Raymond G. Pendleton v. State of Missouri

570 S.W.3d 658
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 26, 2019
DocketWD81347
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 570 S.W.3d 658 (Raymond G. Pendleton 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
Raymond G. Pendleton v. State of Missouri, 570 S.W.3d 658 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

RAYMOND G. PENDLETON, ) ) WD81347 Appellant, ) v. ) OPINION FILED: ) STATE OF MISSOURI, ) March 26, 2019 ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Buchanan County, Missouri Honorable Daniel Fred Kellogg, Judge

Before Division One: Cynthia L. Martin, P.J., Victor C. Howard, and Thomas H. Newton, JJ.

Mr. Raymond G. Pendleton appeals a Buchanan County Circuit Court judgment

dismissing a Rule 24.035 motion following his guilty plea to a class B felony charge

of driving while intoxicated. He contends that the court failed to make sufficient

findings and conclusions about alleged exceptions to the motion’s untime ly filing. We

reverse and remand for the motion court to make specific findings of fact as to the

circumstances beyond Mr. Pendleton’s control allegedly resulting in an untimely filed

Rule 24.035 motion.

After Mr. Pendleton pleaded guilty in 2015 to the class B felony of driving while

intoxicated, the Buchanan County Circuit Court sentenced him to five years’

imprisonment. He was delivered to the Department of Corrections on October 5, 2015, which meant, in the absence of an appeal, that his post-conviction motion was due no

later than April 4, 2016. 1 Mr. Pendleton’s Rule 24.035 motion to vacate, set aside, or

correct the judgment or sentence was notarized on March 30, 2016, and he testified by

deposition that he deposited the motion with sufficient firs t-class postage in a prison

mailbox that day. The court clerk date stamped the motion as filed on April 6, 2016.

Appointed counsel timely filed an amended motion under Rule 24.035, raising, among

other matters, the claim that Mr. Pendleton’s late filing of the pro se motion fell within

a recognized exception under Dorris v. State, 360 S.W.3d 260 (Mo. banc 2012), i.e.,

the late filing was caused by circumstances beyond Mr. Pendleton’s control, the court

misfiled the motion, or it should be deemed timely filed under the “mailbox rule” which

had not yet been adopted in Missouri. 2

The motion court conducted an evidentiary hearing that mainly involved a

substantive issue raised in the amended motion, but also included the testimony of Mr.

Pendleton’s wife about notes she had taken regarding the date on which he had

purportedly mailed the motion. While the motion court kept the record open to receive

additional evidence, it entered a judgment of dismissal before that evidence was

presented, dismissing the Rule 24.035 motion as untimely. 3 In that judgment, the

motion court recited the relevant dates, set forth the Rule 24.035 requirement, and

1 The 180-day limitation period actually ended on April 2, 2016, but that was a Saturday. 2 Mr. Pendleton has not urged this Court on appeal to adopt and apply the “mailbox rule” in his case. The mailbox rule was added to Rule 24.035 in 2016 and took effect July 1, 2017. 3 The additional evidence consisted of a drug investigator’s testimony about whether and under what circumstances he had used Mr. Pendleton as a confidential informant, as well as Mr. Pendleton’s transcribed deposition testimony. It appears that the motion court thereafter set aside the July 11, 2017, judgment pending the receipt of evidence on August 11, 2007.

2 concluded, “As Movant filed the instant motion 182 days after such initial delivery it

is untimely, and therefore must be dismisssed, this 11 th day of July, 2017.”

Mr. Pendleton filed an amended motion to reconsider dismissal or in the

alternative a motion for amended judgment on July 19, 2017. This motion reiterated

his arguments about the timeliness of a Rule 24.035 motion and its exceptions, with

reference to the circumstances of his case, and further sought, under Rule 78.07(c), an

amendment to the July 11, 2017, judgment to include additiona l findings of fact and

conclusions of law on the pro se motion’s timeliness. According to the motion, because

the “judgment makes no findings on Movant’s claim tha[t] exceptions apply, the Court

of Appeals would necessarily be required to supply findings and conclusions by

implication, which would constitute an improper de novo review.” Mr. Pendleton’s

deposition transcript was attached to the motion. After setting aside the July 11, 2017,

judgment, the motion court heard additional testimony on the Rule 24.035 amended

motion during an August 11, 2017, hearing at which Mr. Pendleton’s deposition was

formally admitted into evidence. The motion court entered a judgment of dismissal on

August 22, 2017, again with minimal findings and conclusions. 4 Mr. Pendleton filed a

4 In full, this judgment states the following:

Movant pled guilty to the Class B Felony of Driving While Intoxicated on the 6 th day of April, 2015, in the case of State of Missouri v. Raymond [G.] Pendleton, Case #13BU-CR02451-01. On the 1 st day of October, 2015, the Court sentenced Movant to five years in the Department of Corrections. Movant was delivered to the Department of Corrections on the 5 th day of October, 2015.

Movant filed his pro se Motion to Vacate, Set Aside or Correct the Judgment or Sentence on April 6, 2016. Missouri Rule of Criminal Procedure 24.035 requires that such post-conviction motions must be filed within 180 days of the Movant’s delivery to the Department of Corrections. As Movant filed the instant motion 182 days after such initial delivery it is untimely, and therefore must be dismissed, this 22 nd day of August, 2017.

3 motion to amend this judgment seeking specific findings under Rule 78.07(c) on the

applicability of the second and third Dorris exceptions and presenting arguments

similar to those raised in the alternative motion filed in July 2017. 5 The motion court

did not rule on this motion, so it was deemed overruled ninety days later. Rule 78.06.

Mr. Pendleton appeals.

Legal Analysis

In the sole point relied on, Mr. Pendleton argues that the motion court failed to

make adequate findings of fact and conclusions of law with the degree of specificity

required for meaningful appellate review under Rule 24.035(j). 6 According to Mr.

Pendleton, the motion court simply found that the post-conviction motion was filed two

days late and did not make any findings relating to his claim that the motion was late

due to circumstances beyond his control or to misfiling by the court. The State argues,

in part, that Mr. Pendleton waived this claim by failing to file a motion to amend the

judgment under Rule 78.07(c). We disagree. As stated above, Mr. Pendleton filed a

motion to amend under Rule 78.07(c) as to both the July 11 and August 22, 2017,

judgments. Accordingly, we will address the point on the merits.

Our review of a motion court’s disposition of a Rule 24.035 motion is

circumscribed. Rule 24.035(k).

Appellate review of a motion court’s dismissal of a post-conviction relief motion is limited to determining whether the findings and conclusions of law are clearly erroneous. A motion court’s findings and conclusions are

5 Missouri courts have recognized two specific circumstances that may excuse late filings: “(1) when post-conviction counsel abandons the movant; and (2) when rare circumstances outside the movant’s control justify late receipt of the motion.” Watson v. State, 520 S.W.3d 423, 429 (Mo. banc 2017) (citation omitted). These comprise the second Dorris exception; the third is that the court misfiled the motion. Dorris v.

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570 S.W.3d 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-g-pendleton-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2019.