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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
ROLAND JOHNSON, )
) Court of Appeals No. A-11068
Appellant, ) Trial Court No. 4BE-09-386 CI
) t/w 4SM-08-173 CR
v. )
) OPINION
STATE OF ALASKA, )
)
Appellee. ) No. 2426 — September 12, 2014
)
Appeal from the Superior Court, Fourth Judicial District,
Fairbanks, Douglas Blankenship, Judge.
Appearances: David K. Allen, Sechelt, British Columbia, for the
Appellant. Nancy Simel, Assistant Attorney General, Office of
Special Prosecutions and Appeals, Anchorage, and Michael C.
Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Coats,
Senior Judge.*
Judge ALLARD.
Senior Judge COATS, concurring.
*
Sitting by assignment made pursuant to article IV, section 11 of the Alaska
Constitution and Administrative Rule 23(a).
In April 2009, pursuant to a plea agreement, Roland Johnson pleaded guilty
to one count of sexual assault in the third degree and was sentenced to an agreed-upon
term of 22 years with 10 years suspended, 12 years to serve. In exchange for Johnson’s
plea, the State dismissed two counts of sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree and
one count of sexual assault in the second degree.
Johnson later filed an application for post-conviction relief, alleging that
the court-appointed attorney who represented him in negotiating the plea agreement was
ineffective. Among other claims, Johnson argued that his attorney was ineffective in
failing to seek appellate review of his sentence, despite Johnson’s request for such an
appeal.
While Johnson’s application was pending in the superior court, the Alaska
Supreme Court issued its decision in Stone v. State.1 Based on Stone, Johnson argued
that his attorney had been required to file a petition for sentence review at his request,
even though the sentence was specifically bargained for as part of his plea agreement.
The superior court dismissed Johnson’s post-conviction relief application.
The court concluded that Johnson’s attorney was not ineffective in refusing to petition
the supreme court for review of Johnson’s sentence because Stone had not been decided
at the time the attorney made that decision. Johnson now appeals, asserting that this
decision was error and that Stone should apply retroactively to his case.
We conclude that we need not resolve whether Stone is retroactive because
Stone does not govern Johnson’s case. More specifically, we conclude that Stone applies
only to cases in which: (1) the plea agreement gives the sentencing court some discretion
1
255 P.3d 979 (Alaska 2011).
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regarding what sentence to impose and (2) the filing of the petition for sentence review
will not constitute a breach of the plea agreement.
These conditions are not met here. Johnson bargained for, and received,
a specific, fixed sentence, and the sentencing court’s discretion was limited to accepting
or rejecting the plea agreement as a whole. Moreover, any modification of Johnson’s
sentence would have required rescission of the plea agreement. Stone therefore did not
require Johnson’s attorney to file a petition for sentence review. We accordingly affirm
the superior court’s dismissal of Johnson’s application for post-conviction relief.
Why we conclude that Stone v. State did not require Johnson’s attorney to
pursue appellate review of Johnson’s bargained-for sentence
In Stone, the Alaska Supreme Court addressed what it called the “narrow
question” of whether, under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, “a
criminal defendant’s court-appointed counsel must, upon the defendant’s demand after
[a] lawful sentencing pursuant to a plea agreement, file a petition for discretionary
sentence review by [the supreme court] when AS 12.55.120(a) precludes an appeal of
right to the court of appeals.”2
The supreme court concluded that the answer to this narrow question in
Stone’s case was “yes.”3 The court reasoned that when defendants have no right to
appeal their sentence to this Court under Alaska law, a petition for discretionary sentence
review to the Alaska Supreme Court is effectively the “first tier” of appellate review —
thus entitling the defendant to the assistance of counsel, at public expense if the
2
Id. at 980.
3
Id.
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defendant is indigent, under the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Halbert v.
Michigan.4
The supreme court therefore concluded that Stone had a right to demand
that his court-appointed attorney pursue a petition for sentence review. The court
explained that if Stone’s attorney believed that Stone’s excessive sentence claim was
“wholly frivolous,” the attorney had the option of filing an Anders brief and moving to
withdraw, but the attorney did not have the option of refusing to file anything.5
In the present case, Johnson argues that he, like the defendant in Stone, had
the right to demand that his attorney file a petition asking the supreme court to review
his sentence for excessiveness, even though his sentence was part of a bargained-for plea
agreement. But there is a material distinction between Johnson’s case and the facts of
Stone.
(a) Unlike Stone, Johnson’s plea agreement gave the
sentencing court no discretion regarding what sentence to
impose
Both Johnson and the defendant in Stone were sentenced under a plea
agreement. But unlike Johnson’s plea agreement, the plea agreement in Stone did not
call for a specific, fixed sentence. Instead, Stone’s plea agreement called for Stone to
4
See id. at 982-83; see also Halbert v. Michigan, 545 U.S. 605, 611 (2005). In Halbert,
the United States Supreme Court explained that “first-tier review” differs from subsequent
appellate review because by the latter stages, claims have already been presented by appellate
counsel and passed upon by an appellate court. Id.
5
Stone, 255 P.3d at 983; see also Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738, 744 (1967) (if
court-appointed appellate counsel reviews trial record and finds no non-frivolous issue for
appeal, counsel may request to withdraw, but withdrawal request must be accompanied by
a brief that refers to anything in the record that might arguably support the appeal).
4 2426
receive a sentence within a specified range — 5 to 12 years to serve — at the discretion
of the sentencing judge.6
Thus, the sentence Stone received (9 years to serve) was the result of the
judge’s exercise of sentencing discretion — an exercise of discretion that theoretically
could have been “clearly mistaken” as that term is used in Alaska sentence review law.7
In contrast, Johnson’s plea agreement specified the exact sentence he was
to receive: 22 years’ imprisonment with 10 years suspended, 12 years to serve. There
was nothing left to the judge’s discretion other than the judge’s option under Criminal
Rule 11(e) to reject the plea agreement as a whole.
We conclude that this difference between the sentencing process in Stone
and the sentencing process in Johnson’s case makes the holding in Stone inapplicable to
Johnson’s case.
(b) Unlike Stone, Johnson’s proposed petition for sentence
review would clearly be a repudiation of his plea agreement
— therefore, under Alaska law, Johnson must seek rescission
of the entire agreement rather than attacking his sentence
separately
As noted above, the plea agreement in Stone called for Stone to receive a
sentence within a specified range of possible sentences. Thus, Stone’s appellate attack
on his sentence was not necessarily a repudiation of his plea agreement. Indeed, it was
arguably consistent with the plea agreement for Stone to contend that the particular
6
Stone, 255 P.3d at 980.
7
See McClain v. State, 519 P.2d 811, 813 (Alaska 1974) (under “clearly mistaken”
standard, trial court’s sentence will be upheld unless, after independently reviewing the
record, the appellate court is convinced that the sentence is outside the permissible range of
reasonable sentences).
5 2426
sentence he received was excessive, and that he should receive a lesser sentence, as long
as this requested lesser sentence was still within the agreed-upon range.
In footnote 23 of Stone, the Alaska Supreme Court noted that, earlier in the
case, the State had expressly taken the position that Stone’s attack on his sentence would
constitute a repudiation of his plea agreement with the State — apparently under the
theory that, by agreeing to be sentenced within the specified range, Stone had also
implicitly agreed not to challenge the sentence he ultimately received, as long as that
sentence was within the agreed-upon range.8 But the supreme court declared that the
State’s contention was “not before us at this time.”9 In other words, the supreme court
declared that it was deciding Stone’s case under the working assumption that Stone’s
intended petition for sentence review was at least plausibly consistent with the terms of
his plea agreement.10
This reasoning is consistent with the general legal principle that “the parties
to a contract retain their legal rights relating to the transaction covered by the contract
unless either (1) the contract specifically states that a party is relinquishing a legal right
as part of the bargain; or (2) the terms of the contract are clearly premised on the
8
See Stone, 255 P.3d at 983 n.23.
9
Id.
10
This is where we part ways with Senior Judge Coats’s concurring opinion. Judge
Coats concludes that the supreme court took no account of the procedural posture of Stone’s
case when it ruled that a petition for sentence review is “first tier” appellate review under
Halbert. In Judge Coats’s view, even Stone would have no right under Stone to file a
petition for review of his sentence, because the sentence was imposed as part of a plea
agreement.
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relinquishment of this right (i.e., the party’s exercise of the legal right would be clearly
inconsistent with the provisions of the contract).”11
In Stone’s case, the parties were not in agreement about whether filing a
petition for sentence review constituted a breach of the plea agreement.12 Further
litigation on this issue was therefore needed. Notably, there is nothing in the record in
Stone to suggest that Stone wanted to rescind any part of the plea agreement. Instead,
it appears that Stone just wanted a lower sentence, presumably one more in line with the
lower end of the range he had agreed to.
In contrast, in Johnson’s case, the record is clear that Johnson wanted to
repudiate the terms of his plea agreement, as the other claims raised in his application for
post-conviction relief demonstrate.13 Moreover, unlike in Stone, any reduction in
Johnson’s fixed, agreed-upon sentence of 22 years’ imprisonment with 10 years
suspended would necessarily require rescission of a specific bargained-for term of his
plea agreement.
11
State v. Henry, 240 P.3d 846, 849 (Alaska App. 2010); see also Simon v. State, 121
P.3d 815, 821-22 (Alaska App. 2005) (where the plea agreement did not include an express
waiver of appellate rights, ambiguity in the agreement was interpreted in the defendant’s
favor, so that the right to appeal the severity of the sentence was preserved).
12
Stone, 255 P.3d at 983 n.23.
13
Johnson claimed, among other things, that his attorney was ineffective in negotiating
the plea, that the trial judge failed to comply with the requirements of Criminal Rule 11 in
accepting the plea, and that he should be allowed to withdraw the plea.
7 2426
Alaska law does not permit this type of piecemeal attack on the terms of a
plea agreement.14 As this Court explained in Woodbury v. State,15 “[w]hen ... a defendant
wishes to challenge an already consummated plea agreement as being unlawful, the
defendant must seek rescission of the agreement — not selective enforcement of only
those provisions favorable to the defendant.”16 We articulated a similar principle in
Grasser v. State17: “Because Grasser negotiated a plea agreement with the government,
and because he was sentenced under the terms of that agreement, Grasser can not now
claim the benefit of the portions of the agreement that he likes while, at the same time,
mounting an appellate attack on the portions that he does not like.”18
Thus, under both Grasser and Woodbury, if Johnson believed that his
bargained-for sentence was excessive, he was required to seek rescission of the entire
plea agreement, rather than attacking one term of his plea agreement on appeal.
We note that after Johnson’s trial attorney refused to file a sentence petition
on his behalf, this is precisely what Johnson did: he sought rescission of the entire plea
agreement through an application for post-conviction relief in which he was represented
by court-appointed counsel. The superior court ruled against Johnson on these claims,
and Johnson has not appealed any of these rulings — except the ruling that Johnson’s
attorney was not ineffective when she declined to file a petition for sentence review.
14
See, e.g., Woodbury v. State, 151 P.3d 528, 532 (Alaska App. 2007); Grasser v. State,
119 P.3d 1016, 1018 (Alaska App. 2005).
15
151 P.3d 528 (Alaska App. 2007).
16
Id. at 532.
17
119 P.3d 1016 (Alaska App. 2005).
18
Id. at 1018.
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By not appealing these rulings Johnson is, in effect, conceding that he has
no ground to seek rescission of the plea agreement as a whole, and that he simply wants
an appellate court to reduce his bargained-for sentence while leaving the remainder of
the plea agreement intact. Under Alaska law, Johnson is not entitled to do this.
(c) Because Johnson bargained for a specific fixed sentence,
there is an inadequate record from which an appellate court
could conduct an excessive sentence review
There is an additional factor that influences our decision in this case. As
the concurrence points out, the record of a change of plea and sentencing normally will
not reveal all of the circumstances that factored into the plea agreement. This is
particularly true in cases such as Johnson’s, where the parties have agreed to a specific,
fixed sentence and the sentencing court’s discretion is limited to accepting or rejecting
the plea agreement as a whole. In this type of situation, the superior court may proceed
to sentencing without ordering a pre-sentence report, without holding a separate
sentencing hearing, and without giving a full explanation under Chaney of why the
agreed-upon sentence is reasonable.19
The situation is different in cases like Stone, where the plea agreement
leaves critical terms of the sentence up to the sentencing court’s discretion. In those
cases, the sentencing court may need to conduct an inquiry into the defendant’s
background and the facts of the offense in order to exercise its sentencing authority in
a meaningful way. The court is also required to explain and justify the sentence it
imposes under the Chaney criteria. Those cases are therefore more likely to provide a
19
See Alaska R. Crim. P. 11(e)(1) and Alaska R. Crim. P. 32.1(a)(2); see also State v.
Chaney, 477 P.2d 441, 443-44 (Alaska 1970) (providing the sentencing goals a court must
normally consider before imposing sentence, now codified in AS 12.55.005).
9 2426
sentencing record from which an appellate court can review whether the sentence
imposed by the judge is excessive.
Here, in contrast, there is essentially no sentencing record from which an
appellate court could meaningfully review Johnson’s sentence. Moreover, Johnson
received significant benefits from the plea agreement: the dismissal of three felony-level
sexual abuse and sexual assault charges. Without knowing the details of Johnson’s
background, the facts of his offense, and the facts pertaining to the dismissed charges,
it would be all but impossible for an appellate court to review the agreed-upon sentence.
Conclusion
For the reasons explained here, we conclude that the Alaska Supreme
Court’s decision in Stone v. State does not govern Johnson’s case. Johnson bargained
for and received a specific, fixed sentence. Under Alaska law, Johnson is not allowed
to seek a reduction of that sentence while leaving the other provisions of his plea
agreement intact. Instead, his remedy is to seek rescission of the entire agreement.
Accordingly, Johnson was not deprived of the effective assistance of counsel when his
attorney declined to file a petition for sentence review.
We AFFIRM the superior court’s judgment.
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COATS, Senior Judge, concurring.
This case requires us to interpret the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in
Stone v. State.1 Stone was charged with manslaughter, two counts of assault, and driving
under the influence.2 He also faced several petitions to revoke his probation. Stone
entered into a plea agreement in which the State agreed to reduce the manslaughter
charge to the less serious offense of criminally negligent homicide. Represented by an
attorney from the Public Defender Agency, Stone agreed to enter a plea of no contest to
that offense and to the other offenses and petitions to revoke. The plea agreement
specified that Stone would receive a composite sentence of 5 to 12 years to serve. The
superior court accepted the plea agreement and sentenced Stone to 13 years with 4 years
suspended, 9 years to serve on the four charges, and to an additional 350 days on the
petitions to revoke probation, for a total sentence of 9 years and 350 days to serve.3
After his sentencing, another attorney from the Public Defender Agency
consulted with Stone to find out if he wished to appeal his conviction or sentence. Stone
told the attorney that he believed his sentence was illegal, and he asked the attorney to
file an appeal. After reviewing the file and consulting with Stone’s trial attorney, the
attorney advised Stone that he had no ground for appellate review of his sentence. The
attorney took no further action.4
1
255 P.3d 979 (Alaska 2011).
2
Id. at 980.
3
Id.
4
Id.
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Stone then filed an application for post-conviction relief. Another attorney
was appointed to represent him. In that application, Stone claimed, among other issues,
that he was entitled to attack his sentence as excessive in the appellate courts, and that
his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by advising him otherwise.5
The superior court concluded that Stone’s claim that he was entitled to
appellate review of his sentence was meritless and that his attorney therefore had not
provided ineffective assistance of counsel. The court observed that attorneys have an
“ethical duty not to file frivolous pleadings.”6 The court dismissed the application for
post-conviction relief.7
Stone appealed that decision to this Court. The State took the position that
Stone could have petitioned the Alaska Supreme Court for discretionary review of his
sentence on the ground of excessiveness, but that it was up to Stone’s attorney, not
Stone, to decide whether to pursue that remedy.8
This Court concluded that Stone had not shown that his attorney was
ineffective because it was not clear that the attorney had a duty to file a petition for
hearing asking the supreme court to review Stone’s sentence for excessiveness.9
Stone then filed a petition for hearing in the supreme court. The supreme
court reviewed the petition on the “narrow issue” of whether “a petition for discretionary
sentence review by this court is first-tier appellate review invoking the federal
5
Id. at 981.
6
Id.
7
Id.
8
Id.
9
Id. at 982.
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constitutional right to appointed counsel and the related right to require counsel to seek
appellate review.”10 The court concluded that a petition for discretionary review of a
sentence by the supreme court is “first-tier appellate review,” and that attorneys are
therefore required to pursue this remedy, if a defendant asks for it.11
During litigation of this issue, the State argued that if Stone pursued
appellate review of his sentence he would be in breach of his plea agreement with the
State and that the State should therefore be allowed to repudiate the plea agreement and
prosecute Stone on the original charges.12 The supreme court did not reach this issue,
stating that it was “not before us at this time.”13
As a general rule, if a defendant wishes to challenge one part of an already
consummated plea agreement as unlawful, the defendant must seek recision of the entire
agreement.14 The supreme court limited its decision in Stone to one issue: whether “a
petition for discretionary sentence review by this court is first-tier appellate review
invoking the constitutional right to appointed counsel and the related right to require
counsel to seek appellate review.”15 The court declared that the question of whether
Stone would be in breach of his plea agreement by seeking appellate review of his
10
Id.
11
Id. at 983.
12
Id. at 983 n.23.
13
Id.
14
Woodbury v. State, 151 P.3d 528, 532 (Alaska App. 2007); Grasser v. State, 119 P.3d
1016, 1018 (Alaska App. 2005).
15
Stone, 255 P.3d at 982.
13 2426
sentence was “not before us at this time.”16 The court thus expressly declined to address
the policy question of whether a defendant who entered into a plea agreement is
considered to be attacking his plea agreement when he seeks appellate review of his
sentence as excessive.
That question is before us now. We must therefore resolve whether a
defendant may enter into a plea agreement and then, after sentencing, “claim the benefit
of the portions of the agreement that he likes while, at the same time, mounting an
appellate attack on the portions that he does not like.”17
This case is an excellent illustration of why it is unfair to allow a defendant
to enter into a plea bargain, accept the benefits of that bargain, and then argue in an
appellate court that his sentence is excessive. Johnson pleaded guilty to one count of
sexual assault in the third degree and was sentenced to an agreed-upon term of 22 years
with 10 years suspended. He received significant benefits from this agreement: the State
dismissed two counts of sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree and one count of
sexual assault in the second degree.
The record of a criminal case will normally not reveal all of the
circumstances that factor into a plea bargain — the strength of the State’s case, the
availability and willingness of the witnesses to testify, the trial pressures on the judge and
the parties. Sentencing courts rely on the competence of prosecutors and defense
attorneys to arrive at reasonable agreements in light of these circumstances. Of course,
trial courts ultimately supervise these agreements, and they are in a much better position
than appellate courts to gauge the competence of the attorneys and the fairness of a plea
16
Id. at 983 n.23.
17
Grasser, 119 P.3d at 1018.
14 2426
bargain. They are also in a better position to gather information in the event they have
reservations about accepting a plea bargain.
As a policy matter, it makes no difference whether a defendant agrees to a
specific sentence as opposed to a limited sentencing range. Either way, the defendant
should not be permitted to claim the benefit of a plea bargain while mounting an
appellate attack on the portions of the bargain he does not like.18
I agree with the majority that if Johnson was dissatisfied with his sentence,
his remedy was to seek recision of his plea agreement in the trial court. I also agree that
the superior court properly dismissed Johnson’s application for post-conviction relief
because Johnson cannot show that his attorney was ineffective for failing to pursue
discretionary review of his sentence. I do not agree that reaching this result requires us
to interpret Stone in a manner that is not supported by the text of that decision.
18
Id.; see also Woodbury, 151 P.3d at 532.
15 2426