Court Opinion

ID: 2799163
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-05-07 03:37:31.762318+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:58.339917
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT JACKSON
                          Assigned on Briefs March 3, 2015

            BOBBY GLEN CROCKER v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

                 Appeal from the Circuit Court for Carroll County
                   No. 05CR98PC       Donald E. Parish, Judge

                 No. W2014-01082-CCA-R3-PC - Filed May 6, 2015

Petitioner, Bobby Glen Crocker, filed a petition for post-conviction relief, which was
dismissed by the post-conviction court as being barred by the statute of limitations. He
appeals the post-conviction court‟s finding that the statute of limitations should not be
tolled due to Petitioner‟s mental incompetency. Following a careful review of the record,
we affirm the decision of the post-conviction court.

  Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

TIMOTHY L. EASTER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERT W.
WEDEMEYER and ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JJ., joined.

J. Neil Thompson, Huntingdon, Tennessee, for the petitioner, Bobby Glen Crocker.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Jeffrey D. Zentner, Assistant
Attorney General; Hansel Jay McCadams, District Attorney General; and R. Adam
Jowers, Assistant District Attorney General, for the respondent, State of Tennessee.

                                       OPINION

                          Factual and Procedural Background

       Over ten and one-half years ago, the Petitioner murdered his wife. He pled guilty
in the Circuit Court of Carroll County in 2006 and filed his first petition for post-
conviction relief in 2011. The post-conviction court‟s dismissal of that petition was
affirmed by this Court in 2013. Bobby Glen Crocker v. State, No. W2012-00960-CCA-
R3-PC, 2013 WL 2327092 (Tenn. Crim. App. May 28, 2013), perm. app. granted (Tenn.
Oct. 23, 2013). The Tennessee Supreme Court vacated this Court‟s decision and
remanded the case to the post-conviction court for an additional hearing. It is from that
hearing and subsequent judgment of dismissal that the Petitioner now appeals.

      The following excerpt comes from this Court‟s original opinion affirming the
dismissal of Petitioner‟s first petition for post-conviction relief:

             The Carroll County Grand Jury indicted the Petitioner for first
      degree premeditated murder for the October 2004 killing of his estranged
      wife. In November 2004, Pathways Behavioral Health conducted a
      competency evaluation and concluded that, based on the Petitioner‟s mental
      retardation, he was incapable of defending himself at trial. In February
      2005, Western Mental Health Institute assessed the Petitioner and found
      him to be “functioning within the [m]oderate range of mental retardation.”
      The State filed a motion requesting that, based on the “mixed messages” of
      the two evaluations, a mental retardation specialist re-evaluate the
      Petitioner. In April 2005, a mental retardation specialist from the
      Department of Mental Health evaluated the Petitioner and concluded that
      he was capable of defending himself at trial. On March 20, 2006, the
      Petitioner pled guilty to second degree murder and received a thirty-year
      sentence to be served at one hundred percent.

              On February 1, 2011, the Petitioner filed a pro se petition for post-
      conviction relief, raising several issues, including that he was actually
      innocent of the crime and received the ineffective assistance of trial
      counsel. The State filed a motion to dismiss the petition on the basis that it
      was time-barred. The post-conviction court concluded that it should
      conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether due process required
      tolling the one-year statute of limitations and appointed counsel to represent
      the Petitioner. Counsel filed an amended petition, arguing that the statute
      of limitations should be tolled due to the Petitioner‟s mental incompetence.
      In support of the amended petition, counsel attached the Petitioner‟s
      medical records since the entry of his guilty plea. In October 2011, the
      post-conviction court ordered that Pathways evaluate the Petitioner to
      determine whether he was competent to participate in the post-conviction
      process, and the evaluator concluded that the Petitioner was competent.

             In April 2012, the post-conviction court conducted the evidentiary
      hearing to determine whether the Petitioner‟s alleged mental incompetence
      tolled the statute of limitations. At the hearing, Anne McSpadden, a
      psychologist at West Tennessee State Penitentiary, testified as an expert in
      psychology that she met with the Petitioner one time in April 2006. The
                                           -2-
Petitioner had been referred to her in order for her to determine whether he
was eligible to participate in a program for low-functioning inmates and
whether he would benefit from “some type of therapy.” Dr. McSpadden
met with the Petitioner for twenty to thirty minutes and determined that he
was not eligible for the program due to the length of his sentence and the
severity of his crime. At the time of their meeting, the Petitioner had just
entered the Department of Correction and was receiving treatment for
major depression. Dr. McSpadden said the Petitioner seemed to have
trouble remembering things and “had issues surrounding his case and . . .
was confused.” She explained that people with major depression typically
“experience significant impairment in their day to day ability to work,
manage their affairs, and to just deal with the day to day stressors.” The
Petitioner also had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD), which could cause flashbacks and nightmares, and was taking
several antipsychotic and antidepressant medications. He reported to Dr.
McSpadden that he had very little education and could not read or write.
Dr. McSpadden stated, “I would think that it would be very difficult for
anybody in this day and time to not be able to read and write to deal with
what we have to do from day to day.”

       Dr. McSpadden testified that the Petitioner could not remember
much about what had happened in the past. She said that in 2004,
Pathways had determined that his IQ was 60, which “falls in the mildly
mentally retarded branch.” She explained that people diagnosed as mildly
mentally retarded had impaired judgment in most areas of their lives and
usually required supervision and monitoring. If they worked, they usually
had to have a job coach help them, and they often lived in supervised care
homes or with their families. Dr. McSpadden stated that in her experience,
people with an IQ of 60 usually functioned on a reading and writing level
of third grade or less and would have to have assistance managing their
personal affairs. Dr. McSpadden said that in her opinion, it would be very
difficult for the Petitioner to manage his personal affairs or understand legal
options available to him. She said that some of her opinions about the
Petitioner were based on events that occurred after she interviewed him in
April 2006.

       On cross-examination, Dr. McSpadden testified that there were
“significant differences” in people diagnosed as mildly mentally retarded.
With support and help, some of them could maintain a fairly normal life
without constant supervision. The State showed Dr. McSpadden a report
from an evaluation conducted on the Petitioner by the Department of
Mental Retardation Services in April 2005. She acknowledged that the
                                      -3-
report indicated the Petitioner could read, check his own blood sugar levels,
and perform a difficult task such as changing the clutch in his truck. She
also acknowledged that the report indicated the Petitioner worked in a
factory for twenty-three years, owned a furniture shop for three years, and
worked as a sharecropper for about thirteen years. However, she was not
sure the information in the report was accurate. Dr. McSpadden
acknowledged that the Petitioner‟s 2005 evaluation assessed whether he
was malingering and that the evaluator concluded the Petitioner was
malingering. The Petitioner‟s April 2005 evaluation was conducted over a
two-day period and was more detailed than the twenty- to thirty-minute
interview Dr. McSpadden conducted in April 2006. Dr. McSpadden did
not diagnose the Petitioner with any conditions as a result of their
interview, and she did not see him again.

       On redirect examination, Dr. McSpadden testified that in April 2005,
the Petitioner‟s Global Assessment of Function (GAF) test score was 60.
She said that GAF measured “how well a person is doing relative to the
general population” and that a score of 60 meant “he has impairment. He
either has moderate impairment in one area or mild impairment in all three
areas of his life. And those areas being work, relationships, and the other
use of available time.” She acknowledged that according to the Petitioner‟s
November 2004 evaluation, Pathways concluded that he was incompetent
to stand trial due to his mental retardation.

        The Petitioner testified that people at the prison prepared his
paperwork for him, told him how to do his job, and told him when to take a
shower. He said inmates “[do] my business” and “[g]et my clothes.”
Sometime before the Petitioner entered prison, his brother obtained power
of attorney over his affairs because he could not make decisions. He said
he could sign his name but could not read or write. The State asked if he
was able to understand his legal responsibilities and obligations, and the
Petitioner answered, “I guess I do. Yeah.” He said that he “didn‟t have
nothing to do” with the filing of his pro se petition for post-conviction relief
and that he did not understand the information in the petition. He also said
that he did not understand that by filing the petition, the post-conviction
court could order that his guilty plea be withdrawn and that he go to trial.
The guards and nurses assisted the Petitioner in prison. He said that he
went to the prison hospital twice per day for blood sugar monitoring, that
he ate too much food, that he did not know what foods he could eat, and
that “they have to take it away from me.”

                                      -4-
             On cross-examination, the Petitioner acknowledged that he signed
      his petitions for post-conviction relief but said that he did not know why the
      petitions were filed. He acknowledged that an individual named Peter
      Jenkins prepared his pro se petition and said that Jenkins “writes my letters
      and [tells] me what to do.” The Petitioner stated that he signed whatever
      Jenkins told him to sign and that he did not know anything about the law.
      He acknowledged that he had a prison job but said, “They pay me, but I
      don‟t do nothing. . . . Well, the other guy does the job. He tells me what to
      do.” He acknowledged that he used to work in a factory and said that he
      worked there more than twenty-three years. He also worked as a
      sharecropper but never owned a furniture shop. He stated that he “told
      people stuff to make me look good . . . because [they] was calling me
      retarded” and that “I ain‟t normal.” He said that when he visited the prison
      doctor, other inmates told him what to tell the doctor because the inmates
      did not want him “[put] in the crazy house.” The State asked the Petitioner
      if he had ever resided in a supervised home facility, and he answered, “I
      don‟t understand a word you [are] saying.”

             On redirect examination, the Petitioner testified that he could not
      learn in school. He said that when he was ten years old, he was told that he
      was “retarded” and that his going to school was “useless.”

              Samantha Phillips testified that she was the Health Administrator at
      Northwest Correctional Complex, where the Petitioner was an inmate. She
      identified the Petitioner‟s medical records, and the State introduced the
      records into evidence. Phillips stated that she was familiar with the policies
      and procedures for appointing conservators for inmates and that nothing in
      the records indicated a conservator had been appointed for the Petitioner.

             In a written order, the post-conviction court concluded that the
      Petitioner failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that within one
      year of his judgment of conviction becoming final, he “lacked the mental
      capacity to manage his personal affairs and to understand his legal rights.”
      Thus, the post-conviction court concluded that the statute of limitations
      should not be tolled and dismissed the petition for post-conviction relief as
      time barred.

Bobby Glen Crocker, 2013 WL 2327092, at *1-4 (footnote omitted).

      This Court affirmed the dismissal of the petition, concluding that the post-
conviction court had not erred in finding that Petitioner had failed to prove by clear and
convincing evidence that he suffered from mental incompetence necessitating the tolling
                                           -5-
of the statute of limitations. Id. at *5. On October 23, 2013, the Supreme Court of
Tennessee granted Petitioner‟s Rule 11 application for permission to appeal, vacated the
decision of this Court, and remanded to the post-conviction court for an additional
hearing so that Petitioner was “afforded the opportunity to present additional evidence
concerning his alleged incompetency in light of the standard . . . adopted in Reid [ex rel.
Martiniano v. State, 396 S.W.3d 478 (Tenn. 2013)].” Bobby Glen Crocker v. State, No.
W2012-00960-SC-R11-PC, at 3 (Tenn. Oct. 23, 2013) (Order). Reid announced a new
standard by which courts should determine whether the post-conviction statute of
limitations should be tolled for a petitioner with an alleged mental incompetency. See id.
at 1-2. That decision was released while Petitioner‟s post-conviction appeal was pending.

       Upon remand, the post-conviction court held another evidentiary hearing on May
6, 2014, during which the following evidence was adduced.

        Ms. Fannie T. Shelton testified that she was a nationally certified psychiatric nurse
practitioner, family nurse practitioner, and gerontological nurse practitioner. She
received her undergraduate education from the University of Tennessee and the
University of Memphis. She received a Master‟s degree in nursing, “specifically in
diagnosing and treatment,” from the University of Tennessee in December 1981. She
practiced at Veterans Medical Center in Memphis from 1981 through 2006.

       Ms. Shelton saw Petitioner on June 30, 2006, and in September 2006 at Northwest
Correctional while she was employed by Mental Health Management, Inc. Petitioner‟s
diagnosis on both occasions was “major depressive disorder recurrent with psychosis and
[post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”)].” After evaluating Petitioner, Ms. Shelton
“continued [Petitioner] on his current medical regimen . . . because he was doing so
well.” At the hearing, Ms. Shelton could not recall what medications Petitioner was
taking at the time, but she was “sure” that he was “on an anti-depressant for his
depressive disorder.” Petitioner may have been taking psychotropic medications for the
“psychotic features” that sometimes accompany depression.

        Each of Petitioner‟s diagnoses of major depressive disorder and PTSD is a mental
disease or defect and an “Axis 1” psychiatric diagnosis. Ms. Shelton explained that,
“according to DSM-IV and V [the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, fourth and fifth
editions], there‟s a spectrum in Axis 1 [that] relates to the psychiatric component of the . .
. disorders. There‟s . . . Axis 2, 3, 4, and 5, but this specifically is related to a psychiatric
diagnosis.” She testified that an Axis 1 diagnosis would not affect a person being able to
understand his or her legal rights and would not “have any effect on their mental
capabilities as they process information [or] things of that nature.” When Ms. Shelton
observed Petitioner in June and September of 2006, “he was having no symptoms, no
hallucinations, no problem with sleep or appetite, no side effects from medications, and
he did not voice any complaints . . . of his mental status exam, but he was stable at that
                                               -6-
time.” Ms. Shelton stated that nothing in her observation notes suggested that Petitioner
was untruthful or deceptive during their meetings.

       Ms. Shelton could not remember the particular meetings that she had with
Petitioner; she could only testify based on her notes. Ms. Shelton‟s notes reflected that
there were not any noteworthy differences between Petitioner‟s condition in June and in
September. Ms. Shelton never made any inquiry into Petitioner‟s educational
background or IQ, although Petitioner reported to Ms. Shelton that he was attending
“AC” school. Ms. Shelton could not recall what that abbreviation meant. She did not
discuss Petitioner‟s legal situation with him. Ms. Shelton stated that neither of
Petitioner‟s diagnoses would “in any way affect [Petitioner] from being able to make a
rational choice between options that are presented to him.”

       Ms. Shelton explained that patients received an initial treatment plan, which was
reviewed every six months by a team to discuss whether any changes needed to be made.
Each time Ms. Shelton observed Petitioner, there was a treatment plan in place for him.
Petitioner received outpatient treatment for his diagnoses, and Ms. Shelton never felt that
his condition was acute enough to necessitate inpatient treatment.

       Ms. Shelton‟s records reflected that Petitioner mental status in June 2006 was
“oriented times four,” which is the highest level on the assessment form. In this mental
status, Petitioner‟s memory and intellect were intact, and his speech and thought
processes were “appropriate.” Petitioner had no complaints about his sleep, and he did
not have hallucinations or delusions. Petitioner‟s mood was normal. He had no health
changes. Petitioner was compliant with his medications and did not have any side
effects. Ms. Shelton‟s overall assessment was that Petitioner was “stable and
maintaining.”

        Ms. Shelton also completed a form for the Tennessee Department of Correction
Abnormal and Voluntary Movement Scale (“AIMS” form). On the AIMS form, a health
practitioner will “grade whether there are side effects to the medications that a person is
prescribed, and if the[re] are, [one] can adjust or discontinue” medication. The AIMS
form for Petitioner indicated that in June and September of 2006 Petitioner did not have
any problems with his facial and oral movements, extremity movements, trunk
movement, or global judgment and mental status. Nothing in Ms. Shelton‟s records
indicated that Petitioner “could not make rational choices on his own.”

       Dr. Anne Marie McSpadden, who previously testified at Petitioner‟s first post-
conviction hearing, testified again. She was a psychologist working as the mental health
administrator for West Tennessee State Penitentiary (“WTSP”). Dr. McSpadden
obtained a PhD in Applied Behavioral Studies from Oklahoma State University in 1985.

                                            -7-
Dr. McSpadden could not remember specifically meeting with Petitioner in 2006, but her
records reflected that she did. At that time, she was a consulting psychologist for WTSP.

        Dr. McSpadden testified that Petitioner‟s diagnoses of major depressive disorder
recurrent with psychosis and PTSD are “a mental disease or defect.” She also stated that
“a serious mental illness [affects] [a] person‟s ability to make choices.” She testified that
Petitioner‟s diagnoses of major depressive disorder recurrent with psychosis and PTSD
“would not make it impossible” for Petitioner “to understand his legal position and any
options that are available to him,” but they “could certainly influence” his ability to
understand them. Dr. McSpadden affirmed that Petitioner‟s IQ was 66, but stated that
Petitioner‟s IQ combined with his mental disorders would not change her conclusion
about his ability to understand his legal options. Dr. McSpadden acknowledged that an
inability to read or write might affect Petitioner‟s ability to understand his legal options
simply because he may not be able to read documents or understand difficult words or
concepts. Dr. McSpadden testified that Petitioner‟s mental diagnoses, IQ, and inability to
read and write, when combined, would affect Petitioner‟s ability to make a rational
choice when presented with options. She could not attribute the impairment to any
particular cause or condition because “that‟s difficult to parse out.”

        On cross-examination, Dr. McSpadden agreed that she only saw Petitioner on one
occasion. She acknowledged that, despite the combination of conditions and deficiencies
afflicting Petitioner, any particular case will vary with a patient‟s individual symptoms.
Dr. McSpadden testified that she was “not able to say specifically that [Petitioner] has
been affected by this mental health disorder or disease or this IQ level as far as him
making rational choices while he‟s been at the penitentiary.” Dr. McSpadden admitted
that, although she said that Petitioner‟s ailments could have an effect on him, she was
“not here saying that it has prevented him from understanding his legal position at any
time during the time he‟s been in prison.” She also admitted that she was “not able to
testify here today that it [ha]s prevented him from making any rational choices during the
time he‟s been in the penitentiary system.”

       Pete Clinton Jenkins was an inmate housed with Petitioner at Northwest
Correctional Facility in Tiptonville. Mr. Jenkins had been incarcerated there since 2004,
before Mr. Crocker arrived. He was with Petitioner on a daily basis and spent “on
average, four hours” with Petitioner. Mr. Jenkins “help[ed] him fill out commissary
clothing forms, just daily routine things we have to do at the prison.” He recalled that,
when Petitioner first arrived at the prison in 2006, his mental state was “very bad.” Mr.
Jenkins explained: “He was a lot disoriented. . . . He‟d have to be told what to do, how to
do it, where he would go and how he would make his bed. Just various things.
Everyday, routine things you‟d have . . . to tell him.” These “routine things” were those
“that a normal person of his age should know how to do” and would not have been
learned after entering prison.
                                             -8-
       Mr. Jenkins affirmed that Petitioner cannot read or write; he has never seen
Petitioner write anything other than signing his name. Mr. Jenkins wrote letters for
Petitioner to his attorney because Petitioner could not write them on his own. Mr.
Jenkins helped Petitioner file his petition for post-conviction relief. He stated that
Petitioner “at no time” understood that he had a right to file the petition.

       Mr. Jenkins said that he remembered Petitioner being on medication for an
extended period of time until 2010 or 2011, “right before [he] filed this petition.” After
Petitioner stopped taking his medication, Mr. Jenkins “tried to tell him what all [he] felt
was done wrong in his case,” but Petitioner did not seem to understand. Mr. Jenkins tried
to explain these things to Petitioner “back in 2007, 2008,” but “he didn‟t understand.”
Mr. Jenkins explained:

       He don‟t know nothing about the law. . . . He thought he was only going to
       be there for a year, you know, and then I said, “Well, Bobby, you‟ve got
       longer in here than that.” I said, “Didn‟t they tell you you‟ve got another
       appeal?” He said, “No.” He said, “What is an appeal?” And, I‟d have to
       sit down and explain to him what an appeal was.

Mr. Jenkins stated that Petitioner does “not really” understand the concept of post-
conviction relief; “[h]e understands that he‟s in court, but that‟s about the extent of it.”
Mr. Jenkins believed that another inmate also tried to help Petitioner file for post-
conviction relief, but Petitioner did not understand.

        He stated that in prison, Petitioner had a job “collecting bags, putting them in a
blanket and roll[ing] them up. That‟s about it.” Petitioner also had a job “wiping off
tables.” Mr. Jenkins did not know of any classes taken by Petitioner since he had been in
prison.

       When Petitioner first arrived at the penitentiary, “he was off on his own” and
“didn‟t have nobody.” Petitioner “was scared to death. Would stay in his cell a lot,
wouldn‟t come out. [Mr. Jenkins would] have to get him to come out, walk in the yard.”
Petitioner had a cellmate. Mr. Jenkins did not know of Petitioner ever being mistreated
in prison; “people kind of look out for” him. Mr. Jenkins agreed that some would say
Petitioner “acts more like a kid . . . than anything else.”

       Petitioner did not discuss any legal issues with Mr. Jenkins and was not able to
understand any of the legal concepts explained to him by Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins
“somewhat has a grasp on how our system works” because he has “been through habeas
corpus relief” and “had suits in federal court and taken numerous avenues since the early
„90s to try to get [his] case taken care of.” Mr. Jenkins was unaware of any legal
                                            -9-
assistance available to prisoners once they arrived at prison, but there was a law library
available. He did not think Petitioner could use the library given that Petitioner cannot
read, and he has never seen Petitioner in the law library. Mr. Jenkins stated that there
was a law clerk at the library that “tries to help with . . . court matters.” The law clerk
must be sought out for help; he does not approach inmates.

       On cross-examination, Mr. Jenkins testified that he had been in prison since 1994
“for two convictions of aggravated rape that are stacked on top of each other for thirty
years.” He agreed that he thought “the system” had done him wrong. He acknowledged
that he has “filed appellant briefs and . . . a writ of habeas corpus and all sorts of things to
try to get out of” his convictions. Mr. Jenkins also has felony convictions for theft,
burglary, and an escape from prison.

       The prosecutor entered into evidence a letter admittedly typed and signed by Mr.
Jenkins. The letter is dated November 10, 2011, is addressed to the Clerk of Court, and
was file-stamped on November 15, 2011. In the letter, Mr. Jenkins alleges:

       I have known Bobby for several years and in this time, I have talked to him
       on several occasions and issues. I‟ve also looked over what paperwork he
       has had as well as listen very closely to his story, recollection of events that
       transpired.

The letter further provides details of Petitioner‟s case, dates, and meetings with an
attorney about the civil lawsuit filed against Petitioner for the wrongful death of his wife.
Mr. Jenkins acknowledged that, in the letter, he claimed that someone else drafted
Petitioner‟s petition for post-conviction relief. However, Mr. Jenkins clarified that, “I
rough drafted it, and I let them do it. . . . And I filed it for him.”

       Petitioner testified that he is currently imprisoned in Tiptonville. He has known
Mr. Jenkins ever since he arrived in prison, but he cannot remember when he first
arrived. Petitioner claimed that he “was kind of in a nightmare” at first. He explained:

       I had nightmares and people doing stuff to me where I lived, you know.
       My daddy used me for five years of abuse. I went through hell, and he
       done it to me. And I was living in hell. I prayed for hell. I tried to kill
       myself hundreds of times. My brother saved me. He should not never have
       saved me. My wife teached me how to kill myself.

Petitioner also provided the following in regards to his condition when he first arrived:

       I was too sick. I was too sick when I first went there, but I got better.
       People was helping me, and the nurse . . . was taking care of me. . . . I
                                              -10-
          couldn‟t remember. And sick and all, you know. I didn‟t know when to
          get up or how to do anything in prison or do anything. If people was
          helping me and the nurses, they helped me a lot. Every time I‟d go down
          there, the nurses would give me candy and stuff and feed me, you know,
          and talk to me and try to encourage me, you know, to try to hold it together
          and everything . . . . But the doctors, they worried about me down there,
          you know. They asked me questions all the time because they don‟t want
          me to . . . relapse or something. They said . . . too much pressure on me
          and cause me to relapse again.

        Petitioner admitted that he was taking medication when he arrived at prison. He
said, “[T]he medicine helped, but it didn‟t take away the nightmares that goes since I was
hearing things, you know, seeing dead people.” Petitioner could not describe how the
medicine helped him. He did not remember when he stopped taking medication, but he
stated that he is no longer taking any, except for his heart and diabetes.

          Regarding his knowledge of the petition for post-conviction relief, Petitioner
stated:

          [W]hen I went to the penitentiary, I had no knowledge of nothing. I had
          known nothing about no library, nothing like that. I didn‟t know they had
          anything existed you could file a petition. I didn‟t know. I thought when I
          went to the pen, that was it. There wasn‟t nothing nobody could do.

Petitioner claimed that he did not remember helping Mr. Jenkins file the petition or
providing him information to prepare it. Petitioner said that he did not “know anything
about post-conviction relief” when he first arrived at the penitentiary. He expounded:

          I can‟t read or write. I didn‟t know it existed. I thought that was it. I
          mean, they put me in the pen. Somebody did. . . . I thought it was
          permanent. I didn‟t know you could come back to court. I had no idea I
          could come back up here and post-convict. Didn‟t nobody tell me. If they
          told me, I would of had.

Petitioner testified that he thought he would only “be at the penitentiary” for one year
because that was what his lawyer told him. Petitioner could remember “some of the
things” that his attorney did, but he was not taking medication at the time. Petitioner
denied ever going to the law library or talking with the law clerk about his case.

       Petitioner explained that other inmates beside Mr. Jenkins had “helped” him in
prison:

                                              -11-
       They helped me. When I go to the psychologist, they tell me what to say,
       you know, and not to play crazy, that they‟ll put me in a mental hospital,
       stuff like that. They take care of me, and I don‟t say nothing to the doctors
       that‟s going to throw them off, you know.

On cross-examination, Petitioner admitted that he was “clever” about knowing how to
talk to doctors so that he could avoid going to the mental hospital.

       Petitioner said that he is “on the last job [he] can do now because [he] couldn‟t do
the others.” He has been removed from other jobs for “messing” them up. According to
Petitioner, the other “inmates get tired of showing [him] all the time.”

       Petitioner denied knowing why he was at the hearing, but he said that Mr. Jenkins
talked to him about it. Petitioner testified that, at the time of the hearing, he understood
that he had a right to file a petition for post-conviction relief, but he could not remember
at what point he realized that. Petitioner said that he did not know that he could file a
petition for post-conviction relief before this one was filed. Petitioner did not know that
he “had a right to appeal [his] case when he got convicted.” He added, “I thought I was
supposed to stay in prison. I mean, I signed that deal, ever what it was they told me to
sign. I do what they told me to do.” Petitioner told the post-conviction court that he
would “like to have another trial” and to be given “another chance.”

       Petitioner could not remember being in court for his guilty plea and did not
remember being told that he would serve a thirty-year sentence as a “100% offender.”
Petitioner said “I would had no idea what a 100 percent is nothing. Nobody explained it.
. . . You might as well been talking to a tree. I wouldn‟t understand it.” When asked if
Petitioner understood that he would have to serve 85% of his sentence, Petitioner
claimed, “I don‟t remember that, and I wouldn‟t have knowed what it meant even if I‟d
said because I can‟t count. I ain‟t got no education. I wouldn‟t know what it meant.”

       Petitioner denied wanting a new trial initially but admitted that he “signed the
[post-conviction] papers” because he “agreed with it.”

       [Prosecutor]: So when you found out that you can sign some papers and
       come back and see the judge, you wanted to do that, didn‟t you?

       [Petitioner]: Yes, sir. I did.

       [Prosecutor]: That was your decision, wasn‟t it?

       [Petitioner]: Yeah.

                                            -12-
       [Prosecutor]: And the only thing that prevented you from doing that before
       any of this is because nobody come and told you that?

       [Petitioner]: Didn‟t nobody tell me.

        At the end of the hearing, the post-conviction court again found that due process
did not require tolling of the post-conviction statute of limitations because Petitioner had
failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that he was mentally incompetent.

                                          Analysis

        Post-conviction relief is available for any conviction or sentence that is “void or
voidable because of the abridgment of any right guaranteed by the Constitution of
Tennessee or the Constitution of the United States.” T.C.A. § 40-30-103. A petition for
post-conviction relief must be filed within one year of the date on which the judgment
became final if no direct appeal was taken. T.C.A. § 40-30-102(a). Our legislature
emphasized the fact that “[t]ime is of the essence of the right to file a petition for post-
conviction relief,” id., and provided only three narrow exceptions to the statute of
limitations: (1) a new constitutional right with retrospective application; (2) new
scientific evidence establishing actual innocence; and (3) the invalidation of convictions
underlying an enhanced sentence. T.C.A. § 40-30-102(b).

        However, the right to due process may necessitate tolling the statute of limitations
in certain circumstances outside of the enumerated statutory exceptions. See Seals v.
State, 23 S.W.3d 272 (Tenn. 2000); Burford v. State, 845 S.W.2d 204 (Tenn. 1992). Our
supreme court has held:

       [B]efore a state may terminate a claim for failure to comply with procedural
       requirements such as statutes of limitations, due process requires that a
       potential litigant be provided an opportunity for “presentation of claims at a
       meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.” The test is “whether the
       time period provides an applicant a reasonable opportunity to have the
       claimed issue heard and determined.”

Seals, 23 S.W.3d at 277-78 (quoting Burford, 845 S.W.2d at 207).

       Our supreme court has previously held that one circumstance in which due process
requires tolling of the post-conviction statute of limitations is where a petitioner‟s mental
incompetence prevents him from complying with the statute‟s deadline. Seals, 23
S.W.3d at 279. A petitioner who is mentally incompetent throughout the limitations
period would be legally incapable of asserting his or her constitutional rights in a timely
post-conviction petition, and would, therefore, be denied the opportunity to challenge his
                                              -13-
or her conviction in a meaningful manner. Id. at 278. Accordingly, “the failure to toll
the limitations period would deny such a petitioner a fair and reasonable opportunity for
the bringing of the [post-conviction] petition, and thus, would violate due process.” Id.
(quoting Watkins v. State, 903 S.W.2d 302, 307 (Tenn. 1995)) (alteration in Seals).

        Until recently, a petitioner seeking to toll the statute of limitations for mental
incompetence had to show that he or she was “unable either to manage his or her own
personal affairs or to understand his or her legal rights and liabilities.” State v. Nix, 40
S.W.3d 459, 461 (Tenn. 2001). However, the Tennessee Supreme Court decided that,
“[i]n the interest of uniformity and simplicity, we have determined that the standards and
procedures in [Tennessee Supreme Court Rule] 28, § 11 should henceforth be used in all
post-conviction proceedings . . . in which the issue of the petitioner‟s competency is
properly raised,” including “when a petitioner seeks to toll the statute of limitations in
[Tennessee Code Annotated section] 40-30-102(a) due to incompetency.” Reid ex rel.
Martiniano v. State, 396 S.W.3d 478, 512 (Tenn. 2013). That standard of competency is:

       whether the petitioner possesses the present capacity to appreciate the
       petitioner‟s position and make a rational choice with respect to continuing
       or abandoning further litigation or on the other hand whether the petitioner
       is suffering from a mental disease, disorder, or defect which may
       substantially affect the petitioner‟s capacity.

Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 28, § 11(B)(1). “The question is not whether the [petitioner] is able to
care for himself or herself, but whether the prisoner is able to make rational decisions
concerning the management of his or her post-conviction appeals.” Reid, 396 S.W.3d at
513.

        At the hearing, the burden is on the petitioner to prove “that he or she is mentally
incompetent by clear and convincing evidence.” Id. at 494 (citing T.C.A. § 40-30-
110(f)). Our supreme court has directed lower courts to apply the following three-step
test for determining competency:

       (1) Is the person suffering from a mental disease or defect?

       (2) If the person is suffering from a mental disease or defect, does that
       disease or defect prevent him from understanding his legal position and the
       options available to him?

       (3) If the person is suffering from a mental disease or defect which does not
       prevent him from understanding his legal position and the options available
       to him, does that disease or defect, nevertheless, prevent him from making
       a rational choice among his options?
                                            -14-
       If the answer to the first question is no, the court need go no further, the
       person is competent. If both the first and second questions are answered in
       the affirmative, the person is incompetent and the third question need not
       be addressed. If the first question is answered yes and the second is
       answered no, the third question is determinative; if yes, the person is
       incompetent, if no, the person is competent.

Id. at 513 (quoting Rumbaugh v. Procunier, 753 F.2d 395, 398-99 (5th Cir. 1985)). The
focus of the inquiry is on rational decision making:

       A decision may be rational even when it is not one that the majority would
       consider acceptable, sensible, or reasonable. A decision is rational when it
       is based on a process of reasoning. A person‟s decision-making process is
       rational when that person can (1) take in and understand information; (2)
       process the information in accordance with his or her personal values and
       goals; (3) make a decision based on the information; and (4) communicate
       the decision.

Id. at 513 (internal citations omitted).

       “Whether due process considerations require tolling of a statute of limitations is a
mixed question of law and fact, which we review de novo with no presumption of
correctness.” Smith v. State, 357 S.W.3d 322, 355 (Tenn. 2011) (quoting Harris v. State,
301 S.W.3d 141, 145 (Tenn. 2010)). However, we “are bound by the post-conviction
court‟s underlying findings of fact unless the evidence preponderates against them,” and
we “must defer to a post-conviction court‟s findings with regard to witness credibility,
the weight and value of witness testimony, and the resolution of factual issues presented
by the evidence.” Whitehead v. State, 402 S.W.3d 615, 621 (Tenn. 2013) (citations
omitted).

       Petitioner argues that the post-conviction court erred in finding that Petitioner had
not proven mental incompetence entitling him to tolling of the statute of limitations. At
the end of the hearing, the post-conviction court made oral findings of fact and
conclusions of law. The court indicated that it had reviewed the evidence presented at the
first evidentiary hearing in April 2012. After summarizing the testimonies of Ms.
Shelton and Dr. McSpadden presented at the second hearing, the court noted that Mr.
Jenkins‟s criminal history “affects his credibility in the [c]ourt‟s eyes.” Regarding the
November 10, 2011 letter sent to the Clerk of Court by Mr. Jenkins, the court made “the
factual finding that it‟s most likely that Mr. Jenkins has included some information here
that was not related by the [P]etitioner, and it‟s also probable that the [P]etitioner related

                                             -15-
information to Mr. Jenkins beyond what he‟s indicating that he has the ability to know or
recall or understand at this time.” As for Petitioner, the court stated:

       [W]hile [Petitioner] says he doesn‟t know why he‟s here today, the Court
       finds that he actually does know. He may not understand the very detailed
       part of why he‟s here, but bottom line, he understands that he‟s here to ask
       the Court to set aside his conviction and grant him a trial in this case.

        The post-conviction court stated the standard established in Reid and the three-step
test set forth therein and applied it to the facts of Petitioner‟s case. First, the court found
that Petitioner, “during the relevant time period, that is, one year after the finality of the
judgment in this case, did suffer from some mental disease or defect. The proof plainly
establishes that to be the case.” Second, the court found that “the [P]etitioner has not
established by the proof in its totality[,] taking the 2012 evidentiary hearing and today‟s
evidentiary hearing into account,” that his mental diseases or defects prevented him from
understanding his legal position and the options available to him during the “relevant
time period of one year or so after the finality of the judgment.” Third, the court found
that “the condition that [Petitioner] suffers from did not at any relevant time rise to the
level of preventing him from making a rational choice about options which were
available to him, keeping in mind that the option that we‟re talking about here is only his
ability to file a post-conviction relief petition.” The court concluded that “the proof falls
short of having established that the statute of limitations provision should be waived by
any due process consideration.”

       The post-conviction court applied the correct legal standard and the evidence in
the record does not preponderate against the court‟s findings of fact. The testimony of
Nurse Practitioner Shelton plainly weighed heavily against Petitioner on the second and
third prongs of the Rumbaugh test, as she denied that his mental diagnoses had any
adverse impact on his ability to understand his legal options or make rational choices. In
both of her encounters with Petitioner during his first year of imprisonment, he appeared
to be functioning quite well on medication. Dr. McSpadden‟s testimony did not rule out
Petitioner‟s ability to understand his legal options and to make rational choices but
simply suggested that Petitioner‟s combination of disabilities had the potential to make it
more difficult for him to comprehend complex concepts and details. The bulk of her
testimony consisted of generalizations about individuals with the same mental disorders
as Petitioner and lacked specificity as to Petitioner‟s ability to understand his options or
make rational decisions at the time she observed him. Most of her testimony about
Petitioner consisted of recounting the information that he had provided to her in their
brief one-time meeting. As for Mr. Jenkins, who offered the most specific testimony as
to Petitioner‟s capabilities when he first arrived in prison, the court made an adverse
finding as to his credibility and pointed out that much of his testimony was inconsistent
with the contents of the detailed November 15, 2011 letter that he had previously filed
                                             -16-
with the court, which exhibited extensive knowledge about the intricacies of Petitioner‟s
case. Finally, the majority of Petitioner‟s testimony at both hearings was self-serving at
best, and Petitioner conveniently could not recall much of anything that may have been to
his detriment. Worth mention is the fact that Petitioner appeared particularly capable of
articulating how difficult it was for him to understand anything. Moreover, there was
evidence that Petitioner may have been prone to malinger. Given all of the evidence in
the record, we find no error in the decision of the post-conviction court.

                                       Conclusion

      For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the post-conviction court is affirmed.

                                                  _________________________________
                                                  TIMOTHY L. EASTER, JUDGE

                                           -17-