             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

PAUL E. WEBER,                                 §
                                               §   No. 486, 2018
        Defendant Below,                       §
        Appellant,                             §   Court Below—Superior Court
                                               §   of the State of Delaware
        v.                                     §
                                               §   Cr. ID No. 0010007121 (N)
STATE OF DELAWARE,                             §
                                               §
        Plaintiff Below,                       §
        Appellee.                              §

                              Submitted: May 10, 2019
                              Decided:   July 19, 2019

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and TRAYNOR, Justices.

                                      ORDER

         After consideration of the appellant’s opening brief, the State’s motion to

affirm, and the record on appeal, it appears to the Court that:

         (1)    In 2001, the appellant, Paul Weber, was convicted of forgery and

received a thirty-day sentence. Weber sought to appeal that conviction. But his

appeal was dismissed because, under Article IV, Section 11(1)(b) of the Delaware

Constitution, this Court lacks jurisdiction to receive an appeal in a criminal matter

unless the sentence imposed is a term of imprisonment exceeding one month or a

fine exceeding $100.1



1
    Weber v. State, 2002 WL 31235418 (Del. Oct. 4, 2002).
       (2)     Then came the event that gave rise to Weber’s current case and a great

deal of prior litigation. In 2005, Weber was convicted of attempted first-degree

robbery and sentenced as a habitual offender to twenty-five years in prison. Weber’s

unappealable forgery conviction was one of the predicate offenses. Weber took an

appeal from his attempted robbery sentence to this Court and argued that it was

unconstitutional for an offense that he could not appeal to be used as a predicate to

deem him a habitual offender and subject him to a minimum mandatory sentence of

a quarter century.2 This Court issued a formal decision and rejected Weber’s

argument.3 The Court reversed the attempted robbery conviction on other grounds

and remanded for a new trial.4 On remand, Weber was again convicted and

sentenced as a habitual offender to twenty-five years in prison. This Court affirmed

on direct appeal.5

       (3)     Since that time, Weber has sought to relitigate the question of whether

it was unconstitutional for an unappealable offense to be used to enhance the

sentence for his later attempted robbery conviction. Given the procedural bars that



2
  The sentencing range for attempted first-degree robbery was three to twenty-five years. See 11
Del. C. § 832 (providing for a minimum sentence of three years’ imprisonment for first-degree
robbery and establishing first-degree robbery as a class B felony); id. § 4205(b)(2) (providing that
the sentence for a class B felony is “not less than 2 years up to 25 years to be served at Level V”).
The applicable habitual offender statute required the judge to sentence Weber to at least twenty-
five years in prison. Id. § 4214(a).
3
  Weber v. State, 971 A.2d 135, 158-60 (Del. 2009).
4
  Id. at 139-40.
5
  Weber v. State, 38 A.3d 271 (Del. 2012).


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exist to using a postconviction petition under Rule 61 to relitigate a question

addressed on direct appeal,6 Weber has sought to frame his argument in different

ways. But his essential argument involves this question: if a state denies a defendant

a right of appeal, may it use that conviction as a basis to deem the defendant a

habitual offender and expose him to the serious punishment for a later offense that

comes with that label? As recently as last year, Weber pressed a variation on that

argument in a Rule 61 petition. This Court affirmed the Superior Court’s denial of

that petition.7

       (4)     Understandably not satisfied with that result, Weber then filed with the

Superior Court the Motion for Relief of Judgment that is the subject of Weber’s

current appeal. In that motion, which the Superior Court denied, Weber attempts to

avoid the procedural bar by reframing his key argument as solely an attack on his

forgery conviction. But, of course, it is not. Weber has no colorable argument that

the provision of the Delaware Constitution that denies an appeal for sentences of a

month or less is, alone and in itself, unconstitutional.8 His argument, to the extent it



6
  SUPER. CT. CRIM. R. 61(i)(1)-(4); id. R. 61(d)(2).
7
  Weber v. State, 2018 WL 5993473 (Del. Nov. 13, 2018).
8
  See Garza v. Idaho, 139 S. Ct. 738, 744 n.4 (2019) (stating that the United States Supreme Court
“has never recognized a ‘constitutional right to an appeal’”); Reetz v. Michigan, 188 U.S. 505, 508
(1903) (“Neither is the right of appeal essential to due process of law. In nearly every state are
statutes giving, in criminal cases of a minor nature, a single trial, without any right of review.”).
See also Abney v. United States, 431 U.S. 651, 656 (1977) (citing Reetz and stating that “[t]he right
of appeal, as we presently know it in criminal cases, is purely a creature of statute; in order to
exercise that statutory right of appeal, one must come within the terms of the applicable statute”).


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has color, is that Delaware cannot treat a conviction for which it afforded no right of

appeal as a predicate for a later habitual offender determination with far more serious

consequences.

      (5)     We understand that Weber is arguing that to the extent that a conviction

will have the potential future consequence of acting as a predicate offense and

subjecting a defendant to habitual offender status, the Due Process Clause requires

that the state afford an appeal right. In other words, Weber contends that a defendant

who has been convicted of an offense and gotten, say, a fifteen-day sentence, should

be able to appeal because the sentence might later be used in a habitual offender

proceeding and that consequence is so substantial that it violates due process to deny

him a right to appeal. But Weber did not make that argument when he originally

appealed his forgery conviction and was denied the chance to appeal. In fact, Weber

asserted only a single issue in his opening brief in that appeal—that the Superior

Court committed plain error by not giving a limiting instruction concerning certain

testimony regarding Weber’s drug use9—and did not file a reply brief after the State

argued in its answering brief that this Court lacked jurisdiction of the appeal because

Weber’s sentence did not exceed one month. And of course, Weber’s brief sentence

for forgery was served long before he appealed his attempted robbery conviction.


9
 Appellant’s Opening Brief, Weber v. State, 592, 2001 (Del. May 16, 2002), Docket Entry No.
24.



                                            4
Thus, the reason this litigation exists is because Weber seeks to escape the

consequences of his forgery conviction solely because of that conviction’s effect on

his status as a habitual offender. Stated directly, Weber seeks to attack the validity

of his habitual offender sentence for attempted robbery. His current method is

simply a different way of articulating the same essential argument he made in his

original direct appeal from his attempted robbery conviction and in his 2018 Rule

61 petition.

      (6)      We do not question that the issue Weber again seeks to raise is a serious

and important one. An obvious reason for the jurisdictional limitation in Article IV,

Section 11(1)(b) of the Delaware Constitution is that appeals should be limited when

the consequences of a conviction for a defendant are themselves quite limited. But

when a conviction can serve as the basis to later deem a defendant a habitual

offender, the consequences become much greater, leading one to ask whether there

ought to be some mechanism for appellate review of the predicate conviction.

      (7)      The problem for Weber is that he lost his argument that an unappealable

conviction cannot be a predicate offense for habitual offender sentencing on his

initial direct appeal ten years ago. More recently, he made the argument again in a

Rule 61 motion, the Superior Court held that it was procedurally barred for having

been previously adjudicated, and we affirmed that decision last year. He cannot use

a motion that does not even exist under the Superior Court’s procedural rules to



                                            5
avoid the requirements of Rule 61, which is the proper vehicle for the type of

postconviction relief he seeks.10 Rule 61 bars Weber’s claim because the judgment

of conviction has been final for more than a year;11 the issue has been formerly

adjudicated;12 and the motion is successive but does not plead with particularity new

evidence that creates a strong inference of actual innocence or a claim that a new,

retroactive rule of constitutional law applies.13 Additionally, Rule 61 bars him from

attacking his forgery conviction because he is no longer in custody for that

conviction.14 “The only exception to the rule [requiring that a defendant be in

custody in order to pursue relief under Rule 61] is when the defendant ‘suffers

collateral legal disabilities or burdens’” from the conviction.15 But this Court has

held, consistent with federal case law applying the “in custody” requirement of the

federal habeas statute, that later use of a conviction as a predicate offense for habitual

offender sentencing is not a collateral legal burden for purposes of the “in custody”

requirement of Rule 61.16


10
   See Alley v. State, 2015 WL 7188326, at *1 (Del. Nov. 13, 2015) (“Superior Court Criminal
Rule 61 provides the exclusive remedy for setting aside a conviction.”).
11
   SUPER. CT. CRIM. R. 61(i)(1).
12
   SUPER. CT. CRIM. R. 61(i)(4).
13
   Id. R. 61(i)(2)(i), (d)(2)(i)-(ii).
14
   See SUPER. CT. CRIM. R. 61(a)(1) (“This rule governs the procedure on an application by a person
in custody under a sentence of this court seeking to set aside the judgment of conviction or a
sentence of death on the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction or on any other ground that is a
sufficient factual and legal basis for a collateral attack upon a criminal conviction or a capital
sentence.”).
15
   Paul v. State, 2011 WL 3585623, at *1 (Del. Aug. 15, 2011).
16
   Coleman v. State, 2015 WL 5096047, at *2 (Del. Aug. 27, 2015). See Maleng v. Cook, 490 U.S.
488, 492 (1989) (per curiam) (“The question presented by this case is whether a habeas petitioner


                                                6
       (8)     At this stage, Weber has no basis under Delaware law to continue to

seek to repeatedly litigate the same issue. If he wishes to obtain relief, it must be

through the pending federal habeas proceeding in which he appears to have asserted

the issue.17

       NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the motion to affirm is

GRANTED and the judgment of the Superior Court is AFFIRMED.

                                                      BY THE COURT:
                                                      /s/ Leo E. Strine, Jr.
                                                      Chief Justice




remains ‘in custody’ under a conviction after the sentence imposed for it has fully expired, merely
because of the possibility that the prior conviction will be used to enhance the sentences imposed
for any subsequent crimes of which he is convicted. We hold that he does not. . . . In this case, of
course, the possibility of a sentence upon a subsequent conviction being enhanced because of the
prior conviction actually materialized, but we do not think that requires any different conclusion.”).
17
   Amended Pet. For Writ of Habeas Corpus at 28-33, Weber v. Metzger, No. 1:13-cv-00283-LPS
(D. Del. Apr. 10, 2019), Docket No. 58. See Maleng, 490 U.S. at 493-94 (holding that the
defendant was “in custody” for purposes of a federal habeas petition challenging his later
sentences, but “express[ing] no view on the extent to which the [earlier] conviction [which was
used as a predicate offense to enhance the later sentences] itself may be subject to challenge in the
attack upon the [later] sentences which it was used to enhance”).


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