Reynolds v. State
This text of 2019 Ark. 144 (Reynolds v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The State asks this court to dismiss the pending appeal of an order denying and dismissing appellant Edward Joseph Reynolds's petition for postconviction relief under Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.1 (2017).1 Although the file mark on Reynolds's Rule 37.1 petition appears to indicate that it was not timely filed, Reynolds asserted below that under Rule 37.2(g) of our criminal-procedure rules, his petition should be deemed filed on the date that it was mailed. Because the circuit clerk was required by the Rule to include in the record a copy of the envelope in which the petition was received but failed to do so, we remand for a supplemental record.
Reynolds appealed the judgment at issue here, which reflected his convictions for aggravated assault and kidnapping and imposed an aggregate sentence of life imprisonment. This court affirmed. Reynolds v. State ,
The time requirements in Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.2(c) are mandatory, and when a petition under Rule 37.1 is not timely filed, a trial court shall not consider the merits of the petition and grant postconviction relief. Gardner v. State ,
The State contends that the Rule 37 petition did not fulfill the conditions under Rule 37.2(g) for the petition to be deemed filed on the date of its deposit in the prison's legal-mail system because the record does not contain an envelope or other post-marked documents to verify Reynolds's statement concerning the date the petition was mailed. However, the Rule requires that the circuit clerk, not Reynolds, retain the envelope in which the Rule 37 petition was received and include a copy in the record on appeal. This information is needed for any review concerning whether Rule 37.2(g) has been satisfied, but the duty to satisfy that particular condition is the clerk's and not one of Reynolds's duties to fulfill.
The State also contends that, because the date of swearing for Reynolds's affidavit in support of his request to proceed in forma pauperis on the Rule 37 petition was beyond the due date, the petition could not have been timely received in the condition necessary for filing. The State appears to believe that the petition could not have been filed until the clerk received Reynolds's application for in forma pauperis status. Yet, the date that the petition was considered to have been received by the clerk would be the correct filing date, even if Reynolds had tendered the petition without having submitted a request to proceed as a pauper, if he cured the defect in form in a timely manner. See O'Fallon v. O'Fallon ,
There are other, less obvious costs associated with the proceedings that, at times, may require an application to proceed as a pauper even in cases for which no filing fee is assessed. Regardless of the reason that the application may have been needed, a delay in the petition's filing that resulted from the requirement of the form, without a reasonable opportunity to cure the defect, is not acceptable in a criminal case with time-sensitive filing requirements. Our own clerk follows a practice of allowing a reasonable period of time in which to remit an omitted filing fee or provide an appropriate application for pauper status for those appellate records or pleadings with time sensitivity, and when the applicable filing fee or other cure is not received until after the filing deadline, the filing date is the date tendered.
Because the clerk failed to provide a copy of the envelope in which the petition was received, we remand for the circuit clerk to provide a supplemental record with a copy of that envelope. If the clerk has failed in her duty to retain the envelope, *872then the circuit court is to hold a hearing to settle the record, to the extent possible, and enter an order that provides findings on the date that the petition was received by the clerk, the date of the postmark on the envelope, and the filing date of the petition. The supplemental record, including the transcript of any hearing conducted, is to be returned within thirty days of the date of this order.
Remanded for supplemental record.
Kemp, C.J., and Wood and Womack, JJ., dissent.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2019 Ark. 144, 572 S.W.3d 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-state-ark-2019.