Summary
concluding that in an appeal from a denial of a Rule 29.15 motion, a motion court lacked authority to grant a movant an extension to file an amended motion because the motion court did not rule on a motion for extension until after the time limit for filing the amended motion had expired
Summary of this case from Nussbaum v. StateOpinion
WD 84175
11-30-2021
Joellen Grohs, for Appellant. Gregory L. Barnes, Jefferson City, for Respondent.
Joellen Grohs, for Appellant.
Gregory L. Barnes, Jefferson City, for Respondent.
Division Three: Lisa White Hardwick, Presiding Judge, Gary D. Witt, Judge and Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge
EDWARD R. ARDINI, JR., JUDGE
Monique Ransom ("Ransom") appeals the denial of her Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief by the Circuit Court of Jackson County ("motion court") following her convictions for second-degree murder and armed criminal action. Because Ransom's amended post-conviction motion was untimely filed, we reverse and remand to the motion court for an abandonment inquiry.
Factual and Procedural Background
In the underlying criminal case, Ransom was charged, under a theory of accomplice liability, with one count of murder in the second degree and one count of armed criminal action following the death of Eric Harrell ("Victim"). The following facts were established at trial:
In December 2013, Ransom and her boyfriend, Rufus Antwine ("Antwine"), rented a home on Quincy in Kansas City. Antwine did not stay there often, so Ransom invited Victim, a coworker, to rent a room in the home.
At 3:30 or 4:00 a.m. on December 5, 2013, Ransom was arrested for assaulting Victim. While she was being arrested, Ransom belligerently stated that she was going to kill Victim and that there would be an "unsolved homicide on Quincy." Upon being released from jail, Ransom was again arrested for refusing to pay for the cab that brought her home. The next morning, following her release from jail after the second arrest, Ransom said that she was going to "go after" and "kill" Victim.
Ransom got a ride from the jail from Shaunta Grant ("Grant"), who took Ransom to buy new locks for Ransom's home. When they arrived at Ransom's home, Grant changed the locks while Ransom threw Victim's belongings into the front yard.
That same day, a residence on Brooklyn was burglarized. The home was ransacked and multiple items were stolen, including a shotgun, an AR-15 rifle, a Glock 21 .45-caliber handgun, and a camouflage case containing the rifle and handgun.
Later that afternoon, Antwine drove to Ransom's home. While there, he noticed that the .9mm gun he kept hidden in Ransom's closet was missing.
At 8:00 or 9:00 p.m., Ransom and Antwine went to pick up Omar Muhammed ("Muhammed"), Ransom's brother. An hour or so later, Antwine left Ransom and Muhammed at Ransom's home. Ransom and Muhammed indicated that they intended to scare Victim and "rough him up a little bit[.]" After departing, Antwine remembered that he had left some groceries, so he returned to Ransom's home. As Antwine turned the corner onto Ransom's street, he heard gunshots. As he was approaching Ransom's home, Ransom and Muhammed ran out of the house and got into Antwine's vehicle. Antwine took Muhammed to an apartment near 31st Street and dropped Ransom off at Grant's home. While there, Ransom talked on her phone and was "loud and pacing." She also took a bath and wanted to throw away the clothes she had been wearing when she arrived.
Ransom's neighbors reported hearing gun shots, and police arrived to find Victim's body in the doorway of Ransom's home. Victim was lying face up with his hands above his sides and blood around his head.
Early the next morning, Grant drove Ransom back to her home. When they arrived, Ransom began yelling for Antwine. Officers were dispatched shortly after, and when they arrived, Ransom denied living at the home.
Later that day, Ransom told a friend that Muhammed had "handled it for her" and had shot Victim in the head and chest in the doorway of the home. Ransom also pointed to "what she referred to as brain matter on the floor." Ransom told her friend that she was present at the time of the murder.
Victim died from multiple gunshot wounds; he had been shot once in the head, once in the stomach, and once in the right thigh. The medical examiner removed two .45-caliber bullets and one .38-caliber bullet from Victim's body. A firearms expert determined that the two types of bullets could not have been fired from the same gun. The expert also explained that the .38-caliber bullet could have been fired from a .9mm handgun.
Officers searched Ransom's home and, in the front bedroom, found her jacket, a .9mm magazine with ten live rounds, and seven loose .9mm rounds. Those rounds had the same unusual red primer as .9mm rounds found on the ground outside Ransom's home next to a whiskey bottle on which her fingerprints were found.
Ransom was arrested for the murder. At the time of her arrest, she was with a man who lived next door to the home on Brooklyn that had been burglarized on the day of the murder. Officers also arrested Muhammed and, during a search of his residence, found the rifle and camouflage case that had been stolen from the Brooklyn residence. The Glock that had been in the case was missing and never found.
Phone records obtained by the FBI showed that Ransom and Muhammed communicated often on the day before, day of, and day after the murder. Cell tower mapping put Muhammed in the coverage area of the home on Brooklyn that was burglarized on the day that crime occurred. The records also indicated that Antwine's phone and Ransom's phone were in the coverage area of the murder scene between 10:43 p.m. and 10:53 p.m. The phones then connected with the cell tower closest to the apartment of Muhammed's girlfriend on Wyoming, where Antwine had dropped Muhammed off, between 11:08 p.m. and 11:18 p.m.
The jury found Ransom guilty of murder in the second degree and armed criminal action under a theory of accomplice liability. Ransom was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder in the second degree and a concurrent term of fifteen years for armed criminal action.
Ransom appealed her convictions, which were affirmed by this Court in an order issued pursuant to Rule 30.25(b). State v. Ransom , 559 S.W.3d 432 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018). Our mandate issued on November 21, 2018. Wright filed her pro se Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief on January 24, 2019. Post-conviction counsel entered her appearance on January 28, 2019, and the amended motion was due sixty days thereafter on March 29, 2019. On March 25, 2019, post-conviction counsel sought a thirty-day extension. The motion court did not rule on the motion for extension of time until April 12, 2019, after the initial sixty-day time limit for filing the amended motion. Appointed counsel filed Ransom's amended motion on April 24, 2019.
In the amended motion, post-conviction counsel raised four claims, none of which had been raised in Ransom's pro se motion. Following an evidentiary hearing, the motion court denied the claims asserted in Ransom's amended motion for post-conviction relief. Ransom appeals from the denial of her amended post-conviction motion.
Discussion
Ransom raises three points on appeal, each arguing that the motion court erred in denying her post-conviction claims that she received ineffective assistance of trial counsel. In Point I, Ransom asserts that trial counsel was ineffective for advising her not to testify; in Point II, Ransom alleges that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to cross-examine Antwine about inconsistent statements he made to police; and in Point III, she claims that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the DNA evidence presented by the State. Before we consider these claims of error, however, we must address the State's argument that Ransom's amended motion for post-conviction relief was not timely filed.
The time limits in Rule 29.15 are "mandatory and constitutional." Price v. State , 422 S.W.3d 292, 297 (Mo. banc 2014) (citing Smith v. State , 887 S.W.2d 601, 602 (Mo. banc 1994)). These time limits cannot be waived, and both motion courts and appellate courts are required to enforce them. Id. (citing Dorris v. State , 360 S.W.3d 260, 268 (Mo. banc 2012) ). Rule 29.15(g) sets out the time limits for filing an amended motion:
References to Rule 29.15(g) are to the 2017 version. Rule 29.15 was amended, effective January 2018. Rule 29.15(m) provides that "[i]f sentence was pronounced prior to January 1, 2018, postconviction relief shall continue to be governed by the provisions of Rule 29.15 in effect on the date the motion was filed or December 31, 2017, whichever is earlier." Ransom was sentenced on July 7, 2017; therefore, the 2017 version of Rule 29.15 governs this case.
If an appeal of the judgment sought to be vacated, set aside, or corrected is taken, the amended motion ... shall be filed within 60 days of the earlier of the date both the mandate of the appellate court is issued and:
(1) Counsel is appointed, or
(2) An entry of appearance is filed by any counsel that is not appointed but enters an appearance on behalf of movant.
The rule additionally states that "[t]he court may extend the time for filing the amended motion for one additional period not to exceed 30 days." Rule 29.15(g).
Post-conviction counsel entered her appearance on January 28, 2019, thus triggering the initial sixty-day time period for filing an amended motion. The amended motion therefore was due on March 29, 2019. Prior to that deadline, on March 25, 2019, post-conviction counsel filed a motion seeking a thirty-day extension of time to file the amended motion. The motion court did not rule on post-conviction counsel's motion prior to the amended motion's original due date. Instead, the motion court purported to grant the motion for extension nearly two weeks later on April 12, 2019. Post-conviction counsel filed the amended motion within the time she had requested in the motion for extension of time.
The State alleges that the motion court lacked authority to grant the extension after the time limit for filing the amended motion had expired on March 29, 2019. We agree. "[T]he discretion of the motion court to extend the time to file an amended motion must be exercised within the time the amended motion is initially due ." Perkins v. State , 569 S.W.3d 426, 435 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018) (citing Clemmons v. State , 785 S.W.2d 524, 527 (Mo. banc 1990) ) (emphasis in original). This principle was recently reiterated by the Eastern District of this Court in Earl v. State , 628 S.W.3d 695 (Mo. App. E.D. 2021), under facts nearly identical to those present here. In that case, post-conviction counsel moved for a thirty-day extension of time to file the amended motion on the date that he entered into the case. Earl , 628 S.W.3d at 698. The amended motion was due on March 6, 2017, but the trial court did not grant the motion for extension of time until April 4, 2017. Id. Post-conviction counsel filed the amended motion on April 5, 2017. Id. Consistent with the position articulated by this Court in Perkins , the eastern district held that the motion court lacked authority to grant the extension upon expiration of the original sixty-day time period. Id. at 699. The court thus concluded that the amended motion filed on April 5, 2017, was untimely. Id.
The Southern District of this Court recently reached a different result in Scrivens v. State , 630 S.W.3d 917 (Mo. App. S.D. 2021), in which it held that a motion court may grant an extension after the initial filing period has expired. Scrivens , 630 S.W.3d at 918 n.2. The Court stated that "[b]ased on our published decisions, [the Southern District] and the Eastern District would find the amended motion was filed timely because the amended motion was filed within the second extension as belatedly granted[.]" Id. In making this statement, the Southern District failed to acknowledge its own prior decision in Rutherford v. State , 192 S.W.3d 746 (Mo. App. S.D. 2006), or the Eastern District's decision in Earl v. State , 628 S.W.3d 695 (Mo. App. E.D. 2021) —both of which are in accord with our conclusion here and the binding precedent from our Supreme Court in Clemmons , 785 S.W.2d at 527.
Similarly, here, the motion court did not rule on post-conviction counsel's request for an extension within the original sixty-day period for filing the amended motion. Therefore, like in Earl , the motion court lacked the authority to grant the extension, and the amended motion filed outside of the sixty-day window was untimely.
Because the amended motion was untimely filed, the motion court must consider whether Ransom was abandoned by post-conviction counsel. Under such circumstances, "the motion court has a duty to undertake an ‘independent inquiry ...’ to determine if abandonment occurred." Moore v. State , 458 S.W.3d 822, 825 (Mo. banc 2015) (quoting Vogl v. State , 437 S.W.3d 218, 228-29 (Mo. banc 2014) ). "If the motion court finds that a movant has not been abandoned, the motion court should not permit the filing of the amended motion and should proceed with adjudicating the movant's initial motion." Id. (citation omitted). "If the motion court determines that the movant was abandoned by appointed counsel's untimely filing of an amended motion, the court is directed to permit the untimely filing." Id. at 826.
The motion court failed to conduct an inquiry into whether post-conviction counsel abandoned Ransom. "When the independent inquiry is required but not done, this Court will remand the case because the motion court is the appropriate forum to conduct such an inquiry." Moore , 458 S.W.3d at 826 (citing Sanders v. State , 807 S.W.2d 493, 495 (Mo. banc 1991) ). Accordingly, we must reverse and remand this case to permit the motion court to conduct the required inquiry to determine if Ransom was abandoned by post-conviction counsel.
The exception to the necessity of an abandonment inquiry when the claims raised in a movant's pro se motion are adjudicated along with the claims in the amended motion does not apply here. See Childers v. State , 462 S.W.3d 825, 828 (Mo. App. E.D. 2015). Ransom's pro se motion did not raise identical claims to those raised in the amended motion.
Conclusion
This case is reversed and remanded for the motion court to conduct an abandonment inquiry.
All concur.