Thompson v. Commonwealth

736 S.W.2d 319, 1987 Ky. LEXIS 231
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1987
DocketNo. 86-SC-566-TG
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 736 S.W.2d 319 (Thompson v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Commonwealth, 736 S.W.2d 319, 1987 Ky. LEXIS 231 (Ky. 1987).

Opinion

VANCE, Justice.

We have granted transfer of this case from the Court of Appeals to consider once again the proper procedure available to a defendant who has been convicted of a crime and who maintains that his right to one appeal granted by the Kentucky Constitution has been lost because he did not receive effective assistance of counsel to prosecute the appeal.

Beginning with the holding of this court that RCr 11.42 was not an appropriate remedy for a constitutional denial of the right of appeal, McIntosh v. Commonwealth, Ky., 368 S.W.2d 331 (1963), we then proceeded to hold that RCr 11.42 was a proper avenue for relief in such cases, in Hammershoy v. Commonwealth, Ky., 398 S.W.2d 883 (1966). This decision was followed by Cleaver v. Commonwealth, Ky., 569 S.W.2d 166 (1978), which held that RCr 11.42 did not confer jurisdiction on a trial court to reinstate a right of appeal and that a right to a belated appeal or to the reinstatement of a lapsed appeal could be granted only by the appellate court which is to entertain it. Cleaver, supra, was followed by Stahl v. Commonwealth, Ky., 613 S.W.2d 617 (1981), which tossed the ball back into the lap of the trial court by holding that a trial court cannot grant a belated appeal or reinstate a lapsed appeal, but it could, nevertheless, in a proper case, accomplish the same result by vacating the judgment and entering a new judgment from which an appeal could then be prosecuted.

We sought to clarify the seeming inconsistencies of McIntosh, Hammershoy, Cleaver, and Stahl in Commonwealth v. Wine, Ky., 694 S.W.2d 689 (1985). We said:

“The motion is expressly limited to use when there is a claim of entitlement to release on the ground that the sentence is subject to collateral attack. The sentence referred to is the sentence imposed by the trial court, and it follows that any collateral attack upon the sentence must necessarily relate to some deficiency in the trial proceedings before sentence or some defect in the sentence itself which renders the sentence defective on constitutional grounds.
“The frustration of an appeal due to lack of effective assistance of counsel in the appellate process would not ordinarily be considered as a defect in the sentence and would, therefore, not ordinarily warrant relief pursuant to RCr 11.42 which, by its explicit terms, requires the trial court to focus upon the propriety of its own prior rulings without regard for matters which took place after the imposition of sentence.”

Id. at 692.

We held in Wine that the vacation of a judgment pursuant to RCr 11.42 followed by the entry of a new judgment from which an appeal could be taken amounted in fact to the reinstatement of an appeal or the granting of a belated appeal. We further decided to follow the rule set forth in McIntosh and Cleaver that the trial court had no authority pursuant to RCr 11.42 to grant a belated appeal or to reinstate an appeal, the proper avenue for such relief being a petition to the appellate court with jurisdiction to hear the appeal. We expressly overruled Hammershoy and Stahl to the extent that those cases authorized relief pursuant to RCr 11.42.

The crystalline waters that we expected to flow from this clarification enunciated in Commonwealth v. Wine, supra, were soon muddied by the unfortunate dicta contained in our opinion Commonwealth v. Jones, Ky., 704 S.W.2d 203 (1986). Herein, once again, this court cited Hammershoy and Stahl for the proposition that RCr 11.42 is a proper vehicle under which a trial court may vacate a judgment and enter a new [321]*321one for the purpose of permitting an appeal when the time for appeal from the original judgment has expired.

We now overrule that portion of Commonwealth v. Jones, supra, which indicates that a trial court may vacate a judgment and enter a new judgment for the purposes of permitting an appeal.

The appellant, Thompson, was convicted of a felony in the Pike Circuit Court and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1974. He filed a notice of appeal from the judgment of conviction but failed to timely cause the record to be filed. The Public Advocate, later in 1974, filed a motion for a belated appeal with the Court of Appeals of Kentucky. The motion was opposed by the Commonwealth on the ground that a motion in the trial court, pursuant to RCr 11.42, was required for such relief. The Court of Appeals denied the motion for belated appeal.

The appellant then, in January, 1975, filed a motion in the trial court pursuant to RCr 11.42 to vacate the judgment. By an order dated January 17, 1975, the motion was set for a hearing on February 7, 1975. Apparently no hearing was held because the record on appeal does not disclose any further action in the case for the next 11 years. The matter was then renewed when appellant filed, on May 22, 1986, a supplemental memorandum in support of the 1975 RCr 11.42 motion to vacate.

The Commonwealth opposed the motion and contended that the trial court did not have jurisdiction to hear it and that the proper forum for relief was by request to the appellate court for a belated appeal, citing Commonwealth v. Wine, supra.

The trial court relied upon Wine and dismissed the motion to vacate. Thompson appealed to the Court of Appeals, and the Commonwealth moved to transfer the case to this court. Thompson then, by a separate response, joined in the motion for transfer and requested in the alternative that he be allowed to proceed with an appeal in this court.

In Commonwealth v. Wine, supra, Wine had initiated his RCr 11.42 proceeding at a time when it was a proper avenue of relief under the holding in Stahl v. Commonwealth, supra. Although we held in Wine that henceforward relief in such cases could not be had pursuant to RCr 11.42, we did not dismiss Wine's RCr 11.42 proceeding and require him to start anew in the appellate court with a petition to reinstate his appeal. Instead, as a matter of judicial economy, we simply directed the Court of Appeals to reinstate his appeal on the docket and to permit the filing of briefs.

The appellant, Thompson, is in a position similar to that of Wine in that he attempted a motion for a belated appeal in the Court of Appeals subsequent to the decision of this court in Hammershoy v. Commonwealth, supra. The Commonwealth insisted, however, that the motion should have been filed in the trial court, and the Court of Appeals denied his motion. He then filed his motion in the trial court, and when it finally came on for hearing, the Commonwealth opposed it again, this time on the ground that Commonwealth v. Wine, supra, had overruled Hammershoy and that the proceedings should have been filed in the appellate court.

It is clear beyond cavil that if Thompson’s right of appeal has been lost by the negligence of his counsel, he is entitled to relief. Evitts v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
736 S.W.2d 319, 1987 Ky. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-commonwealth-ky-1987.