Court Opinion

ID: 2759745
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-11 17:02:56.733477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:27:02.331475
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2014 Ark. 530

                      SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
                                            No.   CR-14-897
                                                       Opinion Delivered December   11, 2014

ROY LEE RUSSELL
                                   APPELLANT           PRO SE MOTION FOR DUPLICATION
                                                       OF APPELLANT’S BRIEF AT PUBLIC
V.                                                     EXPENSE
                                                       [DESHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
STATE OF ARKANSAS                                      NO. 21CR-12-10]
                                     APPELLEE
                                                       HONORABLE SAM POPE, JUDGE

                                                       REVERSED AND REMANDED;
                                                       MOTION MOOT.

                                             PER CURIAM

       In 2013, appellant Roy Lee Russell was found guilty by a jury of second-degree battery

and the offense of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He was sentenced as a habitual

offender to 180 months’ imprisonment and fined $10,000 for second-degree battery and

sentenced to 480 months’ imprisonment and fined $15,000 for the possession-of-a-firearm

conviction. The sentences were ordered served consecutively. The Arkansas Court of Appeals

affirmed on June 4, 2014. Russell v. State, 2014 Ark. App. 357.

       On June 12, 2014, appellant filed in this court a petition for review.1 The petition was

denied, and the final mandate in the case was issued on September 4, 2014. On September 11,

2014, appellant filed in the trial court a verified pro se petition for postconviction relief pursuant

to Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.1 (2013), challenging the judgment. The trial court

denied the petition on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction to consider it. There was no

explanation in the court’s order as to the basis on which the court concluded that it lacked

       1
           Russell v. State, CR-14-531.
                                       Cite as 2014 Ark. 530

jurisdiction to consider the petition, which was timely filed pursuant to Rule 37.2(c). Under Rule

37.2(c), when there was an appeal from a judgment of conviction, a petition for relief must be

filed in the trial court within sixty days of the date that the mandate was issued by the appellate

court. Appellant filed his petition seven days after the mandate was issued.

       Appellant has lodged an appeal here from the trial court’s order, and he now asks that

his brief-in-chief be duplicated at public expense. Even though appellant ultimately tendered

the number of copies of the brief required, in the interest of judicial economy, we take this

opportunity to reverse the trial court’s order as there was no reason given by the court for

dismissing the petition. We remand the matter so that the trial court may enter an order setting

out the basis for the dismissal of the petition. Should the court determine that its initial

conclusion that it was without jurisdiction to act on the petition was in error, it should enter an

order in accordance with Rule 37.3(a). When a petition for postconviction relief is denied

without an evidentiary hearing, Rule 37.3(a) requires that the court specify “any parts of the files,

or records that are relied upon to sustain the court’s findings.”

       It should be noted that, if the trial court’s order on remand is again adverse to appellant

and appellant desires review of the order by this court, he will be required to perfect an appeal

from the new order in accordance with the prevailing rules of procedure. See Walden v. State,

2014 Ark. 10 (per curiam).

       Reversed and remanded; motion moot.

       Roy Lee Russell, pro se appellant.

       No response.

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