from the public defender’s office had some difficulty locating Keesee to substantiate the alibi. After getting at least one trial continuance on account of this difficulty, the assistant public defender ultimately found Keesee and subpoenaed her. 2 Thereafter, but prior to his trial, Partee dismissed his appointed counsel and retained Steven Decker, a private attorney, to represent him.

Partee’s trial before Judge Bruce R. Fa-well of the Circuit Court of DuPage County began on May 9, 1983, and lasted four days. The State introduced evidence of Kos’ out-of-court photo identification of Partee, and Kos made an in-court identification of Partee as the robber. Kos stumbled a bit, however; his descriptions of the physical appearance of the robber wavered, both during his trial testimony and in various statements to the police before trial. Decker, Partee’s trial counsel, exploited the inconsistencies in Kos’ statements. He grilled Kos during cross-examination, and highlighted Kos’ waffling in arguments to the court in opposition to the admission of the briefcase, glasses and other State’s evidence, and in arguments in support of an unsuccessful motion for judgment of acquittal at the close of the State’s case.

In his defense case, Decker presented four witnesses to support Partee’s alibi. Partee himself then took the stand. He testified that, on the date of the robbery, he went to Keesee’s home in Joliet at about noon and remained there until 4:45 or 5:00pm (the robbery at the gas station in Darien took place at approximately 4:40pm). After leaving Keesee’s home, he drove to another friend’s home in Joliet, and then on to the home of Donald and Marilee Torrence. He estimated that he arrived at the Torrences’ home, which was also in Joliet, between 5:15 and 5:30pm. Both of the Torrences, and the two additional alibi witnesses who were at the Tor-rences’ home that evening, all testified that Partee arrived at the Torrences’ at about 5:30pm. Decker also put on evidence that the drive time from the gas station in Dar-ien to the Torrences’ home in Joliet was such that Partee could not have robbed the station at 4:40pm and made it to the Tor-rences’ by 5:30pm.

Missing from the list of alibi witnesses was Keesee. Just before Partee was to take the stand, Decker informed the court that he was having trouble locating Kee-see. He represented to the court that he had had three telephone conversations with Keesee in the preceding four days, including one the previous afternoon, “instructing” her to come to court:

I informed her that the Torrences would come by and pick her up in the morning. *697 She said “fine.” She had conversations with Mary Torrence yesterday, confirming she would be picked up at 8:30 in the morning. She was not at the location where she said she would be. We have made attempts to contact her at the only number I have for her, as well as the only number that she ever gave the State’s Attorney’s investigator, which was her place of business. All we can get there today is an answering machine. We have left an innumerable number of messages on that. I sent the Torrences out to Joliet to try and find her. We didn’t even know where her exact current residence is, just her work address. I don’t know if she’s at work.

Transcript of Proceedings Before Judge Fawell (“Trial Tr.”), May 11, 1983, at 481-82. Decker then suggested to the court (this all took place outside of the presence of the jury) that he could proceed with Partee and his other witness, the State could proceed with any rebuttal, and then the trial could be continued to the following morning when Keesee would testify — assuming she would show. The court asked Decker if he had a subpoena out on Kee-see, and Decker responded, “I sent people out today./ The Court: She’s not been served with a subpoena?/ Mr. Deoker: No.” Id. at 483. The court then reserved ruling on the matter, adding, “I am inclined to feel if she’s only cumulative, and she hasn’t been served with a subpoena, I hate to delay the trial an extra day or half a day....” Id.

So the trial proceeded, and Decker put on Partee and his last defense witness. After the questioning of these two had ended, the court conducted another sidebar as to how to proceed in the absence of Keesee. Decker again recounted his conversations with Keesee, his attempts to get her to appear that morning, and the missed ride with the Torrences. When asked again by the court whether a subpoena had been served on Keesee, Decker replied that, although he did not subpoena her for that day, he believed that Keesee was subpoenaed by Par-tee’s previous counsel, the public defender’s office. He professed that he did not know whether that subpoena had been “continued in force.” After admonishing Decker to do everything in his power to locate Keesee, the court granted Decker’s request to end for the day. The court told Decker he could conditionally rest his defense case and reopen the following morning with Keesee’s testimony, if she appeared. Id. at 1188-93.

Partee’s case was called the next morning, and still no Keesee. Decker explained to the court that he had sent an investigator to Keesee’s purported place of employment with subpoena in hand, but Keesee was nowhere to be found. She apparently had been fired, and her former employer had no idea where she lived or where she might be working.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Godinez v. United States
N.D. Illinois, 2025
Gil v. Dotson
E.D. Virginia, 2025
Edwards v. Clarke
E.D. Virginia, 2024
Depuy v. Clarke
E.D. Virginia, 2023
Kenner v. Cabel
E.D. Virginia, 2023
Williams v. Clarke
E.D. Virginia, 2023
Shea v. Clark
E.D. Virginia, 2023
Fink v. Clarke
E.D. Virginia, 2023
McKinnon v. Clarke
E.D. Virginia, 2022
Frazier v. United States
N.D. Indiana, 2022
Jones v. United States
N.D. Indiana, 2021
Norton v. United States
N.D. Indiana, 2021
People v. Little
2021 IL App (1st) 181984 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2021)
Lottie v. Griffith
E.D. Missouri, 2021
Long v. Percy
E.D. Wisconsin, 2019
Amos v. Lashbrook
N.D. Illinois, 2018
Rodrigo Hernandez v. Rick Thaler, Director
398 F. App'x 81 (Fifth Circuit, 2010)
People v. Hobson
Appellate Court of Illinois, 2008
Moore v. Quarterman
534 F.3d 454 (Fifth Circuit, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
926 F.2d 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-ex-rel-ellis-o-partee-v-michael-p-lane-and-ca7-1991.