Personal Restraint Petition Of: Lester Juan Griffin, Jr. ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                                          FILED
    COU i i OF APPEALS
    DIVISION Tj
    2014 MAY - 6
    AM 8: 27
    STATE ODF WAS: ENcrON
    DY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    In re the Personal Restraint of                                                          No. 42012 -1 - II
    LESTER JUAN GRIFFIN,
    PUBLISHED OPINION
    Petitioner.
    LEE, J.--   Ajury found Lester Juan Griffin guilty of one count of first degree assault with a
    firearm enhancement and one count of attempted first degree burglary with a firearm
    enhancement.           We   affirmed    Griffin's   conviction.    State v. Griffin, noted at 
    157 Wn. App. 1001
    2010).       Griffin then filed this         personal     restraint       petition (    PRP).     The State argues that
    consideration of Griffin's petition is barred on procedural grounds because his petition was
    inadequate and was not timely cured. We agree and deny Griffin's petition.
    FACTS
    A jury found Griffin guilty of one count of first degree assault with a firearm
    enhancement and one count of attempted first degree burglary with a firearm enhancement. We
    affirmed Griffin's convictions on direct appeal, and we issued a mandate on December 10, 2010.
    Griffin filed     a    timely, 67 -page   pro se personal restraint petition.              Later, Griffin sought, through
    counsel, permission          to file   an amended petition        in   place of    his   original pro se petition.   Griffin
    filed a timely, eight - age amended petition on December 9, 2011, one day before the expiration
    p
    of   the   one -year     time bar.     RCW 10. 73. 090( 1).            Griffin's   amended petition    baldly   alleged   six
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    grounds for relief, but it did not contain any supporting factual allegations, legal argument, or
    evidence.
    Also on December 9, Griffin filed a motion to stay consideration of his petition pending
    the   outcome      of   potential   deoxyribonucleic   acid ( DNA)         testing   on   trial   evidence.      Griffin's motion
    for    a   stay   was    granted.    Ultimately, Griffin determined that DNA testing was not possible
    because the       evidence    had been    contaminated       by   other   forensic testing. On June 6, 2012, Griffin
    filed a motion requesting "that the stay be lifted and this Court set the briefing schedule set forth
    in Part II [ of the       motion],   for the parties to have an opportunity to brief the issues raised in the
    amended petition'.'         Spindle ( Peer Mot. to Lift       Stay    at   3).   Griffin's motion to lift the stay was
    granted. The commissioner' s ruling stated:.
    Petitioner has moved to lift the stay in this case and for permission to file a
    supplemental      petition.     Petitioner' s    motions       are   granted.         Petitioner should,
    however, be aware that the issues in the supplemental brief may be subject to the
    one -year time bar stated in RCW 10. 73. 090 if petitioner did not raise these same
    issues in     a previous,   timely   petition.    See In re Pers. Restraint of Bonds, 
    165 Wn.2d 135
    , 139 -44 ( 2008).
    Spindle_ (
    Ruling          Lifting Stay).   The                          also
    commissioner's ruling .                        a_
    briefing schedule ordering
    that `Petitioner' s      supplemental petition    is due     within   60 days        of   the   date   of   this ruling"   Spindle
    Ruling Lifting Stay).
    On August 13, 2012, Griffin filed a document titled "OPENING BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF
    AMENDED PERSONAL RESTRAINT                           PETITION:'           Griffin presented six specific arguments:
    1.          The State   committed a   Brady 1 violation.
    1
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
     ( 1963).
    2
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    2.          Griffin received ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to conduct an
    adequate investigation into allegations of misconduct by the investigating detective.
    3.          Material facts exist which should have been presented at trial.
    4.          Griffin received ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to effectively impeach
    the State's witnesses.
    5.          Griffin received ineffective assistance of counsel when his counsel failed to object
    to the State's improper closing arguments.
    6.          The State committed flagrant and ill-intentioned misconduct during closing
    argument.
    In response, the State filed a brief arguing that consideration of Griffin's petition is barred
    on procedural grounds.               First, the State argues that Griffin filed a supplemental petition rather
    than    a supplemental        brief,   and raised new     issues. Therefore, under our Supreme Coures decision
    in In   re     Personal Restraint of Hankerson, 
    149 Wn.2d 695
    , 700, 
    72 P. 3d 703
     ( 2003), Griffin's
    petition     is   a mixed petition      that   must   be dismissed.   Second, the State argues that Griffin's timely
    amended petition was inadequate and that Griffin could not cure the inadequate amended petition
    by filing      a   brief   after   the statutory time    bar has   expired.    See RCW 10. 73. 090.   We agree that
    Griffin failed to          timely    cure     his clearly inadequate    amended petition.     Accordingly, Griffin's
    amended petition is denied.
    ANALYSIS
    A.         MIXED PETITION
    To support its argument that Griffin has filed a mixed petition, the State argues that
    Griffin's         August    2012     filing    should    be   considered   a   supplemental   petition   because the
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    Commissionefs order refers to a supplemental petition; therefore, anything Griffin files in
    response   to the Commissionefs            order must      be   considered a supplemental petition.        In contrast,
    Griffin   argues    that he filed       a motion    to lift the stay   and set a   briefing   schedule.   Griffin never
    actually filed a motion to file a supplemental petition.
    We accept Griffin's argument that he did not file a supplemental petition in August 2012
    because he did not file a motion asking permission to file a supplemental petition. We consider
    the document Griffin filed as a supplemental brief in support of the amended petition and not a
    supplemental petition.          Therefore, we do not address the State's argument that Griffin has filed a
    mixed petition that must be dismissed. Hankerson, 
    149 Wn.2d at 700
    .
    B.        ADEQUACY AND TIMELINESS OF PETITION
    The State also argues that Griffin's amended petition was inadequate and could not be
    cured by an untimely brief. Griffin contends that any inadequacies in his amended petition have
    been cured by filing his brief. Griffin primarily argues that we are permitted to liberally interpret
    our court rules to allow a petitioner to file an adequate petition. Although we agree with Griffin
    to the extent that we may permit liberal interpretation as to the form of a personal restraint
    petition, we cannot liberally interpret our court rules in a manner which circumvents the
    statutorily    prescribed     time bar. Because the inadequacies of Griffin's amended petition were not
    timely cured, we deny Griffin's amended petition.
    As   an   initial   matter,   Griffin's   amended petition     is   indisputably inadequate. In order to
    obtain    relief    through     a   personal   restraint    petition,   the   petitioner   must   prove " either   a (   1)
    constitutional error that results in actual and substantial prejudice or ( 2) nonconstitutional error
    that `constitutes a fundamental defect which inherently results in a complete miscarriage of
    4
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    justice." In       re    Pers. Restraint of Monschke,                  
    160 Wn. App. 479
    , 488, 
    251 P. 3d 884
     ( 2010)
    quoting In         re   Pers. Restraint of Davis, 
    152 Wn.2d 647
    , 672, 
    101 P. 3d 1
     ( 2004) ( internal
    quotations marks omitted).                In order to meet this burden, the petitioner`inust support the petition
    with   facts      or evidence and        may    not      rely solely      on   conclusory   allegations"   Monschke, 160 Wn.
    App.    at   488 ( citing RAP 16. 7( a)( 2)( i);             In re Pers. Restraint of Cook, 
    114 Wn.2d 802
    , 813 -14,
    
    792 P. 2d 506
     ( 1990);            In re Pers. Restraint of Williams, 
    111 Wn.2d 353
    , 365, 
    759 P. 2d 436
    1988)).         Further, the petitioner has the burden of demonstrating "that the `factual allegations are
    based   on more          than   speculation, conjecture, or            inadmissible    hearsay." Monschke, 160 Wn. App.
    at 489 ( quoting In re Pers. Restraint of Rice, 
    118 Wn.2d 876
    , 886, 
    828 P.2d 1086
    , cert. denied
    
    506 U.S. 958
     ( 1992)).
    Here, Griffin filed an amended petition that did not include even general substantive facts
    supporting his           alleged grounds        for      relief.   It stated six grounds for relief; however, he did not
    support      the   stated grounds        for   relief,     even    with   conclusory   allegations?    At a bare minimum, a
    personal restraint petition must include:
    A    statement      of (   i) the facts upon which the claim of unlawful restraint of
    petitioner is based and the evidence available to support the factual allegations,
    2 For example, Griffin's first ground for relief stated:
    Griffin should be given a new trial or released from confinement pursuant to RAP
    16. 4( c)( 2), because the conviction was obtained and the sentence was imposed in
    violation of his right to effective assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal as
    guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and Article
    1, section 22 of the Washington State Constitution.
    Amended Pers. Restraint Pefr                   at   3.     This failed to allege the specific ground or grounds upon
    which    his ineffective          assistance        of counsel      claim was      based.    Griffin's remaining grounds for
    relief are stated in a similar manner.
    5
    No. 42012 -1 - I1
    ii) why other remedies are inadequate, and ( iii) why the petitioner's restraint is
    unlawful.
    RAP 16. 7( a)( 2).         A personal restraint petition need not include legal argument or authority if
    legal   argument      and    authority is included in accompanying                     briefing.   RAP 16. 7( a)( 2), 16. 10.
    However, because Griffin's amended petition did not include any facts supporting his bare
    allegations that his restraint was unlawful, Griffin's amended petition is inadequate on its face
    and does not meet the bare requirements of RAP 16. 7( a)( 2) for a personal restraint petition.
    Simply filing a document labeled a personal restraint petition and alleging broad categories of
    error   does      not make      the document       a personal      restraint petition.       Accordingly, unless Griffin
    timely cured the inadequacies of the amended petition, we must deny it.
    3
    The State        relies   on   RAP 16. 10( a)( 1)       to argue that unless the brief is filed with the
    petition,    it   cannot   be   considered    to   cure   any inadequacies in the          petition   itself. Griffin argues
    that under RAP 1. 2 this court will liberally construe the court rules to `facilitate the decision of
    cases on    the    merits"   RAP 1. 2( a).     According to Griffin, we should consider his amended petition
    and his brief as a whole and, as a result, his petition is not.inadequate.
    Our court rules govern the form of a petition. Therefore, we are free to liberally interpret
    them to     provide    flexibility       in the form in   which       the   petition   is filed. Griffin is correct that we
    may liberally construe the court rules such that we may consider a petition that makes bald
    allegations regarding the stated grounds for relief without any supporting facts together with a
    3
    RAP 16. 10 states, in relevant part:
    a) Briefs Allowed. The following briefs may be, but need not be, filed:
    1) Petitioner' s Opening Brief Petitioner's opening brief, which should be
    filed with the petition.
    6
    No. 42012 -1 - I1
    brief that contains factual allegations, evidence, and legal argument or authority as a complete
    adequate petition.          See RAP 16. 7, 16. 10.      Further, we may liberally construe the court rules such
    that a brief in support of a petition need not be filed with a petition, but rather, may be filed after
    the   petition.     RAP 16. 10.    Therefore, if Griffin had timely filed both his amended petition and his
    brief, Griffin's         petition would      be   complete.    However, Griffin did not file both his amended
    petition and        his brief timely.     Accordingly, we must decide whether Griffin could cure a timely
    filed but inadequate amended petition with an untimely brief. The answer is no.
    To decide otherwise would require us to disregard the statutory time bar in RCW
    10. 73. 090. Our Supreme Court has held that RCW 10. 73. 090 functions as a statute of limitations
    not as a   jurisdictional      statute.      Bonds, 
    165 Wn.2d at 140
    .   Given that RCW 10. 73. 090 functions
    as a statute of limitations, we do not have the authority to disregard it under the guise of liberally
    interpreting our own court rules. As our Supreme Court has stated:
    The defendant is not seeking a waiver of a court rule, however, but of a statute of
    limitation. RAP 18. 8( ar does not allow the court to waive or alter statutes.
    Inre    the   Pers. Restraint     ofBenn,         134Wn.2d868, 939, 
    952 P. 2d 116
     ((1998).           Therefore, to the
    extent that Griffin argues that the court rules grant us the authority to accept a petition that is
    untimely because it was not sufficient until after the time bar has expired, we disagree.
    Here, Griffin       asks us   to   endorse   the   practice of    filing" placeholdei' petitions. Reply Br. of
    Petitioner     at   9.    We decline this request because to do so would allow petitioners to file any
    document labeled a personal restraint petition and then later file a document curing the
    4 RAP 18. 8( a) allows us to `waive or alter the provisions of any of these rules and enlarge or.
    shorten    the time       within which an act must           be done"     Although Griffin relies on RAP 1. 2 rather
    than RAP 18. 8( a), he still asks us to rely on court rules to alter the time bar imposed by statute.
    7
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    inadequacies      sometime       before this      court considers          the   petition.        A petitioner cannot avoid the
    time bar by filing a skeletal, inadequate petition before the statutory deadline, and then file a
    document meeting the           requirements        for   an acceptable petition after              the deadline.   Griffin has not
    cited any authority supporting the contention that Washington courts accept the practice of filing
    placeholder petitions.          DeHeer v. Seattle Post -
    Intelligencer, 
    60 Wn.2d 122
    , 126, 
    372 P.2d 193
    1962) ( " Where no authorities are cited in support of a proposition, the court is not required to
    search out authorities, but may assume that counsel, after diligent search, has found none. ").
    Griffin   also states   that "[ h] ere, this Court' s rulings allowed for a placeholder petition and
    5
    for later    briefing. "       Reply   Br.    of   Pet' r   at   9.       Griffin' s argument presumes that this court
    evaluated     and    endorsed      Griffin'   s   amended        petition        as    adequate.       Griffin' s presumption is
    incorrect.
    The first order granted Griffin' s motion to file the amended petition and stayed
    consideration of      the     amended petition while         Griffin investigated               potential   DNA   evidence.   When
    the motion was granted, there was no obligation to determine whether Griffin' s amended petition
    complied with       the   minimum requirements of                RAP 16. 7.           As explained above, filing a document
    labeled a personal restraint petition does not mean that the petitioner has filed an adequate
    petition.    Likewise, the order lifting the stay did not endorse Griffin' s petition as adequate.
    Rather the ruling lifted the stay Griffin                   requested       and       set   a   briefing   schedule.   Under RAP
    5 Griffin, however, does not assert that compliance with this court' s orders entitles him to relief
    under  the doctrine of equitable tolling. See Bonds, 
    165 Wn.2d at 141
    ; In re Pers. Restraint of
    Hoisington, 
    99 Wn. App. 423
    , 431 - 32, 
    993 P. 2d 296
     ( 2000). At oral argument the State noted
    that Griffin has not asserted equitable tolling and suggested that equitable tolling does not apply
    in this   case.     Griffin made no effort to acknowledge or respond to the State and has failed to
    assert    that we should apply the        doctrine        of equitable       tolling. Therefore, we do not address the
    issue any further. See RAP 10. 3( a)( 6).
    8
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    16. 10( c)   we      may      order     or   allow   briefing   at   any time.   See also Bonds, 
    165 Wn.2d at 140
    .
    However, allowing briefing, at counsel' s request, prior to consideration of the petition, does not
    require this court to first evaluate the adequacy of the petition.
    This court repeatedly reminded Griffin of the one year time bar in RCW 10. 73. 090.
    Because Griffin was repeatedly told that the one year time bar would be applied to any additional
    issues or supplemental petitions, Griffin was on notice that the rulings were not altering the time
    bar. Therefore, Griffin should have been aware that the time bar expired on December 10, 2011,
    one   day    after   he filed his        amended petition and         his   motion   to stay.   This court' s rulings did not
    alter the procedural requirements under RAP 16. 7, and the rulings did not alter the time bar
    imposed      by   RCW 10. 73. 090.                More importantly, the rulings did not give Griffin permission to,
    nor do they absolve Griffin of, filing an amended petition that he knew or should have known did
    not meet       any    requirement            of   RAP 16. 7.    Accordingly, we reject Griffin' s assertion that this
    court' s earlier rulings granted permission to file an inadequate placeholder petition.
    Finally, Griffin argues that his actions in this case are acceptable because:
    Developing the factual and legal arguments in subsequent pleadings, after DNA
    test results, would ensure that this Court and the State could consider the merits of
    all of [ Griffin' s] claims in a fully informed proceeding. This is a more efficient
    use of everyone' s resources than piecemeal litigation by way of presenting the
    Court with multiple, successive petitions.
    Reply    Br.   of    Pet' r   at   7.   Although we agree that judicial efficiency is a laudable goal, filing a
    baldly inadequate petition was not necessary to achieve it. Moreover, none of the stated grounds
    for relief in Griffin' s amended petition appear to rely in any way on the results of subsequent
    DNA testing.          Accordingly, there is no excuse for asserting them without relying on any factual
    basis.       Further, Griffin            could     have filed    an   adequate   petition,      asked for a stay and then
    9
    No. 42012 -1 - II
    reevaluated     the   merits   of   the   original   claims   when   the stay   was   lifted.   Griffin chose to do
    6
    neither.
    Accordingly, we deny Griffin' s petition.
    6 In addition, we note that newly discovered evidence, including new DNA evidence, is an
    exception      to the time bar                              filing a successive petition. RCW
    and can establish good cause        for
    10. 73. 100( 1), . 140. Accordingly, although it may not have been the most efficient option,
    Griffin would not have been barred from raising claims based on newly discovered DNA
    evidence in a subsequent petition.
    10