Court Opinion

ID: 4020909
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-08-02 18:07:42.869048+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:27:38.016743
License: Public Domain

ALEX M. DAVIS,                               )
                                             )
       Movant-Appellant,                     )
                                             )
vs.                                          )              No. SD34071
                                             )
STATE OF MISSOURI,                           )              Filed: July 28, 2016
                                             )
       Respondent-Respondent.                )

               APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHRISTIAN COUNTY

                           Honorable Laura J. Johnson, Circuit Judge

REMANDED

       Alex M. Davis (“Movant”) rejected a plea agreement offer and proceeded to trial. He

received a substantially longer sentence and now complains in his sole point on appeal that

counsel was ineffective in that he misadvised Movant in several respects which resulted in

Movant refusing to accept the initial plea offer of 15 years on two counts and as a result Movant

was prejudiced. Specifically, he alleged that “counsel advised [him] that he would be subject to

the 85% requirement before parole eligibility on the proposed fifteen[-]year offer.” The motion

court found:

       This claim is not cognizable under Rule 29.15. See Williams [v. State], 344 S.W.3d
       [878,] 883 [(Mo.App. S.D. 2011) (en banc)] (“[A] defendant’s claim that trial
       counsel’s alleged lack of advice deprived the defendant of a chance to plead guilty

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           and obtain a shorter sentence is simply not cognizable in a Rule 29.15 proceeding
           because it has nothing to do with whether the defendant’s trial itself was fair.”).

           Although Williams was the law in 2011,1 it is no longer the law in Missouri. The United

States Supreme Court, in a Missouri case, found that counsel’s failure to communicate a plea

agreement to a defendant was cognizable under Rule 29.15. See Missouri v. Frye, 132 S. Ct.
1399, 1408 (2012) (holding that claims of ineffective assistance of counsel during plea

negotiations are cognizable); see also Lafler v. Cooper, 132 S. Ct. 1376, 1384 (2012)

(“Defendants have a Sixth Amendment right to counsel, a right that extends to the plea-

bargaining process.”).2 Here, Movant alleged that trial counsel misadvised him as to the results

of the plea offer.

           The trial court did not make any credibility determinations whether trial counsel did in

fact misadvise Movant. We are, thus, unable to determine if the motion court found that trial

counsel had affirmatively misadvised Movant concerning the plea offer or whether there was a

reasonable probability that Movant would have accepted the earlier plea offer and, as such, we

are compelled by Rule 24.035(k)3 to remand to the motion court for such necessary findings of

fact and conclusions of law.

           The judgment is vacated and the case is remanded to the motion court for further

proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion on claim number six.

Nancy Steffen Rahmeyer, J. - Opinion Author

Gary W. Lynch, P.J. - Concurs

Daniel E. Scott, J. - Concurs

1
    The State concedes the claim is cognizable.
2
 To be fair to the motion court, there is no indication on Westlaw that one of the alternate holdings in Williams
should no longer be followed. We note it now for future practitioners and courts.
3
    All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2016).

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