IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0722
Filed February 17, 2021
JACK LEWIS GOOD,
Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Kellyann M.
Lekar, Judge.
Jack Good appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.
AFFIRMED.
Richard Hollis, Des Moines, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Darrel Mullins, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Considered by Bower, C.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ.
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MULLINS, Judge.
Jack Good appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief. He
argues the court erred in (1) dismissing his application on statute-of-limitations
grounds and for failure to set forth specific facts upon which the application was
based and (2) considering facts allegedly outside the record that flowed from the
underlying criminal record that was allegedly not specifically judicially noticed by
the court.1 He also argues postconviction-relief counsel was ineffective in failing
to file an amended application for postconviction relief and a resistance to the
State’s motion for summary disposition and in failing to move for a new trial due to
the court’s alleged consideration of facts outside the record.2
Good filed his application for postconviction relief in January 2019. The
application verified judgment on his conviction of assault with intent to commit
sexual abuse was entered in 1996, he was sentenced to two years in prison, and
no appeal was taken. In his application, Good generally argued changes in sex-
offender-registry laws over the past twenty years resulted in a violation of his 1996
plea agreement. The only change he highlighted is that he is now required to
1 Any constitutional due-process or equal-protection claims in relation to the court’s
alleged errors were not raised or decided in the district court and are not preserved
for appellate review. See Meier v. Senecaut, 641 N.W.2d 532, 537 (Iowa 2002).
2 Counsel on appeal notes: “It is possible that Good may wish to present the
substantive issues raised in this case but Court never addressed.” Counsel
provides a laundry list of those issues, but no substantive arguments. He also
requests that if any case decided while this appeal is pending declares
unconstitutional new Iowa Code section 814.6A(1) (Supp. 2019), which prohibits
a defendant from filing pro se documents in any Iowa court while represented by
counsel and forbids courts from consider, that any such holding be applied to this
appeal. But that provision applies to criminal defendants. Its postconviction-relief
counterpart is found in section 822.3A(1). Either way, we have no pro se filings
before us in this appeal, so we do not address the request.
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register as a sex offender for life. Apparently relative to that claim, he stated his
“sentence has expired, or probation, parole, or conditional release has been
unlawfully revoked, or [he] is otherwise held in custody or other restraint.” The
State moved for dismissal on statute-of-limitations grounds pursuant to Iowa Code
section 822.3 (2019).
At the ensuing hearing, the State echoed its statute-of-limitations argument.
Good responded that his claim of being held or subject to a sentence that has
expired was not subject to the statute of limitations. The State replied that Good
failed to put forth sufficient facts to show his sentence expired. In its ensuing ruling,
the court concluded the application was time-barred and failed to “specifically set
forth the grounds upon which the application is based,” as required by section
822.4. The court granted the State’s motion to dismiss, and this appeal followed.
Appellate review of postconviction-relief proceedings is typically for
correction of errors at law, but where claims of ineffective assistance of counsel
are forwarded, our review is de novo. See Diaz v. State, 896 N.W.2d 723, 727
(Iowa 2017).
We first address Good’s claim that the court erred by considering facts
allegedly outside the record. Good argues the court inappropriately considered
facts contained in the underlying criminal record, of which he claims the court did
not take judicial notice. Specifically, he complains of the court considering the date
he was sentenced, March 12, 1996. Good argues that Iowa Code section 822.6A,
which took effect while his application is pending and automatically makes the
underlying criminal file part of the record in a postconviction-relief proceeding, does
not apply. He takes the position the statute only applies to applications both filed
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and decided after the statute’s effective date on July 1, 2019. But we need not
decide whether the statute applies because, even if the court did not take judicial
notice of the underlying file and then relied on it thereafter, Good suffered no
prejudice from the same. Good’s own application stated he was sentenced on his
conviction in 1996 and did not appeal. That was sufficient to alert the court that
the conviction or decision was final for statute-of-limitations purposes more than
two decades before Good filed his application. In addition, the exact date of
Good’s sentencing was recited in the State’s motion to dismiss and its attachment,
as well as at the hearing on the motion to dismiss. We find no prejudicial error
here. And counsel breached no duty resulting in prejudice in failing to move for a
new trial based upon the court’s alleged consideration of facts outside the record,
so counsel was not ineffective as alleged in relation to this claim.
We turn to Good’s claim dismissal on statute-of-limitations grounds was
improper. Postconviction-relief “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.” Iowa Code § 822.3. “However, this
limitation does not apply to a ground of . . . law that could not have been raised
within the applicable time period.” Id. Good states his argument before the district
court was that he was entitled to relief based on changes in the law since his 1996
plea, specifically changes to sex-offender-registry statutes contained in chapter
692A. He points only to statutory amendments made to chapter 692A in 2009.
See 2009 Iowa Acts ch. 119, §§ 1–31. He claims these statutory amendments in
2009 amounted to “a ground of fact or law that could not have been raised within
the applicable [limitations] period,” so he has good cause to file his application
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beyond three years the date his conviction was final, which was in 1996. But we
have previously agreed that
[i]f defendants were allowed to collaterally attack prior convictions
every time the legislature changed a penal statute . . . , few
convictions would ever be final. The courts would be swamped with
revolving litigation for the same offense. Each defendant is entitled
to a full and complete trial. The right does not extend to a new trial
every time the law subsequently changes.
Dryer v. State, No. 02-1179, 2003 WL 22187437, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 24,
2003). Furthermore, Good did not file his application for postconviction relief within
three years of the alleged new grounds of law effectuated by the 2009 legislative
amendments to chapter 692A, so his application is time-barred. See, e.g., Smith
v. State, 882 N.W.2d 126, 127–28 & n.2 (Iowa Ct. App. 2016) (collecting cases).
So we affirm the dismissal of Good’s application on statute-of-limitation grounds.
We need not address Good’s claims the court erred in dismissing his application
for failure to set forth specific facts upon which the application was based because
dismissal was proper pursuant to the statute of limitations.
We turn to Good’s claims postconviction-relief counsel was ineffective in
failing to file an amended application or a written resistance to the State’s motion
to dismiss. These claims are largely based on the court alternatively dismissing
Good’s application for failure to set forth specific facts upon which the application
was based. Good takes the position that counsel should have filed an amended
application providing the court with facts sufficient to rule upon the application. He
adds that a written resistance to dismissal would have provided the court “a more
eloquent presentation of the facts” that “would have caused the district court to
deny the State’s motion to dismiss.” He also claims these failures amounted to
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structural error for failure to subject the State’s motion to dismiss to meaningful
adversarial testing. But Good provides us with no position on what facts should
have been provided or what additional arguments should have been made. See
Dunbar v. State, 515 N.W.2d 12, 15 (Iowa 1994) (“When complaining about the
adequacy of an attorney’s representation, it is not enough to simply claim that
counsel should have done a better job. The applicant must state the specific ways
in which counsel’s performance was inadequate and identify how competent
representation probably would have changed the outcome.” (internal citation
omitted)). In any event, we have already concluded dismissal was appropriate per
the statute of limitations, so we find Good suffered no prejudice from counsel’s
failure to supply additional facts to stave off the district court’s dismissal on the
alternative ground—failure to set forth specific facts upon which the application
was based. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984) (setting forth
elements of claims of ineffective assistance of counsel); State v. Harrison, 914
N.W.2d 178, 188 (Iowa 2018) (same).
Finding no cause for reversal on the issues properly presented for our
review, we affirm the denial of Good’s application for postconviction relief.
AFFIRMED.