Su the Missourt Court of Appeals
Eastern District
DIVISION THREE
GERALD PARSONS, ) No. ED106367
)
Appellant, } Appeal from the Circuit Court of
) Jefferson County
vs. } 16JE-CC00715
)
STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Honorable Troy A. Cardona
)
Respondent. } Filed: May 14, 2019
OPINION
This post-conviction-relief case arose out of an incident in which Gerald Parsons, while
intoxicated, crashed his vehicle into a stationary police vehicle injuring the officer inside. Parsons
was charged with driving while intoxicated (DWI) and second-degree assault of a law enforcement
officer, both class B felonies which carried punishment ranges of five to [5 years in prison. After
plea negotiations failed, Parsons entered blind guilty pleas to both charges and received concurrent
sentences of 12 years on each conviction. Later, it was determined that the DWI charge was an
included offense of the assault charge and, therefore, the guilty plea on the DWI charge violated
Parsons’s constitutional right against double jeopardy. Parsons was permitted to withdraw his
guilty plea to the DWI charge and that charge was dismissed, but his guilty plea and 12-year
sentence on the assault charge remained in place.
Parsons now appeals the denial following an evidentiary hearing of his Rule 24.035!
motion for post-conviction relief based on allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel. He
contends that the motion court clearly erred when it found he was not prejudiced by his counsel’ s
failure to recognize the double jeopardy situation presented by the two charges and counsel’s
advice that he plead guilty to both charges.
We find that the motion court clearly erred when it found that Parsons was not prejudiced
by counsel’s error. Therefore, we reverse and remand.
Background
1. Parsons’s guilty pleas and counsel's discovery of the double jeopardy issue.
Under § 558.011.1(2)", second-degree assault of a law enforcement officer and driving
while intoxicated each carry a sentence range of between five and 15 years in prison, During the
plea bargain negotiations in this case, the State offered to recommend sentences of 11 years on
each charge in exchange for Parsons’s guilty pleas.? Parsons rejected the offer. Then, on February
25, 2016, he entered blind guilty pleas to the two charges.* On April 20, 2016, the court accepted
his pleas and sentenced him to 12 years on each conviction and ordered the sentences to run
concurrently.
Parsons’s counsel then discovered that the DWI charge was an included offense since
driving while intoxicated was one of the elements of the assault charge. As a result, the guilty
! All rules references are to the Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2018).
* All statutory references are to RSMo Cum. Supp. 2014.
3 The record is silent on whether the State’s offer was for concurrent or consecutive sentences but
the parties on appeal appear to agree that the offer was for concurrent sentences.
4 A blind guilty plea is one in which the defendant pleads guilty without any agreement with the
prosecutor or court as to the sentence and with an understanding that the court could impose any
sentence within the authorized range of punishment. Stanley v. State, 490 S.W.3d 389, 391 n.1
(Mo.App.E.D. 2016).
pleas and convictions subjected Parsons to multiple punishments for the same offense in violation
of his constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy, which Parsons never waived.’ The plea
court and the State were also apparently unaware of this defect in the plea negotiations and the
court’s sentences.
On May 5, 2016, counsel filed a motion to withdraw Parsons’s guilty plea to the DWI
charge to which the State consented and on May 19, 2016, the court set aside that guilty plea. The
State also filed a nolle prosequi as to the DWI charge.
Parsons’s counsel did not advise him that he should seck also to withdraw his guilty plea
to the assault charge. In fact, counsel stated at the evidentiary hearing that after realizing his error
with respect to the double jeopardy issue, he told Parsons it was best not to seek re-sentencing on
the assault charge because he feared that if Parsons requested a lesser sentence, the plea court
might be inclined to give him a greater one.
5 An individual’s right to be free from double jeopardy derives from the Fifth Amendment to the
United States Constitution. This right was made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth
Amendment. State v. Horton, 325 S.W.3d 474, 477 (Mo.App.E.D, 2010). Beyond protecting
defendants from subsequent prosecutions for the same offense after an acquittal or a conviction,
the Fifth Amendment also prohibits multiple punishments for the same offense, /d. at 477-78
(citing North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 717 (1969), overruled on other grounds by
Alabama y, Smith, 490 U.S. 794, 798-803 (1989)).
When there is an allegation of multiple punishments for one offense, the question is
whether cumulative punishment was intended by the legislature. /d. at 478 (citing State v. McTush,
827 S.W.2d 184, 186 (Mo.banc 1992). If the legislature specifically authorizes cumulative
punishment under two statutes that prohibit the same conduct, the court may impose multiple
punishments without violating the double jeopardy clause. Id. (citing McTush, 827 S.W.2d at
186). Here, the legislature clearly did not authorize multiple punishments for the criminal conduct
at issue, because § 556.041 provides that a person may not be convicted of more than one offense
for the same conduct if one offense is included in the other, and there is no dispute that the charges
in this case fall under § 556.046’s definition of included offenses.
3
2. Parsons’s Rule 24.035 motion for post-conviction relief and evidentiary hearing.
Parsons then filed his Rule 24.035 motion seeking relief from the assault conviction and
its 12-year prison sentence. He asserted multiple claims of prejudicial ineffective assistance of
counsel,® including that counsel’s erroneous advice caused him to plead guilty to the assault charge
unknowingly and involuntarily and that had counsel correctly advised him that he legally faced
only the assault charge and its 15-year maximum sentence—not both the assault charge and the
DWI charge with its additional 15 years~——he would have gone to trial.
At the evidentiary hearing, Parsons testified that at the time he entered his blind guilty
pleas, he believed he “did not really have any options” except to plead guilty, because he thought
he could be sentenced up to a maximum of 30 years in prison. Plea counsel testified that before
he discovered his etror, he advised Parsons that he had a “very difficult case” for trial; that
consecutive sentences were “a possibility”; and that, therefore, he could face up to 30 years on the
charges.’ Parsons testified, however, that had he known he faced only the assault charge and its
§ Jn addition to his claim on review here, Parsons asserted that counsel was deficient for failing to
advise him to seek the withdrawal of his guilty plea to the second-degree assault charge. The
motion court found that Parsons had no right to seek relief for this additional claim of ineffective
assistance because according to the court, after Parsons was sentenced on April 20, 2016, counsel
was acting as post-conviction counsel, and Missouri courts recognize no right to the effective
assistance of post-conviction counsel. See Martin v, State, 386 S.W.3d 179, 186 (Mo.App.E.D.
2012) (citing “Missouri’s longstanding principle that a petitioner does not have a constitutional
right to the effective assistance of post-conviction counsel”).
Although Parsons failed to raise this issue here, we note that no authority in Missouri law
supports the conclusion that counsel was acting as post-conviction counsel the entire time he had
an opportunity to file a motion to withdraw Parsons’s guilty plea to the second-degree assault
charge. Rule 29.07(d) provides that a motion to withdraw a guilty plea may be made at the earliest
before sentence is imposed, and here counsel had more than 20 days after Parsons entered his
guilty pleas to file a motion to withdraw them before sentencing. Morcover, Rule 29.07(d) sets
forth that to correct manifest injustice the court afler sentence may set aside the judgment of
conviction and permit the defendant to withdraw his plea, and no authority holds that only “post-
conviction counsel” may seek withdrawal after sentencing.
7 We acknowledge that counsel testified at a different point that his and Parsons’s perspective “was
never that [there] was a legitimate threat for [Parsons’s sentences] to run consecutively.” At first
4
15-year maximum sentence, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going
to trial.
The motion court—netably, the same judge as in the plea court-—found that Parsons’s
counsel was “deficient in failing to object to the imposition of sentence on both charges.” But the
motion court found that Parsons was not prejudiced by counsel’s error because the plea court set
aside Parsons’s DWI guilty plea and conviction. The motion court also found that Parsons’s
remaining guilty plea, to the second-degree assault charge, was entered knowingly and voluntarily,
despite the fact that Parsons had entered it based on misinformation about the double jeopardy
consequences and thus as a result of a fundamentally-flawed plea bargaining process.
This appeal follows.
Standard of Review
1. The two-part Strickland fest for ineffective assistance of counsel under Rule 24.035.
We review the denial of a Rule 24.035 motion for post-conviction relief only to determine
whether the motion court’s findings and conclusions are clearly erroneous. Rule 24.035(k);
Dorsey vy. State, 448 S.W.3d 276, 282 (Mo.bane 2014). Findings and conclusions are clearly
erroneous only if, after reviewing the entire record, we are left with the definite and firm
impression that a mistake has been made. Swallow v. State, 398 S.W.3d 1, 3 (Mo.banc 2013). We
presume that the motion court’s findings are correct. Chaney v. State, 323 $.W.3d 836, 841
(Mo.App.E.D. 2010).
glance, this may seem to conflict with counsel’s testimony that consecutive sentences were “a
possibility.” Nevertheless, the two statements may be reconciled. The record shows that counsel
appraised what was a “legitimate threat” in referring to the anticipated consequences of Parsons
pleading guilty, as opposed to in describing—as counsel did at other points during the hearing—
the possible consequences of Parsons going fo trial and being convicted of both of the charges.
5
Parsons’s burden of proof is established by Strickland’s two-prong test for determining
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims in post-conviction-relief cases. Johnson v. State, 406
S.W.3d at 898 (Mo.bane 2013) (citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)). To
be entitled to relief, the movant must show by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) his counsel
failed to exercise the level of skill and diligence that a reasonably competent counsel would in a
similar situation, and (2) he was prejudiced by that failure. /d. at 898-99.
2. Parsons’s burden with respect to the prejudice prong of the Strickland fest.
There is extensive jurisprudence, specific to the guilty plea context, addressing the
movant’s burden of proof with respect to the prejudice prong of the Strickland test. See, e.g., Lee
v. United States, 137 S.Ct. 1958, 1965 (2017); Missouri v. Frye, 566 U.S. 134, 147 (2012); Hill v.
Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 59 (1985); Webb v. State, 334 S.W.3d 126, 128 (Mo.bane 2011); Debbins
y. State, 187 S.W.3d 865, 867 (Mo.banc 2006). In Lee, the Supreme Court of the United States
recited the standard we find to be applicable in this case: “When a defendant claims that his
counsel’s deficient performance deprived him of a trial by causing him to accept a plea, the
defendant can show prejudice by demonstrating a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.” 137 5.Ct. at
1965 (citing Hill, 474 U.S. at 59).
The Court in Lee drew an important distinction between ineffective assistance that occurs
during a fria/ and ineffective assistance that occurs during plea negotiations. Id. at 1964-5. A
claim of ineffective assistance of counsel will often involve a claim of attorney error “during the
course of a legal proceeding”—-for example, that counsel failed to raise an objection at trial or to
present an argument on appeal. Jd. at 1964 (citing Roe v. Flores—Ortega, 528 U.S. 470, 481
(2000)). A defendant raising such a claim can demonstrate prejudice by showing “a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
been different.” Flores-Ortega, 528 U.S. at 482 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
But a claim of ineffective assistance in plea negotiations amounts, by contrast, to an
averment that counsel’s “deficient performance arguably led not to a judicial proceeding of
disputed reliability, but rather to the forfeiture of a proceeding itself.” Lee, 137 S.Ct. at 1965
(quoting Flores—Ortega, 528 U.S. at 483) (emphasis added). When a defendant alleges his
counsel’s deficient performance led him to accept a guilty plea rather than go to trial, we do not
ask whether, had he gone to trial, the resu/t of that trial would have been different than the result
of the plea bargain. id. That is because, while we ordinarily “apply a strong presumption of
reliability to judicial proceedings,” “we cannot accord” any such presumption “to judicial
proceedings that never took place.” id. (quoting Flores-Ortega, 528 U.S. at 482-483) (internal
quotation marks omitted). We instead consider whether the defendant was prejudiced by the
“denial of the entire judicial proceeding . . . to which he had a right.” Id. (citing Flores-Ortega,
528 U.S. at 483) (emphasis added).
3. The role plea bargaining plays in our criminal justice system.
The Missouri Supreme Court in Taylor vy, State, 497 S.W.3d 342, 349 (Mo.App. W.D. 2016)
observed that plea bargain negotiations represent a critical phase of litigation for purposes of the
Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. See also Padilla v. Kentucky, 559
U.S. 356, 373 (2010). And the Supreme Court of the United States in Frye, 566 U.S. 134 at 143
described the role of plea bargaining in our criminal justice system as follows:
Ninety-seven percent of federal convictions and ninety-four percent of state convictions
are the result of guilty pleas. ... The reality is that plea bargains have become so central
to the administration of the criminal justice system that defense counsel have
responsibilities in the plea bargain process, responsibilities that must be met to render the
adequate assistance of counsel that the Sixth Amendment requires in the criminal process
at critical stages. Because ours “is for the most part a system of pleas, not a system of
trials,” .. . itis insufficient simply to point to the guarantee of a fair trial as a backstop that
inoculates any errors in the pretrial process. “To a large extent .. . horse trading [between
prosecutor and defense counsel] determines who goes to jail and for how long. That is
what plea bargaining is. It is not some adjunct to the criminal justice system, it is the
criminal justice system.” ... “[Defendants] who do take their case to trial and lose receive
longer sentences than even Congress or the prosecutor might think appropriate, because
the longer sentences exist on the books largely for bargaining purposes. This often results
in individuals who accept a plea bargain receiving shorter sentences than other individuals
who are less morally culpable but take a chance and go to trial”, ... In today’s criminal
justice system, therefore, the negotiation of a plea bargain, rather than the unfolding of a
trial, is almost always the critical point for a defendant.
(internal citations omitted). These principles and insights guide our analysis here.
Discussion
Since it is undisputed that Parsons’s counsel’s advice constituted the ineffective assistance
of counsel, the question before us is whether Parsons demonstrated a reasonable probability that
but for his counsel’s constitutionally ineffective assistance, he would not have pleaded guilty to
the assault charge and would have insisted on going to trial. We find that Parsons met his burden
of proof under this standard, and that the motion court clearly erred by finding that he was not
prejudiced in this case.
1. Counsel's ineffective assistance rendered Parsons’s guilty pleas unknowing and
involuntary.
A guilty plea must be a voluntary expression of the defendant’s choice, and a knowing and
intelligent act done with sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely
consequences. State v. Roll, 942 $.W.2d 370, 375 (Mo.banc 1997) (citing Brady v. United States,
397 U.S. 742, 748 (1970)), Following a guilty plea, the ineffectiveness inquiry is limited to
whether counsel’s actions impinged on the movant’s ability to enter a knowing and voluntary plea.
Dobbins v. State, 187 S.W.3d 865, 866 (Mo.banc 2006) (citing Roll, 942 S.W.2d at 375 (Mo.bane
1997)). Mistaken beliefs about sentencing affect a defendant’s ability to knowingly enter a guilty
plea if the mistake is reasonable and the mistake is based upon a positive representation upon
which the movant is entitled to rely. Jd. at 866-867 (citing Dorsey v. State, 115 S.W.3d 842, 845
(Mo.bane 2003)).
It is no surprise that the motion court has recognized and the State has conceded that
Parsons’s counsel rendered ineffective assistance by missing the double jeopardy issue and
advising Parsons to plead guilty to both charges. Likewise, the State, at least, did not contest
Parsons’s assertion that counsel affirmatively misled him and induced him to enter guilty pleas
that were unknowing and involuntary.
2. The record supports Parsons’s argument that it was reasonably probable he would have
gone to trial absent counsel’s error.
Although it points toward prejudice that Parsons was caused by his attorney’s mistake to
enter unknowing and involuntary guilty pleas, that alone does not satisfy the test set forth in Lee
that Parsons show “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s errors, he would not have
pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.” Lee, 137 S.Ct. at 1965.
Nevertheless, we find Parsons met that standard as well. First, Parsons testified that had
he been given accurate advice, he would have gone to trial. Second, we find it significant that
Parsons rejected the State’s offer of 11 years on each count even when he thought—incorrectly—
that he faced up to 30 years if he proceeded to trial. This shows that if Parsons had properly faced
only one possible conviction and a maximum sentence of 15 years, there is at least a reasonable
chance that he would have insisted on a trial. Finally, Parsons testified that while he entered blind
pleas of guilty, those came only after he concluded based on counsel's advice that he had no other
realistic option. In light of these facts, we find Parsons has demonstrated a reasonable probability
that, wisely or not, he would have insisted on a trial in the absence of counsel’s error.
3, The motion court’s implicit rationale that Parsons would not have gone to trial absent
counsel’s error because he was unlikely to obtain a better result by doing so departs from
the Supreme Court’s holding in Lee and is supported only by speculation.
Contrary to the motion court’s apparent presumption, Parsons did not have to show that he
would have been better off going to trial than pleading guilty. See Lee, 137 S.Ct. at 1965 C[W]e
do not ask whether, had [the movant] gone to trial, the result of that trial ‘would have been
different’ than the result of the plea... .”). Parsons’s sole burden to prove prejudice in this case
was, instead, to establish a reasonable probability that counsel’s error caused him to plead guilty
where otherwise he would have insisted on a trial. fd.
Obviously, defendants weigh their prospects at trial in deciding whether to plead guilty,
but “[w]hen [the respective consequences of a conviction after trial and by piea| are, from the
defendant’s perspective, similarly dire, even the smallest chance of success at trial may look
attractive.” Jd. at 1966 (citing Hill, 474 U.S. at 59) (emphasis added), So where, as here, we are
“asking what an individual defendant would have done, the possibility of even a highly improbable
result may be pertinent to the extent it would have affected his decisionmaking.” Jd. at 1967
(emphasis added), Indeed, the Supreme Court has recognized that even “a defendant with no
realistic defense to a charge carrying a 20-year sentence may nevertheless choose trial, if the
prosecution’s plea offer is 18 years.” Jd, at 1966-67 (emphasis added).
Here, Parsons rejected a more favorable offer. Based on this example, and for all the
reasons stated above, we find Parsons has demonstrated a reasonable probability that with the
threat of unlawful double-sentencing wiped out, he would have decided he was better off risking
10
a trial, even if another defendant would not have reached the same conclusion.® The motion court
clearly erred by finding that Parsons was not prejudiced by counsel’s ineffective assistance.
We are mindful and respectful of the motion court’s important role as the fact-finder on a
Rule 24,035 motion. However, we find that the motion court’s rationale for denying Parsons’s
motion is entirely speculative that there was no reasonable likelihood he would have insisted on a
trial in the absence of counsel’s error because he was unlikely to obtain a better result at trial than
the 12-year sentence he received for pleading guilty to the assault charge.
Indeed, the motion court had no firm basis in the record to conclude that with the threat of
conviction of both included offenses removed from the equation, the State would have made a plea
offer acceptable to Parsons, or that even if he rejected the State’s offer, he would still have been
inclined to enter a blind plea rather than proceed to trial. It is unknowable what impact the fact
that there were two possible felony convictions and two 15-year maximum sentences in play had
on the State’s decision to offer 11 years on each charge. So frankly, it is impossible to know
whether the State would have made any plea offer in the absence of counsel’s error, much less
whether Parsons would have accepted it. But as discussed above, he has already shown that, even
in an erroneously-diminished bargaining position, he was not willing to accept an offer of 11 years,
and the record supports his assertion that he entered his blind guilty pleas because he considered
3 In Lee, the Court also required that the movant demonstrate that a decision to forgo pleading
guilty and go to trial would have been rational under the circumstances. Jd. at 1968-69 (citing
Padilla, 559 US. at 372). There is no explicit argument here that, even if Parsons showed he
would have gone to trial absent counsel’s error, it would have been irrational under the
circumstances for him to do so. Nevertheless, to the extent the issue is raised on this appeal, we
would conclude here—like the Zee Court on the facts in that case—that though perhaps “[n]ot
everyone” would make the same choice in Parsons’s position, “[w]e cannot agree that it would be
irrational” for a defendant in that position to forgo pleading guilty in favor of trial. Jd.
11
himself boxed in by counsel’s mistake that exposed him to the risk of being sentenced to 30 years
if he took his case to trial.
Furthermore, though the State clearly had a strong case for trial on this record, it is not a
certainty that Parsons would even have been convicted by a jury of the greater of the two offenses
charged here—importantly, the one to which Parsons’s blind plea of guilty was never set aside:
second-degree assault of a law enforcement officer. The assault charge required the State to prove
that Parsons operated a motor vehicle while intoxicated and “when so operating, actfed] with
criminal negligence to cause physical injury to a law enforcement officer... .” § 565.082.1(4)
(emphasis added). Section 562.016.5 defines the phrase “acts with criminal negligence” as
follows: “A person acts with criminal negligence or is criminally negligent when he fails to be
aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that circumstances exist or a result will follow, and
such failure constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable person
would exercise in the situation.”
On the other hand, the class B felony DWI charge under § 577.010.2(6)(a) burdened the
State merely with proving that Parsons drove under the influence and was a habitual offender. And
the information in this case recites four prior guilty pleas by Parsons to driving while intoxicated
that, if proved, would appear to readily demonstrate his habitual offender status under §
577.001(11).
So while Parsons was charged with two serious felonies, both with wide and significant
punishment ranges, the State’s burden at trial to prove those crimes would not have been the
same—it would have been more onerous to prove the greater offense. Though the State would
have had to prove Parsons drove while intoxicated for either offense, the nzens rea element of the
assault charge—that Parsons acted with “criminal negligence’”—inserted matters of proof that
12
increased the State’s burden and at the same time raised questions that may have been useful to
the defense at trial.
4. Counsel’s erroneous advice profoundly damaged Parsons’s plea bargaining position.
Counsel’s mistake skewed the entire plea bargain process in this case, altering the
bargaining position of all involved. Most critically, counsel’s error devastated Parsons’s
bargaining position by squandering any leverage he might have had to elicit an acceptable plea
offer. And conversely, the error here unfairly enhanced the State’s bargaining position by
providing the State with the unearned, unlawful leverage of the threat of two convictions where
only one was constitutionally permitted, and an attendant improper doubling of Parsons’s potential
time in prison. With such threats in its arsenal, the State had one more bite at the apple and one-
hundred percent more bargaining room on the higher end of sentencing than it should have. The
State’s final offer of 11 years on each charge illustrates how strong it considered its position.
5. The motion court’s rationale that setting aside Parsons’s guilty plea to the DWI charge
remedied any prejudice that may have occurred is misplaced.
Parsons’s guilty plea to the assault charge failed the most basic test for determining whether
a plea is knowing and voluntary: A guilty plea must be a voluntary expression of the defendant’s
choice, and a knowing and intelligent act done with sufficient awareness of the relevant
circumstances and likely consequences. Roll, 942 8.W.2d at 375. In fact, the motion court
acknowledged that Parsons’s counsel was “deficient in failing to object to the imposition of
sentence on both charges.” But though the plea court appropriately set aside Parsons’s DWI guilty
plea, we are not persuaded—as the motion court was—that setting aside the DWI guilty plea
somehow rendered knowing and voluntary Parsons’s remaining guilty plea to the assault charge
and cured any prejudice to him from counsel’s error, Rather, we believe Parsons’s assault-charge
guilty plea retained the fundamental defect of being entered unknowingly and involuntarily
13
because not only counsel, but also the State and the plea court utterly misrepresented to Parsons
the effect on his constitutional rights of pleading guilty to included offenses. And applying the
test for prejudice from Lee, we fail to see how the prejudice to Parsons was in any way cured here
when it could readily have been cured by setting aside both guilty pleas and allowing Parsons and
the State to reengage in plea negotiations as to the assault charge alone—or, if that failed, to
proceed to trial with only one possible conviction and sentence hanging over Parsons’s head.
Conclusion
After reviewing the entire record, we are left with the definite and firm impression that a
mistake has been made. The judgment of the motion court is reversed and the cause is remanded
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
SS
James M. Dowd, Judge Ss
Sherri B. Sullivan, P.J., and
Lawrence E. Mooney, J., concur.
14