People v. Tidwell ( 2010 )


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  •                          Docket No. 108133.
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT
    OF
    THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v.
    CLEOTHER TIDWELL, Appellant.
    Opinion filed January 22, 2010.
    JUSTICE KARMEIER delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Chief Justice Fitzgerald and Justices Freeman, Thomas, Kilbride,
    Garman, and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    At issue in this appeal is whether a motion or request is required
    to obtain a ruling allowing or denying leave to file a successive
    postconviction petition under section 122–1(f) of the Post-Conviction
    Hearing Act (Act) 725 ILCS 5/122–1(f) (West 2006)), and whether
    a ruling rendered in the absence of a motion or request is subject to
    review in the appellate court. We hold that the circuit court is not
    obliged to rule in the absence of a motion or request, but that it may
    do so where documents submitted by a defendant supply an adequate
    basis for a ruling on the threshold cause-and-prejudice question, and
    when the circuit court has ruled, its determination is subject to review
    in the appellate court.
    STATUTE INVOLVED
    Section 122–1(f) of the Act provides in pertinent part as follows:
    “Only one petition may be filed by a petitioner under this
    Article without leave of the court. Leave of court may be
    granted only if a petitioner demonstrates cause for his or her
    failure to bring the claim in his or her initial post-conviction
    proceedings and prejudice results from that failure.” 725
    ILCS5/122–1(f) (West 2006).
    BACKGROUND
    In 1994, following a jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County,
    defendant, Cleother Tidwell, was convicted of attempted first degree
    murder and aggravated battery with a firearm. He was sentenced to an
    extended term of 55 years’ imprisonment. On direct appeal, defendant
    argued that the trial court erroneously failed to give a jury instruction
    on reckless conduct and that his sentence was excessive. The appellate
    court rejected those contentions. People v. Tidwell, No. 1–94–2655
    (1995) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
    On May 6, 1996, defendant filed a pro se postconviction petition,
    alleging, in part, that trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance
    with regard to a reckless conduct defense and instruction thereon. The
    appellate court affirmed the circuit court’s summary dismissal of
    defendant’s petition after granting the public defender’s motion for
    leave to withdraw as counsel pursuant to Pennsylvania v. Finley, 
    481 U.S. 551
    , 
    95 L. Ed. 2d 539
    , 
    107 S. Ct. 1990
    (1987). People v.
    Tidwell, No. 1–96–3101 (1997) (unpublished order under Supreme
    Court Rule 23).
    On December 20, 2006, the successive pro se postconviction
    petition in this matter was received by the circuit clerk. Therein,
    defendant alleged, inter alia, that People v. Novak, 
    163 Ill. 2d 93
    ,
    112-13 (1994), cited on direct appeal to support the trial court’s
    denial of an instruction on reckless conduct under the charging
    instrument approach, had been overruled by this court’s decision in
    People v. Kolton, 
    219 Ill. 2d 353
    , 364, 367 (2006). In that case, this
    court held that an offense may be considered a lesser-included offense
    even if every element of the lesser offense is not explicitly contained
    in the indictment as long as the missing element can be reasonably
    -2-
    inferred. On the basis of Kolston’s reasoning, defendant claimed that
    an instruction on reckless conduct as a lesser-included offense of
    attempted murder should have been tendered at trial.
    Though no motion accompanied the petition, and defendant made
    no express request for leave to file same, the circuit court nonetheless
    considered the allegations of defendant’s petition as they bore upon
    the threshold issue of cause and prejudice, and ultimately issued a
    thorough six-page order, concluding that defendant had failed to
    satisfy the cause-and-prejudice test. The circuit court noted:
    “In petitioner’s case, he was charged with attempted first
    degree murder for shooting the victim with intent to kill and
    with aggravated battery for shooting her intentionally and
    knowingly. Reckless conduct is defined as consciously
    disregarding a risk. ‘It is not defined in the charging
    instrument and thus under Novak, defendant was not entitled
    to an instruction on it.’ [Order at 4, quoting from the appellate
    court’s 1995 Order.]
    ***
    In petitioner’s case, the charging instrument does not
    explicitly define consciously disregarding a risk, per Novak.
    However, that mental state cannot be reasonably inferred from
    the charging instrument per Kolton, either. The state of mind
    required for attempted first degree murder, aggravated
    battery, and the remainder of petitioner’s charged offenses is
    with intent to kill and intentionally and knowingly.
    Consciously disregarding a risk is inapposite to this.
    Consciously disregarding a risk cannot be inferred by
    petitioner’s stalking his girlfriend for months, kidnapping her
    for several days, and then finally threatening his girlfriend and
    her mother’s life in a church and then pointing and firing a gun
    at his girlfriend, who is now paralyzed from the waist down.
    The Kolton case does not further petitioner’s position on
    the issue. The trial court decided, on the basis of the facts in
    petitioner’s case, not to give the reckless conduct instruction.
    The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s decision in
    petitioner’s direct appeal, and as such the issue is barred by
    res judicata.
    -3-
    ***
    It is further apparent that the petitioner has failed to
    demonstrate that any prejudice inured from the failure to
    assert this claim earlier. Had this claim been presented in the
    initial petition, there is scant probability that the petitioner
    would have prevailed. Thus, petitioner makes no showing that
    the absence of the claim now presented so infected the trial
    that his resulting conviction violated due process.”
    The circuit court concluded: “[T]he court finds that petitioner has
    failed to satisfy the cause and prejudice test set forth by the legislature.
    Accordingly, leave to file the instant petition is hereby denied.”
    On appeal, citing our decision in People v. LaPointe, 
    227 Ill. 2d 39
    , 44 (2007), the appellate court correctly observed that section
    122–1(f) of the Act prohibits the filing of a successive petition without
    first obtaining leave of court to do so. Referencing our opinion in
    
    LaPointe, 227 Ill. 2d at 44
    , the appellate court continued: “Since the
    statute expressly conditions leave to file on defendant’s satisfaction of
    the cause and prejudice test, the court further ruled that a successive
    petition cannot be considered filed even if it was accepted by the
    clerk’s office.” From those premises, the appellate court concluded:
    “Here, the record shows, contrary to defendant’s
    contention, that he did not expressly seek leave of court prior
    to filing his successive postconviction petition, and, thus failed
    to meet the statutory requirement that the request precede the
    filing. 
    LaPointe, 227 Ill. 2d at 44
    -5; accord People v. Wyles,
    
    383 Ill. App. 3d 271
    , 275-76 (2008); 
    Daniel, 379 Ill. App. 3d at 750-51
    ; People v. DeBerry, 
    372 Ill. App. 3d 1056
    , 1060
    (2007). Accordingly, we find that the successive petition is not
    considered filed, and that this court may not consider the
    merits of the allegations raised therein.” No. 1–07–0710
    (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
    ANALYSIS
    The issue before us is one of statutory construction, and thus our
    review is de novo. People v. Davison, 
    233 Ill. 2d 30
    , 40 (2009). In
    construing a statute, our primary objective is to give effect to the
    intention of the General Assembly. People v. Greer, 
    212 Ill. 2d 192
    ,
    -4-
    208 (2004). In this case, the evils sought to be remedied by section
    122–1(f), and the goals to be achieved, are not open to question. As
    our appellate court aptly observed in People v. Brockman, 363 Ill.
    App. 3d 679 (2006), section 122–1(f) was clearly intended by the
    General Assembly to codify the cause-and-prejudice test adopted by
    this court in People v. Pitsonbarger, 
    205 Ill. 2d 444
    , 459 (2002), and
    thus evinces an intent to limit the filing of both successive and
    frivolous postconviction petitions. In pursuit of the latter objective,
    the legislature has also seen fit to enact section 22–105 of the Code of
    Civil Procedure. See People v. Conick, 
    232 Ill. 2d 132
    , 141 (2008)
    (purpose of section 22–105 is “to curb the large number of frivolous
    collateral pleadings filed by prisoners which adversely affect the
    efficient administration of justice, and to compensate the courts for the
    time and expense incurred in processing and disposing of them”). The
    questions presented in this case are purely procedural: whether a
    motion or request is required to obtain a ruling allowing or denying
    leave to file a successive postconviction petition under section
    122–1(f), and whether a ruling rendered in the absence of a motion or
    request is subject to review in the appellate court. It is the legislature’s
    intent in that regard that we must discern.
    The best indicator of the legislature’s intent is the language of the
    statute, which must be accorded its plain and ordinary meaning. King
    v. First Capital Financial Services Corp., 
    215 Ill. 2d 1
    , 26 (2005).
    Where the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous, this court
    will apply the statute as written without resort to aids of statutory
    construction. In re R.L.S., 
    218 Ill. 2d 428
    , 433 (2006).
    According to the terms of section 122–1(f), a defendant
    attempting to institute a successive postconviction proceeding,
    through the filing of a second or subsequent postconviction petition,
    must first obtain “leave of court.” The statute informs us that “leave”
    may only be granted where defendant “demonstrates cause for his or
    her failure to bring the claim in his or her initial post-conviction
    proceedings and prejudice results from that failure.” 725 ILCS
    5/122–1(f) (West 2006). No other procedural requirements are
    included in the statute. There is no mention of a prerequisite motion
    seeking “leave,” nor even of an obligatory request. While the parties
    discuss the significance of a 2007 house bill that would have amended
    the statute to specifically require the filing of a motion seeking leave
    -5-
    (95th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Bill 3452) that measure was never
    voted out of a senate committee, and we give it no further
    consideration.
    However, it is clearly defendant’s burden under the statute to
    obtain “leave” of court before a successive postconviction petition
    may be “filed,” so that further proceedings can follow. Therefore, it
    is incumbent upon defendant, by whatever means, to prompt the
    circuit court to consider whether “leave” should be granted, and
    obtain a ruling on that question, i.e., a determination as to whether
    defendant has demonstrated cause and prejudice. In most cases, this
    will require a motion or request and an articulated argument in order
    to initiate court action, but that is not necessarily so.
    “Leave of court” is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary as
    “[j]udicial permission to follow a non-routine procedure.” Black’s
    Law Dictionary 974 (9th ed. 2009). “Leave” entails an act of the court
    permitting certain conduct or action by a litigant. It does not
    necessarily entail a request. To illustrate this point we note that federal
    courts of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, in civil rights cases,
    commonly, sua sponte grant leave to amend complaints before
    dismissing same. See Alston v. Parker, 
    363 F.3d 229
    , 235 (3d Cir.
    2004); Witkowich v. Gonzales, 
    541 F. Supp. 2d 572
    , 590 (S.D.N.Y.
    2008); Steger v. Delta Airlines, Inc., 
    382 F. Supp. 2d 382
    , 387
    (E.D.N.Y. 2005) (“even if not requested by the Plaintiff, the Court
    may sua sponte grant leave to amend”). Recently, without a request
    from the parties, this court gave the parties in a pending action “leave”
    to file supplemental briefs addressing an issue we believed to be
    dispositive, but which the parties had not addressed. See Keener v.
    City of Herrin, No. 107658 (June 26, 2009) (order). Section 122–1(f)
    speaks to a required showing on the part of a defendant, and the
    necessity of action on the part of the circuit court, but it does not
    explicitly or necessarily mandate the filing of a motion as a
    prerequisite to, or the impetus for, court action. Thus, where as here
    a court is given the authority to grant leave, it may do so sua sponte,
    after finding satisfaction of the stated statutory criteria (here cause and
    prejudice); however, it is not required to act in the absence of a
    motion or request. Either way, until such time as leave is granted, a
    successive petition, though received or accepted by the circuit clerk,
    will not be considered “filed” for purposes of further proceedings
    -6-
    under the Act. This construction of the provisions of section 122–1(f)
    is in harmony with our decisions in LaPointe and Conick.
    In LaPointe, the only issue before this court was whether
    docketing a successive petition for second-stage proceedings was
    required where the circuit court, within 90 days after the petition was
    “accepted” by the clerk’s office (without a motion), failed to enter an
    order denying leave to “file” the petition. For purposes of the 90-day
    docketing provision, we held that a successive postconviction petition
    will not be considered “filed,” as that term is used in the statute, until
    leave is granted; notwithstanding the circuit clerk’s reception and
    acceptance of the petition. 
    LaPointe, 227 Ill. 2d at 44
    .
    In Conick, we construed section 122–1(f) of the Act as it relates
    to section 22–105 of the Code. As previously noted, both provisions
    serve similar purposes, i.e., to limit the filing of successive and
    frivolous postconviction petitions. In Conick, defendant filed a third
    request for postconviction relief, styled “Pro Se Petitioner Leave to
    File Successive Petition For Post-Conviction Relief,” along with
    supporting documentation. The circuit court reviewed defendant’s
    filings and entered two orders. In the first order, the circuit court not
    only found the proffered successive postconviction petition failed to
    satisfy the applicable cause-and-prejudice requirements of section
    122–1(f), but also deemed its claims “entirely lacking in merit.” The
    court therefore denied defendant leave to file his successive petition.
    In the second order, the court assessed “$90 for filing a petition to
    vacate, modify or reconsider final judgment plus $15 in mailing fees,”
    pursuant to section 22–105(a), because his proffered third petition
    “was frivolous and patently without merit.” See 
    Conick, 232 Ill. 2d at 135-36
    .
    When the matter ultimately reached this court, we upheld the
    assessment under section 22–105(a) against defendant’s contention
    that, because the circuit court had denied him leave to “file” his
    petition under section 122–1(f), there was “no petition, frivolous or
    not, *** ‘filed’ ” for purposes of section 22–105. See Conick, 
    232 Ill. 2d
    at 138. In the course of our discussion in Conick, we characterized
    the document “filed” by defendant as a “hybrid motion and successive
    petition” and observed, in a footnote, “while we agree that the filing
    of a separate motion for leave to file a successive petition is preferred,
    we find that any technical imperfection in procedure in this case did
    -7-
    not hinder the trial court from performing its review under either
    section 122–1(f) of the Act or section 22–105 of the Code.” Conick,
    
    232 Ill. 2d
    at 140 n.2.
    In Conick, we also found pertinent and significant the
    circumstances giving rise to a circuit court order denying leave to file
    a successive petition in People v. Smith, 
    383 Ill. App. 3d 1078
    (2008).
    In that case, a section 2–1401 petition was filed by defendant after she
    had unsuccessfully sought postconviction relief in a prior proceeding.
    The circuit court recharacterized the section 2–1401 petition as a
    postconviction petition and summarily dismissed it as frivolous and
    patently without merit. The appellate court vacated that order and
    remanded with instructions to allow defendant an opportunity to
    withdraw or amend her pro se pleading. On remand, she chose the
    latter course, providing the court and the State with copies of her
    amended petition. She made no request for leave to file the petition.
    Despite that omission, the circuit court ruled upon her petition,
    denying her leave to file same, finding, inter alia, that the successive
    petition failed to satisfy the cause-and-prejudice test. The appellate
    court noted that defendant “did not seek specific leave to file her
    petition” but held that “the trial court’s written order after remand
    implicitly acknowledged a request for leave and thus followed the
    requirements of section 122–1(f) before denying defendant leave to
    file for failing to satisfy the cause and prejudice test.” Based upon that
    assessment, and the “unique procedural circumstances” of the case,
    the appellate court found there was “no violation of section 122–1(f)
    and that the defendant is entitled to a review of the trial court’s order
    denying her leave to file a successive postconviction petition.” 
    Smith, 383 Ill. App. 3d at 1084
    .
    What emerges from these three cases is a recognition that a
    successive postconviction petition is not considered “filed” for
    purposes of section 122–1(f), and further proceedings will not follow,
    until leave is granted, a determination dependent upon a defendant’s
    satisfaction of the cause-and-prejudice test. There is also a
    commonsense acknowledgment that a defendant who submits a
    successive postconviction petition wants to “file” it and institute
    proceedings thereon. However, it is still defendant’s burden to obtain
    leave, and he must submit enough in the way of documentation to
    allow a circuit court to make that determination. Certainly, no
    -8-
    separate motion seeking leave is mandated by section 122–1(f) in its
    current form, nor, as we have demonstrated, is an explicit request
    even required if the circuit court sees fit to consider the matter and
    rule of its own accord. We find that circuit courts have that authority
    under the statute. The discretionary exercise of that authority to a
    defendant’s benefit in this situation is consistent–in logic and
    equity–with its exercise to a defendant’s detriment when applying the
    provisions of section 22–105(a). See Conick, 
    232 Ill. 2d
    at 136-44 (no
    separate motion or “filed” document is necessary to support a circuit
    court’s consideration of the document received and the imposition,
    under section 22–105, of fees and costs for frivolous petitions); 
    Smith, 383 Ill. App. 3d at 1084
    (no explicit request required to support a
    ruling on leave and the imposition of section 22–105 sanctions);
    People v. Williams, 
    394 Ill. App. 3d 236
    , 243 (2009) (“defendant’s
    ‘technical’ violation of section 122–1(f) did not prevent the
    postconviction court from performing the review called for by section
    122–1(f),” and the appellate court declined to affirm the circuit court’s
    denial of leave on that basis).
    In light of our holding regarding permissive consideration by the
    circuit court, we hold further, under the facts of this case, that there
    is no impediment or obstacle to appellate review of the ruling so
    rendered. Here, the circuit court entered a thorough and reasoned
    order, denying leave to file the successive postconviction petition,
    based upon the contents of the petition submitted. Pursuant to our
    holding, there was no jurisdictional bar to the circuit court’s sua
    sponte ruling on the matter, and there is, consequently, no viable
    rationale for the appellate court’s declination of review.
    For the reasons stated, the judgment of the appellate court is
    hereby vacated and the cause is remanded to that court for review of
    the merits of the circuit court’s ruling on cause and prejudice.
    Appellate court judgment vacated;
    cause remanded.
    -9-