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Bunch v. State

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2002-11-26
Citations: 778 N.E.2d 1285
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ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Earl McCoy
Lafayette, Indiana





ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Steve Carter
Attorney General of Indiana

Jodi Kathryn Stein
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
__________________________________________________________________


                                   IN THE



                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA

__________________________________________________________________

ALAN BUNCH,                  )
                                  )
      Appellant (Defendant Below), )    Indiana Supreme Court
                                  )     Cause No. 79S02-0205-PC-293
            v.                    )
                                  )     Indiana Court of Appeals
STATE OF INDIANA,                 )     Cause No. 79A02-0105-PC-338
                                  )
      Appellee (Plaintiff Below).       )
__________________________________________________________________

                  APPEAL FROM THE TIPPECANOE SUPERIOR COURT
                     The Honorable Donald Johnson, Judge
                         Cause No. 79D01-9009-CF-116
__________________________________________________________________


                           ON PETITION TO TRANSFER

__________________________________________________________________

                              November 26, 2002

BOEHM, Justice.
      We hold that in order to establish the affirmative defense  of  waiver
the State must  raise  it  in  its  pleading  in  a  post-conviction  relief
proceeding and carry the burden of proof on the issue in  the  trial  court.
However, a court on appeal may nevertheless  find,  sua  sponte  or  at  the
suggestion of a  party,  that  the  issue  presented  in  a  post-conviction
petition was waived by procedural default if  the  matter  could  have  been
presented on direct appeal but was not.

                      Factual and Procedural Background


      Alan Bunch was found guilty by a jury of  two  counts  of  Dealing  in
Cocaine as Class A felonies and four counts of Dealing in Cocaine  as  Class
B felonies.  For each Class A felony, Bunch was sentenced to fifty years  in
prison, with four years suspended for supervised probation.  He  received  a
twenty-year sentence on each count of  Dealing  in  Cocaine  as  a  Class  B
felony.  All time was ordered to be served concurrently.
      On direct appeal, the Court of Appeals overturned one of Bunch’s Class
A felony convictions in an unpublished memorandum decision but his  sentence
remained at fifty years.  Bunch v. State, 594 N.E.2d 847, No. 79A02-9112-CR-
539 (Ind. Ct. App. June 18, 1992).   Bunch  did  not  raise  any  sentencing
issues in his direct appeal.[1]
      Bunch then filed a  petition  for  post-conviction  relief  which  was
denied by the trial court.  The Court of  Appeals  affirmed  the  denial  of
post-conviction relief by unpublished memorandum decision.  Bunch v.  State,
659 N.E.2d 262, No. 79A04-9501-PC-14 (Ind. Ct. App. Dec. 14,  1995).   Bunch
raised  no  challenge  to  the  trial  court’s  handling  of  mitigating  or
aggravating circumstances.[2]  This Court denied transfer.
      Bunch then filed  a  successful  request  for  permission  to  file  a
successive  petition  for  post-conviction  relief.    In   the   successive
petition, Bunch argued that in sentencing him, the  trial  court  improperly
weighed the aggravating and mitigating circumstances.[3]  The State filed  a
response asserting the affirmative defenses of  waiver,  res  judicata,  and
laches.[4]
      At the  successive  post-conviction  hearing,  Bunch  challenged  four
aggravating factors cited by the trial court.[5]   The  State  responded  to
Bunch’s  arguments  on  the   merits   contending   that   one   aggravating
circumstance was sufficient to enhance  a  sentence  above  the  presumptive
sentence.  The post-conviction court denied Bunch relief without  ruling  on
the State’s pleaded defense of waiver.
      On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s  denial  of
post-conviction relief on the merits, but  noted  that  “because  the  State
failed to argue the affirmative defense of  waiver  at  the  post-conviction
hearing, it cannot now raise waiver on appeal.”  Bunch v. State, 760  N.E.2d
1163, 1168 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002).[6]   We  granted  transfer  in  a  separate
order dated May 23, 2002 to address this last issue.

                     I.  “Waiver” and Procedural Default


      On appeal, relying on Rouster v. State, 705  N.E.2d  999,  1003  (Ind.
1999), the State argued that Bunch had waived the sentencing  issue  because
he did not raise it on direct appeal.[7]  The Court of  Appeals  interpreted
Langley v. State, 256 Ind. 199, 267 N.E.2d 538 (1971), to require the  State
to raise the defense of waiver at the hearing.  The  court  concluded  that,
because the defense was not  raised  at  the  hearing,  the  State  did  not
preserve the defense in the post-conviction court, and the court  could  not
entertain it.
      We agree that the State was not entitled to affirmance on the basis of
waiver, but conclude that the Court of Appeals was not barred  from  finding
that Bunch had waived his sentencing issues.  The  term  “waiver”  has  been
applied to  several  different  concepts.   Here,  we  need  to  distinguish
between waiver as  an  affirmative  defense  and  a  discretionary  judicial
doctrine that forecloses an issue on appeal.  We think the  latter  is  more
properly  described  as  “procedural  default”  or  “forfeiture,”   but   we
acknowledge that it is often referred to as “waiver.”   Indiana  Trial  Rule
8(C)  requires  parties  to  plead  some  affirmative  defenses,   including
“waiver,” or forfeit them.[8]  It also places the burden of proof  at  trial
on the party required to plead the matter as  an  affirmative  defense.   In
contrast to the “waiver” governed by Rule 8(C), there is also a doctrine  of
judicial administration whereby appellate courts  may  sua  sponte  find  an
issue foreclosed under a variety of  circumstances  in  which  a  party  has
failed to take the necessary steps to preserve the issue.   See  e.g.,  West
v. State, 755 N.E.2d 173, 184 (Ind. 2001)  (where  the  defendant  fails  to
make an offer to prove); Flowers v.  State,  738  N.E.2d  1051,  1061  (Ind.
2000)  (where  defendant  fails  to  object  to  trial  judge’s   comments);
Trueblood v. State, 715 N.E.2d 1242, 1248 (Ind.  1999)  (in  post-conviction
proceedings where  claims  are  available  on  direct  appeal  but  are  not
presented to the court); Kindred v.  State,  540  N.E.2d  1161,  1176  (Ind.
1989) (where defendant rejected the trial  court’s  offer  to  admonish  the
jury).  This case deals with  the  procedural  default  variety  of  waiver,
which arises solely by reason of  failure  to  raise  the  issue  on  direct
appeal.   There  is  no  claim  of  consensual  action,   stipulation   that
eliminated the issue, or some other form of “waiver” that requires proof  of
the actions taken by a party that operate to bar it from asserting a claim.

      A.  Waiver as an Affirmative Defense


      We agree with the Court of Appeals that  the  affirmative  defense  of
waiver must  be  raised  at  the  post-conviction  hearing  to  be  properly
preserved for appeal.  The Court of Appeals relied principally  on  Langley,
256 Ind. at 199, 267 N.E.2d at 538, for its conclusion that waiver  must  be
raised at the post-conviction hearing to  be  properly  preserved.   Langley
held that the State must raise the issue at the hearing:  “[I]t  would  seem
that the state is precluded from asserting waiver on appeal where they  made
no mention concerning it at the hearing.”  Id. at 207  n.2,  267  N.E.2d  at
543 n.2.  Although the State was the  appellee,  the  court  considered  the
issue precluded “on the same basis that an appellant is normally denied  the
right to raise an issue for the first time on appeal.”   Id.   Langley  also
declared, “Where, however, the state, as it did in  this  case,  chooses  to
meet a petitioner’s allegations on their merits at the hearing, we  must  do
likewise on appeal.”   Id.  at  207,  267  N.E.2d  at  542-43.   Relying  on
Langley, the Court of Appeals in this case concluded that  the  “key  factor
in preserving waiver for appeal is that the issue be  argued  to  the  post-
conviction court.”  Bunch,  760  N.E.2d  at  1167.   Similarly,  Mickens  v.
State, 596 N.E.2d 1379, 1381 (Ind. 1992),  interpreted  Langley  to  require
that the waiver defense be “presented” by the State to  the  post-conviction
court before that court can find waiver.  See also  State  v.  Eubanks,  729
N.E.2d 201, 205 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000),  trans.  denied  (State  must  “argue”
waiver as a defense to the post-conviction court or the defense is  waived);
Nelson v. Gurley, 673 N.E.2d 497, 500  n.3  (Ind.  Ct.  App.  1996)  (Waiver
“must be specifically pleaded in the answer or specifically raised at  trial
or it is waived.”).
      Langley involved  two  consolidated  cases  in  which  post-conviction
relief had been denied.  The rules  governing  post-conviction  relief  were
adopted in 1969 and the  current  Trial  Rules  became  effective  in  1970.
Langley was decided by this Court in March 1971.  It is  not  clear  whether
the Court regarded the Trial Rules  as  applicable  to  the  post-conviction
proceedings before it.  In any event, it is now clear that the  Trial  Rules
apply to post-conviction  relief  proceedings.   Ind.  Post-Conviction  Rule
1(5) (“All rules and statutes applicable in civil proceedings including pre-
trial and discovery procedures are available  to  the  parties,  except  [in
cases involving a change  of  judge  request].”);  State  v.  Drysdale,  677
N.E.2d 593, 595  (Ind.  Ct.  App.  1997),  trans.  denied  (“Post-conviction
proceedings are governed by the  rules  and  statutes  applicable  to  civil
proceedings and the petitioner has the burden of proving  his  claims  by  a
preponderance of the evidence.”).
      Under current Trial Rule 8(C), the State must raise the issue  in  its
pleading and carry its burden of proof at trial in order to  prevail  on  an
affirmative defense.  See Troxel  v.  Troxel,  737  N.E.2d  745,  749  (Ind.
2002).  Failure  to  plead  the  defense  waives  it.   Having  pleaded  the
defense, as the State did here, it remained the State’s burden to  establish
the necessary facts to support the defense.
      Here, at the post-conviction  hearing,  although  the  State  did  not
abandon the defense, it took no steps to  call  it  to  the  post-conviction
court’s attention.  More importantly, the State did not  present  the  facts
necessary to establish this defense either  by  evidence  or  by  requesting
judicial notice of the issues presented in  Bunch’s  direct  appeal.   These
facts were readily available to the State.  Simply  offering  into  evidence
Bunch’s appellate brief would establish that the sentencing  issue  was  not
raised on direct appeal.  As a result of this omission, the State failed  to
establish the facts necessary to carry its burden of proof on this  defense.
 The State therefore is not entitled as a matter of right to a  ruling  that
Bunch has waived his claim of sentencing error.

      B.  Waiver by Procedural Default


      Although the State failed to establish an affirmative defense, a court
on appeal may nevertheless find that the sentencing  issue  presented  in  a
second  post-conviction  petition  was  forfeited  by  means  of  procedural
default.  More generally, although a party who has failed to plead or  prove
a Rule 8(C) affirmative defense has no right to prevail on that  basis,  the
party may nevertheless suggest to the court that procedural  default  of  an
issue is an appropriate basis to affirm the judgment below.  To  the  extent
Langley and its progeny suggest otherwise, they  are  overruled.   As  noted
above, an appellate court is not precluded from determining  that  an  issue
is foreclosed  under  a  wide  variety  of  circumstances.   Post-conviction
procedures provide defendants the opportunity to raise issues that were  not
known at the time of the original trial or were not available to  defendants
on direct appeal.  Lowery v. State, 640 N.E.2d 1031, 1036 (Ind.  1994).   It
has long been held that claims available on direct appeal but not  presented
are not available for post-conviction  review.   Trueblood,  715  N.E.2d  at
1248; Conner v. State, 711 N.E.2d  1238,  1246  (Ind.  1999);  Rouster,  705
N.E.2d at 1003; Lowery, 640 N.E.2d at 1036.  These are applications  of  the
basic  principle  that  post-conviction  proceedings  do  not   afford   the
opportunity for a super-appeal.  Wrinkles v. State, 749  N.E.2d  1179,  1187
(Ind. 2001).
      Here it is clear that Bunch seeks to raise an issue that was available
on direct appeal.  The parties’ briefs on direct appeal  and  in  the  first
post-conviction relief appeal  are  matters  of  public  record  subject  to
judicial notice.  See, e.g., Willner v. State, 602  N.E.2d  507,  509  (Ind.
1992); Roeschlein v. Thomas, 258 Ind. 16, 20, 280 N.E.2d  581,  584  (1972).
Our  review  of  Bunch’s  brief  reveals  that  Bunch  did  not  raise   the
aggravating and mitigating sentencing issue on direct appeal.   Because  the
“waiver” the State asserts is of the procedural default variety, it  may  be
raised by an appellate  court  sua  sponte.   We  conclude  that  Bunch,  by
failing to present this claim on direct appeal, is foreclosed  from  raising
it in the post-conviction proceeding.
      For the first time in his second post-conviction relief appeal,  Bunch
contends in his appellate reply brief that  “the  errors  committed  by  the
trial court as  a  result  of  the  consideration  of  improper  aggravating
factors constituted fundamental error, and therefore, can  not  be  waived.”
Fundamental error is a doctrine that prevents review of an issue  on  appeal
despite failure to raise  it  in  the  trial  court.   It  does  not  permit
relitigation of issues that were available on direct appeal.  Rather, as  we
held in Sanders v. State,  765  N.E.2d  591,  592  (Ind.  2002):  “In  post-
conviction proceedings, complaints that something went  awry  at  trial  are
generally cognizable only  when  they  show  deprivation  of  the  right  to
effective counsel or issues demonstrably unavailable at the  time  of  trial
or direct appeal.”
      Finally, Bunch contends for the first  time  in  his  reply  brief  on
appeal in this second post-conviction proceeding that his failure  to  raise
the  trial  court’s  sentencing  errors  was  the  result   of   ineffective
assistance of counsel.  Among the claims Bunch seeks to assert, this is  the
only one that is available in post-conviction proceedings.  However, it  was
waived in this appeal by Bunch’s failure to  present  it  in  his  appellate
brief.

                                 Conclusion


      We affirm the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that the  State  failed  to
preserve the defense of waiver by not establishing  the  facts  relevant  to
the defense at the post-conviction relief hearing.   We  conclude,  however,
that an appellate court is free to find the issue foreclosed for failure  to
present it on direct appeal.  We find the  issue  foreclosed  and  therefore
affirm the trial court’s denial  of  post-conviction  relief.   Pursuant  to
Indiana Appellate Rule 58(A)(2), we summarily affirm all other issues.
      SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON, SULLIVAN, and RUCKER, JJ., concur.

-----------------------
[1] On direct appeal, Bunch argued: (1)  a  statement  given  by  Bunch  was
pursuant to a custodial interrogation that required he  be  advised  of  his
Miranda rights; (2) the  trial  court  erred  by  permitting  the  State  to
question Bunch about his use and possession of  marijuana  although  he  had
never been charged or convicted of  those  activities;  and  (3)  the  trial
court erred by permitting the State to prepare four bags of a white  powdery
substance as demonstrative evidence.
[2] In his first post-conviction relief appeal,  Bunch  contended:   (1)  he
was not sufficiently advised of the  accusations  against  him  because  the
charging information failed to name  the  person  to  whom  he  intended  to
deliver the cocaine; and (2) his Fifth Amendment rights were  violated  when
he was sentenced twice for the same set of facts.
[3] Bunch  also  raised  the  issue  of  ineffective  assistance  of  trial,
appellate, and post-conviction counsel in his petition to the  trial  court.
He raised this issue for the  first  time  in  his  reply  appellate  brief.
Relying on Ross v. State, 429 N.E.2d 942, 945  (Ind.  1982),  the  Court  of
Appeals found Bunch  had  waived  this  issue  by  not  raising  it  in  his
principal brief.  Bunch v. State, 760 N.E.2d 1163, 1167 n.3 (Ind.  Ct.  App.
2002).  We summarily affirm this issue.  Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A)(2).
[4] The State did not raise either res judicata or laches on appeal, and  we
do not address these issues.
[5] Bunch had been charged with reckless homicide  based  on  a  death  from
overdosing on Bunch’s drugs, but he was  acquitted  of  that  count.   Bunch
challenged the trial court’s consideration of the victim’s death  (a  charge
of which he  was  acquitted),  his  prior  criminal  history,  his  need  of
correctional rehabilitation, and the depreciation of the seriousness of  the
crime by imposing a lesser sentence.
[6] The Court of Appeals ultimately held that although the sentencing  court
improperly considered two aggravators when it enhanced Bunch’s sentence,  it
properly considered three aggravators and did not err  in  failing  to  find
Bunch’s proffered mitigators.  Bunch, 760 N.E.2d at 1170-71.
[7] Without giving citations to the record,  the  State  contends  that  the
sentencing issues were known at  the  time  of  Bunch’s  direct  appeal  and
original post-conviction proceeding because they were “based on the face  of
the record of proceedings.”
[8] Trial Rule 8(C) provides  in  pertinent  part,  “A  responsive  pleading
shall set forth affirmatively and carry the burden of proving: . . .  waiver
. . . .  A party required to  affirmatively  plead  any  matters,  including
matters formerly required to be pleaded affirmatively by reply,  shall  have
the burden of proving such matters.”