IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 18-1021
Filed August 7, 2019
BOBBY JOE MORRIS,
Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Arthur E. Gamble,
Judge.
Bobby Joe Morris appeals from the dismissal of his application for
postconviction relief. AFFIRMED.
Andrew Dunn of Parrish Kruidenier Dunn Boles Gribble Gentry Brown &
Bergmann L.L.P., Des Moines, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Considered by Mullins, P.J., Bower, J., and Vogel, S.J.* Gamble, S.J.,
takes no part.
*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2019).
2
BOWER, Judge.
Bobby Joe Morris appeals from the dismissal of his application for
postconviction relief (PCR) in which he challenges his 1998 conviction for first-
degree murder.
While details of the underlying offense have been set out in our previous
opinion, see State v. Morris, No. 98-1640, 2000 WL 381641, at *1–2 (Iowa Ct. App.
Apr. 12, 2000), here we note Morris was charged with committing or aiding and
abetting first-degree murder, with the jury being allowed to determine the shooting
of Morris’s girlfriend was done with premeditation or while committing the forcible
felony of willful injury. We affirmed his conviction on appeal. Id. at *9 (further
review denied, procedendo issued Aug. 3, 2000).
On appeal from the denial of his first PCR proceeding—which application
was filed in 2001 but was not decided until December 16, 2005—Morris’s counsel
argued four issues,
all of which relate to the felony murder/merger rule adopted in [State
v.] Heemstra[, 721 N.W.2d 549 (Iowa 2006)]. Morris claim[ed]:
(1) the district court erred when it ruled his concerns were without
merit; (2) appellate counsel was ineffective for not challenging the
felony murder/merger rule on direct appeal; (3) he received
ineffective postconviction relief counsel because counsel did not
claim appellate counsel was ineffective for not raising the felony
murder/merger rule; and (4) the Iowa Supreme Court erred when it
ruled that Heemstra only applied to cases on direct appeal.
Morris v. State, No. 06-0069, 2007 WL 1827394, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. June 27,
2007). We addressed those claims and affirmed the PCR dismissal. See id. at
*2–5. Further review was denied by the supreme court, and procedendo issued
on August 31, 2007.
3
A second July 30, 2010 PCR application was dismissed for failure to
prosecute on January 20, 2015. This application was filed three years and ten
months after Heemstra was decided and thirty-five months after procedendo
issued on the denial of his first PCR.
On July 31, 2017, Morris filed his third PCR application. Consequently, this
PCR application was filed seventeen years after procedendo issued on the appeal
from his conviction. It was filed nine years and eleven months after procedendo
issued on the appeal of his first PCR application.
The State moved for summary judgment, asserting Morris’s claims in this
third PCR application were previously litigated or time-barred pursuant to Iowa
Code section 822.3 (2017) (providing a three-year limitation period unless the
applicant raises a “ground of fact or law that could not have been raised within the
applicable time period”). Morris resisted.
The district court set out Morris’s claims1 and found most of the claims were
time-barred or “have been litigated either on direct appeal or in Morris’[s] first
PCR.” With respect to the one issue not previously raised—that the non-
retroactive application of Heemstra violates the prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment of the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution—
1
Morris asserted seven claims in this PCR application: (1) prosecutorial misconduct for
failing to provide exculpatory evidence related to statements made by James Caster;
(2) ineffective assistance of trial counsel and subsequent counsel related to that
prosecutorial misconduct, i.e., failure to raise the issue; (3) failure of the trial court to apply
the reasoning of Heemstra when it was argued in relation to Instruction 33 (felony-
murder/willful injury as underlying felony); (4) ineffective assistance of appellate counsel
and subsequent counsel by failure to raise the Heemstra issue; (5) the non-retroactive
application of Heemstra violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment of
the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution; (6) the Iowa Supreme Court
misinterpreted the retroactivity of Heemstra; and (7) jury tampering/instructional error
because Morris was never found guilty of willful injury.
4
the court treated the issue as a claim of an illegal sentence, which can be raised
at any time. See State v. Harrison, 914 N.W.2d 178, 187 (Iowa 2018).
The PCR court concluded:
[T]he prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment set forth in
the state and federal constitutions does not require retrospective
application of ameliorative statutory sentencing provisions. Dixon v.
Iowa Dist. Ct. for Scott Cty., 2018 WL 1182529 (Iowa Ct. App. 2018).
The same reasoning holds for retrospective application of Heemstra.
While Heemstra came down during the appeal of the first PCR,
Morris v. State, 2007 WL 1827394, at *4, appellate counsel in the
first PCR had no obligation to raise these constitutional issues
because they had no merit.
On appeal, Morris argues the court erred in finding his claim concerning the
State’s failure to disclose exculpatory evidence was untimely. He asserts he was
prejudiced by the failure of his appellate counsel in his first postconviction
proceedings to raise the claim regarding the withholding of exculpatory evidence.
He also contends, “Morris’s case should have been the Heemstra . . . case.”
Finally, he urges his life sentence, where one alternative given to the jury was
forcible-felony murder, constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
Ordinarily, our review of PCR proceedings is for errors of law. Harrington
v. State, 659 N.W.2d 509, 519 (Iowa 2003). “But when the basis for relief is a
constitutional violation, our review is de novo.” Id.
Iowa Code section 822.3 contains a statute of limitations for PCR actions.
At the time Morris filed this action in 2017, section 822.3 required that PCR
applications “be filed within three years from the date the conviction or decision is
final or, in the event of an appeal, from the date the writ of procedendo is issued.”2
2
Section 822.3 has been amended, effective July 1, 2019. The three-year limitation
remains:
5
As noted above, this PCR application was filed seventeen years after procedendo
issued on the appeal from his conviction. And, even if the relation-back doctrine
of Allison is applicable, it provides Morris no relief. The application was filed nine
years and eleven months after procedendo issued on the appeal of his first PCR
application. We cannot say a petition filed almost a decade after the denial of his
first postconviction-relief action can be said to have been “filed promptly after the
conclusion of the first PCR action.” Allison, 914 N.W.2d at 891. All of Morris’s
claims of ineffective assistance of trial, appellate, and first PCR counsel are time
barred.
All other applications must be filed within three years from the date the
conviction or decision is final or, in the event of an appeal, from the date
the writ of procedendo is issued. However, this limitation does not apply to
a ground of fact or law that could not have been raised within the applicable
time period. An allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel in a prior
case under this chapter shall not toll or extend the limitation periods in this
section nor shall such claim relate back to a prior filing to avoid the
application of the limitation periods. Facts within the personal knowledge
of the applicant and the authenticity of all documents and exhibits included
in or attached to the application must be sworn to affirmatively as true and
correct. The supreme court may prescribe the form of the application and
verification. The clerk shall docket the application upon its receipt and
promptly bring it to the attention of the court and deliver a copy to the county
attorney and the attorney general.
The emphasized language is new. It appears to be in response to Allison v. State, 914
N.W.2d 866, 891 (Iowa 2018), in which the supreme court adopted a “relation-back
doctrine to the statutory period of limitation under section 822.3 when an applicant alleges
in a second PCR proceeding brought outside the three-year time frame that the attorney
in the first PCR proceeding was ineffective in presenting the same claim as raised in the
second proceeding.” Goode v. State, 920 N.W.2d 520, 525 (Iowa 2018).
In Allison the court held:
[T]he best approach is to hold that where a PCR petition alleging ineffective
assistance of trial counsel has been timely filed per section 822.3 and there
is a successive PCR petition alleging postconviction counsel was
ineffective in presenting the ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claim,
the timing of the filing of the second PCR petition relates back to the timing
of the filing of the original PCR petition for purposes of Iowa Code section
822.3 if the successive PCR petition is filed promptly after the conclusion
of the first PCR action.
914 N.W.2d at 891 (emphasis added).
6
With respect to his cruel-and-unusual-punishment claim, Morris grounds the
claim on due process, arguing, “The due process violation as to Morris results in
his cruel and unusual punishment under Article I, section 17 of the Iowa
Constitution . . . and the Eighth Amendment.” He asserts:
With a general verdict, Morris is spending his life in prison
without a finding he “acted willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly and
with a specific intent to kill Kelsey Bitting[,]” the very prerequisite to
sentencing someone for first-degree murder. Morris’s life
imprisonment is based on a conviction lacking in proof beyond a
reasonable doubt as to every fact necessary to constitute first-
degree murder. This is a violation of the Due Process Clause of the
United States Constitution.
This type of challenge has been rejected in State v. Nowlin:
[A]ll murder which is committed in the perpetration of [specified
felonies] is murder in the first degree. Defendant made timely
exception to the instruction ‘on constitutional grounds’, alleging it
makes it possible for a conviction of first-degree murder to occur
without proof of ‘specific intent to commit murder’. The exception
was overruled. He now attacks the statute on equal protection and
due process grounds.
....
In his due process challenge, defendant contends the felony-
murder statute allows the State to avoid proving the state of mind
essential for first-degree murder by presumptively supplying it when
the crime occurs during the perpetration of one of the enumerated
felonies. He relies on the principle that a defendant is denied due
process of law when the State is not required to prove every element
of the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt.
The fallacy in defendant’s position is his assertion, without
citation of authority, that willfulness, premeditation and deliberation
are essential elements of all first-degree murder. The statutes which
define the crime do not support this assertion.
244 N.W.2d 596, 604 (Iowa 1976) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
“Willfulness, deliberation and premeditation are not essential elements of murder
as defined in [section 707.2(1)(b)]. They are simply elements present in one
7
category of murder sufficient to enhance the penalty.” Id. at 604–05; accord
Harrison, 914 N.W.2d at 193.
Finding no error, we affirm.
AFFIRMED.