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Date: 05-26-2021

Case Style:

Tausha Fields vs. State of Missouri

Case Number: WD83230

Judge: Mark D. Pfeiffer

Court: IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

Plaintiff's Attorney: Eric S. Schmitt, Attorney General, and Shaun J. Mackelprang, Assistant Attorney General,
Jefferson City, MO

Defendant's Attorney:


Criminal Defense Lawyer Directory


Description:

Kansas City, Missouri - Criminal defense attorney represented Tausha Fields with murder in the first degree and armed criminal action charges.



In 2010, Fields was found guilty of murder in the first degree and armed criminal action
following a jury trial.1
She was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole

1 Portions of the facts are quoted from the opinion in Fields’s 2018 appeal of the judgment of the motion
court dismissing her Rule 29.15 motion, Fields v. State, 541 S.W.3d 45 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018), without further
attribution.2
for murder in the first degree and a concurrent twenty-year term of imprisonment for armed
criminal action. We affirmed Fields’s convictions on direct appeal. State v. Morton, 384 S.W.3d
343 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012) (mem.).2
On January 4, 2017, Fields filed an untimely Rule 29.15 motion3 which was signed by
motion counsel and notarized. In addition to claims alleging ineffective assistance of counsel,
Fields alleged that her failure to timely file her Rule 29.15 motion was excused under the “active
interference” exception.4
The motion court dismissed Fields’s motion without an evidentiary
hearing because it was untimely filed. Fields thereafter appealed the judgment of the motion court
dismissing her untimely motion. Fields v. State, 541 S.W.3d 45 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018). On appeal
this Court held that Fields alleged sufficient facts to invoke the active interference exception, in
that the allegations contained in her motion—if believed—indicated that she took every step she
reasonably could within the limitations of her confinement to see that the motion was filed on time.
Id. at 50. On that basis, we reversed and remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at 51.
On May 9, 2019, an evidentiary hearing was held wherein Fields was represented by
counsel. At the evidentiary hearing, Fields offered evidence concerning the merits of her claims
of ineffective assistance of trial counsel; she presented testimony from both of her trial attorneys
and the investigator that assisted trial counsel. However, Fields did not present any evidence or
make any argument regarding her claim that active interference excused the untimeliness of her
motion. In its judgment after the evidentiary hearing, the motion court noted: “Because [Fields]
presented no evidence establishing the actual-interference exception to her late-filed motion,

2 Fields was referred to as “Tausha Lee Morton” during the underlying criminal proceedings.
3 Final mandate of Fields’s direct appeal was issued on December 20, 2012. Under Supreme Court
Rule 29.15(b), Fields’s post-conviction motion was due ninety days after the issuance of our mandate, meaning that
the deadline for filing her initial motion was March 20, 2013.
4 Fields’s allegations of interference concerned her trial counsel, which allegations are fully set out in her
2018 appeal to this Court and need not be repeated here.3
[Fields] failed to meet her evidentiary burden to establish [an exception to] timeliness. This Court
must therefore dismiss [Fields’s] motion.”5
Fields now appeals.
Standard of Review
“Appellate review of a motion court’s dismissal of a post-conviction relief motion is
limited to determining whether the findings and conclusions of law are clearly erroneous.” Propst
v. State, 535 S.W.3d 733, 735 (Mo. banc 2017) (citing Price v. State, 422 S.W.3d 292, 294 (Mo.
banc 2014)); see also Rule 29.15(k). “A motion court’s findings and conclusions are clearly
erroneous if this Court ‘is left with the definite and firm impression that a mistake has been made’
after a review of the entire record.” Propst, 535 S.W.3d at 735 (quoting Price, 422 S.W.3d at
294).
Analysis
Fields asserts six points on appeal. However, we address only her first point as it presents
a threshold issue which is dispositive of her present appeal. In her first point, Fields contends that
the motion court erred in dismissing her Rule 29.15 post-conviction relief motion after an
evidentiary hearing wherein the motion court concluded that she failed to prove that the
untimeliness of her motion was excused under the “active interference” exception.
In a motion filed pursuant to Rule 29.15, the movant must allege facts establishing that the
motion is timely filed and must thereafter prove that the motion is timely by a preponderance of
the evidence. Dorris v. State, 360 S.W.3d 260, 267 (Mo. banc 2012). A movant may meet this
burden by either: “(1) timely filing the original pro se motion so that the time stamp on the file

5
In its judgment, the motion court alternatively itemized bases upon which it concluded that Fields’s
substantive claims of ineffective assistance of counsel lacked merit; however, because we conclude that the motion
court’s dismissal ruling was not erroneous, we need not and do not address those alternative reasoning sections of the
motion court’s judgment addressing Fields’s substantive claims of ineffectiveness of counsel.4
reflects that it is within the time limits proscribed in the Rule; (2) alleging and proving by a
preponderance of the evidence in his motion that he falls within a recognized exception to the time
limits; or (3) alleging and proving by a preponderance of the evidence in his amended motion that
the court misfiled the motion.” Id. (emphasis added).
In her motion, Fields alleged that she fell within a recognized exception to the time limits—
specifically, she alleged active interference of a third-party. See Price, 422 S.W.3d at 301. Fields,
however, failed to prove her allegations in that she failed to offer evidence at the evidentiary
hearing in support of her claim of active interference of a third-party, and Fields conceded as much
in her appellate brief to this Court.
In Fields’s earlier appeal from the motion court’s judgment dismissing her motion without
an evidentiary hearing, this Court held that Fields alleged sufficient facts that, if believed, would
indicate interference of a third party excusing her adherence to the time limits of Rule 29.15(b).
Fields, 541 S.W.3d at 50. Our holding in Fields’s 2018 appeal did not relieve her of her burden to
prove her allegations. To the contrary, our holding informed the motion court that Fields made
sufficient allegations in her motion to entitle her to an evidentiary hearing wherein she could then
present evidence in support of her allegations that may have convinced the motion court to believe
that Fields had met her burden of proving active interference of a third-party by a preponderance
of the evidence. Although the case was remanded for further proceedings, allowing Fields the
opportunity to prove her allegations at an evidentiary hearing, she simply did not attempt to meet
her burden; for, as the motion court correctly noted in its judgment, Fields failed to present
evidence that would give the motion court an opportunity to believe the allegations of active
interference preventing the untimely filing of her Rule 29.15 motion.5
Fields may have met her burden of alleging sufficient facts entitling her to an evidentiary
hearing, but “‘[a]llegations in a postconviction motion are not self-proving.’” Shockley v. State,
579 S.W.3d 881, 918-19 (Mo. banc 2019) (quoting Gittemeier v. State, 527 S.W.3d 64, 71 (Mo.
banc 2017)). Fields was still required to meet her burden of proving that her post-conviction relief
motion was timely under a recognized exception to the Rule 29.15(b) time constraints. “Failure
to present evidence at a hearing in support of factual claims in a post-conviction motion constitutes
abandonment of that claim.” Id. at 919 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, Fields
abandoned her claim of active interference and, in so doing, did not meet her burden of showing
that her motion was timely, via a recognized exception to the Rule 29.15(b) time constraints.
Nonetheless, Fields asserts that she was not required to present evidence at the evidentiary
hearing in support of her allegations of active interference because the facts alleged in her motion
were verified and sworn to under oath by motion counsel and, as such, the motion itself should
have been treated as evidence by the motion court. We disagree.
Though Fields’s “verified pleading” argument fails for numerous reasons,6 most notably it
fails because, absent a stipulation between the parties, an affidavit (i.e., even were we to agree that
the verified pleading constituted a valid affidavit based upon the affiant’s personal knowledge—
which we do not) is not to be treated as evidence. Jhala v. Patel, 154 S.W.3d 12, 20 (Mo. App.
E.D. 2004) (“Missouri courts have consistently held without exception that in the absence of a
stipulation of the parties, there is no authority for admitting an affidavit as evidence at trial.”);

6 Although a post-conviction proceeding is a civil proceeding and, generally speaking, a verified pleading
may in certain circumstances be considered by a circuit court in a civil proceeding, the State argues in its appellate
briefing that Rule 29.15 does not recognize such a circumstance in post-conviction proceedings. More importantly,
the State correctly notes that motion counsel’s verification could not possibly be based upon his personal knowledge
as to the “facts” relating to the active interference claim of Fields and, thus, could not qualify as a verified pleading in
the first instance. See St. Louis Bank v. Kohn, 517 S.W.3d 666, 675 (Mo. App. E.D. 2017). Irrespective, given the
additional reason that the verified motion could not serve as evidence in the below proceeding, we need not address
these alternative arguments of the State further.6
Eames v. Eames, 463 S.W.2d 576, 579 (Mo. App. 1971) (“[A]bsent a stipulation of the parties
there is no authority for treating such affidavits as evidence, and in determining the issues
therefrom.”); see also Beecher v. Beecher, 417 S.W.3d 868, 871 n.2 (Mo. App. S.D. 2014). Here,
there was no stipulation between the parties.7
Consequently, the contention that the motion itself
constituted evidence is unsupported by the record or by any controlling precedent.8
Fields failed to meet her burden of proving to the motion court that her motion was timely
under a recognized exception to Rule 29.15(b), and the motion court’s conclusion to that effect
was not clearly erroneous; nor was the motion court’s dismissal of Fields’s motion as untimely
erroneous.
Point I is denied.

Outcome: The motion court’s judgment dismissing Fields’s Rule 29.15 motion after an evidentiary
hearing is not clearly erroneous and, hence, is affirmed.

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