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Kerney v. State, 3D15–392
Carlos J. Martinez, Public Defender, and John Eddy Morrison, Assistant Public Defender; Benjamin S. Waxman, for petitioner/appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Jay E. Silver, Assistant Attorney General, for respondent/appellee.
Before WELLS, SALTER and LOGUE, JJ.*
In these cases, which we consolidate, we address Parrish Kerney's appeal from an order denying his Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 post-conviction motion and his Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.141(d)(5) petition for habeas corpus relief. For the following reasons, we affirm denial of his Rule 3.850 motion but grant his petition for habeas corpus relief and remand this matter to the court below for a new trial.
In July of 2002, Kerney was indicted for the first degree murder and strong arm robbery of Claudette Andrews. Ms. Andrews was found in her ransacked home covered with bruises, strangled to death, with a television set on her head. Kerney admitted that he had gone to return a plunger that he had borrowed from Ms. Andrews, who was his neighbor, and while there, he had been caught stealing money from her purse. According to Kerney, during an ensuing struggle, Ms. Andrews ended up on the floor where he "started squeezing" her neck until she had stopped breathing. While Kerney denied that he intended to kill Ms. Andrews, he did admit that after she was dead he masturbated, ejaculating on the floor, and then left with her money.
At the close of Kerney's trial, the jury was instructed on manslaughter by act as follows:
Kerney was convicted of second degree murder, and, as pertinent here, argued on appeal that pursuant to Montgomery v. State , 39 So.3d 252 (Fla. 2010), it was reversible error to instruct the jury that "in order to convict [Kerney] of manslaughter by an intentional act, ... the state [had to] prove [that Kerney] had the intent to cause the death of the victim."1 Kerney further argued that this error was not cured, as a number of other district courts had held, by also giving an instruction on manslaughter by culpable negligence:
This argument, as well as Kerney's other arguments, were rejected by this court in a per curiam opinion without citation. On February 18, 2011, the mandate in that case issued. By that time, notices to invoke jurisdiction in the Florida Supreme Court had already been filed in both Salonko (April 29, 2010) and Cubelo v. State , 41 So.3d 263 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010) (September 7, 2010), seeking review of determinations from decisions determining that giving a culpable negligence instruction along with the erroneous manslaughter by act instruction in effect cured the manslaughter by act instruction error. See Cubelo , 41 So.3d at 267–68 ( ).
While proceedings in the Florida Supreme Court in Salonko were stayed on June 9, 2010, pending disposition of Montgomery , by the time the mandate issued in Kerney's appeal on February 18, 2011, a notice had been filed in the Florida Supreme Court (February 9, 2011) seeking discretionary review of the Second District Court of Appeal's decision in Haygood v. State , 54 So.3d 1035 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011). There, as in Salonko and Cubelo , the District Court of Appeal had held "that the erroneous [manslaughter by act] instruction was not fundamental error ... because the jury was also instructed on manslaughter by culpable negligence." Haygood v. State , 109 So.3d 735, 738 (Fla. 2013). On May 5, 2011, a little over two months after the mandate issued in Kerney's case, the Florida Supreme Court accepted jurisdiction in Haygood and simultaneously stayed further proceedings in this court's decision in Cubelo pending disposition of Haygood .
Despite the fact that the Miami–Dade County Public Defender's office was seeking Supreme Court review in Cubelo of the same issue raised and rejected in Kerney's appeal, it filed no motion to recall the mandate and made no effort to secure a written opinion with citations to Salonko or otherwise so as to put Kerney in the Haygood "pipeline." On February 14, 2013, Haygood was decided, holding that "that giving the manslaughter by culpable negligence instruction does not cure the fundamental error in giving the erroneous manslaughter by act instruction where the defendant is convicted of an offense not more than one step removed from manslaughter and the evidence supports a finding of manslaughter by act, but does not reasonably support a finding that the death occurred due to the culpable negligence of the defendant." Haygood , 109 So.3d at 741. The decisions in Salonko and Cubelo were quashed and remanded for reconsideration in light of Haygood . See Salonko v. State , 137 So.3d 1022 (Fla. 2014) ; Cubelo v. State , 137 So.3d 1019 (Fla. 2014).
A little over three months after the Supreme Court's decision in Haygood , Kerney filed the instant post-conviction motion claiming that Haygood is retroactive in application and by virtue of the fact that he was in the Montgomery pipeline, he should have been in the Haygood pipeline as well. The court below denied the motion, determining that it was not timely as having been filed more than two years after Kerney's judgment and sentence had become final and because Haygood is not retroactive in its application. We agree with both determinations and thus affirm the order denying his Rule 3.850 motion. See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.850(b) (); De La Hoz v. Crews , 123 So.3d 101, 104 (Fla. 3d DCA 2013) ().
However, we reach a different result as to Kerney's timely filed Rule 9.141 petition for habeas corpus alleging ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.2 That sworn petition filed four years to the day on which Kerney's judgment and sentence became final on direct review claimed, among other things, that his appellate attorney had misadvised Kerney as to his options after his conviction by leading him to believe any further action on his part would be of no merit and by listing the options available to Kerney without identifying the one option that might have provided him relief—the right to request a written opinion citing case law that would put him in the Haygood pipeline:
Appellate counsel was under no obligation to file for discretionary review on Mr. Kerney's behalf. But, having just correctly argued in the brief that Montgomery controlled the outcome of this case, it was outside of professional standards of competence and diligence to then inform Mr. Kerney that this Court had granted a (non-existent) motion to withdraw as his attorney as though his appeal had no merits and an Anders brief had been filed. It was also outside professional competence to affirmatively tell Mr. Kerney some of his options without telling him the one option he most needed to know about: keeping this conviction from becoming final pending Haygood by asking this Court to amend its per curiam affirmed decision by including a citation to Cubelo , Salonko or any of the other similar decisions and then filing for discretionary review in the Supreme Court of Florida.
(Citation omitted).3 The motion also argued that it was manifestly unjust under the circumstances to deny Kerney relief.
We need not determine which of these two grounds entitle Kerney to relief as both are sufficient to warrant relief. As this court's decision in De La Hoz confirms, even had Kerney been advised of his right to request a written opinion citing cases that would have allowed him to seek pipeline treatment, there was no guarantee that such relief would have been granted and, under circumstances of this case, it would be manifestly unjust to...
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