State v. Niewohner ( 2020 )


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  •                           IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
    (Memorandum Web Opinion)
    STATE V. NIEWOHNER
    NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION
    AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).
    STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE,
    V.
    JARED J. NIEWOHNER, APPELLANT.
    Filed November 10, 2020.     No. A-19-1214.
    Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: JOHN A. COLBORN, Judge, on appeal
    thereto from the County Court for Lancaster County: MATT L. ACTON, Judge. Judgment of District
    Court affirmed.
    Matthew M. Munderloh, of Johnson & Mock, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Erin E. Tangeman for appellee.
    PIRTLE, Chief Judge, and MOORE and RIEDMANN, Judges.
    PIRTLE, Chief Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    Jared J. Niewohner appeals the order of the district court for Lancaster County that affirmed
    the Lancaster County Court’s order denying his verified motion for postconviction relief without
    holding an evidentiary hearing. Based on the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s
    order.
    BACKGROUND
    Niewohner was charged with two counts of third degree sexual assault in Lancaster County
    Court. The charges arose out of an incident at a bar in Lincoln where Niewohner grabbed one
    victim’s buttocks with both hands, and put his hand under the second victim’s dress, touching her
    vaginal area over her tights. A jury found Niewohner guilty of both charges and the county court
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    accepted the jury’s verdict. The county court sentenced him to 45 days in jail and 80 hours of
    community service, as well as 18 months’ probation on each count, to be served consecutively.
    Niewohner appealed to this court with different counsel than the counsel who represented
    him at trial, and in an unpublished memorandum opinion, case No. A-16-1088, we affirmed his
    convictions and sentences. We concluded the evidence was sufficient to support the convictions
    and that his ineffective assistance of counsel claims either had no merit, were not sufficiently
    alleged, or the record on direct appeal was not sufficient to review them.
    With new counsel, Niewohner filed a verified motion for postconviction relief in the
    Lancaster County Court alleging claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel and appellate
    counsel. Specifically, he alleged his trial counsel was ineffective by pursuing a sole defense of
    voluntary intoxication, a defense not recognized by Nebraska law, and that his appellate counsel
    was ineffective for failing to assign that his trial counsel was ineffective for raising such defense.
    His motion alleges that throughout the trial, his counsel made repeated references to Niewohner’s
    intoxication and also requested a jury instruction regarding intoxication as a defense, which the
    county court refused.
    The State filed a motion to deny Niewohner’s postconviction motion without an
    evidentiary hearing. The county court entered an order sustaining the State’s motion and overruling
    and dismissing Niewohner’s motion for postconviction relief without an evidentiary hearing. The
    county court concluded that Niewohner’s claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel was
    procedurally barred because appellate counsel failed to raise the issue on direct appeal. The county
    court further found that Niewohner’s ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim should be
    denied because the files and records showed that Niewohner was entitled to no relief.
    Niewohner appealed to the district court, which affirmed the county court’s order. The
    district court agreed that Niewohner’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective for defending
    him solely on the basis of his intoxication was procedurally barred as he failed to raise the claim
    on direct appeal and the issue would have been known to him or apparent from the record. See
    State v. Dubray, 
    294 Neb. 937
    , 
    885 N.W.2d 540
    (2016). The district court also agreed with the
    county court that appellate counsel was not ineffective because the records and files affirmatively
    showed that trial counsel was not ineffective in pursuing voluntary intoxication as a defense.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Niewohner assigns that the district court erred in affirming the county court’s dismissal of
    his motion for postconviction relief without granting him an evidentiary hearing.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In appeals from postconviction proceedings, an appellate court reviews de novo a
    determination that the defendant failed to allege sufficient facts to demonstrate a violation of his
    or her constitutional rights or that the record and files affirmatively show that the defendant is
    entitled to no relief. State v. Stricklin, 
    300 Neb. 794
    , 
    916 N.W.2d 413
    (2018).
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    ANALYSIS
    Niewohner assigns that the district court erred in affirming the county court’s order denying
    his motion for postconviction relief without an evidentiary hearing. Postconviction relief is
    available to a prisoner in custody under sentence who seeks to be released on the ground that there
    was a denial or infringement of his or her constitutional rights such that the judgment was void or
    voidable.
    Id. In a motion
    for postconviction relief, the defendant must allege facts which, if proved,
    constitute a denial or violation of his or her rights under the U.S. or Nebraska Constitution, causing
    the judgment against the defendant to be void or voidable. State v. 
    Stricklin, supra
    .
    A trial court must grant an evidentiary hearing to resolve the claims in a postconviction
    motion when the motion contains factual allegations which, if proved, constitute an infringement
    of the defendant’s rights under the Nebraska or federal Constitution.
    Id. If a postconviction
    motion
    alleges only conclusions of fact or law, or if the records and files in a case affirmatively show the
    defendant is entitled to no relief, the court is not required to grant an evidentiary hearing.
    Id. Thus, in a
    postconviction proceeding, an evidentiary hearing is not required (1) when the motion does
    not contain factual allegations which, if proved, constitute an infringement of the movant’s
    constitutional rights; (2) when the motion alleges only conclusions of fact or law; or (3) when the
    records and files affirmatively show that the defendant is entitled to no relief.
    Id. Niewohner’s motion for
    postconviction relief alleges that his trial counsel and appellate
    counsel provided ineffective assistance. Under the standard established by the U.S. Supreme Court
    in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), claims of
    ineffective assistance of counsel by criminal defendants are evaluated using a two-prong analysis:
    first, whether counsel’s performance was deficient and, second, whether the deficient performance
    was of such a serious nature so as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial. State v. Dubray, 
    294 Neb. 937
    , 
    885 N.W.2d 540
    (2016). A court may address the two elements of this test, deficient
    performance and prejudice, in either order.
    Id. To show that
    the performance of a prisoner’s counsel was deficient, it must be shown that
    counsel’s performance did not equal that of a lawyer with ordinary training and skill in criminal
    law in the area.
    Id. To establish the
    prejudice element of the Strickland test, a defendant must show
    that the counsel’s deficient performance was of such gravity to render the result of the trial
    unreliable or the proceeding fundamentally unfair. State v. 
    Dubray, supra
    . This prejudice is shown
    by establishing that but for the deficient performance of counsel, there is a reasonable probability
    that the outcome of the case would have been different.
    Id. When a claim
    of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel is based on the failure to raise
    a claim on appeal of ineffective assistance of trial counsel (a layered claim of ineffective assistance
    of counsel), an appellate court will look at whether trial counsel was ineffective under the
    Strickland test. State v. Allen, 301 Neb 560, 
    919 N.W.2d 500
    (2018). If trial counsel was not
    ineffective, then the defendant was not prejudiced by appellate counsel’s failure to raise the issue.
    Id. Much like claims
    of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, the defendant must show that but
    for counsel’s failure to raise the claim, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would
    have been different.
    Id. -3-
              Niewohner concedes that his claim that trial counsel was ineffective, in and of itself, is
    procedurally barred since it was not raised on direct appeal. Therefore, the only issue before us is
    whether Niewohner was entitled to an evidentiary hearing in regard to his claim that his appellate
    counsel was ineffective for failing to raise trial counsel’s ineffectiveness in regard to his reliance
    on Niewohner’s intoxication as a defense.
    Niewohner argues that his trial counsel was ineffective because he solely defended his third
    degree sexual assault charges on the basis of voluntary intoxication and such defense is not
    recognized in Nebraska. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-122 (Reissue 2016), enacted in 2011, provides that
    voluntary intoxication is not a defense to any criminal offense and shall not be taken into
    consideration in determining the existence of a mental state that is an element of the criminal
    offense. See, also, State v. Cheloha, 
    25 Neb. Ct. App. 403
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 317
    (2018). Niewohner
    contends that by alleging trial counsel’s one and only defense was one not recognized in Nebraska,
    his motion sufficiently alleged that his trial counsel performed deficiently and that such deficient
    performance prejudiced him. He further contends the records and files of the county court did not
    affirmatively establish that he was not entitled to postconviction relief on this issue.
    Because the two elements of the Strickland test can be addressed in either order, we first
    address the prejudice prong. Niewohner contends that prejudice should be presumed because trial
    counsel’s pursuit of a sole defense not permitted by law basically left him with no defense at all,
    and the State’s case therefore, was not subjected to any meaningful adversarial testing. Niewohner
    relies on United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2039
    , 80 L. Ed 2d 657 (1984), which
    provides narrow exceptions to the Strickland analysis, where the reliability of the adversarial
    process is in such doubt that prejudice to the defendant will be presumed, resulting in a conclusion
    of ineffective assistance of counsel. State v. Jedlicka, 
    297 Neb. 276
    , 
    900 N.W.2d 454
    (2017). The
    three circumstances where prejudice will be presumed are (1) where the accused is completely
    denied counsel at a critical stage of the proceedings, (2) where counsel entirely fails to subject the
    prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing, and (3) where the surrounding circumstances
    may justify the presumption of ineffectiveness without inquiry into counsel’s actual performance
    at trial.
    Id. In the years
    following Strickland and Cronic, the U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that
    in order for prejudice to be presumed as a result of counsel’s inadequate performance, the failure
    must be extreme. State v. Assad, 
    304 Neb. 979
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 297
    (2020). In Bell v. Cone, 
    535 U.S. 685
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 1843
    , 
    152 L. Ed. 2d 914
    (2002), the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals applied the
    second Cronic exception, failure to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial
    testing, to presume prejudice in a case in which defense counsel in a first degree murder trial
    waived his closing argument in a sentencing proceeding that ultimately resulted in a death
    sentence. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that the Cronic exception did not apply. It
    emphasized that for the exception to apply, the “attorney’s failure must be complete” and
    emphasized that counsel must “‘entirely fail[] to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful
    adversarial testing.’”
    Id. at 697
    (emphasis in original). A presumption was not appropriate in Bell,
    the Court reasoned, because the defendant was merely arguing that his counsel failed to oppose
    the prosecution at specific points of the sentencing proceeding rather than throughout.
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    Two years later in Florida v. Nixon, 
    543 U.S. 175
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 551
    , 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 565
    (2004),
    the U.S. Supreme Court again reversed a lower court’s decision, holding that a presumption of
    prejudice was not called for under the circumstances. In that case, defense counsel conceded the
    defendant’s guilt without the defendant’s consent. The Court held that a presumption of prejudice
    was not warranted and described the presumption of prejudice as a “narrow exception” to
    Strickland that will arise “infrequently.” Florida v. 
    Nixon, 543 U.S. at 190
    . It further emphasized
    that for a court to presume prejudice under Cronic, counsel must “entirely fail[] to function as the
    client’s advocate.” Florida v. 
    Nixon, 543 U.S. at 189
    .
    In the present case, Niewohner is arguing that prejudice is presumed because his trial
    counsel failed to subject the State’s case to meaningful adversarial testing. However, as the district
    court found, “Niewohner’s trial counsel advocated on his behalf by, among other things,
    examining witnesses, moving in limine to exclude evidence, and presenting closing arguments.”
    Trial counsel did not entirely fail to function as Niewohner’s advocate and therefore, Cronic’s
    presumption of prejudice does not apply here.
    Niewohner argues, alternatively, that if we conclude that Cronic does not apply and he
    must prove prejudice under Strickland, his postconviction motion sufficiently alleged how he was
    prejudiced, entitling him to an evidentiary hearing. In his motion he argued he was prejudiced by
    trial counsel’s failure to pursue a valid defense, and had counsel not focused solely on that defense
    he could have pursued other defenses, such as attacking the credibility of the victims, and there is
    a reasonable probability the result of his trial would have been different. Attacking the victims’
    credibility is the only valid defense Niewohner identified in his motion.
    To establish the prejudice element of the Strickland test, a defendant must show that the
    counsel’s deficient performance was of such gravity to render the result of the trial unreliable or
    the proceeding fundamentally unfair. State v. Dubray, 
    294 Neb. 937
    , 
    885 N.W.2d 540
    (2016). This
    prejudice is shown by establishing that but for the deficient performance of counsel, there is a
    reasonable probability that the outcome of the case would have been different.
    Id. Niewohner asserts that
    trial counsel should have challenged the victims’ credibility,
    specifically their version of events and their ability to remember what happened, because they had
    been drinking alcohol prior to going to the bar where the incidents occurred. There was testimony
    at trial that the victims were part of a bachelorette party on the night in question and that they had
    been drinking at a friend’s apartment and at another bar prior to going to the bar where the incidents
    occurred. However, there were other individuals who observed Niewohner’s actions and testified
    at trial and therefore, the victim’s credibility was not in question. As the district court stated, “[i]t
    is not reasonably likely that such tactic would have changed the outcome, given that the bartenders
    also corroborated the complaining witnesses’ testimony.”
    In addition, Niewohner’s involuntary intoxication was not the only defense presented by
    trial counsel. Trial counsel argued Niewohner did not touch the victims for sexual gratification,
    but rather in retaliation for their lack of interest in him. Third degree sexual assault occurs when a
    person subjects another person to “sexual contact” without the person’s consent. Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 28-320 (Reissue 2016). “Sexual contact” only includes “such conduct which can be reasonably
    construed as being for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification by either party.” Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 28-318(5) (Reissue 2016). Accordingly, trial counsel presented a defense that the State
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    failed to meet all the necessary elements of third degree sexual assault. He elicited testimony and
    argued that the State failed to prove that Niewohner’s contact with the two victims was for sexual
    arousal or gratification. He specifically asked Niewohner if he recalled any sexual arousal or
    gratification from touching the victims and he testified he did not. There was also testimony from
    State witnesses that Niewohner was angry or upset when the victims did not want to talk to him.
    During closing arguments, trial counsel argued that Niewohner’s contact with the victims was in
    retaliation for being rejected by them and not for sexual gratification.
    We conclude that Niewohner cannot show prejudice under Strickland and therefore, trial
    counsel was not ineffective. Based on the record before us there is no reasonable probability that
    the outcome of the case would have been different had trial counsel not focused on Niewohner’s
    intoxication. See State v. 
    Dubray, supra
    . Because trial counsel was not ineffective in raising
    Niewohner’s intoxication as a defense, Niewohner was not prejudiced by appellate counsel’s
    failure to raise the issue. See State v. Allen, 
    301 Neb. 560
    , 
    919 N.W.2d 500
    (2018). Accordingly,
    as the records and files affirmatively show that Niewohner is entitled to no relief, no evidentiary
    hearing was required. The district court did not err in affirming the county court’s order dismissing
    Niewohner’s postconviction motion without an evidentiary hearing.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court’s order.
    AFFIRMED.
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