Grant v. Commissioner of Correction

Date Filed2022-12-27
DocketSC20679
JudgeRobinson; McDonald; D’Auria; Mullins; Ecker; Alexander; Keller
Cited0 times
StatusPublished

Syllabus

Pursuant to McCoy v. Louisiana (138 S. Ct. 1500), a criminal defendant has a right under the sixth amendment to the United States constitution to autonomy in deciding the fundamental objectives of his defense, includ- ing whether to continue to maintain his or her innocence, and that right prohibits defense counsel from conceding a defendant's guilt as to a charged offense over the defendant's intransigent and unambiguous objection. The petitioner, who had been convicted of manslaughter in the first degree with a firearm, assault in the first degree, and criminal possession of a firearm, sought a writ of habeas corpus, claiming, inter alia, that his federal constitutional rights to autonomy and the effective assistance of counsel were violated when his trial counsel, D, conceded at trial, without informing the petitioner or obtaining his consent, that the peti- tioner had acted recklessly and was guilty of manslaughter. The peti- tioner had been charged with murder, among other offenses, in connection with an incident in which he fired gunshots into a crowd at a bar, killing one patron and wounding another. Following his arrest, the petitioner confessed to the police that he was the shooter and described his own conduct as reckless. At the petitioner's criminal trial, the state's theory of the case was that the petitioner had gone to the bar intending to shoot a rival drug dealer and, therefore, that the shooting was premeditated. During closing argument, D argued, inter alia, that the petitioner had fired the shots in self-defense because he was scared that the rival drug dealer was going to shoot him, that the petitioner did not have the requisite intent to commit murder but, rather, had acted recklessly, and that he was guilty of manslaughter. The jury found the petitioner not guilty of murder but guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter in the first degree. At his habeas trial, the petitioner testified that he neither discussed with D, nor consented to, D's concession that the petitioner was guilty of manslaughter. In contrast, D testified at the petitioner's habeas trial that it was necessary to argue that the petitioner's conduct was reckless in order to effectively carry out the trial strategy of arguing self-defense while also characterizing the petitioner's conduct as manslaughter so as to avoid a murder convic- tion, that he conferred with the petitioner numerous times regarding this strategy, and that the petitioner agreed to it. The habeas court rendered judgment denying the petition, concluding that McCoy was inapplicable to the present case and that the petitioner failed to establish that D had rendered ineffective assistance. On the granting of certifica- tion, the petitioner appealed from the habeas court's judgment. Held: 1. The habeas court correctly determined that McCoy was inapplicable to the present case, as the petitioner's right to autonomy was not implicated under the facts of this case: The United States Supreme Court made it clear in McCoy that the federal constitutional right to autonomy is implicated only when counsel, over a defendant's express objections, concedes the defendant's guilt as to a charged offense, and, in the present case, there was no credible evi- dence that the petitioner disagreed with D's trial strategy, expressly or otherwise, or that he objected to D's concession of guilt. Rather, the record indicated that the habeas court credited D's testimony that D had conferred with the petitioner numerous times regarding trial strategy and that, given his confession, the petitioner agreed that D would have to concede that he had shot the victims either in self-defense or without the requisite intent to commit murder. 2. This court declined to review the petitioner's unpreserved claim that D had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to adequately explain to the jury the relationship between recklessness and self- defense, the petitioner having failed to raise that claim before the habeas court: The extent of the petitioner's ineffective assistance claim before the habeas court was that D conceded the petitioner's guilt as to manslaugh- ter without consulting the petitioner, and the petitioner did not claim that there was any inadequacy in D's closing argument concerning the relationship between recklessness and self-defense in his habeas petition, during the habeas trial, or in his posttrial brief, and the habeas court did not address that claim. Argued September 7—officially released December 27, 2022

Full Opinion (html_with_citations)

Case ID: 9369856 • Docket ID: 66750365