Court Opinion

ID: 9458915
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-04 21:05:17.084741+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:35:55.500805
License: Public Domain

2023 IL App (5th) 220359-U
            NOTICE
                                                                                     NOTICE
 Decision filed 08/04/23. The
                                                                          This order was filed under
 text of this decision may be               NO. 5-22-0359
                                                                          Supreme Court Rule 23 and is
 changed or corrected prior to
 the filing of a Petition for                                             not precedent except in the

 Rehearing or the disposition of
                                               IN THE                     limited circumstances allowed
 the same.                                                                under Rule 23(e)(1).
                                   APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                               FIFTH DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,            )     Appeal from the
                                                )     Circuit Court of
      Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )     Jefferson County.
                                                )
v.                                              )     No. 18-CF-292
                                                )
ANTHONY T. GARRETT,                             )     Honorable
                                                )     Jerry E. Crisel,
      Defendant-Appellant.                      )     Judge, presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

         JUSTICE WELCH delivered the judgment of the court.
         Presiding Justice Boie and Justice Vaughan concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1       Held: Where the evidence contradicted defendant’s claim that he did not understand what
               “consecutive” sentences meant, the circuit court properly denied his motion to
               withdraw his plea. As any argument to the contrary would lack merit, we grant
               defendant’s appointed counsel on appeal leave to withdraw and affirm the circuit
               court’s judgment.

¶2       Defendant, Anthony T. Garrett, appeals the circuit court’s order denying his motion to

withdraw his guilty plea. His appointed appellate counsel, the Office of the State Appellate

Defender (OSAD), has concluded that there is no reasonably meritorious argument that the circuit

court erred in doing so. Accordingly, it has filed a motion to withdraw as counsel along with a

supporting memorandum. See Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738 (1967). OSAD has notified

defendant of its motion, and this court has provided him with ample opportunity to respond.

However, he has not done so. After considering the record on appeal and OSAD’s memorandum
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and supporting brief, we agree that this appeal presents no reasonably meritorious issues. Thus,

we grant OSAD leave to withdraw and affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

¶3                                    BACKGROUND

¶4     In case No. 18-CF-292, which is the subject of this appeal, the State charged defendant

with unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon, aggravated assault, and resisting a peace officer.

On July 22, 2019, defendant agreed to plead guilty to the weapons charge. In return, the State

agreed to recommend a sentence of no longer than 10 years and dismiss the remaining counts. The

court admonished defendant pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 402 (eff. July 1, 2012) and

after appropriate questioning found that the plea was voluntary.

¶5     Later that same day, defendant pleaded guilty in case No. 19-CF-165. During that hearing,

the parties agreed that the sentence in that case would have to be consecutive to that in case No.

18-CF-292. Defendant twice said that he understood this.

¶6     On November 26, 2019, the court conducted a sentencing hearing covering both cases. By

that time, the parties had further agreed to sentences of five years in this case and six years in No.

19-CF-165. The parties agreed that the sentences had to be served consecutively.

¶7     On May 11, 2020, defendant filed a motion to withdraw his guilty pleas in both cases,

arguing that he was physically and mentally incompetent, that he was “coerced,” and that he had

been promised a 10-year sentence but received 11 years. The circuit court struck the motion as

untimely. Shortly thereafter, defendant filed an “affidavit.” It consisted mostly of correspondence

with John Cesario, a senior counsel at the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission

(ARDC). It also included a letter from defendant’s trial counsel, responding to the complaint, in

which counsel said that he explained the differences between consecutive and concurrent sentences

at least 10 times before defendant pled guilty, even writing on a whiteboard to illustrate how the

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sentences would be added together. He opined that defendant understood that the sentences would

run consecutively before he agreed to plead guilty.

¶8     Defendant filed a direct appeal, arguing that the circuit court did not admonish him that a

motion to withdraw the plea had to be filed within 30 days. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 605(c) (eff. Oct. 1,

2001). Relying on People ex rel. Alvarez v. Skryd, 241 Ill. 2d 34, 40 (2011), we held that, despite

the defective admonitions, the failure to file a timely motion to withdraw the plea deprived the

circuit court of jurisdiction and, accordingly, affirmed the order striking the motion. People v.

Garrett, No. 5-20-0172 (2020) (unpublished summary order under Illinois Supreme Court 23(c)).

The supreme court, in the exercise of its supervisory authority, ordered us to vacate our prior

judgment and remand the cause to the circuit court with directions to consider defendant’s motion

on the merits. People v. Garrett, No. 126863 (Ill. Mar. 24, 2021) (supervisory order).

¶9     On remand, the court conducted a hearing on defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty

plea. Defendant testified that he thought the sentences in this case and No. 19-CF-165 were to run

concurrently. When asked to explain what the word “consecutive” meant, he said that he still did

not understand what it meant, then said that he thought that it meant that the sentences “would be

ran at one time,” but then further stated that he thought it meant that “[y]ou do one sentence and

then you do—the other one follows the sentence that you do.” He said that his original trial counsel

tried to explain it to him and told him that the sentences “would be added together.” He could not

recall why he did not raise his concerns at the sentencing hearing but reiterated that he thought that

“consecutive means concurrent.”

¶ 10   The court denied the motion. The court noted that it had reviewed the transcript in 19-CF-

165 and, based on that transcript, found that defendant’s contention that he did not understand the

meaning of “consecutive” was without merit. The court noted that defendant had presented no

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evidence to support his claims that he lacked physical or mental capacity or that he was coerced to

enter the plea. Defendant timely appealed.

¶ 11                                       ANALYSIS

¶ 12   OSAD concludes that there is no reasonably meritorious contention that the circuit court

erred in denying defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea.

¶ 13   A defendant has no absolute right to withdraw a guilty plea. People v. Hughes, 2012 IL

112817, ¶ 32. Rather, he must show a manifest injustice under the facts involved. Id. Withdrawal

is appropriate where the plea was entered through a misapprehension of the facts or of the law or

where there is doubt as to the guilt of the accused and justice would be better served through a

trial. Id. In the absence of substantial objective proof showing that they were reasonably justified,

a defendant’s subjective impressions alone are not sufficient grounds on which to vacate a guilty

plea. People v. Davis, 145 Ill. 2d 240, 244 (1991). Further, the burden is on the defendant to

establish that the circumstances existing at the time of the plea, judged by objective standards,

justified the mistaken impression. Id. “Generally, the decision to grant or deny a motion to

withdraw a guilty plea rests in the sound discretion of the circuit court and, as such, is reviewed

for abuse of discretion.” Hughes, 2012 IL 112817, ¶ 32. An abuse of discretion will not be found

unless the circuit court’s ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable, or where no reasonable person

would take the view adopted by the circuit court. People v. Baez, 241 Ill. 2d 44, 106 (2011).

¶ 14   OSAD first contends that the issue of whether defendant understood the meaning of

“consecutive sentences” is not properly before the court because no consecutive sentence was

imposed in this case. We agree. This case and 19-CF-165, the case in which a consecutive

sentence was imposed, were disposed of separately, with this case going first. Thus, when

defendant entered his plea in this case, there was no other conviction to which the sentence could

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be consecutive. Defendant agreed to a five-year sentence in this case and that is what he got. On

that basis alone, the circuit court properly denied the motion.

¶ 15   We also agree with OSAD that even if the issue was properly before us, the circuit court

did not err in denying defendant’s motion to withdraw his plea because the evidence amply

supported the court’s conclusion that defendant understood the meaning of “consecutive

sentences.”

¶ 16   At the plea hearing in No. 19-CF-165, defendant twice acknowledged that the sentence

imposed in that case would be consecutive to the sentence in the present case, and he never

indicated any confusion about what “consecutive” meant. Defendant argued in his motion to

withdraw his guilty plea that he had been promised a 10-year sentence but received a sentence of

11 years. Defendant received a five-year sentence in this case and six-year sentence in No. 19-

CF-165. Defendant’s contention that he was promised a 10-year sentence reveals that he was

aware that the sentences in the two cases were to be served one after the other and that he therefore

understood the meaning of consecutive. Documents attached to the “affidavit” that defendant

attempted to file as an amendment to his motion to withdraw the guilty plea included a letter from

plea counsel responding to an apparent complaint to the ARDC in which counsel stated that he

had explained “at least 10 times” what consecutive sentences meant, even using a whiteboard to

illustrate the point. Counsel opined that defendant understood. Finally, in his own testimony at

the hearing on remand, defendant evinced a correct understanding of consecutive sentencing,

explaining at one point that “[y]ou do one sentence and then you do—the other.” Even assuming,

arguendo, that there was an issue of whether defendant understood the meaning of “consecutive

sentences,” we agree with OSAD that the record demonstrates that defendant understood that his

sentences had to be served one after the other, i.e., consecutively, and that no meritorious argument

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can be made that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s motion to withdraw

his guilty plea.

¶ 17                                    CONCLUSION

¶ 18    As this appeal presents no issue of arguable merit, we grant OSAD leave to withdraw and

affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

¶ 19    Motion granted; judgment affirmed.

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