Court Opinion

ID: 9593528
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 00:22:57.892837+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:52:39.080181
License: Public Domain

*185De MUNIZ, J.
Petitioner appeals a judgment dismissing his untimely petition for post-conviction relief.1 Petitioner filed his original petition on January 25, 1991, and an amended petition on April 8, 1991. He concedes that his petition was not timely filed. Defendant concedes that the post-conviction court erred by dismissing the petition without a hearing. Although we are not bound by that concession, we accept it. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
ORS 138.510(2) provides:
“A petition pursuant to [the Post-Conviction Hearing Act] must be filed within 120 days of the following, unless the court on hearing a subsequent petition finds grounds for relief asserted which could not reasonably have been raised in the original or amended petition:
“(a) If no appeal is taken, the date the judgment or order on the conviction was entered in the register.
“(b) If an appeal is taken, the date the appeal is final in the Oregon appellate courts.”
Because petitioner was not allowed a hearing, the issue is whether his petition
“allege[s] facts that, if supported by evidence, would establish that the grounds for relief could not reasonably have been raised timely.” Morrow v. Maass, 109 Or App 694, 695, 820 P2d 1374 (1991), rev den 312 Or 676 (1992).
We look to the allegations in his amended petition to determine whether it should have been dismissed without a hearing.
Petitioner alleges that he was convicted of robbery in the second degree, ORS 164.405, in a bench trial. He appealed his conviction. On the advice of his appellate lawyer, he moved to dismiss the appeal. We granted the motion on May 23, 1990. On January 16, 1991, his lawyer sent him a letter informing him that we had dismissed the appeal.2 Until he received that letter, he did not know that we had dismissed his appeal.
*186The 120-day limitation that applies to this petition began to run on the day that we issued our order dismissing the direct appeal. ORS 138.510(2)(b); ORS 138.550(1). Petitioner did not file a petition until eight months later. We must first decide whether his failure to file a timely petition bars him from filing an untimely one. Specifically, we must construe the meaning of the term “subsequent petition” in ORS 138.510(2). In Boone v. Wright, 110 Or App 281, 821 P2d 719 (1991), rev allowed 313 Or 281 (1992), we recognized that the language of the “escape clause” in the new limitation period3 is “less than straightforward.” 110 Or App at 285. We observed:
“The language in ORS 138.510(2), read literally, appears to dictate that an untimely petition, whatever its merits, can be considered, only if an earlier petition was timely filed.” 110 Or App at 285.
See also Boone v. Wright, supra, 110 Or App at 292 (Buttler, J. , dissenting).
In determining whether a timely petition is a prerequisite for considering an untimely petition, our duty is to ascertain the legislature’s intent. ORS 174.020; State v. Galligan, 312 Or 35, 39, 816 P2d 601 (1991). When the legislature added the 120-day limitation to the Post-Conviction Hearing Act, it “intended to promote more efficient and cost-effective administration of indigent defense services.” Hearing, Senate Judiciary Committee, April 12, 1989 (testimony of R. William Linden, Jr., State Court Administrator). The purpose of the “escape clause” is to ensure “[sjavings without injustice.” Tape Recording, House Judiciary Committee, Civil Subcommittee, June 12,1989, Tape 122, Side A at 1615 (comment by Ross Shepard).
We conclude that a timely petition is not prerequisite to the filing of an untimely petition that raises meritorious issues that could not reasonably have been raised within the 120-day limitation period. If that were the case, prisoners would be encouraged to file timely, but frivolous, petitions, so that they could preserve a forum for untimely petitions. That *187is an absurd result that would completely undermine the legislature’s purpose in enactinjgthe 1989 amendment. “Subsequent petition” means a post-conviction petition that is filed after the expiration of the applicable 120-day limitation period.
Defendant concedes that if petitioner’s appellate counsel failed to timely notify him that his direct appeal had been dismissed, then he has a legitimate excuse for not timely filing his petition. While his direct appeal was pending, petitioner was precluded from seeking post-conviction relief. ORS 138.550(1). The 120-day limitation period began to run on May 23,1990, when we dismissed his appeal. Dismissals by the Court of Appeals on motion are not published in the official reports or elsewhere. Petitioner was not on constructive notice that we had granted his motion to dismiss. He was represented by counsel, and it was counsel’s duty to keep him abreast of procedural developments. According to his petition, his attorney did not inform him that we had granted his motion until sometime around January 17,1991, and he filed his petition within a week after that date. If the allegations in his petition are true, then he could not reasonably have raised any grounds for relief within the 120-day period that applied to his petition. The post-conviction court erred by dismissing it without a hearing.
Reversed and remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

 Post-Conviction Hearing Act, ORS 138.510 to ORS 138.680.

 A copy of that letter was attached, as an exhibit, to his amended petition.

 Until August 5, 1989, ORS 138.510(2) provided that a petition for post-conviction relief could be filed “without limit in time.” The new limitation became effective on August 5, 1989. Or Laws 1989, ch 1053, §§ 18, 22.