Kennicutt v. State

Alok Ahuja, Judge,

dissenting.

The majority concludes that the circuit court did not clearly err in denying Kenni-cutt’s postconviction relief motion without an evidentiary hearing. I respectfully disagree.

At the outset, it bears emphasis that “what is at issue in this appeal is not the motion court’s denial of relief; it is the motion court’s refusal to hold an evidentia-ry hearing to determine whether appellant was entitled to relief under Rule 29.15.” State v. Ivy, 869 S.W.2d 297, 299 (Mo. App. E.D. 1994); see also Masden v. State, 62 S.W.3d 661, 664-65 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001). Rules 24.035 and 29.15 set a “low bar” for a postconviction relief movant to establish his right to an evidentiary hearing. As the Supreme Court has explained, “[i]n order to ensure that claims are decided accurately, the rules encourage evidentiary hearings.” Wilkes v. State, 82 S.W.3d 925, 929 (Mo. banc 2002). Evidentiary hearings in postconviction relief cases should be the rule, not the exception.

According to Kennicutt’s amended motion, his attorney advised him not to testify in support of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea, because of the risk that he could face prosecution for perjury. The amended motion alleges that counsel’s advice was erroneous, because Kennicutt’s proposed sentencing-hearing testimony would not have conflicted with his testimony at his guilty plea hearing, and because, under § 575.040.4, RSMo, “[i]t is a defense to a prosecution [for perjury] that the actor retracted the false statement in the course of the official proceeding in which it was made.”

Kennicutt’s claim of deficient performance by his attorney warrants an eviden-tiary hearing. Although Kennicutt admitted at his guilty plea hearing that he had engaged in “sexual contact by touching [the victim’s] breast,” that admission is not necessarily inconsistent with the testimony Kennicutt wished to give at his sentencing Rearing: that he was not acting with á purpose of arousing or gratifying sexual desire. I recognize that, in Wray v. State, 474 S.W.3d 230, 235-36 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015), this Court held that a plea colloquy sufficiently developed a factual basis for a defendant’s guilty plea to child molestation, where the defendant acknowledged engaging in “sexual contact” with the victim. We explained:'

The average person would understand that by admitting sexual contact with another, he or she Is not admitting mere physical contact but instead contact that has the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification. ... Wray offers no explanation for how his admitted conduct could have been grounded in a misunderstanding about the meaning of the word “sexual” when used to refer to specific physical contact. ... Because the term “sexual” is a commonly-known, layman term, [Wray] failed to demonstrate that he was deprived of the actual knowledge of the factual basis for the charge of child molestation in the first degree.

Id. at 235 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

Wray must be read in its procedural context: it merely affirmed a factual finding by a circuit court, after an evidentiary hearing, that a particular offender had “failed to demonstrate that he was deprived of the actual knowledge of the factual basis” for the charge to which he pled guilty. The movant in Wray “offer[ed] no explanation” as to what he meant when he admitted “sexual contact.” Wray would. not prevent Kennicutt from testifying that ^vhen he admitted to “sexual contact” at his guilty plea hearing, he did not mean that he had acted with the purpose of arousing or gratifying sexual desire. To act “.knowingly,” as required by the perjury statute, it was necessary that Kennicutt have been subjectively “aware of the nature of his conduct.” § 562.016.3(1), RSMo. It may be, as a factual matter, that Kenni-cutt does not have an “average person’s” understanding of the term “sexual contact,” or is not of an “average” literacy level. It may be that Kennicutt understands the term “sexual contact” in a different way (perhaps as any act of touching certain , “sexual” parts of the body, whatever the actor’s intent). Kennicutt’s claim that his intended testimony at his sentencing hearing would not have been inconsistent with his guilty-plea testimony, and that he therefore faced nó risk of a perjury prosecution, is not clearly refuted by the record.

Kennicutt’s claim that his counsel failed to consider the . “retraction defense” in § 575.040.4, RSMo also merits an eviden-tiary hearing. The majority concludes that the “retraction defense” was inapplicable as a matter of law, because “the basis for Mr. Kennicutt’s ‘retraction’ of his admission of guilt was information contained in the SAR—information that had .already been exposed before Mr. Kennicutt desired to testify at the sentencing hearing.”

This issue cannot be decided without an evidéntiary hearing. Although the majority confidently claims that the testimony ¿en-nicutt desired to give at his sentencing hearing was based on “information contained in the SAR,” we do not have the Sentencing Assessment Report in the record. The extent to which the SAR “exposed” the falsity of Kennicutt’s statements at his guilty-plea hearing cannot be determined on this record.

' Even if the record was sufficient, it appears that the SAR merely recounts Ken-nicutt’s own statements claiming his innocence. His counsel stated at the sentencing hearing that the SAR reflected that Kenni-cutt “maintains he is innocent still.” It does not appear that this is a case in which law enforcement discovered the falsity of a speaker’s statements from other information, independent of the speaker. Instead, it is apparently the speaker’s own (out-of-court) recantation which the majority now claims makes the “recantation defense” unavailable. The majority cites no authority to support the surprising proposition that á speaker can be prohibited from relying on the “recantation defense” to a perjury prosecution, because the speaker himself admitted the falsity of his earlier statements to a government official outside the courtroom, before formally “retracting” the statements under oath.

I see no need to define the full limits of the “retraction defense” in this appeal, on this record. After all-, “what is at issue in this appeal is not the motion court’s denial of relief; it is the motion court’s refusal to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether appellant was entitled to relief under Rule 29.15.” State v. Ivy, 869 S.W.2d 297, 299 (Mo. App. E.D. 1994). Kennicutt’s claims of deficient performance by his attorney should be more fully developed at an evidentiary hearing.

Kennicutt is also entitled to an eviden-tiary hearing concerning whether his attorney’s deficient performance prejudiced him. According to Kennicutt, he relied on his attorney’s erroneous advice in choosing not to testify. Kennicutt’s amended motion alleges that, if he had been called to testify, he would have denied acting with the mental state necessary to support his convictions for sexual molestation. The motion also alleges that, if Kennicutt had testified, there is a reasonable probability that the circuit court would have granted the motion to withdraw his guilty plea.

Although Kennicutt’s protestations of innocence may not have required the circuit court to permit him to withdraw his plea, the court plainly had the discretion to permit withdrawal when Kennicutt sought that relief before sentencing. Although “Rule 29.07(d) does not provide a criterion for defining when a plea of guilty may be withdrawn upon a motion before sentence[,] ...' [i]t has been said that whether or not such a withdrawal shall be permitted is within the sound discretion of the court.” State v. Choate, 639 S.W.2d 906, 908 (Mo. App. S.D. 1982); accord, State v. Zito, 595 S.W.2d 383, 385 (Mo. App. W.D. 1980); State v. Nielsen, 547 S.W.2d 153, 158-59 (Mo. App. 1977).1 The majority agrees that “the sentencing court possessed the discretion to permit the withdrawal of Mr. Kennicutt’s guilty plea notwithstanding, it was based on. nothing more than a ‘mere protestation of innocence/ ”

The fact that Kénnicutt did not testify in support of his motion to withdraw ‘ his guilty plea was decisive. The circuit court explicitly stated, on two separate occasions, that it was denying his motion to withdraw his guilty plea because there was no sworn testimony supporting the motion. When the court denied Kennicutt’s motion to withdraw, it explained its ruling this way:

Well, considering the statements made by the Defendant undér oath [at his guilty plea hearing] on September 22nd, 2014, as opposed to the statements that are contained in the1 [Sentencing Assessment Report] which are, if nothing else, hearsay, but even if not objected to for hearsay definitely were not made under oath, the Court is going to choose to believe the statements that he made on September 22, 2014, and the Court is denying the Defendant’s counsel’s motion to set aside the guilty plea.

(Emphasis' added.)

Later in the sentencing hearing, the court again emphasized that it had denied the motion to withdraw because of Kenni-cutt’s failure to testify in support of the motion:

THE COURT: ... As I explained earlier, Mr. Kénnicutt, I was faced with two -different views on what took place. I had your attorney’s argument that you are now saying you didn’t do it.
THE DEFENDANT: Yeah.
THE COURT: I don’t have any sworn testimony to that fact. I have your sworn testimony presented on September 22nd that you did, in fact, do what you were charged with. And since that is the only sworn testimony I have, I have chosen to believe that that is, in fact, what took place and what the truth is.
And therefore I denied your attorney’s motion to set aside your guilty plea because I believe what took place on September 22nd was the truth—or what you told me on September 22nd was the truth.

(Emphasis added.)

Thus, the circumstances alleged in the amended motion are that:

(1) Kénnicutt was advised by his attor- ¡ ney not .to .testify in support of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea;
(2) Kennicutt’s attorney’s advice was based on an erroneous understanding of the law; and
(3) the circuit court denied Kennicutt’s ’ motion to withdraw because—based on his attorney’s erroneous advice—he offered no sworn testimony to support it.

This strikes me as a straightforward case in which Kénnicutt has alleged facts which, .if true, would establish Strickland prejudice and entitle him to postconviction relief.

The circuit court offered two ratipnales for denying Kennicutt’s claim without a hearing. The court’s judgment states:

This 'claim is ... refuted by the record. Movant was present at the sentencing hearing when the oral motion to set aside the-guilty-plea-was made. Although' Movant’s attorney initially stated he was going .to call Movant'to testify, after discussing this strategy' further with Movant, it was decided that Movant would not testify. Movant was there when this discussion happened and could have testified if he wanted to. He could have told the Court he wanted to testify and he could have testified. Movant decided, after talking with, his attorney that he would not testify on the motion to withdraw the guilty plea.
Further, Movant has failed to show prejudice to support this claim. Movant has failed to show that any testimony he would have given would have changed this 'Court’s mind as to the motion to set aside the guilty plea. Movant testified under oath at his guilty plea [that] he indeed committed the crimes of child molestation in the first and second degree. Then, over a month later, Movant comes back into this Court and thorough [sic] his attorney basically admitted that he lied to the Court. Now Movant wants this Court to find that it would have found him a credible witness if he testified that he lied a month prior at sentencing and would have then set aside that guilty plea. This Court cannot see under the circumstances how that testimony from Movant would have changed the ruling denying the motion to set aside the guilty plea.

The circuit court’s stated rationales are clearly erroneous. The court’s first rationale—that Kennicutt could have chosen to testify at the sentencing hearing—ignores the substance of Kennicutt’s claim: that his attorney erroneously advised him that he faced possible prosecution for perjury if he testified, and that he followed that erroneous advice. Kennicutt was entitled to rely on his attorney’s advice; he had no obligation to second-guess his attorney’s facially plausible statements, Cf. Wright v. Campbell, 277 S.W.3d 771, 775 (Mo. App. W.D. 2009) (holding that a lay client is generally under no duty to question a lawyer’s advice while the attorney-client relationship continues).

The court’s . second stated rationale— that the court would have found any testimony Kennicutt offered at the sentencing hearing to be unpersuasive—reflects a misunderstanding concerning the procedural posture of this case. While the circuit court would have been fully entitled to conclude that Kennicutt’s denials of guilt were unpersuasive, after holding an evi-dentiary hearing and seeing Kennicutt testify, it was not entitled to determine the credibility and weight of his testimony without actually hearing it.

This Court has repeatedly rejected circuit courts’ attempts to dispose of postcon-viction relief motions, without conducting evidentiary hearings, based on an assessment of the credibility of the motions’ allegations. We have stressed that, “[w]ithout having heard the testimony and observed the witnesses, the tidal court cannot possibly accurately assess the credibility of the witnesses or the weight of their testimony.” Masden v. State, 62 S.W.3d 661, 668 (Mo. App. W.D. 2001) (citation omitted); see also Carroll v. State, 461 S.W.3d 43, 50 (Mo. App. E.D. 2015) (“When a movant alleges sufficient facts to be entitled to an evidentiary hearing under Rule 29.15, courts may not dismiss the motion based on what the witness ‘would have’ testified to at the hearing.”); State v. Ivy, 869 S.W.2d 297, 301 (Mo. App. E.D. 1994) (motion court concludes that testimony of missing witness would have been “unlikely to be believed by a jury” because of witness’ prior inconsistent statements and familial relationship to defendant; “[h]ad such findings been made after an eviden-tiary hearing at which the motion court had an opportunity to hear [witness’] testimony, observe his demeanor and consider his credibility, they might well be sufficient to support denial of relief. But that is not the posture of this case.”).

The majority contends that an evidentia-ry hearing was not necessary, because Kennicutt’s claim that he did not act with the intent to arouse or gratify sexual desire “is a conclusion, not a fact.” The majority’s statement is completely unsupported. And it is simply wrong. As a general rule, the state of mind with which a defendant acted is a question of fact. State v. Smith, 502 S.W.3d 689, 699 (Mo. App. E.D. 2016) (“The defendant’s state of mind is clearly within the province of the jury”) (citation omitted); State v. Cochran, 365 S.W.3d 628, 634 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012) (same). While it may be that the prosecutors frequently seeks to prove a defendant’s state of mind through circumstantial evidence, the majority cites no authority which prevents a defendant from testifying to his own state of mind, and I am aware of none.

The majority also suggests that Kenni-eutt’s amended motion could be denied without an evidentiary hearing, because his proposed sentencing hearing testimony would have been inconsistent with his testimony at the guilty plea hearing. First, as explained above, there is no necessary inconsistency, since Kennicutt could testify that he did not intend his admission of “sexual contact” as an admission that he had acted with a sexual motivation. But even if there was an unavoidable inconsistency between Kennicutt’s guilty-plea and sentencing-hearing testimony, Kennicutt was apparently prepared to recant his testimony from the guilty plea hearing, and to testify that he had not in fact acted with a culpable mental state. If the trial court had heard that testimony at his sentencing hearing, it could have chosen to believe Kennicutt’s recantation, and permitted him to withdraw his plea.

The majority also suggests that the circuit court “ha[d] the benefit of contrary sworn testimony in the form of the amended motion,” and could make credibility determinations on that basis. In a footnote, the majority goes so far as to suggest that a different rule applies where the proposed testimony comes from the movant, as opposed to coming from a third party: with respect to the movant’s testimony, “the motion court is free, without the need for an evidentiary hearing, to assess” the credibility of that testimony. None of this is supported by any authority, and it is contrary to the caselaw discussed above, which plainly (and sensibly) holds that a circuit court cannot make credibility determinations in a postconviction relief proceeding based only on the allegations in an offender’s motion.2

Before the circuit court can decide whether Kennicutt’s intended sentencing hearing testimony would have created a reasonable probability that the court would have permitted him to withdraw his guilty plea, it must actually hear that testimony. The court cannot assess the credibility of Kennicutt’s post-guilty-plea testimony, and weigh that testimony against his testimony at the guilty plea hearing, based on the allegations in the amended motion alone.

The motion court short-circuited the process contemplated by the rules. The case should be remanded for an evidentia-ry hearing at which the circuit court can hear from Kennicutt’s counsel, and from Kennicutt himself.

. The somewhat unusual nature of Kenni-cutt’s claim may be a source of confusion concerning his right to an evidentiary hearing. In a typical case, a movant contends for the first time in his postconviction relief motion that the facts are different from the facts to which he testified before his conviction and sentence. Thus, the movant’s proposed post-conviction testimony is inconsistent with the movant’s sworn preconviction testimony. When that is the case, the movant’s postcon-viction version of events is clearly refuted by his preconviction testimony, and no evidentia-ry hearing is required.

Kennicutt’s claim in this case is different. He contends that, due to his attorney's ineffective assistance, he was prevented from giving testimony before his conviction and sentence became final, which would have persuaded the court to permit him to withdraw his guilty plea. The preconviction testimony Kennicutt was prevented from giving may have been inconsistent with his other yrecon-viction testimony. Any tension between Ken-nicutt’s proposed and actual preconviction testimony creates a factual issue to be resolved at an evidentiary hearing; it does not justify dispensing with an evidentiary hearing altogether.