Mullin v. State

996 P.2d 737, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 2000 WL 193542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 18, 2000
DocketA-7053
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 996 P.2d 737 (Mullin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullin v. State, 996 P.2d 737, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 2000 WL 193542 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*738 OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Alaska has enacted a statute of limitations governing petitions for post-conviction relief. 1 For Thomas G. Mullin (a prisoner serving a 40-year sentence for sexual abuse of minors), the filing deadline was July 1,1996.

Mullin filed his petition for post-conviction relief on June 28, 1996 — three days before the deadline — but the superior court clerk’s office refused to accept the petition because Mullin failed to submit either the $100 filing fee or an application for exemption from the fee. The clerk’s office notified Mullin of the problem, and they sent him the application form for seeking exemption from the filing fee. Mullin filled out this form and returned it to the clerk’s office on July 24th. The clerk’s office then accepted Mullin’s petition for filing.

Several months later, the superior court dismissed Mullin’s petition for failure to meet the July 1st filing deadline set by the statute of limitations. Even though Mullin submitted his initial paperwork on June 28th, the court concluded that this initial paperwork did not satisfy the .statute of limitations because it was incomplete: Mullin did not tender the $100 filing fee, nor did he submit an application for exemption from that fee. The court recognized that Mullin cured the deficiency on July 24th when he submitted his application for exemption from the filing fee, but the court ruled that Mullin’s curative action came too late because the July 1st deadline had expired.

Mullin now appeals the superior court’s dismissal of his petition for post-conviction relief. We conclude that Mullin’s initial filing, albeit technically deficient, was sufficient to satisfy the statute of limitations. We therefore reverse the superior court and order reinstatement of Mullin’s petition.

To resolve Mullin’s case, we must answer this question: When a prisoner delivers a technically deficient petition for post-eonviction relief to the clerk’s office, does this delivery satisfy the statute of limitations, or does the statute remain unsatisfied until the prisoner cures the defects in the petition? The State argues that two provisions of Alaska law — Criminal Rule 35.1 and AS 09.19.010 — show that the statute of limitations remains unsatisfied until all defects are cured.

Criminal Rule 35.1(c) declares that a petition for post-conviction relief “is commenced by filing an application with the clerk”, and AS 09.19.010(a) declares that a prisoner such as Mullin “may not commence litigation against the state” unless the prisoner has paid the applicable filing fees or has applied for a partial exemption from fees under AS 09.19.010(b). 2 From these provisions of law, the State concludes that a petition for post-conviction relief can not be deemed “filed” until the petitioner pays the filing fee or applies for partial exemption from the fee. Because Mullin took neither of these steps until late July, the State contends that Mullin failed to satisfy the July 1st statute of limitations deadline.

Actually, AS 09.19.010 appears to be stricter than the State construes it to be. Subsection (e) of this statute declares that, even when a court grants a prisoner’s request for a partial exemption from the normal filing fee, the prisoner’s case “[shall] not be accepted for filing” unless the prisoner pays the reduced fee within 30 days (or any longer period allowed by the court). If this provision were construed in line with the State’s argument, a prisoner’s petition for post-conviction relief would not be considered “filed” until (a) a judge rules on the prisoner’s request for partial exemption from fees and (b) the prisoner pays the reduced fee.

The State’s suggested interpretation of Criminal Rule 35.1 and AS 09.19.010 is at odds with the long-standing rule that a pleading may satisfy a filing deadline even though the pleading is technically deficient. For example, ninety years ago (when Alaska was a United States territory governed by *739 federal law), the Ninth Circuit declared that appellate pleadings filed within the relevant time limit would be considered timely despite a technical defect or omission in the pleadings. In Corcoran v. Kostrometinoff 3 , the court ruled that a notice of appeal would be deemed timely despite the fact that the appellant failed to file the required cost bond until after the deadline for filing the appeal had passed.

More importantly, the State’s interpretation of the law could easily lead to unfairness and unreasonable discrimination among petitioners. If we construed AS 09.19.010(e) to mean that the statute of limitations remains unsatisfied until the court system rules on a prisoner’s request for partial exemption from the filing fee and sets the amount of the reduced fee, then the timeliness of the prisoner’s petition would hinge on factors completely beyond the prisoner’s control.

The court system might easily take two or three weeks to process a prisoner’s request for partial exemption from the filing fee. 4 Moreover, the statute then allows the prisoner 30 days (or longer, at the judge’s discretion) to pay the reduced fee. If we were to read AS 09.19.010(e) in the manner the State suggests, then even when a prisoner submitted a request for partial fee-exemption at the same time as they submitted their underlying petition for post-conviction relief, the prisoner’s case would not be “filed” for another six to eight weeks — perhaps longer. Thus, prisoners who submitted their petitions 30, 40, or even 50 days in advance of the statute of limitations deadline would still find themselves thrown out of court because of this built-in judicial delay in “filing” their petitions.

It would be unconscionable to deny prisoners the opportunity to litigate their claims because of systemic delays. It would also be unconscionable if, between two prisoners who file their petitions weeks in advance of the statute of limitations deadline, one prisoner were allowed to litigate and the other barred from litigating simply because the first prisoner’s request for filing-fee exemption was routed to a judge who decided the request the next day, while the other prisoner’s request was routed to a judge who was on vacation, so that the request sat unread on the judge’s desk for two or three weeks.

These considerations are strong arguments against the State’s suggested interpretation of AS 09.19.010. But how else are we to interpret the legislature’s statement that a prisoner’s case is not to be “accepted for filing” until the court makes its filing fee determination and the prisoner pays the reduced fee? Two federal cases decided last year^ — Nichols v. Bowersox 5 and Jones v. Bertrand 6 — provide the proper answer to this question.

Nichols and Jones involved prisoners who filed petitions for habeas corpus. In both cases, the petitions were dismissed as time-barred.

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Bluebook (online)
996 P.2d 737, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 2000 WL 193542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullin-v-state-alaskactapp-2000.