Earle v. Warden of Utah State Prison, Department of Corrections
This text of 811 P.2d 180 (Earle v. Warden of Utah State Prison, Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Anthony Earle’s appeal from a denial of a petition for habeas corpus was dismissed by the Utah Court of Appeals on April 27, 1989. Earle filed a motion to reinstate the appeal on May 24, 1989, which was denied on June 20, 1989. On August 3, 1989, Earle filed a petition for certiorari with this court. We granted his petition and ordered a writ of certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals. We now dismiss that writ for lack of jurisdiction.
This court does not have jurisdiction to hear a case in which the petition for certiorari is not timely filed. According to former rule 45(a), Rules of the Utah Supreme Court, a petition for a writ of certio-rari had to be filed thirty days after the entry of a court of appeals decision. Rule 45(b) mandated that a petition which was not timely filed could not be accepted by the supreme court, as it would be “jurisdic-tionally out of time.” Although rule 2 allowed for the discretionary suspension of the requirements of the rules, the provisions of rules 4(e), 5(a), and 45 were excepted from that option.
[181]*181Earle’s appeal to the court of appeals was dismissed on April 27, 1989. Absent the supreme court’s receipt of a petition for rehearing or a motion for extension of time under rule 45(e) (neither of which petitioner filed), the time in which a petition for certiorari could be accepted by this court expired on May 27, 1989, thirty days after the April 27 order. The interim motion to reinstate the appeal, denied by the court of appeals, did not toll this deadline, but even if it had, the petition for certiorari was not filed within thirty days of the denial of that motion on June 20, 1989. Under these circumstances, we are without jurisdiction to proceed with this writ of certiorari.
The fact that we lack jurisdiction to hear the merits of this case is unfortunate and is arguably due to the fact that petitioner was unrepresented by counsel until we appointed a lawyer after the grant of certio-rari. Based on the pleadings before us, petitioner appears to have at least an arguable case for reversible error by the trial court in refusing to allow him to withdraw his guilty plea. It is impossible to predict without an evidentiary hearing whether Earle could show good cause for withdrawing his guilty plea, but his allegations of lack of adequate representation, coercion, and conflict of interest raise a legitimate question.
Since Earle’s allegations will require factual inquiry, the proper forum for his claims is the trial court. We express appreciation to counsel appointed by this court for work performed on the merits of petitioner’s claims and anticipate that with such representation, petitioner will be able to secure a full hearing of those claims on a new petition for habeas corpus in the district court.1
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
811 P.2d 180, 159 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 1991 Utah LEXIS 31, 1991 WL 70578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earle-v-warden-of-utah-state-prison-department-of-corrections-utah-1991.