Zeno Sims v. State of Missouri

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 26, 2021
DocketWD84050
StatusPublished

This text of Zeno Sims v. State of Missouri (Zeno Sims v. State of Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeno Sims v. State of Missouri, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

ZENO SIMS, ) Appellant, ) WD84050 v. ) ) STATE OF MISSOURI, ) FILED: October 26, 2021 Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY THE HONORABLE PATRICK W. CAMPBELL, JUDGE

BEFORE DIVISION THREE: LISA WHITE HARDWICK, PRESIDING JUDGE, GARY D. WITT AND EDWARD R. ARDINI, JR., JUDGES

Zeno Sims appeals from the judgment denying his Rule 24.035 motion after

he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, first-degree assault, and two counts

of armed criminal action. He contends the motion court clearly erred in denying

him postconviction relief because he established that: (1) the sentencing court

exceeded its authority by directing that his state sentence be served consecutively

to his federal sentence; and (2) defense counsel was ineffective for failing to

inform the sentencing court that the federal district court had the authority to

determine whether he must serve his federal sentence and a state sentence,

which had yet to be imposed, concurrently or consecutively. For reasons

explained herein, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On June 10, 2000, Baron Kelley rear-ended Sims’s car in a traffic accident in

Kansas City. A verbal altercation between the two men ensued, during which

Sims shot and killed Deantreia Ashley and shot Kelley multiple times, wounding

him. The State charged him as a prior offender with first-degree murder, two

counts of first-degree assault, and three counts of armed criminal action.

Sims entered a guilty plea on July 17, 2001. During the plea hearing, the

prosecutor told the court that, pursuant to the parties’ plea agreement, the State

would reduce the first-degree murder charge to second-degree murder and would

dismiss one of the assault counts and one of the armed criminal action counts.

The parties also agreed that Sims would receive a total prison sentence of no less

than 10 years and no more than 30 years. The court questioned Sims about the

agreement, including the possible sentence that he could receive, and he said that

he understood. The court accepted Sims’s plea and deferred sentencing until a

sentencing assessment report could be prepared.

Before Sims was sentenced for those offenses, he entered a guilty plea in

the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri on September

28, 2001, to a charge of distribution of five grams or more of a mixture of a

substance containing cocaine base. On December 4, 2001, the federal court

sentenced Sims to 235 months in prison for that offense. The federal court

ordered that this sentence be served concurrently with the sentence yet to be

imposed on Sims’s state offenses.

2 On December 28, 2001, the circuit court held a sentencing hearing on

Sims’s state offenses. Before imposing sentence, the court informed the

attorneys that it did not believe that the federal court had the authority to dictate

the sentence that the state court could impose. Defense counsel agreed with this

statement. The prosecutor further argued that the federal court was “powerless

to determine what the final sentencing judge’s determination is with respect to

concurrent or consecutive sentences.” The circuit court sentenced Sims to serve

30 years in prison on each count, with those sentences to run concurrently with

each other and consecutively to the sentence imposed on his federal offense.

Sims was delivered to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, which attempted to

transfer him to state custody so that he could begin serving the state and federal

sentences concurrently. Sims v. Chester, 446 Fed. App’x 128, 129 (10th Cir. 2011).

Missouri refused to take custody of Sims until he completed his federal sentence,

however. Id. Sims then filed several unsuccessful petitions for a writ of habeas

corpus seeking to be transferred from the Federal Bureau of Prisons to the

Missouri Department of Corrections so that he could serve his state sentence

concurrently with his federal sentence. See id. (listing the petitions that Sims filed

in federal court and in an administrative proceeding before the Federal Bureau of

Prisons). On March 20, 2013, Sims filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the

Missouri Supreme Court asking that the Court direct that his state sentence run

concurrently with his federal sentence and that he be awarded credit on his state

sentence for any time already served on his federal sentence. The Supreme Court

3 denied his petition. See Casenet entries for State ex rel. Sims v. Dep’t of Corr.,

No. SC93228.

After serving his federal sentence, Sims was delivered to the custody of the

Missouri Department of Corrections on September 15, 2018, to begin serving his

state sentence. Shortly thereafter, he filed a pro se Rule 24.035 motion, which

was later amended by appointed counsel. In his amended motion, Sims alleged,

inter alia, that the circuit court lacked the power to sentence him to serve his state

sentence consecutively to his federal sentence because the federal court directed

that the sentences run concurrently. Sims also alleged that defense counsel was

ineffective for failing to research and present the argument that the federal court’s

determination that the federal sentence should be served concurrently with the

yet-to-be-imposed state sentence was controlling.

An evidentiary hearing was held, during which Sims and defense counsel

testified. The motion court subsequently entered its judgment denying Sims’s

Rule 24.035 motion. Sims appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review the denial of a post-conviction motion for clear error. Rule

24.035(k). The motion court’s findings and conclusions are clearly erroneous only

if a review of the entire record leaves us with a definite and firm impression that a

mistake was made. Swallow v. State, 398 S.W.3d 1, 3 (Mo. banc 2013). We will

affirm the motion court’s judgment if it is sustainable on any ground supported by

the record. Id.

4 ANALYSIS

In Point I, Sims contends the motion court clearly erred in denying his claim

that the circuit court exceeded its authority by directing that his state sentence be

served consecutively to his federal sentence. He argues that the federal district

court’s order that the sentences be served concurrently was binding on the state

circuit court.

Both state and federal courts have the authority to decide whether a

sentence should run concurrently with or consecutively to a defendant’s other

sentences. Mosby v. State, 236 S.W.3d 670, 679 (Mo. App. 2007); Setser v. United

States, 566 U.S. 231 (2012). In Setser, the United States Supreme Court held that

the federal district court’s authority includes the discretion to decide whether a

federal sentence will run concurrently with or consecutively to a state sentence

that has not yet been imposed. 566 U.S. at 244-45. In that case, Setser was on

probation for a state drug offense when the state charged him with another drug

offense and moved to revoke his probation. Id. at 233. A federal grand jury then

indicted him on a federal drug offense. Id. The district court sentenced Setser

first and ordered that his sentence run consecutively to any anticipated state

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