Young, Ex Parte Edward Michael

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 2006
DocketPD-0176-06
StatusPublished

This text of Young, Ex Parte Edward Michael (Young, Ex Parte Edward Michael) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Young, Ex Parte Edward Michael, (Tex. 2006).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NOS. PD-176/177-06
EX PARTE EDWARD MICHAEL YOUNG, Appellant
ON STATE'S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

FROM THE EIGHTH COURT OF APPEALS

EL PASO COUNTY

Hervey, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., Meyers, Keasler and Cochran, JJ., joined. Price, Johnson and Holcomb, JJ., concurred. Womack, J., dissented.

O P I N I O N



The dispositive issue in this case is whether the enforcement provision in the version of Article 28.061, Tex. Code Crim. Proc., applicable to this case, requiring dismissal of a prosecution with prejudice for violations of former Article 32.01, Tex. Code Crim. Proc., violates the separation of powers clause in Article II, § 1, Tex. Const. We hold that the enforcement provision in this version of Article 28.061 violates this provision of the Texas Constitution. (1)

Appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to sixty years in prison on July 21, 1995. He was arrested for this murder and released on bond on September 20, 1991. Appellant was not indicted for this murder until February 16, 1993. He was, therefore, entitled to have his murder prosecution dismissed with prejudice under the version of Article 28.061 applicable to this case. See Ex parte Young, 181 S.W.3d 526, 528-32 (Tex.App.-El Paso, 2005).

Appellant's trial counsel did not raise this Article 28.061 claim during appellant's state murder prosecution. Appellant claimed several years later, in a state habeas corpus application, that trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective for not raising the Article 28.061 claim. See generally Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). Our state courts decided that trial counsel performed deficiently by not raising the Article 28.061 claim and that this deficient performance was outcome-determinative because it deprived appellant of a dismissal with prejudice of his state murder prosecution. (2) Our state courts nevertheless denied habeas corpus relief upon determining that, under the Supreme Court's decision in Lockhart v. Fretwell, this was not legitimate prejudice under Strickland because, when appellant filed his state habeas corpus application, our Legislature had amended Article 28.061 so that dismissal of a prosecution with prejudice for noncompliance with Article 32.01 was no longer required. (3)

Appellant subsequently raised the identical ineffective assistance of counsel claim in a federal habeas corpus application, which also asserted that our state courts had unreasonably applied federal constitutional law in rejecting this claim during the state habeas corpus proceedings. Several years after this, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed and granted applicant federal habeas corpus relief from his state murder conviction. See Young v. Dretke, 356 F.3d 616 (5th Cir. 2004).

The Fifth Circuit addressed only the "prejudice" component of appellant's ineffective assistance of counsel claim because the state courts had previously found that appellant's counsel performed deficiently by not raising the Article 28.061 claim during the state murder prosecution. The State apparently did not dispute that finding during the federal habeas corpus proceedings. See Young, 356 F.3d at 619 (question presented is whether undisputed deficient performance by appellant's counsel prejudiced appellant) and at 622 (noting that "all courts and all parties" have agreed that appellant's lawyer performed deficiently). According to the Fifth Circuit, the prejudice question turned on whether this deficient performance deprived appellant "of a substantive or procedural right-here the right to have the indictment dismissed with prejudice-to which the law entitled him." See Young, 356 F.3d at 627.

The Fifth Circuit decided that appellant suffered legitimate prejudice because he is entitled to the benefit of the version of Article 28.061 applicable to this case. See Young, 356 F.3d at 627-28 (appellant was, at the time of the state murder prosecution, legally entitled to the final "vested" rights conferred upon him by this version of Article 28.061). The State claimed that appellant is not entitled to the benefit of this version of Article 28.061 because it violates the separation of powers provision of the Texas Constitution. The Fifth Circuit rejected this claim by deferring to the state courts' "implicit conclusion and interpretation of state law" that this version of Article 28.061 is constitutional. See Young, 356 F.3d at 628. The Fifth Circuit also decided that our state courts unreasonably applied Strickland by failing to properly distinguish Fretwell and by disregarding Williams' interpretation of Fretwell. See Young, 356 F.3d at 619.

After appellant obtained federal habeas corpus relief, the State obtained another indictment charging appellant with the same murder as the one charged in the earlier indictment. See Young, 181 S.W.3d at 528-29. Appellant filed a pretrial state writ of habeas corpus asserting that the state murder prosecution should be dismissed with prejudice under the version of Article 28.061 applicable to this case. The trial court, however, denied relief based on a finding that the enforcement provision in this version of Article 28.061 violates the separation of powers provision of the Texas Constitution. See Young, 181 S.W.3d at 528-29, 530 (trial court found that former "Article 28.061, in so far as it provided for dismissal with prejudice for Article 32.01 dismissals, constituted a violation of the constitutional separation of powers doctrine"). The El Paso Court of Appeals decided that this version of Article 28.061 is constitutional and ordered the lower court to "dismiss the indictment." See Young, 181 S.W.3d at 532. We granted review to address the constitutionality of this version of Article 28.061.

And we adopt now Presiding Judge Keller's analysis of this issue in her opinion dissenting to the dismissal of the discretionary review petition as improvidently granted in Condran, 977 S.W.2d at 144-47 (Keller, J., dissenting). Consistent with this opinion, we decide that the enforcement provision in the version of Article 28.061 applicable to this case violates the separation of powers provision of the Texas Constitution because it seriously disrupts a prosecutor's ability to perform his duties, it does not effectuate a superior constitutional interest, and it was not contractually submitted to by the prosecution. See Condran, 977 S.W.2d at 144-47 (Keller, J., dissenting). (4)

The Fifth Circuit may have properly granted relief for ineffective assistance of counsel at the time that it acted.

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