IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2017-CP-01167-COA
VICTOR D. JONES A/K/A VICTOR DEWAYNE APPELLANT
JONES A/K/A VICTOR JONES
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/13/2017
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DAVID H. STRONG JR.
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PIKE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: VICTOR D. JONES (PRO SE)
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: LAURA HOGAN TEDDER
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - POST-CONVICTION RELIEF
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART
- 11/27/2018
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., BARNES AND CARLTON, JJ.
BARNES, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. This appeal relates to Victor Jones’s fourth pro-se motion for post-conviction relief
(PCR),1 challenging his 2004 guilty plea on two counts of sexual battery. The Circuit Court
of Pike County dismissed Jones’s motion with prejudice, finding it time barred and barred
as a successive writ. Additionally, the circuit court ruled that it lacked jurisdiction because
1
This Court’s opinions on Jones’s prior PCR motions are: Jones v. State (Jones I),
962 So. 2d 571 (Miss. Ct. App. 2006); Jones v. State (Jones II-COA), 119 So. 3d 350 (Miss.
Ct. App. 2012), rev’d in part, 119 So. 3d 323 (Miss. 2013); Jones v. State (Jones II-MSC),
119 So. 3d 323 (Miss. 2013); Jones v. State (Jones III), 174 So. 3d 902 (Miss. Ct. App.
2015).
the underlying criminal action had been directly appealed to the Mississippi Supreme Court.
We affirm the circuit court’s dismissal for the same reasons set out in Jones III. However,
we reverse as to the jurisdictional issue for the reasons set out by the supreme court in Jones
II-MSC.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. On June 29, 2004, Jones pleaded guilty in the Pike County Circuit Court to two
counts of sexual battery. The State recommended a sentence of twenty years, with ten years
to serve, ten years suspended, and five years of probation for each count, to be served
concurrently. The circuit-court judge, however, did not accept the State’s recommendation
and sentenced Jones to serve twenty years on each count to run consecutively. Jones filed
a direct appeal which was dismissed for failure to pay the costs of appeal. See Jones II-
COA, 119 So. 3d at 351 (¶3).
¶3. Jones filed his first PCR motion at the end of 2004, including claims of a faulty
indictment, an involuntary guilty plea, and ineffective assistance of counsel. Jones I, 962
So. 2d at 572 (¶2). This Court affirmed the circuit court’s dismissal of his PCR motion,
agreeing that Jones’s guilty pleas were voluntary and his counsel effective. Id. at 572-73
(¶¶3, 6).
¶4. Jones filed his second PCR motion in April 2011, and again, it was summarily
dismissed. The circuit court found that it lacked jurisdiction, and the PCR motion was time
barred and barred as a successive writ. Jones II-COA, 119 So. 3d at 351 (¶5). On appeal,
2
Jones argued the dismissal was error because his sentence was illegal. Also, Jones claimed
he should have had a mental-health evaluation before he was allowed to enter his plea. Id.
at 351 (¶2). However, we noted he had not raised his mental health in his previous PCR
motion, where his guilty plea had been found voluntary. Id. at 352 (¶10). This Court
affirmed, finding the issues without merit, and also agreeing that the circuit court lacked
jurisdiction because Jones failed to seek permission from the Mississippi Supreme Court to
file his PCR motion. Id. at (¶¶12-13).
¶5. The Mississippi Supreme Court granted certiorari review and reversed as to the
jurisdictional issue. The supreme court explained that Mississippi Code Annotated section
99-39-7 (Supp. 2012) requires a petitioner to seek leave of the supreme court to file a motion
for PCR only “where the conviction and sentence have been affirmed on appeal or the
appeal has been dismissed.” Jones II-MSC, 119 So. 3d at 325 (¶5) (emphasis added by the
supreme court) (quoting Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-7 (Supp. 2012)). And because Jones was
only allowed to appeal the sentence from his guilty plea under Trotter v. State, 554 So. 2d
313, 315 (Miss. 1989), abrogated on other grounds by Betterman v. Montana, 136 S. Ct.
1609 (2016), this statute was not applicable. Jones II-MSC, 119 So. 3d at 325 (¶5). The
supreme court affirmed that the PCR was time barred and barred by res judicata. Id. at 326
(¶9). The supreme court also found Jones’s argument that he was “legally incompetent” to
plead guilty without merit. The supreme court stated that in the order denying the first PCR
motion, the circuit court found it had “personally observed the defendant’s demeanor,
3
appearance and manner in answering the court’s questions and it appeared to the court that
the defendant was competent to understand and did understand the circumstances
surrounding his guilty plea.” Id. at (¶7). The supreme court also noted: “In support of his
second PCR filing, Jones submitted some of his medical records, but none appears
responsive to his mental competency, in general, or at the time of his plea.” Id.
¶6. On August 30, 2013, fifteen days after the supreme court handed down Jones II-MSC,
Jones filed his third PCR motion. He again argued that he received ineffective assistance
of counsel, his guilty plea was involuntary, he should have received a competency hearing,
and he was incompetent when he was coerced into pleading guilty. Jones III, 174 So. 3d at
904 (¶6). He again filed numerous mental-health records with his PCR motion, and again,
none of them related to his competency at the time of his guilty plea in 2004. Id. at 908
(¶15). Further, he complained that the circuit court did not honor the plea agreement. Id.
at 904 (¶6). The circuit court summarily dismissed Jones’s motion, finding it procedurally
barred as a successive writ and time barred, noting: “The motion is substantively identical
to three previously filed motions which have all been denied.” Id. at 904-05 (¶6).
¶7. Jones appealed, focusing solely on his lack of competency to enter a guilty plea—
again arguing that his attorney was ineffective and his plea was involuntary. This Court
noted these two issues had been raised before in his prior PCR motions and typically would
be procedurally barred by time and successive. Id. at 906-07 (¶10). However, because
Rowland v. State, 42 So. 3d 503, 507 (¶12) (Miss. 2010), excepts from the procedural bars
4
errors affecting fundamental constitutional rights, this Court found Jones’s claims of mental
incompetency were not subject to procedural bars.2 Nonetheless, we found the issue without
merit because it had already been determined in Jones II-MSC. Id. at 907 (¶¶11, 13). There,
the supreme court found no evidence that Jones was incompetent at the time he submitted
his guilty plea. Id. at 907-08 (¶13). Accordingly, this Court affirmed the dismissal of the
third PCR motion, and the supreme court denied certiorari review. Id. at 908 (¶15).
¶8. In January 2016, Jones filed his fourth PCR motion—the subject of the instant case.
He attached numerous documents, including general articles about mental-health disorders,
the prior opinions on his appeals, his defense counsel’s response to a bar complaint in 2010,
a letter from the Pike County district attorney in 2005 explaining that the judge is not under
an obligation to follow their sentence recommendation, mental-health records from a stay
at the Whitfield State Hospital (Whitfield)3 from January 20, 1993 until February 12, 1993,
2
We noted that the res-judicata principle identified in Jones II-MSC appears to have
been modified in Smith v. State, 149 So. 3d 1027, 1032 (¶13) (Miss. 2014), overruled on
other grounds by Pitchford v. State, 240 So. 3d 1061 (Miss. 2017). Jones III, 174 So. 3d
at 906 (¶9).
3
Accordingly to the mental-health records Jones attached, he was committed to
Whitfield for “violent behavior.” He was diagnosed with “adjustment disorder with mixed
emotional features” and “personality disorder not otherwise specified.” The records include
his psychological evaluation, a notice of continuing hospitalization, his diagnostic summary
and discharge notes, and his certificate of discharge. After release from Whitfield, in March
1993 he was arraigned on burglary, burglary of a dwelling, and larceny charges. A year
later, he pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to seven years.
5
and records from prison.4 He also included an affidavit from his mother executed in 2005
related to his guilty plea. Approximately one week later, he filed a motion to amend his
PCR motion, which was substantively similar to his PCR motion.
¶9. In February 2016, the circuit court dismissed Jones’s fourth PCR motion and motion
to amend. The court ruled that the motion was “substantively identical” to the previous
motions he had filed and was therefore successive, as well as time barred. Additionally, the
circuit court again found it lacked jurisdiction to hear the PCR motion because Jones had
failed to ask permission from the supreme court.5
¶10. After refiling his motions with the circuit court, in June 2017, Jones’s “ghost
counsel”6 submitted a “new document,” which he claimed had “surfaced” concerning
Jones’s mental competency in 1993. The document allegedly “show[s] Jones was not
capable of submitting a voluntary guilty plea then or now” because he was being treated
with drugs for his mental problems that could have impaired his ability to understand his
4
Jones included two forms from prison: psychiatric progress notes dated from
October 2006 stating Jones was on medication for complaints of hallucinations attributed
to schizo-affective disorder, and a “master problems list” dated September 2007 showing
his “major problems” were bipolar, panic, and schizo-affective disorders.
5
This ruling unfortunately led to procedural confusion and delay. Jones filed with
the supreme court an application to proceed with his PCR motion. The supreme court
dismissed Jones’s application because he had already been instructed not to file such
application in Jones II-MSC. Due to this ruling, Jones again filed his PCR motion and
motion to amend with the circuit court. All of the motions and attachments were
substantively identical to previous ones.
6
Jones claims in his brief he is so incompetent he has to rely on a “ghost-counsel” for
assistance because he “does not understand what is going on.”
6
plea.7
¶11. On July 13, 2017, the circuit court dismissed Jones’s PCR motion and motion to
amend because the PCR motion was procedurally barred as a successive writ and time
barred. The court found the notice of continued hospitalization could not be considered
“newly” discovered evidence because it was dated from 1993. Further, the court noted that
Jones’s Whitfield discharge notes in 1993 stated he is “not psychotic, he is in control of his
behavior.” The circuit court also ruled that the motion was “substantively identical” to the
multiple previous motions he had filed. However, the circuit court again ruled that the
underlying criminal action had been appealed to the supreme court; therefore, the circuit
court lacked jurisdiction to hear the claim without leave from the supreme court. Jones
timely appealed, yet again raising issues of jurisdiction and competency as it relates to his
guilty plea and assistance of counsel.8
7
The document was a “Notice of Continuing Hospitalization” for Jones at Whitfield
in 1993, as noted above, for “medication monitoring and dosage adjustment” after having
been committed for twenty days. It was file-stamped February12, 1993 by the Pike County
Chancery Clerk. Jones’s “ghost-counsel” appears to be referring to Jones’s 1994 guilty plea,
rather than the 2004 one currently at issue.
8
Jones attached over sixty-five pages of exhibits to his appellate brief from various
sources including multiple copies of articles and other documents on mental health. Most
of the exhibits had been previously filed with the circuit court and related to his competency.
However, we note that documents attached to Jones’s brief that were not first presented to
the circuit court and certified as part of the appellate record cannot be considered on appeal.
Davis v. State, 243 So. 3d 222, 239 (¶76) (Miss. Ct. App. 2018). In an apparent attempt to
circumvent this rule, after filing his notice of appeal, Jones also filed these documents in the
circuit court. Additionally, Jones filed a motion to amend his brief, and a motion to attach
the plea transcript to his brief, which this Court granted. He attached the same mental-health
documents to these motions, complaining that he was never given a competency hearing.
7
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶12. This Court reviews a circuit court’s denial or dismissal of a PCR motion for an abuse
of discretion. Purvis v. State, 240 So. 3d 468, 470 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App. 2017). We “will not
disturb the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous.” Id. Questions
of law, however, are reviewed de novo. Id.
ANALYSIS
I. Jurisdiction
¶13. The trial court claimed it lacked jurisdiction to hear Jones’s claims because he did not
seek leave from the supreme court to file his PCR motion. We do not find this issue “moot,”
as the State suggests, but error, as the supreme court did in Jones II-MSC, and accordingly
reverse as to this issue.
¶14. Mississippi Code Section 99-39-7 requires a petitioner to seek leave from the
supreme court to file a motion for PCR “[w]here the conviction and sentence have been
affirmed on appeal or the appeal has been dismissed . . . .” (Emphasis added). Because he
pleaded guilty, Jones was not allowed to file a direct appeal of his conviction under the
version of Mississippi Code Annotated section 99-35-101 (Rev. 2007) in effect at that time.
See Trotter, 554 So. 2d at 315.9 In Jones II-MSC, the supreme court held the statute
This Court denied Jones’s motion to enter certain middle-school documents into the record
because they were not a part of the record before the circuit court.
9
Trotter held that while a conviction resulting from a guilty plea could not be directly
appealed, a sentence from a guilty plea could, under Mississippi Code Annotated section
99-35-101 (Rev. 2007). Trotter, 554 So. 2d at 315. However, in July 2008 an amendment
8
requiring permission was not applicable where Jones was not allowed to appeal both
conviction and sentence. Jones II-MSC, 119 So. 3d at 325 (¶5). We reverse the circuit
court’s denial of jurisdiction under Jones II-MSC.
II. Procedural Bars
¶15. The trial court found Jones’s PCR motion procedurally barred as a successive writ
and time barred. Any order denying or dismissing a PCR motion bars a second or successive
motion. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-23(6) (Rev. 2015). Additionally, a PCR motion
challenging a guilty plea must be filed within three years of the entry of the judgment of
conviction. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-5(2) (Rev. 2015). Here, Jones filed his fourth PCR
motion over twelve years after he pleaded guilty. Moreover, as the trial court noted, this
latest PCR motion raises substantially similar issues of competency to his second and third
PCR motions.
¶16. However, errors affecting fundamental constitutional rights are excepted from the
post-conviction procedural bars under Rowland. Our supreme court has held that “[i]t is a
violation of due process to try or convict a criminal defendant who is legally incompetent.”
Pitchford v. State, 240 So. 3d 1061, 1067 (¶30) (Miss. 2017) (citing Pate v. Robinson, 383
U.S. 375, 378 (1966)). Here, since Jones raises issues of competency, we shall address the
to section 99-35-101 (Supp. 2011) became effective and superseded Trotter. Now under
that statute a defendant who enters a guilty plea is not allowed to directly appeal his
conviction or sentence from the circuit court. See Chapell v. State, 107 So. 3d 1003, 1007
(¶12) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013).
9
merit of his claims as we did in Jones III.
III. Mental Competency
¶17. As in Jones III, Jones’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel and an involuntary
guilty plea center around his competency. Specifically, Jones argues that his counsel failed
to investigate his prior mental health history and request a competency hearing before he
pleaded guilty. He also argues the trial court should have sua sponte ordered a competency
hearing prior to accepting his guilty plea.
¶18. Uniform Rule of Circuit and County Court 9.06 states in part: “If before or during
trial the court, of its own motion or upon motion of an attorney, has reasonable ground to
believe that the defendant is incompetent to stand trial, the court shall order the defendant
to submit to a mental examination . . . .”10 The defendant “bears the burden of proof to show
by substantial evidence that his competency to stand trial is in question.” Higginbotham v.
State, 122 So. 3d 1205, 1210 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013). Jones fails to meet his burden.
¶19. This Court and the supreme court have affirmed the circuit court three prior times that
there is no merit to Jones’s incompetency arguments. Here, however, Jones attempts to
overcome procedural bars by claiming to have “newly discovered evidence” under section
99-39-23(6) of his mental incompetency during his guilty plea in 2004—the medical records
10
We note that the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court relating to criminal
practice have been supplanted by the Mississippi Rules of Criminal Procedure, effective July
1, 2017. But because the former rules were still in effect at the time of Jones’s guilty plea,
Rule 9.06 is applicable to his case.
10
from his 1993 treatment at Whitfield. However, this and other documents were not
“new”—as the July 2017 trial-court order states, these records have been filed numerous
times before with the Pike County Circuit Court. They do not relate to the 2004 guilty
plea,11 and Jones confuses their applicability with his 1994 guilty plea on other charges.
Further, even if they did relate to the instant plea, his Whitfield discharge records concluded
Jones was “not psychotic” and was “in control of his actions.”
¶20. The mental-health records Jones repeatedly provide show a three-week stay at
Whitfield in 1993 for treatment of psychiatric problems—over ten years before he pleaded
guilty in this action. Just because Jones was admitted to a psychiatric hospital does not mean
he is automatically incompetent to plead guilty to criminal charges ten years later. Jones also
provides records about psychiatric treatment while imprisoned in 2006 and 2007—two years
after his guilty plea. There is no evidence presented that he was incompetent during his plea
hearing, that he was on medication that would impair his judgment, or that his various
diagnoses ten years prior would have made his guilty plea involuntary.
¶21. Undoubtedly, Jones has a long history of mental illness—prison medical records
show he is on medication for several psychiatric disorders and being treated while
11
Jones attached to his appellate brief an unsworn typed “summary of court
appearances” describing his alleged poor mental health before his 2004 guilty plea, where
he claims he was given medication by the jail nurse for audible hallucinations and delusions.
He does not attach any jail records at the time corroborating his statement. Even if he had,
this document is not a certified part of the record before the trial court; so we cannot
consider it. Davis, 243 So. 3d at 239 (¶76).
11
imprisoned.12 Jones even states in his brief he is in “remission due to medication.”
However, the voluminous records show he was quite competent to plead guilty in 2004.
This Court was provided a transcript of the plea hearing, and we reviewed it carefully. Jones
affirmed that he was not under the influence of any medicine during the hearing, he was
satisfied with his legal representation, he understood the maximum sentence that could be
imposed, he understood his rights and was waiving certain rights, and he could be sentenced
by the trial court to the maximum sentence and not what the State recommended.
Additionally, as the supreme court noted in Jones II-MSC, the circuit-court judge
“personally observed the defendant’s demeanor, appearance and manner in answering the
court’s questions and it appeared to the court that the defendant was competent to
understand and did understand the circumstances surrounding his guilty plea.” Jones II-
MSC, 119 So. 3d at 326 (¶7).
¶22. We have reviewed Jones’s alleged newly discovered evidence and, in accordance
with our analysis in Jones III, have found his claims of mental incompetency without merit.
CONCLUSION
¶23. We reverse the judgment of the circuit court that it lacked jurisdiction. However, we
affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of the PCR.
¶24. AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
12
Jones also attaches prison medical records from 2010 documenting psychiatric
visits and medication administration.
12
LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., FAIR, WILSON, GREENLEE,
WESTBROOKS AND TINDELL, JJ., CONCUR. CARLTON, J., CONCURS IN
RESULT ONLY WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
13