Davis v. State

Decision Date02 March 2017
Docket NumberNo. CR–09–339,CR–09–339
Parties Adam DAVIS, Jr., Petitioner v. STATE of Arkansas, Respondent
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

PER CURIAM

Petitioner Adam Davis, Jr., brings his third petition in this court in which he seeks to reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court so that he may file a petition for writ of error coram nobis. He has also filed a motion in which he requests permission to file a response to the State's response to his petition. We dismiss the petition, and the motion is therefore moot.

A prisoner who appealed his judgment and who wishes to attack his conviction by means of a petition for writ of error coram nobis must first request this court to reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court. Noble v. State , 2015 Ark. 141, 460 S.W.3d 774. Davis seeks to challenge his convictions for the capital murder of his wife and the attempted first-degree murder of his wife's friend, along with his aggregate sentence of life imprisonment without parole plus 720 months' imprisonment. This court affirmed the judgment. Davis v. State ,2009 Ark. 478, 348 S.W.3d 553. Leave from this court is therefore required before the trial court may consider a petition for the writ. Noble , 2015 Ark. 141, 460 S.W.3d 774.

In his two previous error coram nobis petitions, Davis raised two claims. The first was that it was the failure by the responding police officers to seek medical attention for his wife—after Davis had shot her in the head at close range four times, twice with a shotgun and twice with a pistol—that caused her death. The second claim Davis raised was that his mental deficits rendered him incompetent to stand trial. In his third petition, Davis reiterates these two claims and makes an additional convoluted, but related, claim that appears to assert a basis for the writ because counsel was ineffective in not presenting mitigating evidence based on psychological evidence of Davis's mental condition. To the extent that Davis may have raised any new claim, it provides no basis for the writ.

This court will grant permission to proceed with a petition for the writ only when it appears, looking to the reasonableness of the allegations of the proposed petition and the existence of the probability of the truth of those allegations, that the proposed attack on the judgment is meritorious. Isom v. State , 2015 Ark. 225, 462 S.W.3d 662. Reassertion of the same claims without sufficient facts to distinguish the claims from those raised in a previous coram nobis petition is abuse of the writ and subjects the petition to dismissal. Swanigan v. State , 2016 Ark. 109, 485 S.W.3d 695 (per curiam). Due process does not require this court to entertain an unlimited number of petitions to reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court to consider a petition for writ of error coram nobis in a particular case. Id. This court has the discretion to determine whether the renewal of a petitioner's application for the writ will be permitted to go forward even if there are additional facts in support of repetitive grounds. Rodgers v. State , 2013 Ark. 294, 2013 WL 3322344 (per curiam).

Davis frames his claim alleging that the police failed to seek medical attention for his wife as one of withheld evidence. As we noted in our previous decision on Davis's second petition, even if Davis were to establish that evidence had been withheld, he could not establish a basis for the writ by establishing that the police contributed to his wife's death. See Davis v. State , 2016 Ark. 296, at 3–4, 498 S.W.3d 279, 282–83 (per curiam) (citing Jefferson v. State , 372 Ark. 307, 312, 276 S.W.3d 214, 219 (2008) in support of this court's holding that Davis was criminally liable for the wrongdoing as if his actions were the sole cause of his wife's death because his actions were a concurrent proximate cause). Under the circumstances of his case, there are no additional facts that Davis can plead that would demonstrate such a reasonable probability concerning this particular claim, that is, concerning failure of the police to seek medical attention for Davis's wife, and continued assertion of the claim is abuse of the writ.

Davis's claims in this petition concerning his mental deficiencies, as in his two previous coram nobis petitions, allege diminished capacity when that he committed the crime and incompetence to proceed. As he did in his previous petitions, Davis intermixes claims that the evidence at trial was insufficient and that his counsel was ineffective. We have repeatedly held that ineffective-assistance-of-counsel and trial-error claims are not cognizable in coram nobis proceedings. Green v. State , 2016 Ark. 386, 502 S.W.3d 524. Davis's newest claims concerning counsel's failure to introduce mitigation evidence are therefore not...

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2 cases
  • Davis v. State
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • January 31, 2019
    ...coram nobis in the trial court in his criminal case. This court dismissed or denied his first three such petitions. Davis v. State , 2017 Ark. 74, 511 S.W.3d 847 (per curiam); Davis v. State , 2016 Ark. 296, 498 S.W.3d 279 (per curiam); Davis v. State , 2016 Ark. 69, 2016 WL 675435 (per cur......
  • Barnes v. State, CR–16–967
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • March 2, 2017

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