Willie D. Armstead v. Wayne Scott, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division

37 F.3d 202
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 1994
Docket92-1648
StatusPublished
Cited by126 cases

This text of 37 F.3d 202 (Willie D. Armstead v. Wayne Scott, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willie D. Armstead v. Wayne Scott, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, 37 F.3d 202 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

STEWART, Circuit Judge:

This is a habeas corpus action brought by a state court prisoner, Willie D. Armstead, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel in connection with his guilty plea to two counts of aggravated robbery in Texas state court. The district court denied relief, affording a presumption of correctness to the factual findings of the state court. While we find that the district court erred in affording a presumption of correctness because the state court did not actually make a factual finding with regard to one of Armstead’s allegations, we nonetheless conclude that Armstead has not demonstrated he was prejudiced by his counsel’s alleged error. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of relief.

Background

On January 27, 1988, a Dallas County, Texas, grand jury returned an indictment charging Armstead with the first-degree felony offense of aggravated robbery in Cause No. F88-77534-S. The indictment alleged a prior felony conviction for attempted capital murder on November 30,1976, also in Dallas County, Texas, in Cause No. F74r-9501-H, for enhancement of punishment pursuant to § 12.42(c) of the Texas Penal Code. On January 29, 1988, the Dallas County grand jury returned a second indictment for a first-degree felony offense of aggravated robbery in Cause No. F88-77715-JS. That indictment also was enhanced by the prior conviction for attempted capital murder.

On March 11, 1988, pursuant to a plea agreement, Armstead pled guilty to the two charges. The trial court sentenced him to two concurrent 40-year terms of confinement and a $750 fine. The trial court further made an affirmative finding that Armstead had used or exhibited a deadly weapon, a firearm, during the commission of the offenses. Also on March 11, 1988, Armstead’s wife Elaine pled guilty to one of the robberies, pursuant to a plea agreement. She was not sentenced until March 24; 1988. She received a sentence of fifteen years.

Armstead did not appeal his convictions, nor did he ever seek to withdraw his guilty plea or allege that his plea bargain had been breached. He filed an application for state habeas relief challenging the convictions, which the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied on October 18, 1989. On June 11, 1990, Armstead filed a federal petition for habeas corpus relief. The district court dismissed the petition with prejudice on July 24, 1992, and this appeal followed.

Armstead argues on appeal that his defense counsel was ineffective in the following respects:

(i) advising Armstead to waive his right to the examining trial on the date it was scheduled;
(ii) failing to investigate and contact witnesses;
(iii) telling Armstead that he did not wish to try the ease because he did not want to blemish his record with a loss;
(iv) advising Armstead to perjure himself;
(v) failing to inform Armstead of his right to have a jury sentence him;
*205 (vi) telling Armstead he would be found guilty of the robbery charges based upon his prior conviction for attempted murder;
(vii) asking Armstead’s mother to persuade him to plead guilty; and
(viii) promising him that his wife, Elaine Armstead, would get probation if he pled guilty.

All eight of Armstead’s allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel were raised previously by him in his state habeas petition. Armstead’s showing in support of his state habeas petition included three affidavits concerning these contentions. The affiants were Armstead’s wife, his mother, and another convict who happened to be appearing in court on the same day as Armstead and who allegedly overheard exchanges between Arm-stead and his counsel relating to the promise that Armstead’s wife would get probation if Armstead pled guilty.

In response to Armstead’s state habeas petition, the state court requested that Arm-stead’s counsel, Alfredo Campos, Jr., submit an affidavit addressing the allegations of the state habeas petition, and the attorney did so. The Campos affidavit directly addressed seven of the eight allegations made by Arm-stead, but it did not address the “false promise” issue at all.

Specifically, Mr. Campos provided the following answers to defendant’s allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel:

(i) he advised Armstead of his right to an examining trial, and Armstead agreed to waive the examining trial in exchange for the offense report;
(ii) he obtained the offense report, had an investigator available, and had information on the three witnesses for trial, all of which he reviewed with Armstead;
(in) he did not tell Armstead that he feared “blemishing?’ his record with a loss;
(iv) he never recommended perjury;
(v) he advised Armstead of his right to jury sentencing;
(vi) Armstead misunderstood his statements regarding the prior conviction; he advised him only that, if the enhancement paragraph were found true, it would raise his minimum penalty for sentencing and that it would “weigh heavily on the punishment phase of the trial”;
(vii)he did have a telephone conference with Armstead’s mother, wherein he “brought her up to date on the status of the case.”

The Court found the statements in counsel’s affidavit to be “true, correct and disposi-tive of the allegations presented by [Arm-stead] relative to Mr. Campos.” Based upon these adopted factual determinations, the state court concluded that counsel was not ineffective and that Armstead entered knowing and voluntary pleas.

When Armstead filed his federal habeas petition forwarding these same allegations, the magistrate judge reviewed Armstead’s claims in light of the state court record and Armstead’s burden under Hill v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 58-59, 106 S.Ct. 366, 870, 88 L.Ed.2d 203 (1985), to show that (1) his attorney actually erred, and (2) he would not have pled guilty but for the error. The Findings, Conclusions and Recommendation of the United States Magistrate Judge provided as follows:

In [Campos’] affidavit [submitted in the state habeas proceeding, he] specifically denied each of [Armstead’s] allegations of error on his part. Moreover, [Campos] also detailed each of the acts which he took on [Armstead’s] behalf, including advising him of all the constitutional rights to which he was entitled, his efforts to investigate the case, and his attempts to insure that [Armstead’s] guilty plea was knowing and voluntary_ The state court subsequently accepted those statements by [Campos] as true and adopted them as findings of fact in regard to the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.... Those findings of fact as to the actions of [Campos] must be presumed to be correct, even though they were entered into as a consequence of a hearing by affidavit rather than an in-court evidentiary hearing. (Emphasis added.)

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37 F.3d 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-d-armstead-v-wayne-scott-director-texas-department-of-criminal-ca5-1994.