Court Opinion

ID: 6325088
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-21 07:19:02.950744+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:58.053722
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                       OF TEXAS

                                   NO. WR-74,562-02

                     EX PARTE RICHARD DOTSON, Applicant

            ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
            CAUSE NO. 1192825-B IN THE 177TH DISTRICT COURT
                         FROM HARRIS COUNTY

       SLAUGHTER, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which YEARY, J., joined.

                               DISSENTING OPINION

       More than ten years after he was convicted and sentenced for the instant drug

offense, the Court grants Applicant a new direct appeal under the theory that his appellate

counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge an improper sentencing enhancement. In

his habeas pleadings, however, Applicant readily acknowledges that he had other prior

criminal convictions that could have supported the enhancement in question. Further, the

record suggests that Applicant did not raise any trial-level objection to the improper

enhancement. Given the circumstances and the absence of precedent in 2009 clearly
                                                                           Dotson dissent - 2

showing that such unpreserved complaint would have constituted reversible error had it

been raised, Applicant has failed to show that his appellate counsel was unreasonable for

failing to raise this issue on direct appeal. Therefore, I cannot agree with the Court’s

decision to grant relief on this basis. Alternatively, even assuming that Applicant’s

ineffective-assistance claim is meritorious, I would remand this case for consideration of

laches in light of the significant delay in bringing this issue to the Court’s attention. For

these reasons, I respectfully dissent.

       I.     Background

       In 2009, Applicant was tried by a jury for the state-jail felony offense of possession

of less than a gram of cocaine, alleged to have occurred in November 2008. TEX. HEALTH

& SAFETY CODE § 481.115(b) (West 2008). The State’s indictment alleged two prior

felonies for enhancement purposes under former Penal Code Section 12.42(a)(2): a 1992

conviction for burglary of a building, and a 1998 conviction for delivery of a controlled

substance. Applicant pleaded true to the enhancements, which raised the range of

punishment to that of a second-degree felony, and he was therefore sentenced to eighteen

years’ imprisonment. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 12.42(a)(2) (West 2008) (making state-jail

felony punishable as second-degree felony upon showing that defendant has two prior

“felony” convictions). However, the latter conviction for delivery of a controlled substance

was in fact a state-jail felony. Although punishment for that offense had been enhanced to

a felony range based on other prior convictions, pursuant to this Court’s precedent, the

offense remained classified as a state-jail felony for future enhancement purposes. See

Campbell v. State, 49 S.W.3d 874, 878 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001). Thus, it was unavailable

to use as a “felony” to enhance Applicant’s delivery offense under former Section
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12.42(a)(2).

       Following Applicant’s conviction, on direct appeal, appellate counsel did not raise

any point of error addressing the improper enhancement, instead raising only a claim of

evidentiary insufficiency. The court of appeals rejected this argument and affirmed

Applicant’s conviction and sentence. Dotson v. State, No. 14-09-00213-CR, 2010 WL

1661930 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] April 27, 2010).

       In 2010, Applicant filed a pro se post-conviction habeas application challenging his

conviction. This original filing did not raise the current claim of ineffective assistance of

appellate counsel, instead raising several record-based claims and claims of ineffective

assistance of trial counsel. None of Applicant’s claims raised in his original pro se

application addressed the unlawful enhancement.

       Applicant was initially appointed counsel for his habeas application, but that

counsel withdrew and, in 2011, the Harris County Public Defender’s Office was appointed

to represent Applicant in these habeas proceedings. In September 2012, the habeas court

signed findings of fact and conclusions of law recommending that relief be denied on

Applicant’s original claims. However, the Public Defender’s Office then filed an

unopposed motion to rescind those findings so that it could complete its investigation of

Applicant’s case. The habeas court agreed and rescinded its findings. It is unclear what, if

anything, transpired with the application during the following nine years, during which

time the application remained pending. 1 In April 2021, the State filed new proposed

findings of fact and conclusions of law. In those findings, it noted that the Public

1
 The habeas record reflects that Applicant’s attorney of record changed several times, but he has
been represented by the Public Defender’s Office since 2011.
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Defender’s Office had not amended the application since being appointed to represent

Applicant in 2011. The trial court signed those findings recommending that relief be

denied. The case was then transmitted to this Court.

       On June 15, 2021, habeas counsel filed in the trial court an amended application

raising additional claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel.

Specifically, counsel alleged that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the

improper enhancement and that appellate counsel was similarly ineffective for failing to

challenge the improper enhancement on appeal. Habeas counsel also filed in this Court a

motion to remand “to resolve additional ground[s] for relief.” We remanded the application

to the habeas court for additional fact-finding on Applicant’s newly-raised claims.

       Following remand, Applicant abandoned his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel

claim and proceeded only on his ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claim. The

habeas court adopted Applicant’s proposed findings and conclusions recommending that

relief be granted in the form of an out-of-time appeal. This Court now follows that

recommendation, finding that Applicant’s appellate counsel rendered constitutionally

ineffective assistance by failing to raise the improper enhancement on direct appeal.

       II.    Applicant’s Ineffective-Assistance Claim Lacks Merit

       In his application, Applicant candidly acknowledges that he had other prior felony

convictions that could have supported enhancement under former Section 12.42(a)(2).

Therefore, he is precluded by this Court’s holding in Ex parte Parrott from receiving relief

on a freestanding illegal-sentence claim in this habeas proceeding. See 396 S.W.3d 531,

535-37 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (holding that habeas applicant raising illegal

sentence/improper enhancement claim must establish harm, and he cannot do so if
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enhanced punishment range was otherwise “supported by his actual criminal history”).

Applicant has also abandoned his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claim, presumably

because he recognizes that, if trial counsel had raised a timely objection to the improper

enhancement in the trial court, the State would have simply substituted one of Applicant’s

other prior felony convictions for the objectionable state-jail felony, thereby avoiding the

problem entirely. Thus, Applicant can only complain that his appellate counsel was

ineffective for failing to challenge the improper enhancement on direct appeal.

       But given the state of the law at the time of Applicant’s direct appeal over a decade

ago, it does not appear to be so clear-cut that this unpreserved complaint would have been

meritorious had it been raised. To prevail on an ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel

claim, it must be shown that “(1) counsel’s decision not to raise a particular point of error

was objectively unreasonable, and (2) there is a reasonable probability that, but for

counsel’s failure to raise that particular issue, [the applicant] would have prevailed on

appeal.” Ex parte Miller, 330 S.W.3d 610, 623 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). Thus, generally

speaking, “if appellate counsel fails to raise a claim that has indisputable merit under well-

settled law and would necessarily result in reversible error, appellate counsel is ineffective

for failing to raise it.” Id. at 624. Here, however, the claim in question was not indisputably

meritorious. Given the lack of any trial objection to the improper enhancement, it is

possible that an appellate court would have held such claim to be unpreserved and rejected

it on that basis.

       In a recent decision, we acknowledged a lack of clarity in the case law surrounding

our treatment of “improper enhancement” claims, as compared to “illegal sentence” claims,

and the circumstances under which such complaints must be preserved with a timely
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objection at trial. See Ex parte Hill, 632 S.W.3d 547, 554-56 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021)

(reviewing caselaw from 1981 to 2018 and observing that, while “improper enhancement”

claims must be preserved at trial, “illegal sentence” claims based on improper enhancement

need not be preserved with an objection in the trial court). In Hill, this Court considered a

situation where a defendant’s sentencing enhancements were proper as of the time of trial,

but one of the enhancing convictions was later vacated on habeas review because of an

involuntary plea. Id. at 550. We filed and set the case, in part, to decide whether “Applicant

forfeited his illegal-sentence claims when he failed to object at trial[.]” Id. at 554. We

recognized that to resolve this issue, we must “first review two different, but closely

related, lines of cases” addressing illegal-sentence claims based on invalid

enhancements, as compared to invalid-enhancement claims. Id. Reviewing the Court’s

caselaw in this area, we observed that we had allowed defendants to raise unpreserved

illegal-sentence claims on post-conviction review, but in many such cases the defect in the

enhancing conviction had not been apparent at the time of trial or on appeal. Id. at 554-55

(discussing Ex parte Rich, 194 S.W.3d 508 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006)). By contrast, we had

required a trial objection to preserve ordinary “improper enhancement” claims. Id. at 555-

56 (discussing Hill v. State, 633 S.W.2d 520 (Tex. Crim. App. 1981), and Ex parte

Patterson, 969 S.W.2d 16 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998)). In attempting to harmonize these

principles, we concluded that applicant Hill could raise his illegal-sentence claim based on

an improper enhancement on habeas, notwithstanding the lack of a trial objection. Id. at

556. But in doing so, we declined to overrule our Hill/improper enhancement line of cases.

We also noted that, unlike the present case, the illegality of applicant Hill’s sentence “was

not ascertainable from the appellate record, becoming apparent only years later when this
                                                                              Dotson dissent - 7

Court overturned his enhancement conviction on involuntary-plea grounds[.]” Id.

       What is clear enough from our discussion in Hill is that, as recently as last year,

there remained a lack of clarity in the caselaw with respect to the circumstances under

which a trial-level objection would be required to preserve an improper-enhancement

claim. The very fact that it was necessary to file and set the case on that issue in 2021

demonstrates that the law was unsettled as to that question at the time of Applicant’s direct

appeal in 2009. Further, unlike the situation in Hill where the problem with the

enhancement was not apparent at trial or from the face of the appellate record, the problem

with the enhancement in this case was present at trial and could have been objected to by

trial counsel. Had counsel timely objected, the State could have likely substituted one of

Applicant’s other convictions for the problematic enhancement, thereby avoiding the error

entirely. Given these circumstances and the fact that Applicant’s criminal history actually

supports enhancement here, I cannot fault appellate counsel for possibly viewing the error

in question as a mere improper-enhancement claim subject to forfeiture, and not a true

“illegal sentence” claim that could be raised for the first time on appeal in the absence of a

trial objection. In short, counsel was not unreasonable for failing to raise this unpreserved

point of error when the law was unsettled with respect to whether such point of error would

have been meritorious. Ex parte Chandler, 182 S.W.3d 350, 359 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005)

(“counsel’s performance will be measured against the state of the law in effect during the

time of trial and we will not find counsel ineffective where the claimed error is based upon

unsettled law”) (internal citation and quotations omitted). To the extent that the law has

subsequently become clearer in the last decade with respect to the ability of litigants to

obtain relief on these types of claims in the absence of a trial objection, that fact should not
                                                                             Dotson dissent - 8

obscure the reasonableness of counsel’s conduct in 2009. Id. (noting that “a bar card does

not come with a crystal ball attached”). Therefore, based on the state of the law at the time

and the circumstances of Applicant’s case, I cannot agree that Applicant has established

his appellate counsel performed deficiently for failing to raise this unpreserved complaint.

          III.   Laches

          As a separate consideration, even assuming for the sake of argument that Applicant

has raised a meritorious ineffective-assistance claim, I would remand this case to the

habeas court for the parties to address whether Applicant’s claim should be barred by

laches.

          The record in this case shows that Applicant filed his pro se habeas application more

than a decade ago, in 2010. Notably, the original pro se pleadings did not include the instant

ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claim on which the Court today grants relief.

The record further shows that Applicant was appointed counsel shortly after he filed the

application. Although counsel of record has changed several times, the office currently

representing him, the Harris County Public Defender’s Office, has been representing

Applicant for over a decade, since 2011. Habeas counsel did not amend the application to

include the present IAC-appellate counsel claim until June 2021.

          The record contains no explanation for why habeas counsel did not bring the

amended application until ten years after his office was appointed to represent Applicant.

Nor is there any explanation for what was happening with the application while it remained

pending for ten years in the trial court. In my view, this situation presumptively raises the

issue of laches based on habeas counsel’s apparent delay in filing the amendment, and the

Court should not grant relief without addressing it. See Hill, 632 S.W.3d at 551 (“The
                                                                             Dotson dissent - 9

purpose of the laches doctrine is ‘to consider whether an applicant has slept on his rights

and, if he has, how that has affected the State, and whether, in light of the delay, it is fair

and just to grant him relief.’”) (quoting Ex parte Perez, 398 S.W.3d 206, 218-19 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2013)). Because the issue of laches has not yet been developed in the trial court,

remand is appropriate to address that issue before the Court decides to grant relief.

       IV.    Conclusion

       Given the lack of clarity in the law with respect to whether Applicant’s unpreserved

improper enhancement claim would have resulted in reversal on direct appeal, I conclude

that Applicant has failed to establish his claim of ineffective assistance of appellate

counsel. Applicant’s claim essentially amounts to an attempt to circumvent this Court’s

holding in Parrott by reframing his complaint as one of ineffective assistance of appellate

counsel. The Court should not permit relief under these circumstances unless Applicant

clearly meets the requirements for establishing this claim, which he does not. Accordingly,

I would deny relief on this basis. Alternatively, even assuming that Applicant’s ineffective-

assistance claim has merit, the Court should remand for an evaluation of laches before

granting relief on this claim. For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.

FILED: March 16, 2022
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