Engesser v. Young , 2014 S.D. 81 ( 2014 )


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  • #27001-a-JKK
    
    2014 S.D. 81
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    OAKLEY BERNARD ENGESSER,                     Petitioner and Appellee,
    v.
    DARIN YOUNG, Warden,
    South Dakota State Penitentiary,             Respondent and Appellant.
    ****
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
    THE FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
    MEADE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    THE HONORABLE WARREN G. JOHNSON
    Judge
    ****
    RONALD A. PARSONS, JR.
    DELIA M. DRULEY of
    Johnson, Heidepriem & Abdallah, LLP
    Sioux Falls, South Dakota
    and
    MICHAEL J. BUTLER
    Sioux Falls, South Dakota                    Attorneys for petitioner
    and appellee.
    MARTY J. JACKLEY
    Attorney General
    PAUL S. SWEDLUND
    Assistant Attorney General
    Pierre, South Dakota                         Attorneys for respondent
    and appellant.
    ****
    ARGUED OCTOBER 6, 2014
    OPINION FILED 11/12/14
    #27001
    KONENKAMP, Justice
    [¶1.]        In this habeas proceeding, the circuit court ruled that the petitioner
    established clearly and convincingly that newly discovered evidence, if proven and
    viewed in light of all the other evidence, would establish that no reasonable juror
    would have convicted him. The court ordered a new trial, and the State appeals.
    Background
    [¶2.]        In 2001, a jury convicted Oakley “Bernie” Engesser of vehicular
    homicide and two counts of vehicular battery. The sole issue at the trial was
    whether Engesser or the deceased, Dorothy Finley, was driving her Corvette when
    it crashed into a minivan on Interstate 90. Neither Engesser nor Finley was
    wearing a seatbelt and both had been drinking alcoholic beverages. The Corvette
    was going “approximately 112 miles per hour when it slammed into the back of the
    minivan, spun off the road, and rolled several times before coming to rest on its roof
    in the median.” See State v. Engesser (Engesser I), 
    2003 S.D. 47
    , ¶ 6, 
    661 N.W.2d 739
    , 744. No witness at trial testified to seeing the driver of the Corvette. Engesser
    was thrown from the car, landing face down in the median. Multiple witnesses at
    trial placed him between five and ten feet from the driver’s side of the Corvette.
    Engesser was unconscious and suffered a gash to the right side of his head. Finley
    was trapped in the car on the passenger side “underneath the passenger seat, her
    body in line with the seat. The upper part of Finley’s body was lying over the top of
    the seat. She was facing the ground. Her feet were underneath the dash. Her face
    was pointing toward the driver’s side.” 
    Id. ¶ 7.
    The passenger side was crushed
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    and the window shattered, but the roof and front windshield were intact. Finley
    was pronounced dead at the scene.
    [¶3.]        At trial, the State presented evidence from Trooper Ed Fox, the lead
    investigator. Trooper Fox arrived on the scene after Engesser and Finley had been
    taken away. He obtained statements from the witnesses at the scene. No witness,
    however, stated specifically whether the driver was a man or woman. Nonetheless,
    based on the positioning of and injuries to Finley’s body, as later described to
    Trooper Fox, he concluded that Engesser was the driver.
    [¶4.]        The State also offered evidence from Finley’s daughter, who testified
    that Finley normally kept her purse at her feet when she was the passenger. The
    purse was found underneath the dashboard on the passenger side. The emergency
    room physician who treated Engesser testified that the person in the passenger seat
    would have suffered the most serious injuries because it was the point of impact
    with the minivan. Engesser suffered injuries on both sides of his body. Finley died
    of injuries to the right side of her body and head.
    [¶5.]        Engesser did not testify at trial. But the jury viewed a video recording
    of his interview with Trooper Fox, in which Engesser explained that he did not
    remember anything after leaving the Full Throttle Saloon. Although Engesser
    believed Finley was driving, he agreed it was possible they had switched before the
    accident. Engesser sought to admit hearsay evidence from his civil attorney that a
    witness — Sean Boyle — had told the attorney he saw Engesser and Finley leave
    the Full Throttle Saloon on the night of the accident, and that Finley was driving
    the Corvette. The court excluded the testimony. Engesser was found guilty and
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    sentenced. We affirmed his convictions in 2003. Engesser I, 
    2003 S.D. 47
    , ¶ 
    50, 661 N.W.2d at 756
    .
    [¶6.]        Over the next twelve years, Engesser petitioned successively for
    habeas corpus relief in state and federal courts. His first state habeas petition was
    denied, and neither the habeas court nor this Court granted his request for a
    certificate of probable cause to appeal. In his first petition for federal habeas corpus
    relief, Engesser, pro se, claimed his trial counsel was ineffective for multiple
    reasons. After his petition was denied, Engesser appealed and was appointed
    counsel. At some point after counsel was assigned, Eric Eckholm contacted
    Engesser’s counsel and asserted that he saw a woman driving the Corvette just
    before the accident. In his deposition, Eckholm testified that he was in his vehicle
    on the shoulder of the Interstate when he saw the Corvette before it hit the
    minivan. Eckholm said he saw a woman in the driver’s seat frantically driving and
    a man in the passenger seat “hanging on.” He described the driver as having blonde
    hair that was “kind of puffy.” He saw the back end of the Corvette strike the
    minivan and a man fly out of the passenger side. He said he walked over to the
    Corvette in the median and saw Finley’s body underneath the overturned car. He
    testified that he contacted Engesser’s trial attorney and first habeas counsel.
    Engesser’s federal habeas counsel did not bring Eckholm’s testimony to the
    attention of the district court before Engesser’s first habeas petition was ultimately
    dismissed by a divided federal appellate panel. See Engesser v. Dooley (Engesser II),
    
    457 F.3d 731
    (8th Cir. 2006), cert. denied, 
    549 U.S. 1223
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 1284
    , 
    167 L. Ed. 2d
    104 (2007).
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    [¶7.]        In 2006, Engesser filed a second petition for habeas relief in state
    court. He argued that his trial counsel and first habeas counsel were ineffective
    because they failed to identify and investigate two witnesses, Eckholm and
    Charlotte (Delaney) Fowler. Although Eckholm and Fowler were originally
    questioned at the scene of the accident and neither indicated that they could
    identify the driver, during the habeas hearing they claimed otherwise. Eckholm
    testified that he was standing on the shoulder of the Interstate behind his parked
    truck when he saw the Corvette. He was able to see that it was a woman driver
    because he saw bracelets and nail polish. She had blonde hair, he said, long
    “enough to fly in the air.” Fowler testified that while she was in the driver’s seat of
    her van parked on the shoulder of the Interstate in front of Eckholm’s vehicle, she
    saw the Corvette travel out of control and hit the minivan. She explained that,
    though she told Trooper Fox on the night of the accident that she was looking at her
    console and did not see the Corvette hit the minivan, she in fact saw the accident.
    She saw a man thrown from the Corvette. In addition to Eckholm and Fowler,
    multiple other witnesses testified at the habeas hearing, including Trooper Fox,
    Engesser’s trial counsel and first habeas counsel, and Engesser.
    [¶8.]        The habeas court ruled that trial counsel and Engesser’s first habeas
    counsel were ineffective for failing to identify and investigate Eckholm and Fowler,
    and that Engesser was prejudiced because their testimony would likely have altered
    the outcome of Engesser’s trial. The court granted the petition and ordered a new
    trial. Following the court’s ruling, in an apparent effort to bolster the rationale for
    a new trial, Engesser sought leave to reopen the proceeding to present testimony
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    from two additional witnesses the State disclosed after the habeas hearing. One
    witness, Greg Smeenk, said that he came upon the accident right after the crash.
    He attempted to get to the woman inside the car, but could not open the passenger-
    side door. He testified that he went over to the driver’s side and was able to open
    the door. He took the woman’s pulse and realized she was dead. Because he had
    his two daughters in the car and did not want them to see the accident, he left the
    scene before ever talking to law enforcement officers. The habeas court denied the
    motion to reopen because, at the time of Engesser’s trial and first habeas petition,
    neither counsel could have known that Smeenk was a potential witness.
    [¶9.]        On appeal, we reversed because Engesser failed to prove that his first
    habeas counsel was ineffective in the first habeas petition. Engesser v. Dooley
    (Engesser III), 
    2008 S.D. 124
    , ¶ 15, 
    759 N.W.2d 309
    , 315. At that time, SDCL 21-27-
    16.1 (later repealed by 2012 S.D. Session Laws, chapter 118, section 6) required
    that a petitioner seeking successive habeas relief show “reasonable cause” for failing
    to bring a claim in the previous habeas petition. Reasonable cause could be
    established by proof that prior habeas counsel was ineffective. See Jackson v.
    Weber, 
    2001 S.D. 30
    , ¶ 11, 
    637 N.W.2d 19
    , 22.
    [¶10.]       Engesser’s third habeas petition in state court was also denied, after
    which Engesser did not seek a certificate of probable cause to appeal. Engesser
    then requested permission to file a successive federal habeas petition with the
    Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. The court authorized the “petition ‘to present a
    new claim that counsel was ineffective because of new evidence of Engesser’s factual
    innocence that could not have been discovered earlier.’” See Engesser v. Dooley
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    (Engesser IV), 
    823 F. Supp. 2d 910
    , 914 (D.S.D. 2011). The district court held an
    evidentiary hearing, during which it heard testimony from Eckholm, Fowler, and
    Smeenk. The court also heard testimony from Boyle and a new witness, Philip
    Syverson.
    [¶11.]       Boyle testified that he was working as a security guard at the Full
    Throttle Saloon on the night of the accident. He knew Finley and said that he saw
    Finley and Engesser leave the bar around 6:30-7:00 p.m., with Finley in the driver’s
    seat of the Corvette. Boyle was not available as a witness until this hearing
    because he had left the state in 2000 to avoid a potential 4th DUI charge.
    [¶12.]       Syverson testified that he saw the Corvette immediately before the
    accident as it entered the Interstate 90 on-ramp heading east. Syverson was on
    Interstate 90, driving east, with his wife and daughter in the car. When the
    Corvette attempted to merge onto the Interstate it was parallel to Syverson’s
    vehicle. The Corvette was travelling at approximately the same speed as his
    vehicle, except for the last one hundred meters, when it sped up and shot ahead of
    his car. Syverson testified that he noticed the Corvette when his car was traveling
    parallel to it. He looked over to the driver and observed feminine features and a
    feminine hair style. Shortly after the Corvette sped past Syverson’s vehicle,
    Syverson came upon the accident. He stopped his car. His wife went to help the
    people in the minivan, and Syverson stayed with his daughter until his wife
    returned. They left before law enforcement officers arrived.
    [¶13.]       Syverson was discovered as a potential witness after the accident came
    up in a conversation with his co-workers. They were discussing vehicle accidents,
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    and Syverson had mentioned that he saw an accident with a red Corvette a year
    earlier. His co-worker, Rusty Engesser, mentioned that his cousin was in that
    accident. Syverson was eventually contacted as a potential witness. He was shown
    a picture of Finley taken around the time of the accident and also a picture of
    Engesser taken while he was in the hospital after the accident. Syverson testified
    that the picture of Finley was consistent with the features he observed and, in
    reference to the picture of Engesser, stated that “in no way was that the driver.”
    [¶14.]       After the evidentiary hearing, Engesser urged the district court to
    consider the merits of his procedurally-defaulted ineffective assistance of counsel
    claim based on Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 851
    , 
    130 L. Ed. 2d 808
    (1995) and on 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(B)(i)-(ii). He argued that based on his newly
    discovered evidence and in light of all the evidence, no reasonable juror would have
    found him guilty. The district court analyzed Engesser’s claim under both the
    requirements of § 2244(b)(2)(B)(i)-(ii) and the Schlup standard. To meet the
    conditions of § 2244(b)(2), Engesser was required to establish “the factual predicate
    for the claim could not have been discovered previously through the exercise of due
    diligence[,]” and that “the facts underlying the claim, if proven and viewed in light
    of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing
    evidence that, but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have
    found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.” The district court ruled that
    Engesser met the first requirement through the testimony of Syverson, which
    factual predicate could not have been previously discovered. The court further
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    ruled that, had Engesser’s trial attorney been effective, no reasonable juror would
    have convicted him. The court noted,
    During Engesser’s trial, Trooper Fox was the only witness to
    testify that Engesser was the driver of the Corvette. This
    assertion was not refuted by Engesser’s attorney, who appeared
    to focus on the fact that the Corvette was stored outdoors,
    permitting any bodily fluids inside the Corvette to deteriorate.
    If Engesser’s attorney had interviewed Eckholm and Fowler,
    and called them as witnesses, their testimony would have
    directly contradicted Trooper Fox’s assertion that Engesser was
    the driver of the Corvette. The identity of the driver was the
    only issue at Engesser’s trial. If a factfinder were presented
    with Eckholm’s and Fowler’s eyewitness testimony, no
    reasonable factfinder would have found Engesser guilty of the
    underlying offense. The only state court (Judge Macy) to have
    considered Eckholm’s and Fowler’s testimony and to weigh the
    testimony against the evidence presented at Engesser’s trial
    found that their testimony would have changed the outcome of
    his trial. Moreover, Judge Macy reached this conclusion without
    the benefit of Syverson’s eyewitness testimony, which
    demonstrates even more clearly that “but for the constitutional
    error, no reasonable factfinder would have found [Engesser]
    guilty of the underlying offense.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244.
    Engesser 
    IV, 823 F. Supp. 2d at 925
    (alteration in original).
    [¶15.]       The district court ruled that Engesser met the Schlup standard, which
    permitted habeas “review of otherwise barred claims if [the petitioner] produces
    reliable new evidence not available at trial establishing that it is more likely than
    not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of the new evidence.”
    See Amrine v. Bowersox, 
    238 F.3d 1023
    , 1028 (8th Cir. 2001). In consideration of
    the “old and new, incriminating and exculpatory [evidence], without regard to
    whether it would necessarily be admitted under ‘rules of admissibility that would
    govern at trial,’” the court ruled that “Engesser has demonstrated ‘that more likely
    than not any reasonable juror would have reasonable doubt.’” Engesser IV, 823 F.
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    Supp. 2d at 927-28 (quoting House v. Bell, 
    547 U.S. 518
    , 538, 
    126 S. Ct. 2064
    , 2077,
    
    165 L. Ed. 2d 1
    (2006)).
    [¶16.]       The federal district court then addressed the merits of Engesser’s
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim. It deferred to the findings by the state court
    on Engesser’s second petition for habeas relief and did not find unreasonable the
    state court’s conclusion that Engesser’s counsel was prejudicially ineffective. The
    district court granted Engesser’s petition for a writ of federal habeas corpus under §
    2254. The State appealed and the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed. It
    ruled that Engesser’s successive petition for habeas relief must be dismissed
    because it was predicated on a claim (ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to
    investigate Eckholm and Fowler as witnesses) that was discoverable through the
    exercise of due diligence at the time of Engesser’s first federal petition for habeas
    relief. Engesser v. Dooley (Engesser V), 
    686 F.3d 928
    , 937 (8th Cir. 2012).
    [¶17.]       In February 2013, Engesser sought leave to file a fourth petition for
    habeas relief in state court. Engesser asserted his right to file a successive petition
    for a writ of habeas corpus under SDCL 21-27-5.1 based on Syverson’s testimony.
    He also asserted a freestanding claim of actual innocence based on the South
    Dakota Constitution. He later amended his petition to assert newly discovered
    evidence through another witness, Ramona Dasalla, a resident of Rapid City. The
    State moved to dismiss Engesser’s petition, arguing that his claim of newly
    discovered evidence was barred by SDCL 21-27-3.3, that he waived his claim of
    actual innocence by failing to raise it in a prior petition, and that his amended
    petition failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
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    [¶18.]       The habeas court granted Engesser leave to file the amended petition
    and held an evidentiary hearing in July 2013. At the hearing, Ramona Dasalla,
    Russell Engesser (Engesser’s cousin), Rena Hymans (Engesser’s former counsel),
    Val Engesser (Engesser’s wife), Beau Goodman, Brett Garland, Todd Albertson, and
    Engesser testified. The habeas court also reviewed the evidence from Engesser’s
    trial and previous habeas proceedings. In its memorandum decision and findings of
    fact and conclusions of law, the habeas court ruled that Engesser was aware of
    Syverson as a potential witness as early as November 2007, and therefore, his claim
    to the extent it relied on Syverson’s testimony was barred by the statute of
    limitations under SDCL 21-27-3.3(4). But because the existence of Dasalla as a
    witness was unknown until April 2013, Engesser’s petition was not time barred.
    The court found that Engesser did not waive his right to seek relief on a claim of
    actual innocence because the Legislature repealed SDCL 21-27-16.1, which provided
    that any ground for relief not raised in the original petition “may not be the basis
    for a subsequent application, unless the court finds grounds for relief asserted
    which for reasonable cause were omitted or inadequately raised in the original,
    supplemental, or amended application.” The court also concluded that the
    Legislature’s 2012 amendment to the laws governing habeas corpus created “more
    stringent guidelines for prisoners bringing multiple habeas corpus petitions” but
    “specifically carved out an exception for newly discovered evidence, that when
    weighed with the evidence as a whole, showed by clear and convincing evidence that
    no reasonable juror would have returned a guilty verdict.” Finally, the court ruled
    that “principles of elemental fairness set forth in the due process protections of the
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    South Dakota constitution require recognition of a freestanding actual innocence
    claim.”
    [¶19.]       The habeas court highlighted the testimony from Goodman, Eckholm,
    Fowler, Boyle, Syverson, and Dasalla in reviewing whether Engesser “identifie[d]
    newly discovered evidence that, if proven and viewed in light of the evidence as a
    whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that no
    reasonable fact finder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying
    offense.” See SDCL 21-27-5.1. Goodman testified at the second federal habeas
    hearing and the current hearing. Eckholm and Fowler testified at the second
    habeas hearing in state court and the second federal habeas hearing. Boyle,
    Smeenk, and Syverson testified at the second federal habeas hearing. Dasalla
    testified in the current hearing.
    [¶20.]       The court ruled that Dasalla’s testimony was newly discovered because
    her evidence was not known until April 2013. After Dasalla had read an article in a
    newspaper about Engesser’s current petition for relief, she contacted the author of
    the article. The author put Dasalla in contact with Engesser’s counsel. Dasalla
    reported that on the day of the accident, she and her boyfriend were traveling on
    Interstate 90 in the right-hand lane, heading toward Rapid City. She saw a red
    Corvette pass in the left-hand lane. Having an affinity for Corvettes and Camaros,
    she “was attracted to it and looked at it.” She saw the driver of the Corvette. She
    was “absolutely sure” a woman was driving and a man was sitting in the passenger
    seat, turned “sitting three-quarters like this — toward the window.” The Corvette
    drove past her boyfriend’s vehicle and Dasalla did not see the accident happen.
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    When they came upon the scene, they stopped and parked for ten minutes. Dasalla
    saw the white minivan in the ditch and the Corvette in the median upside down.
    She also saw a body in the median. Dasalla remained in her boyfriend’s vehicle the
    entire time and did not talk to anyone at the scene. Dasalla’s boyfriend drove away
    when someone directing traffic told them to move on.
    [¶21.]         The habeas court found “Ramona Dasalla’s testimony to be credible,
    persuasive and compelling.” It further found that her “testimony that she saw a
    woman driving a red Corvette on Interstate 90 immediately prior to the accident in
    which Dorothy Finley died is accurate and true.” Based on Dasalla’s testimony, the
    testimony of the other witnesses, and the evidence presented at trial, the habeas
    court concluded that “Engesser’s evidence demonstrating his actual innocence is
    credible, persuasive, and compelling[.]” The court ruled that “Engesser has shown
    by clear and convincing evidence that the newly discovered evidence, in light of the
    evidence as a whole, would create reasonable doubt of his guilt in the mind of a
    reasonable juror.” The court granted Engesser’s request for a writ of habeas corpus
    based on SDCL 21-27-5.1 and based upon his freestanding claim of actual innocence
    under South Dakota’s constitution.
    [¶22.]         The State appeals, asserting that a freestanding claim of actual
    innocence does not exist in South Dakota and that the habeas court erred when it
    ruled that Engesser met the burden of proof under SDCL 21-27-5.1(1). 1
    1.       Standard of review:
    Habeas corpus is not a substitute for direct review. Because
    habeas corpus is a collateral attack upon a final judgment, our
    scope of review is limited. . . .
    (continued . . .)
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    1. Actual Innocence Claim under SDCL 21-27-5.1
    [¶23.]         In 2012, at the request of the Office of the South Dakota Attorney
    General, the Legislature amended the code on habeas corpus. See S.D. Sess. Laws
    ch. 118, § 6. It repealed SDCL 21-27-16.1, which governed when an applicant could
    file a successive petition for a writ of habeas corpus. 
    Id. Before SDCL
    21-27-16.1
    was repealed, this Court had interpreted it to require an applicant to show
    reasonable cause why the successive claim could not be brought in the original
    petition and “[a]ctual prejudice resulting from the alleged constitutional violation.”
    See Jackson, 
    2001 S.D. 30
    , ¶ 
    11, 637 N.W.2d at 22
    (citation omitted). In the same
    bill, Senate Bill 42, the Legislature enacted SDCL 21-27-5.1, governing when an
    __________________
    (. . . continued)
    Habeas corpus can be used only to review (1) whether the court
    had jurisdiction of the crime and the person of the defendant; (2)
    whether the sentence was authorized by law; and (3) in certain
    cases whether an incarcerated defendant has been deprived of
    basic constitutional rights.
    Loop v. Class, 
    1996 S.D. 107
    , ¶ 11, 
    554 N.W.2d 189
    , 191 (citation omitted).
    Statutory interpretation is a question of law reviewed de novo.
    Perdue, Inc. v. Rounds, 
    2010 S.D. 38
    , ¶ 7 n.2, 
    782 N.W.2d 375
    ,
    377 n.2. The purpose of statutory construction is to discover the
    true intention of the law which is to be ascertained primarily
    from the language expressed in the statute. City of Rapid City
    v. Anderson, 
    2000 S.D. 77
    , ¶ 7, 
    612 N.W.2d 289
    , 291-92
    (citations omitted). The intent of a statute is determined from
    what the Legislature said, rather than what we think it should
    have said. 
    Id. Words and
    phrases in a statute must be given
    their plain meaning and effect. Moss v. Guttormson, 
    1996 S.D. 76
    , ¶ 10, 
    551 N.W.2d 14
    , 17 (citations omitted). In interpreting
    statutes, we presume that the Legislature did not intend an
    absurd result. 
    Id. Esling v.
    Krambeck, 
    2003 S.D. 59
    , ¶ 6, 
    663 N.W.2d 671
    , 675-76.
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    applicant may file a successive petition for a writ of habeas corpus. In its entirety,
    that statute provides:
    A claim presented in a second or subsequent habeas corpus
    application under this chapter that was presented in a prior
    application under this chapter or otherwise to the courts of this
    state by the same applicant shall be dismissed.
    Before a second or subsequent application for a writ of habeas
    corpus may be filed, the applicant shall move in the circuit court
    of appropriate jurisdiction for an order authorizing the applicant
    to file the application.
    The assigned judge shall enter an order denying leave to file a
    second or successive application for a writ of habeas corpus
    unless:
    (1) The applicant identifies newly discovered evidence
    that, if proven and viewed in light of the evidence as a
    whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and
    convincing evidence that no reasonable fact finder would
    have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense;
    or
    (2) The application raises a new rule of constitutional law,
    made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the
    United States Supreme Court and the South Dakota
    Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable. The
    grant or denial of an authorization by the circuit court to
    file a second or subsequent application shall not be
    appealable.
    
    Id. This case
    implicates subsection (1), and before we address the merits of the
    habeas court’s decision, we review the court’s conclusion that SDCL 21-27-5.1(1)
    gave Engesser a right to obtain habeas relief.
    [¶24.]       The State contends that the Legislature did not intend to create an
    independent means of habeas relief when it enacted SDCL 21-27-5.1(1). Rather, the
    State believes the Legislature created a “gateway” for an applicant to have an
    otherwise-barred successive habeas corpus claim considered if the applicant could
    also show that, but for a constitutional error at trial, no reasonable juror would have
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    found him guilty based upon the newly discovered evidence. As support, the State
    points to the companion federal rule, a rule the federal courts have consistently
    interpreted to require both newly discovered evidence and a deprivation of a
    constitutional right due to a trial error. See 28 U.S.C.A. § 2244(b)(2); McQuiggin v.
    Perkins, ___ U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 1924
    , 1932, 
    185 L. Ed. 2d 1019
    (2013); 
    House, 547 U.S. at 536
    , 126 S. Ct. at 2078; see also 
    Schlup, 513 U.S. at 327
    , 115 S. Ct. at 867.
    [¶25.]         The United States Supreme Court has ruled that a right to habeas
    relief exists only upon a “constitutional claim with a colorable showing of factual
    innocence” and not upon a freestanding claim of actual innocence. 2 See Herrera v.
    Collins, 
    506 U.S. 390
    , 399, 404, 
    113 S. Ct. 853
    , 860, 862, 
    122 L. Ed. 2d 203
    (1993).
    A majority of state courts have followed suit, including this Court in Boyles v.
    Weber, 
    2004 S.D. 31
    , ¶ 11, 
    677 N.W.2d 531
    , 537. Boyles, however, was decided
    before the Legislature repealed SDCL 21-27-16.1 and enacted SDCL 21-27-5.1(1).
    Moreover, although we have found federal precedent instructive when federal rules
    are similar to our statutes, § 2244(b)(2) is markedly different from SDCL 21-27-
    5.1(1). The federal rule specifically requires a constitutional error:
    (2) A claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus
    application under section 2254 that was not presented in a prior
    application shall be dismissed unless--
    ...
    (B)(i) the factual predicate for the claim could not have
    been discovered previously through the exercise of due
    diligence; and
    2.       Although it must be noted the Court also wrote that “a truly persuasive
    demonstration of ‘actual innocence’” in a capital case where there was “no
    state avenue open to process such a claim,” would be unconstitutional.
    
    Herrera, 506 U.S. at 417
    , 113 S. Ct. at 869.
    -15-
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    (ii) the facts underlying the claim, if proven and viewed in
    light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to
    establish by clear and convincing evidence that, but for
    constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have
    found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.
    28 U.S.C.A. § 2244(b) (emphasis added). No similar requirement exists within
    SDCL 21-27-5.1(1) or the remaining statutes governing successive petitions for
    habeas relief.
    [¶26.]       Nonetheless, the State argues that the only reasonable interpretation
    of the Legislature’s intent is that a petitioner must identify a constitutional error in
    addition to newly discovered evidence. This interpretation, the State believes, is
    necessary because habeas corpus is only available “to review (1) whether the court
    has jurisdiction of the crime and the person of the defendant; (2) whether the
    sentence was authorized by law; and (3) in certain cases whether an incarcerated
    defendant has been deprived of basic constitutional rights.” See Lawrence v. Weber,
    
    2011 S.D. 19
    , ¶ 7, 
    797 N.W.2d 783
    , 785 (citations omitted). Thus, while the
    Legislature did not use the words “but for the constitutional error,” the State
    contends the habeas court was without authority to review Engesser’s claim that
    newly discovered evidence established his actual innocence.
    [¶27.]       “A habeas corpus proceeding is a civil action which exists solely under
    statutes passed by our Legislature.” Haase v. Weber, 
    2005 S.D. 23
    , ¶ 8, 
    693 N.W.2d 668
    , 670 (Gilbertson, C.J., dissenting). We confine our review, therefore, to the
    statutory scheme governing habeas corpus proceedings. Under SDCL 21-27-1,
    “[a]ny person committed or detained, imprisoned or restrained of his liberty” has a
    right to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus relief. The petitioner bears the
    initial burden of proof to establish a colorable claim for relief, and the petition must
    -16-
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    “set[ ] forth the facts concerning his detention” and “identify any previous
    applications made pursuant to this chapter, together with the grounds therein
    asserted.” See SDCL 21-27-3. A two-year statute of limitations is imposed from
    “[t]he date on which the factual predicate of the claim or claims presented could
    have been discovered through the exercise of due diligence.” SDCL 21-27-3.3(4).
    When a petition is successive, SDCL 21-27-5.1(1) requires that the petitioner seek
    leave from the court before filing the petition, which leave can be obtained by
    “identif[ying] newly discovered evidence that, if proven and viewed in light of the
    evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing
    evidence that no reasonable fact finder would have found the applicant guilty of the
    underlying offense[.]” Once leave is granted and the writ is filed and returned,
    SDCL 21-27-12 requires that “a day shall be set for the hearing of the cause of
    imprisonment or detainer[.]” Thereafter, “[t]he court or judge shall proceed in a
    summary way to settle the facts by hearing the evidence and arguments . . . and
    shall dispose of the applicant as the case may require.” SDCL 21-27-14.
    [¶28.]       In chapter 21-27 and particularly in SDCL 21-27-5.1(1), the
    Legislature gave a habeas court the authority to consider the merits of successive
    petitions for a writ of habeas corpus if the petitioner brought forth newly discovered
    evidence that, if proven and considered in light of the other evidence, clearly and
    convincingly established that no reasonable fact finder would have found the
    petitioner guilty of the underlying offense. It would be a usurpation of legislative
    prerogative to hold that after a habeas court rules a petitioner met the statutory
    requirements to file a successive petition, that the court must nonetheless dismiss
    -17-
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    the petition because the petitioner failed to also identify a constitutional error. The
    Legislature did not impose this requirement, and we should not read it into the
    plain and unambiguous language of SDCL 21-27-5.1(1). 3 See State v. Wilson, 
    2004 S.D. 33
    , ¶ 9, 
    678 N.W.2d 176
    , 180. We conclude that the habeas court did not err
    when it “proceed[ed] in a summary way to settle the facts by hearing the evidence
    and arguments” and “dispose[ed] of the applicant as the case may require,” see
    SDCL 21-27-14, after it granted Engesser leave to file the successive petition under
    SDCL 21-27-5.1(1).
    2. Engesser’s Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus
    [¶29.]         The State next contends that the habeas court erred when it concluded
    that Engesser’s newly discovered evidence, if proven and viewed in light of the other
    evidence, established by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror
    would have found Engesser guilty. Moreover, the State argues that this Court
    should not employ its traditional clearly erroneous standard of review against the
    habeas court’s factual findings, because the “weight of the interests at stake”
    3.       Several states have allowed a freestanding claim of actual innocence by
    statute. Ariz. R. Crim. P. 32.1(h); Ark. Code Ann. §§ 16-112-201, -208; Del.
    Code Ann. tit 11, § 4504; D.C. Code § 22-4135; Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15 §
    2138(10); Md. Crim. Proc. § 8-301; Minn. Stat. § 590.01; Ohio Rev. Code Ann.
    § 2953.21; Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-117; Utah Code Ann. § 78B-9-301; Va.
    Code Ann. § 19.2-327.10. Other states have recognized such a claim by case
    law. See In re Bell, 
    170 P.3d 153
    , 157 (Cal. 2007); Miller v. Comm’r of Corr.,
    
    700 A.2d 1108
    , 1130 (Conn. 1997); People v. Washington, 
    665 N.E.2d 1330
    ,
    1336-37 (Ill. 1996); Montoya v. Ulibarri, 
    163 P.3d 476
    , 484 (N.M. 2007); State
    ex rel. Amrine v. Roper, 
    102 S.W.3d 541
    , 547 (Mo. 2003); 
    Beach, 302 P.3d at 51-52
    . South Dakota is not alone in acknowledging that “[o]ur criminal
    justice system has little value if it cannot differentiate the guilty from the
    innocent with a high degree of certainty.” Jackson, 
    2001 S.D. 136
    , ¶ 
    27, 637 N.W.2d at 25
    (Konenkamp, J., concurring).
    -18-
    #27001
    warrants a heightened level of review. The State asks for an independent and
    scrupulous review of the evidence and an affirmance only if the decision is
    supported by substantial evidence.
    [¶30.]       We find persuasive the Connecticut Supreme Court’s analysis in Miller
    v. Commissioner of Correction, which examined the standard of review appropriate
    for a habeas court’s factual findings on a claim of innocence based on newly
    discovered evidence. See 
    700 A.2d 1108
    , 1136 (Conn. 1997). The court recognized
    that de novo review by an appellate court would be “inconsistent” with the mandate
    that the habeas court assess the credibility of the particular witnesses and make
    factual determinations. 
    Id. But the
    court found insufficient the deferential clearly
    erroneous standard because that level of review would “not afford sufficient weight
    to the importance of the factual determination at stake, to the interests of the
    parties, and to the extraordinary nature of the ultimate remedy in the event that
    the petitioner is successful.” 
    Id. “The appropriate
    scope of review,” the court ruled,
    “is whether, after an independent and scrupulous examination of the entire record,
    we are convinced that the finding of the habeas court . . . is supported by
    substantial evidence.” 
    Id. Other state
    courts use this standard. In re Richards,
    
    289 P.3d 860
    , 869 (Cal. 2012) (substantial evidence standard); Mayshack v.
    Werholtz, 
    142 P.3d 338
    (Kan. Ct. App. 2006) (substantial evidence standard). We
    adopt this standard to review the habeas court’s factual findings.
    [¶31.]       In deciding whether the factual findings of the habeas court are
    supported by substantial evidence, we will not reweigh the evidence and substitute
    our judgment for that of the court. See Olson v. City of Deadwood, 
    480 N.W.2d 770
    ,
    -19-
    #27001
    775 (S.D. 1992). But the record must show that the court evaluated the testimony
    deemed credible in light of the other evidence to determine whether the court’s
    impression of the testimony can be sustained in light of the record as a whole. See
    Doe v. Menefee, 
    391 F.3d 147
    , 164-65 (2d Cir. 2004).
    [¶32.]       From our review of the record, we conclude that there was adequate
    support for the habeas court’s finding that Dasalla was a credible witness.
    Although the State insists that Dasalla could not be found credible because, among
    other things, she falsely denied meeting with Engesser’s attorneys, she materially
    changed her testimony on what she saw, and she denied seeing a photograph of
    Finley with short hair, the habeas court listened to Dasalla testify and heard the
    discrepancies and inconsistences highlighted by the State’s cross examination. The
    court emphasized that despite the inconsistencies on certain details, Dasalla
    maintained that she saw a woman driver and a male passenger. Moreover, the
    court found relevant that Dasalla had no connection to Engesser or this case. She
    came forward after reading a news article about Engesser’s petition for habeas
    relief. The court viewed Dasalla’s testimony in light of the other evidence, and
    specifically found her to be “credible, persuasive and compelling[.]” Finally, the
    court found that “Dasalla’s testimony that she saw a woman driving the red
    Corvette on Interstate 90 immediately prior to the accident in which Dorothy Finley
    died is accurate and true.”
    [¶33.]       The State next contends that the habeas court improperly considered
    Syverson’s testimony, because his testimony was not newly discovered under SDCL
    21-27-3.3(4). But our law permits consideration of this testimony. SDCL 21-27-
    -20-
    #27001
    5.1(1) specifically directs the habeas court to consider the newly discovered evidence
    (Dasalla’s testimony) in light of the other evidence (all trial evidence and evidence
    from all habeas proceedings). Even under federal law, as the Supreme Court noted,
    “the habeas court must consider ‘all the evidence,’ old and new, incriminating and
    exculpatory, without regard to whether it would necessarily be admitted under
    ‘rules of admissibility that would govern at trial.’” 
    House, 547 U.S. at 538
    , 126 S.
    Ct. at 2077 (quoting 
    Schlup, 513 U.S. at 327
    -28, 115 S. Ct. at 867).
    [¶34.]       Lastly, the State contends that even if this Court considers all the
    evidence, “Engesser has failed to produce unquestionable (clear and convincing)
    proof that he is actually innocent.” The State explains in great detail why the
    testimony of Eckholm, Fowler, Syverson, and Dasalla is inherently unreliable and
    could not overcome the persuasive physical evidence of Engesser’s guilt presented at
    trial. In the State’s view, Engesser’s petition is “based solely on the fuzzy, decade-
    old memories of (allegedly) newly-identified eyewitnesses who exhibit bias and
    whose testimony contradicts the physical evidence.”
    [¶35.]       We must acknowledge the reality that Engesser was found guilty by a
    jury of his peers in an error-free trial, and therefore, no longer enjoys the
    presumption of innocence. See 
    Herra, 506 U.S. at 399
    , 113 S. Ct. at 860. Moreover,
    although “[d]eference is given to a trial court’s assessment of evidence presented to
    it in the first instance,” similar deference is not given to the court’s application of
    the facts to the legal standard. See 
    House, 547 U.S. at 539
    , 126 S. Ct. at 2078; see
    also 
    Beach, 302 P.3d at 52
    (Montana recognizes two species of actual innocence
    -21-
    #27001
    claims: substantive and procedural.). 4 Rather, this decision involves a mixed
    question of fact and law and implicates our de novo review. See Stockwell v.
    Stockwell, 
    2010 S.D. 79
    , ¶ 16, 
    790 N.W.2d 52
    , 59 (citation omitted); see also 
    Menefee, 391 F.3d at 163
    . We do not “make an independent factual determination about
    what likely occurred, but rather [we] assess the likely impact of the evidence on
    reasonable jurors.” See 
    House, 547 U.S. at 538
    , 126 S. Ct. at 2077 (citation omitted).
    The focus is on what a reasonable juror would do in light of the newly discovered
    evidence and the other evidence. Specifically, we must find that the newly
    discovered evidence, if proven and viewed in light of the other evidence, establishes
    by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable fact finder would have found
    Engesser guilty of the underlying offenses. See SDCL 21-27-5.1(1).
    [¶36.]         The only witness to testify that Engesser was in the driver’s seat was
    Trooper Fox, who based his testimony on his examination of the Corvette, the
    reported position of Finley’s body and her injuries, his belief that Engesser was
    lying, and his three years’ experience with the South Dakota Highway Patrol. Yet
    Trooper Fox did not arrive at the scene until after Finley had been removed from
    the car and Engesser was transported to the hospital. In Engesser’s trial, the jury
    4.       In Beach, the Montana Supreme Court, applying de novo review, reversed a
    district court’s grant of a new trial because the judge considered only the new
    evidence, which by itself was compelling, but when considered with all the old
    evidence presented in the 1984 trial, including the petitioner’s confession, did
    not provide reliable proof of actual 
    innocence. 302 P.3d at 71
    . In contrast,
    the evidence offered in Engesser’s trial that he was the driver was neither
    compelling nor substantial. And his newly discovered eyewitness testimony
    presents reliable proof, along with all the evidence, to conclude that no
    reasonable fact finder would have found Engesser guilty of the offenses
    charged against him. See SDCL 21-27-5.1(1).
    -22-
    #27001
    heard testimony from Mary Redfield that when she arrived on the scene, she found
    the driver’s-side door of the Corvette open. But the testimony from Smeenk
    suggested otherwise. Smeenk arrived at the scene immediately after the accident.
    He had to pry the driver’s-side door open to check Finley’s pulse. After confirming
    that she was not alive, he left the scene before talking to law enforcement officers
    because he had his daughters in his car.
    [¶37.]       At trial, Trooper Fox testified about his investigation of the accident
    scene and opined that the location of the driver’s seat would have comfortably fit
    Engesser not Finley. But Trooper Fox initially wrote in his report that Finley was
    the driver, which to the habeas court was consistent with Eckholm’s testimony that
    Eckholm used the words “she and her” when giving his statement to Trooper Fox on
    the night of the accident. Additionally, at trial, the state’s forensic expert could not
    give an opinion on whether Finley was the passenger or the driver. Another expert
    testified that it was possible for a driver to get thrown around in the vehicle and
    end up in the passenger seat. Further suggesting that Engesser was ejected out of
    the passenger window, Eckholm and Fowler testified to seeing Engesser ejected
    from the vehicle before it rolled in the median. Finally, Syverson and Dasalla
    testified that moments before the accident they observed a woman driving the
    Corvette and a man in the passenger seat.
    [¶38.]       “Punishment of the innocent may be the worst of all injustices.”
    Jenner v. Dooley, 
    1999 S.D. 20
    , ¶ 19, 
    590 N.W.2d 463
    , 471. Three habeas judges,
    two state and one federal, had serious doubts about Engesser’s guilt after observing
    and considering exculpatory testimony from multiple eyewitnesses. From our
    -23-
    #27001
    review of the evidence presented in Engesser’s current habeas proceeding, including
    Dasalla’s newly discovered testimonial evidence, as well as the evidence presented
    in his trial and in each previous habeas proceeding in state and federal court, we
    conclude that there is substantial evidence to support the circuit court’s conclusion
    that Engesser established by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror
    would have found him guilty of the underlying offense.
    [¶39.]       Because we uphold the grant of Engesser’s writ of habeas corpus and
    order for a new trial under SDCL 21-27-5.1(1), we need not consider whether a
    freestanding claim of actual innocence exists under the South Dakota Constitution.
    Moreover, although the State contends that the habeas court erred when it failed to
    give the State unfettered access to attorney Hyman’s file, the State abandoned that
    claim when it failed to set the motion for a hearing. The court did not address the
    merits, and therefore, there is no decision for this Court to review. See In re
    Regennitter, 
    1999 S.D. 26
    , ¶ 10 n.2, 
    589 N.W.2d 920
    , 923 n.2 (citations omitted).
    [¶40.]       Affirmed.
    [¶41.]       GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and ZINTER, SEVERSON, and
    WILBUR, Justices, concur.
    -24-