Thomas, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 0310198
ANTONIO DWAYNE HALBERT, PETITIONER v. MICHIGAN
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MICHIGAN
[June 23, 2005]
Justice Thomas, with whom Justice Scalia
joins, and with whom The Chief Justice joins as to all but Part
IIIB3, dissenting.
Petitioner Antonio Halbert pleaded no
contest to charges that he sexually assaulted his stepdaughter and
another young girl. Michigan law did not provide Halbertas a
defendant convicted by a plea of guilty or no contestan appointed
attorney to help him prepare an application for leave to appeal to
the Michigan Court of Appeals. The Court holds Michigans law
unconstitutional as applied to Halbert. It fails, however, to
ground its analysis in any particular provision of the Constitution
or in this Courts precedents. It also ignores that, even if there
is a right to counsel in the circumstances at issue, the right is
waivable and was validly waived here. I respectfully dissent.
I
To understand why the Courts holding is
an unwarranted extension of our precedents, it is necessary first
to understand the limits that Michigan places on the provision of
court-appointed counsel for defendants who plead guilty or no
contest. Before 1994, Michigan afforded all criminal defendants the
right to appeal their convictions to the Michigan Court of Appeals.
By the early 1990s, however, the Michigan Court of Appeals had a
backlog of thousands of cases awaiting decision, nearly a third of
which were appeals by defendants who had pleaded guilty or no
contest.
People v.
Bulger, 462 Mich. 495, 504, 614
N. W. 2d 103, 107 (2000). To reduce this backlog, Michigan
voters amended the Michigan Constitution in 1994 to provide that
[i]n every criminal prosecution, the accused shall
have an
appeal as a matter of right, except [that]
an appeal by an
accused who pleads guilty or nolo contendere shall be by leave of
the court. Mich. Const., Art. 1, §20;
Bulger,
supra,
at 504, 614 N. W. 2d, at 107. This constitutional amendment
created a two-track system for Michigan defendants: The Michigan
Court of Appeals must hear the appeals of those who dispute their
guilt, while it may elect to hear the appeals of those who concede
or do not contest their guilt of the substantive crime.
In 1999, the Michigan Legislature
enacted the statute at issue here. It provides that, in general, a
defendant who pleads guilty, guilty but mentally ill, or nolo
contendere shall not have appellate counsel appointed for review of
the defendants conviction or sentence. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann.
§770.3a(1) (West 2000). Defendants who plead guilty or no contest
do not, however, invariably lose the right to counsel on appeal;
the statute contains exceptions to the general rule. The trial
court must appoint appellate counsel for plea-convicted defendants
if the State seeks leave to appeal, the defendants sentence
exceeds the upper limit of the applicable minimum guidelines range,
or the defendant seeks leave to appeal a conditional plea.
§770.3a(2). Further, the trial court may appoint appellate counsel
for plea-convicted defendants who seek leave to appeal certain
sentencing errors. §770.3a(3). Finally, if the Court of Appeals
grants leave to appeal, the case proceeds as an appeal of right,
Mich. Ct. Rule 7.205(D)(3) (2005), and the plea-convicted defendant
is entitled to appointed counsel, Mich. Comp. Laws Ann.
§770.3a(2)(c). Thus, plea-convicted defendants lack appellate
counsel only in certain types of cases, and only then when they are
seeking leave to appeal.
II
The majority nevertheless holds that
Michigans system is constitutionally inadequate. It finds that all
plea-convicted indigent defendants have the right to appellate
counsel when seeking leave to appeal. The majority does not say
where in the Constitution that right is locatedthe Due Process
Clause, the Equal Protection Clause, or some purported confluence
of the two.
Ante, at 23. Nor does the majority attempt to
anchor its holding in the history of those Clauses.
M. L. B. v.
S. L. J., 519 U.S.
102, 131, 133, 138 (1996) (Thomas, J., dissenting). Nor does the
majority even attempt to ground its holding in the entirety of this
Courts jurisprudence, which does not require paid appellate
assistance for indigent criminal defendants.
Id., at
131138. The majority ignores the bulk of that jurisprudence and
leaves those arguments unanswered.
Instead, the majority pins its hopes on
a single case:
Douglas v.
California, 372 U.S. 353
(1963).
Douglas, however, does not support extending the
right to counsel to any form of discretionary review, as
Ross v.
Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600 (1974), and later cases
make clear. Moreover, Michigan has not engaged in the sort of
invidious discrimination against indigent defendants that
Douglas condemns. Michigan has done no more than recognize
the undeniable difference between defendants who plead guilty and
those who maintain their innocence, in an attempt to divert
resources from largely frivolous appeals to more meritorious ones.
The majority substitutes its own policy preference for that of
Michigan voters, and it does so based on an untenable reading of
Douglas.
A
In
Douglas, California granted an
initial appeal as of right to all convicted criminal defendants.
372 U.S., at 356. However, the California District Court of Appeal
appointed counsel for indigent defendants only after determining
whether counsel would be useful to the defendant or the court.
Ibid. Thus the California appellate court was forced to
prejudge the merits of indigent defendants appeals, while it
judged the merits of other defendants appeals only after briefing
and oral argument.
Ibid.
In previous cases, this Court had
considered state-imposed conditions like transcript and filing fees
that prevented indigent criminal defendants from obtaining any
appellate review.
Ross,
supra, at 606607 (discussing
Griffin v.
Illinois, 351 U.S. 12 (1956), and its
progeny). By contrast, in
Douglas, California provided
appellate review to all criminal defendants, but it did not provide
a state subsidy for indigent defendants whose claims appeared
unlikely to benefit from counsels assistance. This Court
nevertheless held that when States provide a first appeal as of
right, they must supply indigent defendants with counsel.
Ross,
supra, at 607. In
Ross, however, this
Court declined to extend
Douglas right to counsel beyond
initial appeals as of right. States need not appoint counsel for
indigent defendants who seek discretionary review in a States
highest court or this Court.
Ross, supra, at 616618.
Michigans system bears some similarity
to the state systems at issue in both
Douglas and
Ross. Like the defendant in
Douglas, Halbert requests
appointed counsel for an initial appeal before an intermediate
appellate court. But like the defendant in
Ross, Halbert
requests appointed counsel for an appeal that is discretionary, not
as of right. Crucially, however,
Douglas noted that its
decision extended only to initial appeals
as of rightand
later cases have repeatedly reaffirmed that understanding.
1 This Court has
never required States to appoint counsel for discretionary review.
Ross,
supra, at 610;
Murray v.
Giarratano, 492 U.S. 1, 1011 (1989); see also
Pennsylvania v.
Finley, 481 U.S. 551, 555 (1987). And
an appeal permitted only by leave of the court, Mich. Const.,
Art. 1, §20, is discretionaryas the Michigan Supreme Court has
recognized,
Bulger, 462 Mich., at 519, 614 N. W. 2d, at
113;
id., at 542542, 614 N. W. 2d, at 125 (Cavanagh,
J., dissenting). Neither
Douglas nor any other decision of
this Court warrants extending the right to counsel to discretionary
review, even on a defendants initial appeal.
Just as important, the rationale of
Douglas does not support extending the right to counsel to
this particular form of discretionary review. Admittedly, the
precise rationale for the
Griffin/
Douglas line of
cases has never been made explicit.
Ross,
supra, at
608609. Those cases, however, have a common theme. States may not
impose financial barriers that preclude indigent defendants from
securing appellate review altogether.
Griffin, 351 U.S., at
1718 (plurality opinion);
id., at 22 (Frankfurter, J.,
concurring in judgment);
Burns v.
Ohio, 360 U.S. 252,
258 (1959);
Smith v.
Bennett, 365 U.S. 708, 713714
(1961). Nor may States create unreasoned
distinctions among defendants,
M. L. B.,
supra, at 111 (quoting
Rinaldi v.
Yeager, 384
U.S. 305, 310 (1966));
Douglas,
supra, at 356;
Griffin,
supra, at 2223 (Frankfurter, J., concurring
in judgment), that arbitrarily cut off appeal rights for indigents
while leaving open avenues of appeals for more affluent persons,
Ross, 417 U.S., at 607.
Far from being an arbitrary or
unreasoned distinction, Michigans differentiation between
defendants convicted at trial and defendants convicted by plea is
sensible. First and perhaps foremost, the danger of wrongful
convictions is less significant than in
Douglas. In
Douglas, California preliminarily denied counsel to all
indigent defendants, regardless of whether they maintained their
innocence at trial or conceded their guilt by plea. Here, Michigan
preliminarily denies paid counsel only to indigent defendants who
admit or do not contest their guilt. And because a defendant who
pleads guilty may not thereafter raise independent claims relating
to the deprivation of constitutional rights that occurred prior to
the entry of the guilty plea,
Tollett v.
Henderson,
411 U.S. 258, 267 (1973), the potential issues that can be raised
on appeal are more limited,
Bulger, 462 Mich., at 517, and
n. 7, 614 N. W. 2d, at 112113, and n. 7. Further,
as the Michigan Supreme Court has explained,
[p]lea proceedings are also shorter, simpler, and more routine
than trials; the record most often consists of the factual basis
for the plea that is provided to the trial court. In contrast with
trials, less danger exists in plea cases that the record will be so
unclear, or the errors so hidden, that the defendants appeal will
be reduced to a meaningless ritual.
Id., at 517, 614
N. W. 2d, at 112.
When a defendant pleads in open court, there is less need for
counsel to develop the record and refine claims to present to an
appellate court. These are all [r]easoned
distinctions between defendants convicted by trial and
those convicted by their own plea.
M. L. B., 519
U.S., at 111 (quoting
Rinaldi, supra, at 310).
The brief history of Michigans system
confirms this. When Michigan voters amended the State Constitution
to establish the current system, roughly 13,000 civil and criminal
appeals per year clogged the Michigan Court of Appeals docket. Of
those, nearly a third were appeals by criminal defendants who had
pleaded guilty or no contest. Even though at the time
plea-convicted defendants were appointed paid appellate counsel,
few of these defendants were granted relief on appeal. Simply put,
Michigans bar and bench were devoting a substantial portion of
their scarce resources to thousands of cases with little practical
effect. Reallocating resources was not invidious discrimination
against criminal defendants, indigent or otherwise.
Douglas,
372 U.S., at 356 (internal quotation omitted). It was an attempt to
ensure that frivolous appeals [were] not subsidized and public
moneys not needlessly spent.
Griffin,
supra, at 24
(Frankfurter, J., concurring in judgment).
Todays decision will therefore do no
favors for indigent defendants in Michiganat least, indigent
defendants with nonfrivolous claims. While defendants who admit
their guilt will receive more attention, defendants who maintain
their innocence will receive less. Even some defendants who plead
guilty will feel the pinch, because plea-convicted defendants are
entitled to counsel in preparing their leave applications if, for
example, they appeal from conditional pleas, Mich. Comp. Laws Ann.
§770.3a(2)(d) (2005), or their sentences exceed the applicable
guidelines ranges, §770.3a(2)(b). And any plea-convicted defendant
granted leave to appeal is entitled to appointed counsel.
§770.3a(2)(c). Holding Michigans resources constant (since we have
no control over the States bar or budget), the majoritys policy
choice to redistribute the States limited resources only harms
those most likely to have worthwhile claimsto say nothing of the
cost of enabling courts and prosecutors to respond to the
over-lawyering of minor cases.
Alabama v.
Shelton,
535 U.S. 654, 681 (2002) (Scalia, J., dissenting); cf.
Rompilla v.
Beard,
ante, at 8 (Kennedy, J.,
dissenting). Then, too, Michigan is under no constitutional
obligation to provide appeals for plea-convicted defendants.
Ante, at 2 (citing
McKane v.
Durston, 153 U.S.
684 (1894)). Michigan may decline to provide an appellate process
altogether (since the Courts ruling increases the cost of having a
system of appellate review). Surely plea-convicted defendants would
prefer appeals with limited access to counsel than no appeals at
all.
B
The majority does not attempt to
demonstrate that Michigans system is the sort of unreasoned
discrimination against indigent defendants
Douglas
prohibits. Instead, the majority says that this case is earmarked
by two considerations that were also key to this Courts decision
in
Douglas: First, when a plea-convicted defendant seeks
leave to appeal, the Michigan Court of Appeals adjudicates the
leave application with reference to the merits.
Ante, at 9.
Second, the plea-convicted defendant who seeks leave to appeal is
generally ill equipped to represent [himself].
Ibid.
Neither of these arguments is correct.
1
The majority reasons that in
adjudicating an application for leave to appeal, the Michigan Court
of Appeals is guided
by the merits of the particular defendants
claims.
Ante, at 11. The distinction that
Douglas
drew, however, was not between appellate systems that involve some
evaluation of the merits of the applicants claims and those that
do not,
ante, at 10, but instead between discretionary and
mandatory review.
Supra, at 46. Of course the California
intermediate courts in
Douglas evaluated cases on their
merits: These courts were hearing appeals as of right.
The Michigan Court of Appeals probably
does consider the merits of the applicants claims in exercising
its discretion; so do other courts of discretionary review,
including this Court. For instance, this Court would be unlikely to
grant a case to announce a rule that could not alter the cases
disposition, or to correct an error that had not affected the
proceedings below. This Court often considers whether errors are
worth correcting in both plenary and summary dispositions. None of
this converts discretionary, error-noticing review into mandatory,
error-correcting review.
Likewise, the Michigan Court of Appeals
is not required to hear particular cases or correct particular
errors. It may elect to hear cases when it finds the trial courts
disposition questionable or dubious. Or it may elect to hear cases
when it finds the trial courts disposition important or
interesting. For all we know, it may (and probably does) consider
both. Regardless, the Court of Appeals decision to grant review
remains discretionary, because it does not depend on whether
there has been a correct adjudication of guilt in every
individual case.
Ross, 417 U.S., at 615. Like other courts
of discretionary review, the Court of Appeals may opt to correct
errors,
ante, at 1011, and n. 3but it is not
compelled to do so.
The majority appears to dispute that
review before the Michigan Court of Appeals is truly discretionary,
ante, at 1011, and n. 4, but it provides no support
for its speculation. Unlike the California District Court of Appeal
in
Douglas, the Michigan Court of Appeals has discretion in
deciding whether to grant leave applications. See
Bulger,
462 Mich., at 519, 614 N. W. 2d, at 113 (describing the issue
as whether a defendant is entitled under the federal constitution
to appointed counsel in a first
discretionary appeal from a
plea-based conviction (emphasis in original));
id., at
542543, 614 N. W. 2d, at 125 (Cavanagh, J., dissenting)
(Nothing in our court rules or statute precludes the Court of
Appeals from denying leave even though it may believe that the
trial courts decision was incorrect). So far as we can tell, the
Michigan Court of Appeals decision to grant or deny a leave
application is not constrained by any state constitutional
provision, statute, or court rule. The Michigan Court of Appeals
may deny leave for any reason, or for no reason at all.
The majoritys holding suggests that
Michigans system would pass constitutional muster if the Court of
Appeals recited lack of importance in the grounds presented as
its ground for denying leave,
ante, at 1012, or if its
decisional criteria were set forth in a statute, judicial decision,
or court rule,
ibid. Yet the relevant inquiry under
Douglas and
Ross is whether the Court of Appeals is
obliged to review the casenot whether the Court of Appeals must or
does offer a particular ground for declining review.
2
The majority also asserts that, without
counsel, plea-convicted defendants who seek leave to appeal are
generally ill equipped to represent themselves.
Ante, at
9. This overgeneralizes
Douglas rationale. The
Douglas Court was concerned with the barren record that
would follow a defendant on appeal. 372 U.S., at 356. For where
the record [was] unclear or the errors [were] hidden, the
appellate court would have difficulty detecting errors without the
assistance of counsel.
Id., at 358.
This is in part why this Court in
Ross did not extend the right to counsel to discretionary
review before the North Carolina Supreme Court. Before that court,
a defendant applying for leave had a transcript or other record of
trial proceedings, a brief on his behalf in the Court of Appeals
setting forth his claims of error, and in many cases an opinion by
the Court of Appeals disposing of his case.
Ross, 417 U.S.,
at 615. Coupled with whatever the defendant might submit on his
own, these materials provided the State Supreme Court with an
adequate basis for its decision to grant or deny review. Ibid.
The majority does not argue that
indigent plea-convicted defendants who file leave applications do
so with a barren record,
Douglas,
supra, at 356, or
that the Michigan Court of Appeals lacks an adequate basis for
reviewing their leave applications,
Ross,
supra, at
615. The Michigan Supreme Court put it best:
[Michigans] court rules require trial counsel to assist the
defendant in organizing and presenting to the trial court any
potential appellate issues that warrant preservation. Accordingly,
a pro se defendant seeking discretionary review will have the
benefit of a transcript, trial counsels framing of the issues in
the motion to withdraw, and the trial courts ruling on the
motion.
Bulger,
supra, at 518, 614 N. W. 2d, at
113; see also Mich. Ct. Rule 6.005(H)(4) (2005).
As in
Ross, these materials aid both the plea-convicted
defendant and the Michigan Court of Appeals in identifying claims
appropriate for plenary consideration. A plea-convicted defendant
does not face a record unreviewed by counsel, and he does not lack
any reasoned treatment of his claims. And, again, plea proceedings
tend to be more transparent than trials,
supra, at 6; less
danger exists in plea cases that the record will be so unclear, or
the errors so hidden,
Bulger,
supra, at 517, 614
N. W. 2d, at 112, that the Michigan Court of Appeals will be
unable to identify issues that deserve further examination on
appeal. After all, the Michigan Court of Appeals need know only
enough to decide whether to grant further review. Should it elect
to do so, Michigan law requires the appointment of counsel to aid
in the appeal. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §770.3a(2)(c) (2005).
The majoritys unwillingness to confront
the distinctions between Michigans system and the California
system at issue in
Douglas is made clear by its reliance on
Swenson v.
Bosler, 386 U.S. 258 (1967)
(per
curiam).
Swenson considered whether indigent defendants
convicted at trial have a right to appointed counsel during their
initial appeal as of right, even if the State provides indigent
defendants with a trial transcript and a motion for a new trial
prepared by trial counsel.
Id., at 258259. But
Douglas had already answered that question, as this Court
summarily declared: [Appointed counsel] may not be denied to a
criminal defendant, solely because of his indigency, on the only
appeal which the State affords him
as a matter of right.
386 U.S., at 259 (emphasis added). Of course, Michigans entire
argument is that there is a [r]easoned distinction between
defendants convicted following trials and pleas, as there is
between appeals as of right and discretionary review.
M. L. B., 519 U.S., at 111 (citation omitted);
Brief for Respondent 28. This Courts brief,
per curiam
opinion in
Swenson did not consider, much less address,
these arguments.
Lacking support in this Courts cases,
the majority effects a not-so-subtle shift from whether the record
is adequate to enable discretionary review to whether
plea-convicted defendants are generally able to [n]aviga[te] the
appellate process without a lawyers assistance.
Ante, at
14. This rationale lacks any stopping point.
Pro se
defendants may have difficulty navigating discretionary direct
appeals and collateral proceedings, but this Court has never
extended the right to counsel beyond first appeals as of right.
Supra, at 45, and n. 1. The majority does not
demonstrate that
pro se defendants have any more difficulty
filing leave applications before the Michigan courts than, say,
filing petitions for certiorari before this Court.
In fact, this Court receives thousands
of
pro se petitions every year that list the date and
nature of the judgment or order appealed from, Mich. Ct. Rule
7.205(B)(1) (2005); reci[te] the appellants allegations of error
and the relief sought,
ibid.; and se[t] forth a concise
argument
in support of the appellants position on each issue,
ibid. See this Courts Rule 14 (setting forth analogous
requirements for petitions for writs of certiorari). Michigan
actually provides a three-page form application accompanied by two
pages of instructions for defendants seeking leave to appeal after
sentencing on a plea. It counsels defendants to state the issues
and facts relevant to the appeal, and state the law that supports
your position and explain how the law applies to the facts of your
case.
Ante, at 15 (internal quotation marks omitted). The
majority gives no clue as to how Michigan could make its procedures
for seeking leave to appeal less intimidating to the uncounseled.
Ibid. Regardless, Michigans procedures are more than
sufficient to enable discretionary review.
The majority then attempts to soften the
blow by saying that it is doing the State a favor, because
providing indigents with appellate counsel will yield applications
easier to comprehend.
Ante, at 1516. Even assuming the
majoritys paternalism is accurate, there is no evidence that the
Michigan courts currently have difficulty adjudicating leave
applications. At the least, the majority leaves unexplained why the
Michigan courts have greater difficulty than do state and federal
courts considering discretionary direct appeals and collateral
proceedings. And even assuming the Michigan courts have special
difficulty, it is unlikely any marginal gains will offset the harms
wrought by the majoritys preference for redistributing resources
to a set of generally less meritorious claims. Whether or not one
agrees with the policy choice made by Michigan voters, it is
perfectly constitutional.
III
Even assuming that there is a right to
appointed appellate counsel in these circumstances, the right, like
the vast majority of other procedural rights, is waivable, despite
the majoritys dictum to the contrary. Moreover, Michigans
statutory prohibition on appointed appellate counsel does not
prevent defendants from waiving any constitutional right to such
counsel. And, in this case, Halberts waiver was knowing and
intelligent.
A
Legal rights, even constitutional ones,
are presumptively waivable.
United States v.
Mezzanatto, 513 U.S. 196, 200201 (1995); see also
New
York v.
Hill, 528 U.S. 110, 114 (2000);
Peretz v.
United States, 501 U.S. 923, 936 (1991) (The most basic
rights of criminal defendants are
subject to waiver). The
presumption of waivability holds true for the right to counsel.
This Court has held repeatedly that a defendant may waive that
right, both at trial and at the entry of a guilty plea, so long as
the waiver is knowing and intelligent.
Iowa v.
Tovar,
541 U.S. 77, 88 (2004);
Faretta v.
California, 422
U.S. 806, 835 (1975);
Adams v.
United States ex rel.
McCann, 317 U.S. 269, 279 (1942);
Johnson v.
Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 464465 (1938). Michigan seeks a
waiver no more extensive than those this Court has already
sanctioned at other stages of a criminal proceeding: It asks
defendants convicted by plea to waive the right to appointed
counsel on appeal.
There may be some nonwaivable rights:
ones so fundamental to the reliability of the factfinding process
that they may never be waived without irreparably discrediting the
federal courts.
Mezzanatto,
supra, at 204 (internal
quotation marks, brackets, and citation omitted). The right to
appointed counsel on discretionary appeal from a guilty plea,
however, is not one of them
. Even assuming that the
assistance of appellate counsel enhances the reliability of the
factfinding process by correcting errors in that process, it cannot
possibly be so fundamental to the process that its absence
irreparably discredit[s] the federal courts, particularly since
the Constitution guarantees no right to an appeal at all,
e.g.,
M. L. B., 519 U.S., at 110, 120.
Furthermore, as I have explained, the record of a plea proceeding
is fully adequate to enable discretionary review and, in turn, to
permit the correction of errors in the factfinding process when
necessary.
Supra, at 11 (explaining that a plea-convicted
defendant does not face a record unreviewed by counsel, and does
not lack any reasoned treatment of his claims). And, finally, even
if the reliability of the appellate process rather than the trial
process is the relevant consideration here, the assistance of
appellate counsel is not so fundamental to the appellate process
that its absence deprives that process of meaning.
Supra, at
6, 1113. Cf
. Hill, supra, at 116117 (a
constitutional protection may be waived even if it benefits society
as well as criminal defendants).
Petitioner emphasizes the difficulty of
the choice to which Michigans statute puts criminal defendants:
proceed to trial and guarantee the appointment of appellate
counsel, or plead guilty and forgo that benefit. But this Court has
repeatedly recognized that difficult choices are a necessary
byproduct of the criminal justice system, and of plea bargaining in
particular. See,
e.g.,
Mezzanatto,
supra, at
210;
Brady v.
United States, 397 U.S. 742, 750
(1970). Michigans waiver requires a choice no more demanding than
others criminal defendants regularly face.
B
The majority maintains, first, that
Halbert could not waive the right to appointed appellate counsel
because Michigan law afforded him no such right to waive; second,
in dictum, that the right cannot be waived; and, third, that even
if the right can be waived, Halbert did not knowingly and
intelligently waive it here. The Court is wrong in each
respect.
1
The majority claims that [a]t the time
he entered his plea, Halbert, in common with other defendants
convicted on their pleas, had no recognized right to appointed
appellate counsel he could elect to forgo.
Ante, at 16.
This assertion apparently refers to the Michigan statute, Mich.
Comp. Laws Ann. §770.3a (West 2000). At the time of Halberts plea,
the statute provided that, if a defendant was convicted by plea, he
generally could not receive appointed appellate counsel. The
majoritys reasoning is flawed for at least three reasons.
First, the statement that Halbert, in
common with other defendants convicted on their pleas, had no
recognized right to appointed appellate counsel,
ante, at
16, is either incorrect or irrelevant. If (as we must) we view the
waiver decision from the perspective of Halbert and other
defendants
before entering a plea, the statement is wrong as
a matter of Michigan law. The Michigan Court Rules applicable at
the time of Halberts plea explicitly provided that he was entitled
to appointed appellate counsel if convicted following a trial.
Mich. Ct. Rule 6.425(F)(1)(b) (Lexis 2001) (In a case involving a
conviction following a trial, if the defendant is indigent, the
court must enter an order appointing a lawyer if the request is
filed within 42 days after sentencing or within the time for filing
an appeal of right). Michigan law thus gave Halbert, before
entering a plea, the choice either to proceed to trial and
guarantee himself appointed appellate counsel, or to plead guilty
or no contest and forgo appointed appellate counsel in most
circumstances.
Alternately, by stating that Halbert,
in common with other defendants convicted on their pleas, had no
recognized right to appointed appellate counsel,
ante, at
16, the majority might mean that Michigan law afforded Halbert no
right to appointed appellate counsel following a plea-based
conviction. If so, the statement is true but irrelevant. Of course
Michigan law did not afford Halbert a right to appointed counsel
once he pleaded no contest to the charged crimes. But the question
is whether, by pleading no contest with knowledge of the condition
(no paid counsel on appeal), Halbert accepted the condition and
thereby waived his right to paid counsel on appeal. In other words,
the question is whether Halbert had no right to counsel following
his plea, because he had elected to forgo the right
by
pleading.
Second, even if the majority were
correct about Michigan law, that is beside the point. At issue here
is whether Halbert waived any federal constitutional right to
appointed appellate counsel he might have enjoyed. Whether Michigan
law provides for such counsel says nothing about whether a
defendant possesses (and hence can waive) a federal constitutional
right to that effect. That Michigan, as a matter of state law,
prohibited Halbert from receiving appointed appellate counsel if he
pleaded guilty or no contest, is irrelevant to whether Halbert had
(and could waive) an independent federal constitutional right to
such counsel.
Third, the majority implies that if the
existence of a right to paid appellate counsel had been something
more than no[t] recognized at the time of Halberts plea, then
the right would have been waivable,
ante, at 16. What this
cryptic statement means is unclear. But it cannot possibly mean
that only rights that have been explicitly and uniformly recognized
by statute or case law may be waived. If that is what the statement
means, then the majority has outlawed all conditional waivers (ones
in which a defendant agrees that, if he has such a right, he waives
it).
I take it instead that the reference to
rights that are something more than no[t] recognized, and hence
waivable,
ante, at 16, means not just rights that are
uniformly recognized, but also rights whose existence is unsettled.
If this understanding of the majoritys rule is correct, then the
rule does not justify its claim that the constitutional right at
issue was wholly unrecognized. In fact, the existence of such a
right was unsettled when Halbert entered his plea. By that date,
November 7, 2001, the Michigan Supreme Court had issued
Bulger, 462 Mich. 495, 614 N. W. 2d 103, sustaining
over a vigorous dissent the practice of denying the appointment of
appellate counsel on application for leave to appeal a plea-based
conviction; and a Federal District Court had enjoined Michigan
state judges from denying the appointment of appellate counsel to
indigents pursuant to the state statute, on the ground that the
statute was unconstitutional,
Tesmer v.
Kowalski, 114
F. Supp. 2d 622, 625629 (ED Mich. 2000). The majority appears
to focus on the fact that Michigan law did not afford defendants
this right, but, again, state law is irrelevant to whether they
possessed a federal constitutional right. The existence of that
right was unsettled at the time of Halberts plea; hence, on what I
take to be the majoritys own terms, the right should have been
waivable.
2
The majority attempts to deflect this
criticism by saying that nothing in Halberts plea colloquy
indicates that he waived an unsettled
but assumed right to the
assistance of appointed appellate counsel, post-plea.
Ante,
at 16, n. 7. But any arguable inadequacy in the plea colloquy
is a separate issue from, and is irrelevant to, the question at
hand: whether the right was recognized, and hence waivable by
Halbert (or any other defendant deciding how to plead),
irrespective of the content of the plea colloquy.
2
The majority compounds its error by
expressing doubt in dictum that the right to appointed appellate
counsel can be waived.
Ante, at 17, n. 8. This ignores
the well-established presumption of waivability,
e.g.,
Mezzanatto, 513 U.S., at 200201;
Hill, 528 U.S., at
114. By ignoring the presumption, the majority effectively reverses
it, espousing an analysis that is directly contrary to the
approach we have taken in the context of a broad array of
constitutional and statutory provisions.
Mezzanatto, supra,
at 200. For the proposition that Michigans waiver requirement is
unconstitutional, the majority cites
Douglas, 372 U.S., at
357358, and
M. L .B., 519 U.S., at 110113, which
explained that states cannot create unreasoned distinctions between
indigent and moneyed defendants.
Ante, at 17, n. 8.
These cases have nothing to do with waiver; they determined only
that certain rights existed, not that they both existed
and were
nonwaivable.
The majority seems to think that
Michigans waiver requirement arbitrarily distinguishes between
indigents and more affluent persons. As I have explained, however,
the statute does no such thing. Rather, it sensibly differentiates
between defendants convicted at trial and defendants convicted by
plea.
Supra, at 67. The majoritys dictum fails to
persuade.
3
In this case, the plea colloquy shows
that Halberts waiver was knowing and intelligent, and that any
deficiency in the plea colloquy was harmless. See 28 U.S.C. § 2111;
cf. Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 11(h). First, Halbert understood he
was waiving any appeal as of right: The trial court asked Halbert,
You understand if I accept your plea you are giving up or waiving
any claim of an appeal as of right, and Halbert answered Yes,
sir. App. 22. Second, the court explained the statutory exceptions
governing when counsel must or might be appointed, and Halbert
again indicated that he understood those conditions.
Ante,
at 7 (quoting colloquy). In context, the courts enumeration of the
limited conditions in which counsel might be appointed informed
Halbert that counsel would not be appointed in other circumstances.
Third, at the end of the colloquy, the court asked counsel, Any
other promises or considerations I should be made aware of? App.
24, and Do counsel believe Ive complied with the court rule
regarding no contest pleas?
id., at 25, both of which
questions the prosecutor and defense attorney answered in the
affirmative. Cf.
Bradshaw v.
Stumpf,
ante, at
7 (Where a defendant is represented by competent counsel, the
court usually may rely on that counsels assurance that the
defendant has been properly informed of the nature and elements of
the charge to which he is pleading guilty). Fourth, the court
f[ound] the plea understandingly made, voluntary and accurate.
App. 25. There can be no serious claim that Halbert would have
changed his plea had the court provided further information.
***
Today the Court confers on defendants
convicted by plea a right nowhere to be found in the Constitution
or this Courts cases. It does so at the expense of defendants
whose claims are, on average, likely more meritorious. And it
ignores that, even if such a right exists, it is fully waivable and
was waived in this case. I respectfully dissent.
Notes
1.
Douglas, 372 U.S., at 357;
Ross, 417 U.S., at 608
(
[Douglas] extended only to initial appeals as of right);
Evitts v.
Lucey, 469 U.S. 387, 394 (1985)
(
Douglas is limited to the first appeal as of right);
Pennsylvania v.
Finley, 481 U.S. 551, 555 (1987)
([T]he right to appointed counsel extends to the first appeal of
right, and no further);
Coleman v.
Thompson, 501
U.S. 722, 755 (1991) (
[Douglas] establish[es] that an
indigent criminal defendant has a right to appointed counsel in his
first appeal as of right in state court); see also
Wainwright v.
Torna, 455 U.S. 586, 587 (1982)
(per
curiam) (
[Ross] held that a criminal defendant does not
have a constitutional right to counsel to pursue discretionary
state appeals or applications for review in this Court).
2.
Moreover, the majoritys failure to make clear which sources
of law are to be considered in deciding whether a right is no[t]
recognized,
ante, at 16, and hence nonwaivable, is bound to
wreak havoc. For instance, suppose that a defendant waived the
right to appeal his sentence after the regional Court of Appeals
had held that the principle of
Blakely v.
Washington,
542 U.S. 296 (2004), did not apply to the United States Sentencing
Guidelines, but before this Court held the contrary in
United
States v.
Booker, 543 U.S. ___ (2005). The defendant
could claim that, in his circuit, the Sixth Amendment right against
the application of the Guidelines was no[t] recognized, and hence
that the right was nonwaivable.