Catherine Adkins v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 2026
Docket26S-PC-00171
StatusPublished
AuthorJustice Slaughter

This text of Catherine Adkins v. State of Indiana (Catherine Adkins v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catherine Adkins v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2026).

Opinion

Pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 65(E), the trial court and parties shall not take any action in reliance upon this opinion until it is certified.

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court FILED Supreme Court Case No. 26S-PC-171 May 28 2026, 11:34 am

CLERK Catherine Adkins, Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court Appellant-Petitioner,

–v–

State of Indiana, Appellee-Respondent.

Decided: May 28, 2026

Appeal from the Wayne Superior Court No. 89D02-2102-PC-1 The Honorable Gregory A. Horn, Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 25A-PC-438

Opinion by Justice Slaughter Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Goff, and Molter concur. Slaughter, Justice.

Catherine Adkins appeals an adverse declaratory judgment in her post- conviction case. Appellate jurisdiction here turns on whether the trial court’s declaration is a final judgment under Indiana law. We hold it is not a final judgment because the Declaratory Judgment Act does not categori- cally deem all declarations final. We grant transfer, dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, and remand.

I

In 2015, eleven-month-old K.S. died while in Catherine Adkins’s care. Adkins claimed she tripped and hit a door frame while holding K.S., but an autopsy found his injuries consistent with multiple acts of inflicted blunt-force trauma. The infant’s death was ruled a homicide. In 2016, Ad- kins faced the charge of Level 1 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death. After a bench trial, the court found her guilty and sentenced her to thirty years with ten years suspended. Our court of appeals affirmed her conviction and sentence on direct appeal. Adkins v. State, No. 19A-CR- 2121, 2020 WL 1969295 (Ind. Ct. App. Apr. 24, 2020) (mem.).

In 2021, Adkins sought post-conviction relief. Relevant here, she al- leged her appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge her jury-trial waiver. The State conceded that the trial court had not put her waiver on the record and concluded she likely was entitled to a new trial. But the State warned her that, while she was incarcerated, it had inter- cepted over eighty of her letters that detailed “an intentional and knowing killing” of K.S., as well as crimes committed in other states. Thus, the State advised, any new trial Adkins received would be for murder, not neglect.

Adkins asked the post-conviction court to declare what her rights would be if she received relief on her underlying ineffectiveness claim. She relied on Post-Conviction Rule 1, section 10, which states the trial court “shall not impose a more severe penalty than that originally im- posed” if the petitioner successfully seeks relief on post-conviction. Ind. Post-Conviction Rule 1 § (10)(b). Thus, she argued, any new sentence she receives must not exceed her original sentence for neglect, even if she were convicted of the more severe crime of murder. The post-conviction

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 26S-PC-171 | May 28, 2026 Page 2 of 6 court issued a declaratory judgment but ruled against Adkins. It held that Rule 1, section 10 does not apply when the State discovers new evidence supporting a higher-level charge.

Adkins moved to continue the pending post-conviction proceedings and appealed the adverse judgment. In a precedential opinion, the court of appeals affirmed. Adkins v. State, 272 N.E.3d 217 (Ind. Ct. App. 2025). It held that Rule 1, section 10 “neither curtails the State’s authority to file a new charge based on new evidence nor restricts the sentencing court from applying the proper statutory range to that conviction.” Id. at 224.

Adkins now seeks transfer, which we grant, ___ N.E.3d ___ (Ind. 2026), thus vacating the appellate decision, Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).

II

We hold that appellate jurisdiction is lacking because Adkins did not appeal from a final judgment. An appellate court must have jurisdiction to decide an appeal’s merits. In re Adoption of S.L., 210 N.E.3d 1280, 1282 (Ind. 2023). Appellate courts generally have jurisdiction only over appeals from final judgments. App. R. 2(H); DeCola v. Norfolk S. Corp., 222 N.E.3d 938, 939 (Ind. 2023). A final judgment disposes of all claims as to all parties or is deemed final by law, App. R. 2(H), such as by statutes or court rules. Our final-judgment rule enhances judicial efficiency by generally requir- ing that all issues in a case be litigated in a single appeal. Otherwise, “there would be needless delays and increased expense from limitless in- terlocutory appeals of garden variety rulings”. Means v. State, 201 N.E.3d 1158, 1163 (Ind. 2023).

The disputed judgment below is not a final judgment under any of the five definitions of “final judgment” in Appellate Rule 2(H). First, the court’s ruling did not “dispose[] of all claims as to all parties” and thus does not meet Rule 2(H)(1). An order that resolves all claims “end[s] the particular case and leave[s] nothing for future determination.” Ramsey v. Moore, 959 N.E.2d 246, 251 (Ind. 2012). The post-conviction court’s ruling below resolved nothing. It merely declared what would happen, hypo- thetically, if Adkins’s post-conviction claim were to succeed; it never re- solved the merits of her claim.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 26S-PC-171 | May 28, 2026 Page 3 of 6 Nor is the court’s ruling final under Rule 2(H)(2), (3), or (4). The ruling contained none of the “magic language” required under Trial Rules 54(B) or 56(C) to make an otherwise interlocutory ruling “final”: expressly de- termining in writing that there is no reason for delay and expressly direct- ing in writing the entry of judgment on fewer than all issues (for 56(C) rul- ings) or claims or parties (for both 54(B) and 56(C) rulings). Georgos v. Jack- son, 790 N.E.2d 448, 452 (Ind. 2003); App. R. 2(H)(2). The court’s ruling was not deemed final under Trial Rule 60(C). App. R. 2(H)(3). And it did not rule on a motion to correct error under Trial Rule 59. Id. at 2(H)(4).

That leaves only the fifth (and final) definition of a “final judgment”— whether the ruling was “otherwise deemed final by law.” Id. at 2(H)(5). Adkins argues that all declaratory judgments, including the disputed dec- laration below, are deemed final by law, and that she can appeal under Rule 2(H)(5). Trial courts can issue declaratory judgments under the Uni- form Declaratory Judgment Act, Indiana Code chapter 34-14-1. If the Act treats declaratory judgments as final, appealable orders, then Adkins is right, and all declaratory judgments are final under Rule 2(H)(5). When interpreting a statute, “we begin by reading its words in their plain and ordinary meaning, taking into account ‘the structure of the statute as a whole.’” Town of Linden v. Birge, 204 N.E.3d 229, 237 (Ind. 2023) (quoting ESPN, Inc. v. Univ. of Notre Dame Police Dep’t, 62 N.E.3d 1192, 1195 (Ind. 2016)). And we “avoid interpretations that depend on selective reading of individual words that lead to irrational and disharmonizing results.” ESPN, Inc., 62 N.E.3d at 1195 (quoting West v. Off. of Ind. Sec’y of State, 54 N.E.3d 349, 355 (Ind. 2016)).

Under the Act, declarations have “the force and effect of a final judg- ment or decree.” Ind. Code § 34-14-1-1. Adkins argues that this statute alone makes all declaratory judgments final, appealable orders for pur- poses of Rule 2(H).

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Related

Ramsey v. Moore
959 N.E.2d 246 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2012)
Johnson v. Johnson
920 N.E.2d 253 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2010)
Georgos v. Jackson
790 N.E.2d 448 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2003)
Marriage of Pond v. Pond
700 N.E.2d 1130 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1998)
Rauh v. Fletcher Savings & Trust Co.
194 N.E. 334 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1935)

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