Court Opinion

ID: 4312276
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-09-13 19:25:26.322699+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:44:33.024040
License: Public Domain

09/12/2018
        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                         AT KNOXVILLE
                           Assigned on Briefs June 24, 2018

                   LARRY WADE v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

                Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County
                   No. 288261      Thomas C. Greenholtz, Judge

                             No. E2015-02177-CCA-R3-PC

NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.

       I join the majority in affirming the post-conviction court’s denial of the
petitioner’s petition for post-conviction relief. However, I write separately to dissent
from the majority’s holding that a hearing on a motion to withdraw a guilty plea, which a
defendant files after sentencing but before the judgment becomes final, does not
constitute a “critical stage” of the proceedings and, therefore, does not provide the
constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel.

        This issue is not properly before us. The petitioner was represented by motion
counsel at the hearing on his motion to withdraw his guilty plea. After this court
affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion to withdraw the plea, the petitioner
petitioned for post-conviction relief on the basis that motion counsel was ineffective. He
raises that same issue on appeal. He does not contend that the hearing on the motion to
withdraw his plea was a “critical stage” of the proceedings, thus requiring the effective
assistance of counsel. The State also does not raise the issue. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(b)
(providing that “[r]eview generally will extend only to those issues presented for review”
but that this court “may in its discretion consider other issues in order, among other
reasons: (1) to prevent needless litigation, (2) to prevent injury to the interests of the
public, and (3) to prevent prejudice to the judicial process”).

       This court has addressed a petitioner’s post-conviction claim that he received the
ineffective assistance of counsel when trial counsel failed to file a post-sentencing motion
to withdraw a guilty plea and held that while counsel was deficient, the petitioner failed
to demonstrate prejudice. Devin Camp v. State, No. E2012-00198-CCA-R3-PC, 2013
WL 3103974, at *19-20 (Tenn. Crim. App. at Knoxville, Jun. 17, 2013). Holding that a
post-sentencing hearing on a motion to withdraw a guilty plea is not a critical stage of the
proceedings and, therefore, that a defendant is not entitled to counsel at that hearing, is
extremely detrimental to defendants who must satisfy the extremely high burden of
demonstrating manifest necessity in order to withdraw a plea. To announce such a
holding in a post-conviction case, in which the issue has not been raised or thoroughly
briefed by the parties, is not one in which I am willing to partake. See In re Kaliyah S.,
455 S.W.3d 533, 540 (Tenn. 2015) (stating that although an issue has not been properly
presented for review, Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure 13(b) and 36(a), “[t]aken
together, . . . permit appellate courts to grant complete relief to the parties as long as they
have been given fair notice and an opportunity to be heard on the dispositive issues’”)
(quoting Heatherly v. Merrimack Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 43 S.W.3d 911, 916 (Tenn. Ct. App.
2000)).

      Accordingly, while I agree with the majority’s conclusion that the petitioner failed
to show prejudice with regard to his ineffective assistance of counsel claims, I dissent
from the majority’s holding that a defendant is not entitled to the effective assistance of
counsel, or any counsel for that matter, at a hearing on a post-sentencing motion to
withdraw a guilty plea.

                                               ____________________________________
                                               NORMA McGEE OGLE, JUDGE