Julie Mae Kirk v. State of Missouri

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
DocketWD81958
StatusPublished

This text of Julie Mae Kirk v. State of Missouri (Julie Mae Kirk v. State of Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julie Mae Kirk v. State of Missouri, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT JULIE MAE KIRK, ) ) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) WD81958 ) ) Opinion filed: ) ) December 17, 2019 STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LAFAYETTE COUNTY, MISSOURI THE HONORABLE DENNIS A. ROLF, JUDGE

Before Division Two: Thomas H. Newton, Presiding Judge, Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge, and Tom N. Chapman, Judge

Julie Kirk appeals from the judgment of the circuit court which dismissed her pro se Rule

24.035 motion for postconviction relief as untimely filed. We reverse.

Background

In May 2017, Kirk pleaded guilty to the class C felony of possession of a controlled

substance, two counts of the class C felony of first-degree endangering the welfare of a child, and

the class A misdemeanor of unlawful use of drug paraphernalia. The trial court found Kirk to be

a prior drug offender and a prior and persistent offender and sentenced her to seven years’

imprisonment on each of the felonies and 90 days in jail on the misdemeanor, with the sentences ordered to run concurrently.

Kirk was delivered to the custody of the Department of Corrections (DOC) on June 22,

2017. Under the version of Rule 24.035(b) which became effective on July 1, 2017, Kirk’s

postconviction relief motion was due within 180 days of the date she was delivered to the DOC’s

custody, or by December 19, 2017. The rule specified that a motion sent to the court by United

States mail would be deemed filed as of the date the motion was “deposited in the mail.”

The circuit clerk stamped Kirk’s pro se Rule 24.035 motion as received on December 21,

2017 – two days after the deadline. The circuit court appointed counsel to represent Kirk. Before

counsel could file an amended postconviction relief motion, the State filed a motion to dismiss on

the basis that Kirk’s pro se motion was untimely.

The circuit court held an evidentiary hearing on the State’s motion to dismiss on March

19, 2018. At the outset, the State argued to the circuit court that Kirk’s testimony, standing

alone, would not be sufficient to show when her motion was mailed:

There has to be evidence of when it went into the mail. And if all we have is the Defendant's testimony, then I don't know that that is something that we can rely on. I mean, it's in her best interest to say that it was mailed prior to the date where it would be untimely filed.

The State argued that, although Kirk’s motion was file-stamped on December 21, “[i]t could have

been mailed the day before. It could have been mailed on the 20th, which is still untimely filed.”

Kirk testified that she was incarcerated at the Chillicothe Correctional Center. She said

that she put her pro se motion in the prison mail system on December 4, 2017, the date on which

her in forma pauperis affidavit was notarized. Kirk testified that she placed the motion in her

housing unit’s outgoing mailbox, which is picked up once a day. Once the motion was placed in

the prison mailbox, Kirk testified that “it’s in the Department of Corrections’ hands. I don’t have

nothing to do with it.”

2 Kirk also presented the testimony of the Lafayette County Circuit Clerk, Deana Aversman.

Aversman testified that mail is not delivered directly to the Lafayette County courthouse in

Lexington. Instead, Aversman testified that she picks up the mail from the post office every day

between 8:00 and 8:30 a.m. Once a filing is picked up from the post office, it is file stamped on

the day she picks it up. If mail arrives at the post office after 8:30 a.m., it would be picked up the

next day. Because of when she picks up the mail, Aversman agreed that, “if [Kirk’s pro se motion]

had arrived at the post office at 8:30 the day before, it wouldn’t get picked up[, and therefore would

not get file-stamped,] until the next day.”

Aversman testified that the clerk’s office had not retained the envelope in which Kirk

mailed her pro se motion to the court. She acknowledged in her testimony that since July 2017,

“we have this new rule [Rule 24.035(c)] where we are supposed to be file stamping the

envelopes as well” as the motions themselves. Aversman testified that she became alerted to the

requirements of the new rule by Kirk’s appointed counsel, which would have occurred after

counsel was appointed on December 21, 2017 – more than six months after the new rule went

into effect. Aversman testified that, after being informed of the rule’s requirements by Kirk’s

counsel, she “did a little research and discovered that we got a deployment last July, which is a

methodology in letting clerks know when there is changes in procedure. So we got that last

July.” Aversman testified that, as a result of this case, “I have made sure that my staff is well

aware of that rule.”

The circuit court noted at the hearing that Kirk had not signed her motion for postconviction

relief (although she had executed an in forma pauperis affidavit included in the motion). Kirk’s

counsel offered to have Kirk sign the motion in the courtroom. Instead, she sent an executed

version of her motion to the court following the hearing; it was file-stamped by the clerk’s office

3 on March 27, 2018, eight days after the March 19 hearing at which the circuit court had noted the

deficiency.

Following the hearing, the motion court granted the State’s motion to dismiss by docket

entry. Kirk filed a motion to reconsider. Among other things, Kirk’s reconsideration motion

presented new evidence that a postage calculator on the United States Postal Service website

showed that a letter mailed from Chillicothe to Lexington was expected to take two days for

delivery.

The motion court entered its judgment dismissing Kirk’s pro se motion on June 21, 2018.

The circuit court’s judgment concludes:

Movant’s pro se motion was file-stamped December 21, 2017. Movant’s pro se motion was not signed, but even if deemed to have been promptly corrected, the motion did not allege facts establishing the motion was timely filed. Movant’s motion did not allege “active third-party interference”, nor did the March 19 hearing prove the allegations of timeliness that were not in the pro se motion. Any showing that the pro se motion was completed timely, without more, does not tend to prove when the motion was “dispatched” to the Circuit Court, “much less when the court received it.” Wadel v. State, WD79502 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017).[1]

This appeal by Kirk followed.

Standard of Review

Appellate review of a motion court’s dismissal of a postconviction relief motion is limited

to determining whether the findings and conclusion are clearly erroneous. Propst v. State, 535

S.W.3d 733, 735 (Mo. banc 2017). A motion court’s findings and conclusions are clearly

erroneous if the appellate court is left with a definite and firm impression that a mistake has been

made after a review of the entire record. Id.

1 Wadel v. State, 524 S.W.3d 575, 577 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017), was decided under a prior version of Rule 24.035(b), under which a post-conviction motion was deemed filed only when physically received by the circuit court. As explained below, Rule 24.035(b) was subsequently changed to adopt the “mailbox rule”; the date of a pro se motion’s receipt by the court is no longer controlling.

4 Discussion

When an inmate is convicted after a guilty plea, Rule 24.035(b) establishes the deadline

for filing an initial motion for postconviction relief.

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Related

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487 U.S. 266 (Supreme Court, 1988)
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181 S.W.3d 78 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2006)
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Glover v. State
225 S.W.3d 425 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2007)
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131 S.W.3d 781 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2004)
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Spells v. State
213 S.W.3d 700 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2007)
Mark D. Vogl v. State of Missouri
437 S.W.3d 218 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2014)
Anthony L. Carroll, Movant/Appellant v. State of Missouri
461 S.W.3d 43 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2015)
Dorris v. State
360 S.W.3d 260 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2012)
Price v. State
422 S.W.3d 292 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2014)
Boehm v. Allen
524 S.W.3d 542 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2017)
Wadel v. State
524 S.W.3d 575 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2017)
Propst v. State
535 S.W.3d 733 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2017)
Fields v. State
541 S.W.3d 45 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)
Naylor v. State
569 S.W.3d 28 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

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