Jeffries v. State

Decision Date25 May 2022
Docket Number20-1631
Citation979 N.W.2d 319 (Table)
CourtIowa Court of Appeals
Parties Willie James JEFFRIES, Applicant-Appellant, v. STATE of Iowa, Respondent-Appellee.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Paul D. Scott Judge.

Postconviction applicant appeals the denial of relief.

Gary Dickey of Dickey, Campbell & Sahag Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee State.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Greer and Ahlers, JJ.

TABOR Presiding Judge.

Willie Jeffries, who is serving a life sentence, appeals the summary dismissal of his seventh petition for postconviction relief (PCR), contending the district court wrongfully determined his claims were time-barred. But because his notice of appeal was untimely, we cannot reach the merits of his challenge and instead dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.

The postconviction court summarized the nearly forty years of procedural history leading to this action:

Jeffries was convicted of sexual abuse in the first degree on May 6, 1985. He pursued a direct appeal of the conviction, and the conviction was affirmed on January 11 1988.
Jeffries filed his first and second applications for postconviction relief [PCR] seven years later, in 1995.[1] Both applications were dismissed as time-barred in 1997. He filed his third and fourth PCR applications in 2000. Both were dismissed as time barred in 2004. He filed his fifth PCR application in 2007. That application was dismissed as time-barred in 2010. He filed his sixth PCR application in 2013. That application was dismissed as time-barred in 2014.
On April 4, 2019, Jeffries filed his application in this case. He seeks a new trial based upon ineffective assistance of prior counsel.

In July 2019, the State moved for summary dismissal. On October 28 2019, the postconviction court dismissed Jeffries's petition. Two days later, Jeffries's attorney, Raya Dimitrova, sent him a letter with mixed messages.[2] On the one hand, the letter referenced the court's ruling[3] and a statement of costs incurred. But on the other hand, it inadvertently listed an upcoming February 18, 2020 court date, which was no longer scheduled. In December 2019, Dimitrova moved to "withdraw as counsel due to the case being closed." The court granted that motion.

But come February 2020, Jeffries called Dimitrova's office to ask about the court date. In response to that call, she sent him a second letter, again enclosing the October 2019 dismissal ruling. Within a week, Jeffries contacted the district court, complaining that counsel "lied" to him and asking for an investigation of counsel's actions, for a rehearing, and for a chance to appeal. After receiving that pro se filing, the court appointed attorney Gary Dickey to represent Jeffries in May 2020. Two months later, the court asked Dickey to file a status update by September 14 on Jeffries's pro se "motion to investigate counsel's actions and give applicant an opportunity to be heard." Two months after the court's deadline, attorney Dickey moved for a hearing "to make a record" on an alleged breach of duty by attorney Dimitrova in failing to notify Jeffries of the status of his case and on Jeffries's right to appeal.

The court granted that request and held a hearing in early December 2020. Dimitrova was the only witness. She acknowledged that including the court date in the October 2019 letter to Jeffries was "a mix up" by her office. But she testified that despite the invitation to contact her office if he had questions, Jeffries never called to ask about the dismissal. As for advising Jeffries about appeal deadlines, she testified that she had a phone call with Jeffries soon after the dismissal. But whether they discussed an appeal was unclear from her notes. At base, Dimitrova did not "have any reason to doubt" that she advised Jeffries of his right to appeal. Yet she did not have "any independent recollection" of doing so.

One day after the hearing, the court issued an order interpreting Jeffries's February 2020 letter as a motion for delayed appeal. The court then advised that a post-trial motion was not the proper vehicle to seek a delayed appeal and that Jeffries must apply to the Iowa Supreme Court for permission to bring a belated challenge. One week later, attorney Dickey filed a notice of appeal from the October 2019 dismissal. On the same day, he sought leave from the supreme court to pursue a delayed appeal. The supreme court ordered the appeal to proceed to briefing and directed the parties to address the jurisdictional issue in their briefs. In March 2022, the supreme court transferred the appeal to our court.

"Failure to appeal on time is a jurisdictional defect." Jensen v. State, 312 N.W.2d 581, 582 (Iowa 1981). Appellate courts have the inherent power to decide whether they have subject matter jurisdiction over an appeal. State v. Davis, 969 N.W.2d 783, 785 (Iowa 2022). Since the jurisdictional question is before us, we must examine the grounds for granting a delayed appeal before reaching the merits. See id.

We start with the appellate rule. Would-be appellants have thirty days from judgment to file a notice of appeal. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.101(1)(b). Judgment- here, summary dismissal of Jeffries's application-occurred on October 28, 2019. He filed his notice of appeal on December 10, 2020-409 days after the dismissal.

Why so late? In briefing the jurisdictional issue, Jeffries blames attorney Dimitrova's misleading advice. He points to the flawed letter she sent in October 2019 that mentioned a court date that was no longer on the calendar. He also underscores her uncertainty about advising him of his right to appeal. And he notes that she did not file a notice of appeal on his behalf before withdrawing from his representation. Under those circumstances, he asks us to exercise our "inherent authority to grant delayed appeals" because "circumstances beyond [his] control have frustrated an intent to appeal." Swanson v. State, 406 N.W.2d 792, 793 (Iowa 1987).

In response, the State asserts our authority to grant a delayed appeal is "case-specific and context-dependent." Also citing Swanson, the State urges that exercising jurisdiction is proper only when "the denial of a right of appeal would violate the due process or equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution." Id.

The State's assertion tracks our supreme court's recent description of the landscape for granting delayed appeals:

Our grant of delayed appeals has mostly been reserved to direct appeal of criminal cases. See, e.g., State v. Anderson, 308 N.W.2d 42, 44 (Iowa 1981); Horstman v. State, 210 N.W.2d 427, 430 (Iowa 1973); State v. Wetzel, 192 N.W.2d 762, 764-65 (Iowa 1971). This term we determined delayed appeals may be appropriate in termination-of-parental-rights cases depending on the circumstances. In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d 280, 291-93 (Iowa 2021). We have also stated that "[t]he same federal constitutional considerations which have forced us to recognize delayed appeals in criminal cases are potentially applicable in some civil settings." Swanson, 406 N.W.2d at 792 n.1. But we have not decided whether or under what circumstances a delayed appeal might be available in postconviction-relief actions.

Anderson v. State, 962 N.W.2d 760, 762 (Iowa 2021).[4]

Despite that tease, the supreme court did not decide in Anderson whether delayed appeals were an option in PCR cases. See id. at 763 ("[I]t is not necessary to address the availability of delayed appeal in postconviction relief. For even if delayed appeal were available, it is not available here under the facts presented."). Instead, Anderson emphasized that even in those categories of cases allowing delayed appeals, appellate courts typically will not grant a jurisdictional exception when the lateness in filing a notice of appeal was more than "negligible."[5] Id. (citing In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d at 293). Anderson waited six months after discovering his attorney's failure to file a timely notice of appeal, and did not offer an explanation sufficient to justify that lag. Id. at 763-64. The court reasoned, "We think in most cases, a six-month delay is far too long to permit a delayed appeal." Id. at 763. In the end, the court dismissed the PCR appeal for want of jurisdiction. Id. at 764.

We take the same tack here. Even assuming Dimitrova's error excused Jeffries's untimeliness until February 2020, when she sent him a second letter, notice of appeal wasn't filed until December 2020-ten months...

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