Lee v. State , 2015 Ark. 26 ( 2015 )


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  •                                         Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 26
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.   CR-14-923
    TERRY ANTONIO LEE                                    Opinion Delivered January   22, 2015
    PETITIONER
    PRO SE MOTION FOR BELATED
    V.                                                   APPEAL
    [PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    NO. 60CR-10-48]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    RESPONDENT             HONORABLE BARRY SIMS, JUDGE
    MOTION GRANTED.
    PER CURIAM
    In 2013, the Arkansas Court of Appeals affirmed petitioner Terry Antonio Lee’s
    conviction on charges of committing a terroristic act, criminal attempt to commit first-degree
    battery, and four counts of aggravated assault. Lee v. State, 
    2013 Ark. App. 209
    . The mandate
    issued on April 16, 2013, and, on June 3, 2013, petitioner filed in the trial court a timely petition
    for postconviction relief under Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.1 (2014). After a
    hearing, the court denied the Rule 37.1 petition by order entered April 16, 2014, from which
    petitioner now seeks to appeal. This court’s clerk declined to lodge the record on appeal, and
    petitioner has filed a motion for belated appeal. We grant the motion, and we permit the appeal
    to go forward.
    Arkansas Rule of Appellate Procedure–Criminal 2(a) requires that a notice of appeal must
    be filed within thirty days of the date that an order denying a petition for postconviction relief
    was entered, which would apply in this case so that the notice of appeal must have been filed no
    later than Friday, May 16, 2014. A petitioner has the right to appeal a ruling on a petition for
    Cite as 
    2015 Ark. 26
    postconviction relief. Bean v. State, 
    2014 Ark. 440
    (per curiam). If a petitioner fails to file a
    timely notice of appeal, however, a belated appeal will not be allowed absent a showing by the
    petitioner of good cause for the failure to comply with proper procedure. 
    Id. Petitioner contends
    that the circuit court clerk failed to send him a copy of the April 16,
    2014 order denying postconviction relief until May 9, 2014. The notice of appeal was filed on
    May 19, 2014. Petitioner alleges that the clerk’s failure to promptly notify him of the order
    caused the delay in filing the notice of appeal. The State has not responded to petitioner’s
    motion so as to refute petitioner’s claim that the order was not promptly mailed.
    Arkansas Rule of Criminal Procedure 37.3(d) requires the circuit court to promptly mail
    a copy of an order disposing of a Rule 37.1 petition to the petitioner. The language in the rule
    is mandatory, and this court has recognized good cause to excuse the petitioner’s failure to
    timely file a notice of appeal in cases where the circuit court has failed to abide by Rule 37.3(d).
    Nelson v. State, 
    2013 Ark. 316
    (per curiam). Where the record is silent, and the respondent is
    unable to provide an affidavit from the clerk of the circuit court or some other proof that the
    order was mailed, we must assume that the petitioner was not properly notified. 
    Id. Here, petitioner
    alleges that a copy of the order denying postconviction relief was not
    mailed to him until more than three weeks after the order had been entered. The State has failed
    to respond to or contest that allegation; therefore, petitioner has stated good cause for the delay
    in filing the notice of appeal. See 
    id. Because we
    grant the motion for belated appeal, our clerk
    is directed to lodge the record and set a briefing schedule for the appeal.
    Motion granted.
    2