Flanigan v. State

MANNHEIMER, Judge,

with whom COATS, Chief Judge, joins, concurring.

I concur in the court's decision that the legislated time limits on petitions for post-conviction relief do not violate the habeas corpus clauses of the federal and state constitutions. I write separately to clarify my reasons for reaching this conclusion.

James Flanigan was convicted of murder in 1982, and this court affirmed his conviction in 1984.1 In 1995, the legislature established time limits for filing a petition for post-conviction relief.2 Under AS 12.72.020(a2)(8)(A), a petition for post-conviction relief must be filed within two years of the date judgement was entered against the defendant or, if the defendant appealed the conviction, within one year of the date the judgement was affirmed on appeal. For defendants like Flanigan whose convictions became final before July 1, 1994, the legislature established a special deadline of July 1, 1996.3

In August 1996, Flanigan filed a petition for post-conviction relief, but this petition was dismissed because Flanigan missed the July 1st filing deadline. He now asserts that the legislated filing deadlines amount to an abrogation or "suspension" of the writ of habeas corpus for inmates who miss the pertinent deadline. That is, Flanigan argues that the legislature's action violates both Article I, Section 9 of the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 18 of the Alaska Constitution.

Flanigan's federal constitutional argument is easily decided. Article I, Section 9 of the United States Constltutlon declares, in pertinent part:

The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless 'when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

Article I, Section 9 does not purport to limit the power of the states, but rather the power of the federal Congress.4 Thus, even if the Alaska Legislature had tried to abolish the writ of habeas corpus, the legislature's action would not violate Article I, Section 9 of the federal Constitution. (And, of course, the federal writ of habeas corpus would remain in fqrce in Alaska.)

Flanigan's state constitutional argument requires more attention. Article I, Section 13 of the Alaska Constitution provides:

Habeas Corpus.
The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or actual or imminent invasion, the public safety requires it.

As can be seen, this section of the Alaska Constitution tracks the language of the federal provision. The drafters of Article I of our state constitution stated in their accompanying commentary that the Alaska habeas corpus provision was "identical with the Federal Constitution" except for the additional language addressing "imminent invasion".5

*378If, as Flanigan claims, the time limits on petitions for post-conviction relief amount to a "suspension" of the writ of habeas corpus, then AS 12.72.020(a)(8)(A) would violate Article I, Section 18 of our state constitution. But in order to determine whether AS 12.72.020 restricts the availability of the constitutionally guaranteed writ of habeas corpus, we must ascertain what the drafters of the Alaska Constitution meant when they spoke of the "writ of habeas corpus".

As noted above, the drafters of our state's habeas corpus provision essentially copied the language of the federal Constitution. At the constitutional convention, the debate concerning Article I, Section 18 focused exclusively on choosing appropriate language to deal with attacks that did not involve immediate physical invasion. The delegates did not discuss the meaning of the phrase "writ of habeas corpus".6 From this, I infer first, that the delegates to the constitutional convention concurred in the drafters' statement that Article I, Section 18 was substantively "identical" to the federal provision, and see-ond, that the delegates intended Article I, Section 13 to protect the same right of habe-as corpus guaranteed by the federal Constitution. So, to understand what right is protected by Article I, Section 18 of the Alaska Constitution, we must examine the meaning of "writ of habeas corpus" as that phrase is used in the federal Constitution.

The "writ of habeas corpus" guaranteed by Article I, Section 9 of the federal Constitution is the writ that was known at common law as "habeas corpus ad subjiciendum ".7 This writ rose to prominence as "The Great Writ" during the sixteenth century, when the common law courts began to use habeas corpus as a means of granting relief to persons imprisoned by order of the King's Council without judicial authorization.8 - The writ "won its place as the most important safeguard of personal liberty ... when employed against the crown and its officers ... to elicit the cause for an individual's imprisonment and to ensure that he was released, admitted to bail, or promptly tried[.]" 9

But although the writ of habeas corpus was available to anyone held against their will, the writ was not intended to provide a general method for collaterally attacking a criminal conviction. Rather, the writ simply commanded the jailor or other custodian to produce legal justification for holding the petitioner. In the case of prison inmates, this usually meant that the jailor had to produce the judgement authorizing the petitioner's incarceration. Once the criminal judgement was produced, the habeas corpus petitioner could attack the judgement only on the ground that the issuing court had lacked jurisdiction over the petitioner or the petitioner's offense.10

This is not to say that the common law forbade collateral attacks on a criminal conviction. Such attacks were allowed (within a limited scope), but not under the rubric of habeas corpus. Rather, the writs of coram nobis and coram vobis were the vehicles for attacking a conviction based on errors com*379mitted by the trial court.11

In modern times, we are used to seeing the writ of habeas corpus employed as a method of collaterally attacking a criminal judgement for constitutional error. This is because the United States Congress, in 1867, passed a statute broadening the seope of the habeas corpus remedy. Under the Habeas Corpus Act of 1867, any federal or state prisoner could collaterally attack a eriminal conviction on the ground that it was obtained in violation of either the constitution or the laws of the United States.12

As the Supreme Court explained in Johnson v. Zerbst:

Congress has expanded the rights of a petitioner for habeas corpus{,] and the effect [of this change] is to substitute for the bare legal review that seems to have been the limit of judicial authority under the common-law practice ... a more searching investigation [into] the causes of [the petitioner's]! detention, and the court, upon determining the actual facts, is to dispose of the [petitioner] as law and justice require.
There [is] no doubt of the authority of Congress to thus liberalize the common-law procedure on habeas corpus in order to safeguard the liberty of all persons within the jurisdiction of the United States against infringement through any violation of the Constitution or a law or treaty [of the United States, and thus] a prisoner in custody pursuant to the final judgment of a state court of criminal jurisdiction may have a judicial inquiry in a court of the United States into the very truth and substance of the causes of [the prisoner's] detention[.]

304 U.S. at 466, 58 S.Ct. at 1024 (footnotes and internal quotations omitted).

But this broadened writ of habeas corpus was a creature of statute. The common-law writ guaranteed by the federal Constitution remained limited to jurisdictional attacks on a criminal judgement. The Supreme Court reiterated the limited nature of the constitutionally-guaranteed writ in United States v. Hayman (decided in 1952):

Although the objective of the Great Writ long has been the liberation of those unlawfully imprisoned, at common law a judgment of conviction rendered by a court of general jurisdiction was conclusive proof that the confinement was legal. Such a judgment [by itself] prevented issuance of ._ the writl.]
In 1867, Congress changed the common law rule by extending the writ of habeas corpus to "all cases where any person may be restrained of his or her liberty in violation of the constitution, or of any treaty or law of the United States", and [by] providing for inquiry into the facts of the detention.

Hayman, 342 U.S. 205, 210-11, 72 S.Ct. 263, 268, 96 L.Ed. 232 (1952).

Alaska decisions from the turn of the century recognized this limitation on the scope of the remedy afforded by the writ of habeas corpus. See In re Burkell13 and Mabry v. Beaumont 14.

In late 1955, when the drafters of our state's habeas corpus provision copied the language of the federal habeas corpus clause, and in early 1956, when the delegates to the Alaska Constitutional Convention considered and debated the draft of Article I, Section 18, there was no discussion concerning the meaning or scope of the writ. By that time, the United States Supreme Court had unambiguously explained the limited nature of the constitutionally guaranteed writ, contrasting it with the broader statutory writ enacted by Congress. Given this historical backdrop, I conclude that the framers of the Alaska Constitution intended our habeas corpus provision to guarantee the same limited common-law writ guaranteed by the United States Constitution.

*380This was the view of our first state legislature when, in 1962, they enacted AS 12.75-the chapter of the Alaska Statutes that codifies the writ of habeas corpus and the procedures governing habeas corpus litigation. AS 12.75 codifies a narrow writ of habeas corpus, modeled after the common-law writ guaranteed by the federal and state constitutions. AS 12.75.020 declares:

A person properly imprisoned or restrained by virtue of a legal judgment [issued by] a competent tribunal [having] civil or criminal jurisdiction ... shall not be allowed to prosecute the writ.

And AS 12.75.110 declares:

No court or judge, on the return of a writ of habeas corpus, may inquire into the legality or justice of any order, judgment, or [court] process specified in AS 12.75.020 or into the justice, propriety, or legality of a commitment for contempt made by a court ... according to law, and charged in the commitment, as provided by law.

In other words, the writ of habeas corpus codified in AS 12.75 is not to be used as a writ of error (other than to test the court's jurisdiction).15

I acknowledge that the United States Supreme Court more recently adopted a substantially broader view of the common-law writ of habeas corpus in Fay v. Noia.16 Justice Brennan, writing for the majority, rejected the notion that habeas corpus inquiry was traditionally limited to questions of jurisdiction.17 Instead, Justice Brennan asserted that "at the time that the Suspension Clause was written into our Federal Constitution ..., there was respectable common-law authority for the proposition that habeas [corpus] was available to remedy any kind of governmental restraint contrary to fundamental law" 18-that is, as a means of collaterally attacking any criminal judgement that was imposed in violation of due process.

Justice Brennan's view of the common-law writ was vigorously contested at the time by Justice Harlan (writing for the minority in Fay v. Noia ).19 Since that time (1968), the view adopted by the Fay v. Noiq majority has been criticized by scholars.20 Justice Powell, concurring in Schneckloth v. Busta-monte 21, and joined by three other members of the court 22, labeled Justice Brennan's construction of the common-law writ a "revisionist view" of history.23 Justice Powell declared that "recent scholarship has cast grave doubt on Fay's version of the writ's historic funcetion".24

Despite these criticisms, the Supreme Court has never disavowed what it said in Fay v. Noiw about the seope of the common-law writ of habeas corpus. Thus, Fay's interpretation of the common-law writ, though clouded, remains the controlling interpretation for purposes of federal constitutional law. But in the present appeal, this court must decide an issue of state constitutional law: What did the drafters of Alaska's Constitution intend when they wrote Article I, Section 13?

*381To answer this question, we need not try to assess the current validity or likely future of Fay v. Noiq. It is sufficient to note that Fay v. Noiw was decided in 1963-after the Alaska Constitution was drafted and adopted, and after the Alaska Legislature codified the writ of habeas corpus in AS 12.75. Whatever might be said about Fay v. Noi@'s construction of the writ of habeas corpus, it is clear that Fay represents a sharp departure from the view of the writ espoused in the Supreme Court's earlier opinions, beginning with Ex Parte Watkins in 1880 and continuing through United States v. Hayman in 1952. It is this pre-Fay view of the writ that guided the drafters of Alaska law. I therefore conclude that Article I, Section 18 of the Alaska Constitution incorporates and guarantees the common-law writ of habeas corpus as described in pre-Fay jurisprudence. In 1974, the Alaska Supreme Court enacted a post-conviction relief rule-Criminal Rule 35(b), later renumbered as Criminal Rule 35.1. This rule gives criminal defendants the right to collaterally attack their convictions and sentences on a variety of grounds. One of the listed grounds for post-conviction relief is that the defendant's "conviction or sentence is ... subject to collateral attack upon any ground [formerly] available under any common law, statutory, or other writ [or] proceeding[.]" 25 And the rule itself declares that it is "intended to provide a standard procedure for accomplishing the objectives of all of the constitutional, statutory[,] or common law writs." 26

That is, Criminal Rule 85.1 codifies not only the constitutionally guaranteed writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum but also the common-law writs of error (coram nobis and coram vobis) that authorized a limited collateral attack on the facts underlying a eriminal conviction. Indeed, the scope of post-convietion relief available under Criminal Rule 85.1 exceeds what was available under the common-law writs; it rivals the scope of relief available under the statutory writ of habeas corpus enacted by the federal Congress.

To the extent that Criminal Rule 85.1 codifies the constitutionally guaranteed writ of habeas corpus, one could plausibly argue that the legislature is powerless to amend Criminal Rule 85.1 in such a manner as to prevent prisoners from pursuing this writ. That is, Article I, Section 13 of our state constitution may well prohibit the legislature from enacting a law that prevents a prisoner from requiring the government to produce the criminal judgement that justifies the prisoner's incarceration, or that prevents the prisoner from challenging the jurisdiction of the court which issued that judgement.

But Flanigan's case does not raise this issue. Flanigan is imprisoned because he was convicted of murder. There is no question that Flanigan is imprisoned by virtue of a criminal judgement issued by the superior court. And although Flanigan's petition for post-conviction relief raises a multitude of issues, he does not assert that the superior court lacked jurisdiction over him or lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over his offense. Thus, Flanigan's collateral attack on his conviction is not a petition for "writ of habeas corpus" as that phrase is used in Article I, Section 18 of the Alaska Constitution.

Because Flanigan's petition is not a petition for writ of habeas corpus, Article I, Section 13 does not guarantee him the right to pursue his petition. His right to collaterally attack his conviction on the various grounds alleged in his petition stems from court rule and from statute. And because his right derives from:court rule and statute, the legislature ostensibly has the power to modify, limit, or even abolish that right.

I say "ostensibly" because I believe that, under certain cireumstances, other provisions of our state constitution may limit the legislature's power in this area. But that debate is premature in Flanigan's case. The precise question presented in this appeal is whether Article I, Section 13 of the Alaska Constitution guarantees a criminal defendant the right to collaterally attack their conviction on the basis of alleged procedural and legal *382errors committed in the trial court. For the reasons explained here, I conclude that the answer is "no". I note that the supreme courts of Oregon and Washington have reached this same conclusion, using similar reasoning.27

Accordingly, I join in the decision to uphold the superior court's dismissal of Flani-gan's petition for post-conviction relief.

. See Flanigan v. State, Memorandum Opinion No. 583 (Alaska App., May 30, 1984).

. See SLA 1995, ch. 79, § 9.

. See SLA 1995, ch. 79, § 40.

. See Wayne R. LaFave and Jerold H. Israel, Criminal Procedure (1984), § 27.2(a), Vol. 3, pp. 289-290.

. See Report of the Committee on Preamble and Bill of Rights (December 15, 1955), reprinted in Proceedings of the Alaska Constitutional Convention, Part 6, Appendix 5, p. 66.

This one change—the reference to actual or imminent invasion'"-was born of the Cold War and advances in military technology. This language was inserted to deal with the possibility that an enemy might attack and subjugate Alaska by bombs and missiles, before any foreign troops *378physically invaded the state. As originally proposed, the habeas corpus provision used the phrase, "imminent peril". This phrase was amended to "imminent invasion" during floor debate. See Proceedings of the Alaska Constitutional Convention, Part 2, pp. 1358-1366, 1450-54.

. The entire debate on Article I of the Alaska Constitution is found in Proceedings, supra, Part 2, pp. 1280-1503.

. See LaFave and Israel, Criminal Procedure, supra, § 27.1(b), Vol. 3, pp. 285-86; Fay v. Noia, 372 U.S. 391, 399-400, 83 S.Ct. 822, 827-28, 9 L.Ed.2d 837 (1963); Petition of Runyan, 121 Wash.2d 432, 853 P.2d 424, 429 (1993); Bartz v. State, 314 Or. 353, 839 P.2d 217, 224 (1992).

. See LaFave and Israel, § 27.1(b), Vol. 3, p. 286.

. Dallin H. Oaks, Habeas Corpus in the States-1776-1865, 32 Univ. Chicago Law Rev. 243, 244 (1965) (quoted in LaFave and Israel, § 27.1(b), Vol. 3, p. 288).

. See LaFave and Israel, § 26.4(a), Vol. 3, pp. 222-23, and § 27.1(b), Vol. 3, pp. 287-88. See also Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 254, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 2061, 36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973) (Powell, J., concurring); United States v. Hayman, 342 U.S. 205, 210-11, 72 S.Ct. 263, 268, 96 L.Ed. 232 (1952); Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 465, 58 S.Ct. 1019, 1023, 82 L.Ed. 1461 (1938); Ex Parte Watkins, 28 U.S. (3 Pet.) 193, 202-03, 7 L.Ed. 650 (1830).

. LaFave and Israel, § 27.1(c), Vol. 3, pp. 288-89.

. See LaFave and Israel, § 27.2(b), Vol. 3, pp. 292-96. See United States v. Hayman, 342 U.S. at 210-11, 72 S.Ct. at 268; Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. at 465-67, 58 S.Ct. at 1023-24.

. 2 Alaska Rpts. 108 (1903).

. 6 Alaska Rpts. 512 (1922).

. AS 12.75.020 and AS 12.75.110 carry forward the limitation on the scope of the writ that appeared in the 1913, 1933, and 1949 codifications of Alaska law. See, eg., CLA 1949, § 66-26-2:

Persons properly imprisoned or restrained by virtue of the legal judgment of a competent tribunal of civil or criminal jurisdiction, or by virtue of an execution regularly and lawfully issued upon such judgment or decree, shall not be allowed to prosecute the writ.

and § 66-26-17:

But no court or judge, on the return of a writ of habeas.corpus, has power to inquire into the legality or justice of any order, judgment, or process specified in section 66-26-2....

These two sections mirrored similar provisions found in CLA 1913, §§ 1399 and 1414, and CLA 1933, §§ 4133 and 4151.

. 372 U.S. 391, 83 S.Ct. 822, 9 L.Ed.2d 837 (1963).

. See 372 U.S. at 404, 83 S.Ct. at 830.

. 372 U.S. at 405, 83 S.Ct. at 831.

. 372 U.S. at 448-463, 83 S.Ct. at 853-861.

. See LaFave and Israel, § 27.1(b), Vol. 3, pp. 287-88.

. 412 U.S. 218, 250, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 2059, 36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973).

. See 412 U.S. at 249-250, 93 S.Ct. at 2059.

. See 412 U.S. at 252, 93 S.Ct. at 2060.

. 412 U.S. at 253, 93 S.Ct. at 2061.

. Criminal Rule 35.1(a)(6), formerly Criminal Rule 35(b)(1)(F).

. - Criminal Rule 35.1(b), formerly Criminal Rule 35(b)(2).

. See Petition of Runyan, 121 Wash.2d 432, 853 P.2d 424 (1993); Bartz v. State, 314 Or. 353, 839 P.2d 217 (1992).