William J. Hunsaker, Jr. v. The People of the State of Colorado

2021 CO 83, 500 P.3d 1110
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 20, 2021
Docket20SC360
StatusPublished
Cited by1,348 cases

This text of 2021 CO 83 (William J. Hunsaker, Jr. v. The People of the State of Colorado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William J. Hunsaker, Jr. v. The People of the State of Colorado, 2021 CO 83, 500 P.3d 1110 (Colo. 2021).

Opinion

Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Case No. 17CA1815

Attorneys for Petitioner: Hunsaker Emmi, P.C. William J. Hunsaker Arvada, Colorado

Attorneys for Respondent: Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General Megan C. Rasband, Assistant Attorney General Denver, Colorado

OPINION

HART, JUSTICE

¶1 After criminal defendants are convicted, Colorado Rule of Criminal Procedure 35 provides them with three types of postconviction remedies. A defendant may seek correction of an illegal sentence "at any time"-even many years after the conviction. Crim. P. 35(a). A defendant may ask the court to reduce a sentence within certain limited timeframes. Crim. P. 35(b). And a defendant may bring other specified types of postconviction challenges to a conviction or sentence but must generally do so within three years of the date of conviction. See Crim. P. 35(c); § 16-5-402(1), C.R.S. (2021). The question we are asked to answer here is how Crim P. 35(a), which permits the correction of a sentence "at any time," should interact with Crim. P. 35(c), which has a three-year statute of limitations subject to only a few specific exceptions provided in section 16-5-402(1).

¶2 We have considered this question once before, in Leyva v. People, 184 P.3d 48 (Colo. 2008), but that opinion has been construed by two different divisions of the court of appeals in mutually exclusive ways. One division has found that, under Leyva, correction of an illegal sentence renews the limitations period for all arguments for postconviction relief, entirely restarting the three-year clock. See People v. Baker, 2017 COA 102, ¶¶ 37-42, 461 P.3d 534, 540, rev'd on other grounds, 2019 CO 97M, 452 P.3d 759. In contrast, the division in this case found that, under Leyva, correction of an illegal sentence only renews the Crim P. 35(c) limitations period for arguments "related to how the illegality in the original sentence potentially affected a defendant's original conviction." People v. Hunsaker, 2020 COA 48, ¶ 16, 490 P.3d 688, 692. We

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Bluebook (online)
2021 CO 83, 500 P.3d 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-j-hunsaker-jr-v-the-people-of-the-state-of-colorado-colo-2021.