Schoicket v. State ( 2021 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: November 2, 2021
    S21A0840. SCHOICKET v. THE STATE.
    PETERSON, Justice.
    Rebecca Dawn Schoicket was granted an out-of-time appeal to
    appeal the judgment of conviction entered on her guilty plea. In
    addition to challenging her sentence on one count, she argues that
    the out-of-time appeal she was granted meant that the trial court
    should have granted her motion for leave to file an otherwise
    untimely motion to withdraw her guilty plea. Schoicket argues that
    Collier v. State, 
    307 Ga. 363
     (834 SE2d 769) (2019), recognized that
    it would be a “logical extension” of our case law to permit the filing
    of such a motion, because we have stated that the grant of an out-of-
    time appeal starts the post-conviction process “anew.” Schoicket is
    correct in that appraisal of our case law, but we decline to extend it
    to afford her the relief she seeks.
    As the special concurrence to Collier explained, this Court
    ignored contrary precedent and statutes in creating out of whole
    cloth the motion for out-of-time appeal in the trial court, see 
    id. at 379
     (Peterson, J., concurring specially), which is the procedural
    vehicle that forms the foundation of the case law on which Schoicket
    relies. And following our decision in Collier, we have retreated from
    broad statements about the effect of a granted out-of-time appeal in
    order to avoid dispensing unwarranted windfalls. See Kelly v. State,
    
    311 Ga. 827
    , 830-831 (860 SE2d 740) (2021). A defendant is granted
    an out-of-time appeal when she shows that her counsel’s ineffective
    assistance frustrated her right to timely appeal by unprofessionally
    failing to advise her of that right or by failing to file an appeal she
    desired. Allowing such a grant to then permit the movant to file a
    motion to withdraw a guilty plea would be an unwarranted windfall
    with potentially profound consequences for our criminal justice
    system. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Schoicket’s
    motion for leave to pursue such relief. However, because we agree
    with Schoicket that the sentencing court erred in sentencing as to
    2
    one count, we vacate that count and remand for resentencing.
    The record shows the following. In October 2016, with the
    assistance of counsel, Schoicket pleaded guilty to felony murder and
    other charges in Walton County Superior Court. 1 More than a year
    later, in December 2017, Schoicket filed a pro se motion for an out-
    of-time appeal. She subsequently amended that motion and also
    filed a pro se motion to withdraw her guilty plea. After being
    appointed new counsel, Schoicket moved for leave to file a motion to
    withdraw her guilty plea. Following a hearing, the trial court
    granted Schoicket’s motion for an out-of-time appeal, but denied the
    motion for leave. Despite that ruling, Schoicket’s counsel filed a
    motion to withdraw the guilty plea the day after the hearing.
    Schoicket now appeals from the trial court’s denial of her motion for
    leave to file a motion to withdraw her plea.2
    1   Schoicket was charged with malice murder (Count 1), aggravated
    assault (Count 2), felony murder (Count 3), possession of a firearm during the
    commission of a felony (Counts 4, 5, and 6), tampering with evidence (Count
    7), and possession of methamphetamine (Count 8). Schoicket pleaded guilty to
    Counts 3, 6, 7, and 8 and was sentenced to life plus five years in prison.
    2 Schoicket filed the motion to withdraw her guilty plea and, one minute
    later, filed a notice of appeal from the judgment of conviction and the order
    denying leave to file a motion to withdraw the guilty plea.
    3
    1. Schoicket argues that the trial court erred in denying her
    motion for leave to file a motion to withdraw her guilty plea because
    the granted out-of-time appeal permitted her to start the post-
    conviction process “anew.” She relies on certain statements in our
    prior decisions, including one in the special concurrence in Collier
    that “a logical extension of” prior statements of this Court would be
    that a granted out-of-time appeal authorizes the filing of a motion
    to withdraw a guilty plea. See Collier, 307 Ga. at 380 (Peterson, J.,
    concurring specially). We agree that permitting such a motion would
    be a logical extension of our precedent that invented certain post-
    conviction remedies. Although we should not have invented those
    remedies in the first place, we decline to invent additional remedies
    that might further complicate our post-conviction jurisprudence.
    We begin with a little background. The traditional rule is that
    motions to withdraw a guilty plea must be filed in the term of court
    in which the defendant was sentenced, see Brooks v. State, 
    301 Ga. 748
    , 751 (2) (804 SE2d 1) (2017), the time period under the common
    law during which trial courts could generally reconsider their
    4
    judgments, see Moon v. State, 
    287 Ga. 304
    , 305-306 (696 SE2d 55)
    (2010) (Nahmias, J., concurring). This well-established rule is
    merely the application of a bedrock common-law principle that
    applies equally to other criminal motions and in civil cases. See Gray
    v. State, 
    310 Ga. 259
    , 263 (3) (850 SE2d 36) (2020) (common-law rule,
    which Georgia courts have long-applied, provides that “in absence of
    a statute providing otherwise, the general principle obtains that a
    court cannot set aside or alter its final judgment after the expiration
    of the term at which it was entered, unless the proceeding for that
    purpose was begun during that term” (citation, punctuation, and
    emphasis omitted)); see also Smith v. State, 
    298 Ga. 487
    , 487-488
    (782 SE2d 17) (2016) (rule applicable even if motion construed as
    motion to withdraw guilty plea or motion for arrest of judgment);
    Tremble v. Tremble, 
    288 Ga. 666
    , 668 (1) (706 SE2d 453) (2011)
    (applying rule to second divorce decree entered after expiration of
    term of court in which first decree was entered). This common law
    rule, as applied to motions to withdraw guilty pleas, remains in force
    today. See Gray, 310 Ga. at 262 (2) (common-law rules remain in
    5
    effect “except where they have changed by express statutory
    enactment or by necessary implication”) (citation and punctuation
    omitted).
    When a defendant seeks to withdraw her guilty plea after the
    expiration of that term of court, she must pursue such relief through
    habeas corpus proceedings. See Davis v. State, 
    274 Ga. 865
    , 865 (561
    SE2d 119) (2002). Applying this traditional rule, Schoicket’s motion
    to withdraw her guilty plea, as a stand-alone motion, would be
    barred as untimely because it is undisputed that she sought to file
    it more than a year after the term of court in which the judgment of
    conviction was entered. See OCGA § 15-6-3 (2) (B) (the terms of court
    for the Superior Court of Walton County commence on the “[f]irst
    and second Mondays in February, May, August, and November”).
    Schoicket argues that she is permitted to file her otherwise
    untimely motion because the grant of an out-of-time appeal
    essentially restarted the post-conviction process. Her arguments are
    rooted in statements made in Ponder v. State, 
    260 Ga. 840
     (400 SE2d
    922) (1991), and Maxwell v. State, 
    262 Ga. 541
     (422 SE2d 543)
    6
    (1992). But we already have begun to trim back those broad
    statements.
    Ponder is the primary case for expanding the record upon the
    grant of an out-of-time appeal in order to consider previously
    unraised claims. There, we held that a defendant who is granted an
    out-of-time appeal should be allowed to file a motion for new trial in
    order to raise ineffectiveness claims against trial counsel for the first
    time. See 
    260 Ga. at 840-841
     (1). This Court explained that the grant
    of an out-of-time appeal
    should be seen as permission to pursue the post-
    conviction remedies which would be available at the same
    time as a direct appeal . . . and constitutes permission to
    pursue appropriate post-conviction remedies, including a
    motion for new trial.
    
    Id. at 841
     (1). We note, however, that even by its own terms, Ponder
    authorized only “appropriate” post-conviction remedies.
    In Maxwell, we extended Ponder to allow a defendant to pursue
    a second motion for new trial with appellate counsel despite the fact
    that the defendant’s first motion for new trial, filed by trial counsel,
    had been denied. See Maxwell, 
    262 Ga. at 542-543
     (3), disapproved
    7
    by Kelly, 311 Ga. at 830-831. We stated in Maxwell that the second
    motion for new trial was permitted because the grant of an out-of-
    time appeal “start[s] the post-conviction process anew.” Id. at 542-
    543 (3). Allowing a second motion for new trial in Maxwell was an
    “appropriate” remedy because trial counsel could not have been
    expected to raise ineffectiveness claims against himself in the first
    motion for new trial. See Garland v. State, 
    283 Ga. 201
    , 203 (657
    SE2d 842) (2008); see also Hood v. State, 
    282 Ga. 462
    , 463 (651 SE2d
    88) (2007) (“[A] lawyer may not ethically present a claim that [the
    lawyer] provided a client with ineffective assistance of counsel[.]”).
    We readily acknowledge that our statements in Ponder and Maxwell
    would naturally lead to the conclusion that, upon the grant of an
    out-of-time appeal, a defendant who pleaded guilty should be able to
    file a motion to withdraw that plea, just as a defendant who went to
    trial can file a motion for new trial. 3
    3We also acknowledge another line of case law that has afforded similar
    remedies on direct appeal. See, e.g., Davis, 
    301 Ga. at 659
     (reversing denial of
    timely motion to withdraw guilty plea and remanding for hearing on claim that
    plea counsel was ineffective); Gooden v. State, 
    305 Ga. 835
    , 838 (828 SE2d 302)
    8
    But in Kelly we retreated from what Ponder and Maxwell said,
    holding that the grant of an out-of-time appeal does not actually
    start the post-conviction process “anew”; instead, it merely
    “restore[s] the defendant to the position he occupied at the time he
    forfeited his right to appeal (or seek other post-conviction relief).”
    Kelly, 311 Ga. at 830-831. And as Justice Warren recognized in
    Kelly, and as Ponder’s core holding teaches us, remedies for
    ineffective assistance of counsel should be tailored to the particular
    violation. See Kelly, 311 Ga. at 833 (Warren, J., concurring specially)
    (“[T]he remedy this Court provided in Maxwell was too broad
    because it exceeded that which was required to remedy the
    deprivation of Maxwell’s appellate rights because of an alleged
    constitutional violation (i.e., ineffective assistance of counsel).”);
    Ponder, 
    260 Ga. at 842
     (2) (allowing motion for new trial to be filed
    (2019) (affirming denial of timely motion to withdraw guilty plea and rejecting
    claim for remand based on plea counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness, as issue
    already had been adjudicated by the trial court). But this case presents only
    the question of what remedy is available through the procedural vehicle of a
    granted motion for out-of-time appeal, not whether other remedies are ever
    available in other procedural postures.
    9
    upon grant of out-of-time appeal because appellate counsel did not
    have the opportunity to raise ineffectiveness claims against trial
    counsel until after the time for an appeal had passed). Any
    suggestion now that the grant of an out-of-time appeal starts the
    post-conviction process completely “anew” fails to recognize our
    holding in Kelly, which narrowed Ponder to avoid dispensing
    unwarranted windfalls to would-be appellants.4 And the imprecise
    statement in Maxwell that the grant of an out-of-time appeal
    “start[s] the post-conviction process anew,” if applied beyond the
    context of that case, ignores Ponder’s teaching that only
    “appropriate” remedies are available upon the grant of a motion for
    out-of-time appeal.
    Such a windfall would arise from allowing a defendant to file
    an otherwise untimely motion to withdraw a guilty plea simply
    because she was granted an out-of-time appeal. As discussed above,
    4 Justice Ellington’s dissent also points to language repeated in a number
    of our decisions that the grant of an out-of-time appeal is the “functional
    equivalent of the entry of judgment.” That statement originates in Fairclough
    v. State, 
    276 Ga. 602
     (581 SE2d 3) (2003), and is based on an assessment of
    Maxwell’s overbroad “anew” language. See Fairclough, 
    276 Ga. at 603
     (1).
    10
    longstanding precedent dictates that a defendant seeking to
    withdraw a guilty plea after the expiration of the term of court in
    which she was sentenced can do so only in habeas. See Davis, 
    274 Ga. at 865
    . And because of this precedent, Georgia does not
    recognize untimely standalone motions to withdraw a guilty plea.
    Indeed, we have explicitly rejected efforts to file motions for out-of-
    time withdrawal of guilty pleas, notwithstanding that we allow
    motions for out-of-time appeals. See, e.g., Sims v. State, Case No.
    S21A0587, 
    2021 WL 3727797
    , at *2 n.5 (Ga. Aug. 24, 2021) (citing
    Brooks, 
    301 Ga. at 751
     (2) n.7, and Foster v. State, 
    294 Ga. 400
    , 401
    (754 SE2d 78) (2014)).5 It would be strange indeed to prohibit a
    5 Justice Ellington’s dissent relies on Gude v. State, 
    229 Ga. 831
     (194
    SE2d 445) (1972), for the proposition that we have created a stand-alone,
    untimely motion to withdraw because we considered the merits of an appeal
    from such a motion. But Gude does not support this proposition. First, this
    Court in Gude merely affirmed the denial of an untimely motion to withdraw,
    but we did not consider whether such motions were appropriate at all, and so
    Gude contains no holding as to whether such motions are allowed. See Seals v.
    State, 
    311 Ga. 739
    , 745-746 (2) (b) (860 SE2d 419) (2021) (“Decisions of this
    Court . . . do not stand for points that were neither raised by the parties nor
    actually decided in the resulting opinion[.]” (citation and punctuation
    omitted)). Second, we have since clearly held that we will vacate orders that
    consider the merits of untimely motions because a trial court lacks jurisdiction
    to decide such motions. See Brooks, 
    301 Ga. at 752
     (2). Third, even if Gude
    11
    standalone motion for out-of-time withdrawal of a guilty plea ⸺ and
    direct such a movant to habeas ⸺ but then allow precisely the same
    remedy to another defendant based purely on a demonstration that
    her separate right to appeal had been frustrated.
    For decades now, our post-conviction jurisprudence has been
    described as a “tangle” of “confusing” procedural rules. See Maxwell,
    
    262 Ga. at 543
     (Fletcher, J., concurring in part). To untangle it
    ourselves would be difficult and seemingly disruptive to the system
    that has developed around it,6 and we are not called upon in this
    could be read as having permitted untimely motions to withdraw a guilty plea,
    that holding was effectively overruled by our more recent decisions holding
    otherwise. See White v. State, 
    305 Ga. 111
    , 122 n.10 (823 SE2d 794) (2019)
    (“When a high court finds discordant opinions among its own . . . precedents
    the court generally follows its decision in the most recent case, which must have
    tacitly overruled any truly inconsistent holding.” (citation and punctuation
    omitted; emphasis in original)).
    6 This certainly is true as to our precedent requiring Sixth Amendment
    claims of ineffective assistance of counsel to be raised on direct appeal. As we
    discuss briefly below, the criminal justice system has in many ways organized
    itself around that precedent, and overruling it would be very disruptive. It
    seems unlikely, however, that eliminating the motion for out-of-time appeal
    would pose the risk of similar disruption. Unlike the requirement to assert
    claims of ineffectiveness on direct appeal, motions for out-of-time appeal have
    had less effect on the structure and funding of the public defender system;
    indeed, much of the mess that we have created in this area might be mitigated
    by eliminating that procedural vehicle, and considerations of stare decisis
    might well counsel in favor of doing so. But this case does not present the
    12
    case to begin to sort out that mess. That we are not doing so today,
    however, does not require us to add to that mess. And to rule in
    Schoicket’s favor would make the mess far worse; all defined limits
    on when a defendant could file a motion to withdraw a guilty plea
    would be erased.7 A defendant who pleaded guilty long ago and
    changed her mind after many years in prison might be able to
    challenge the voluntariness of a plea if she can show that her right
    to an appeal was frustrated by her plea counsel.8
    And if that were allowed, the burden would then shift onto the
    question of whether our precedent creating motions for out-of-time appeal
    should be overruled, however, because this is not an appeal challenging the
    disposition of such a motion, and so we leave that question for a future case.
    7 In Collier, the majority opinion suggested that laches or other equitable
    doctrines might apply to bar claims brought so late that the delay prejudiced
    the State. See 307 Ga. at 373-376 (2). The four-justice special concurrence
    declined to join that suggestion as “tinker[ing] at the margins” with things we
    had made up, and acknowledged merely that “none of our cases have held that
    the State cannot assert a defense of prejudicial delay.” Id. at 379, 382
    (Peterson, J., concurring specially). We leave anything further on this question
    for another day.
    8 Ironically, Ponder defended its holding as bringing finality far sooner
    than a habeas proceeding would, because an ineffectiveness claim could “be
    promptly resolved by the judge who presided over the trial as opposed to having
    it resolved by a habeas corpus court somewhere down the road.” Ponder, 
    260 Ga. at 842
     (1) (citation and punctuation omitted). But the creation of a
    standalone procedural vehicle that might be filed long after a habeas petition
    has become untimely is a strange way to achieve finality.
    13
    State to prove the voluntariness of a very old plea when it would
    otherwise be on the defendant. See Kennedy v. Hines, 
    305 Ga. 7
    , 9 &
    n.2 (2) (823 SE2d 306) (2019) (while habeas petitioner bears the
    burden of proving that her guilty plea was not “voluntary, knowing,
    and intelligent,” the State has the burden to prove voluntariness on
    direct appeal). Given that the passage of years can result in records
    lost or destroyed, and witnesses may forget, move, or die, the State
    may not be able to make this showing even when a plea was
    voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. And if the State fails to do so
    (and some sort of laches principle is deemed not to apply), the
    defendant will win an argument she would otherwise lose (and
    indeed might not be able to raise due to the applicable statute of
    limitations, see OCGA § 9-14-42 (c)) in habeas. Worse still, the
    passage of many years could then make it virtually impossible for
    the State to try the defendant before a jury. This would result in
    windfall upon windfall for the defendant.
    To be sure, there are competing concerns involved in post-
    conviction relief procedures ⸺ addressing violations of a defendant’s
    14
    constitutional rights on the one hand, and ensuring finality on the
    other. But the General Assembly has enacted habeas statutes
    balancing these competing concerns. See OCGA § 9-14-42 (a), (c)
    (habeas   petition   alleging   that   felony   conviction   involved
    “substantial denial” of constitutional rights must be brought within
    four years). We lack the authority to substitute our policy
    preferences for those of the General Assembly and thereby allow a
    defendant to skirt the legislatively established process. Cf. Duke v.
    State, 
    306 Ga. 171
    , 186 (4) (829 SE2d 348) (2019) (overruling a
    judicially created rule altering the legislature’s jurisdictional
    requirements for interlocutory appeals); State v. Orr, 
    305 Ga. 729
    ,
    735-736 (2) (827 SE2d 892) (2019) (concluding that evidentiary
    exclusion rule, created by this Court with dubious authority and
    based on “the Court’s view of good policy,” was abrogated by the
    legislature’s enactment of the new Evidence Code); see also Love v.
    State, 
    309 Ga. 833
    , 842 (4) (848 SE2d 882) (2020) (“[Policy]
    considerations are best left to be weighed by our General
    Assembly.”).
    15
    The dissents argue that our prior holdings support the creation
    of this additional remedy, but they point only to statements in those
    cases that were not essential to the holdings. See, e.g., Maxwell, 
    262 Ga. at 542-543
     (3).
    It is, of course, axiomatic that a decision’s holding is
    limited to the factual context of the case being decided and
    the issues that context necessarily raises. Language that
    sounds like a holding — but actually exceeds the scope of
    the case’s factual context — is not a holding no matter
    how much it sounds like one.
    Ga. Interlocal Risk Mgmt. Agency v. City of Sandy Springs, 
    337 Ga. App. 340
    , 340 n.1 (788 SE2d 74) (2016) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). Our recent cases have re-affirmed Ponder’s teaching that
    only “appropriate” remedies should be granted upon a showing of
    constitutionally ineffective counsel, yet the dissents’ approach is not
    tailored to remedying the ineffective assistance that frustrated
    Schoicket’s right to appeal in the first place. This is not how the
    United States Supreme Court tells us to remedy Sixth Amendment
    violations. See United States v. Morrison, 
    449 U.S. 361
    , 364 (101 SCt
    665, 66 LE2d 564) (1981) (“Cases involving Sixth Amendment
    deprivations are subject to the general rule that remedies should be
    16
    tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and
    should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests.”).
    The dissents correctly point out that, in departing from the
    holding of Neal v. State, 
    232 Ga. 96
     (205 SE2d 284) (1974), we made
    the policy decision to create a new out-of-time appeal procedural
    vehicle, and that we elected in Collier to leave that vehicle in place.
    But the dissents go astray in suggesting that this means we must
    necessarily continue making up new policy so long as it follows
    logically from the policy we’ve already created. The criminal justice
    system — and especially the structure of our public defender system
    — has evolved over time to comply with the requirements we have
    created. The General Assembly has appropriated substantial funds
    to make that system work. That we did not in Collier undo all of this
    does not mean that we should keep inventing new requirements for
    the legal system to comply with.
    The dissents argue that we should continue trail-blazing
    because our invented remedy should be made available in an even-
    handed manner to trial-convicted and plea-convicted defendants
    17
    alike. But where do we stop? The dissents do not say. And our
    inventions have never purported to be even-handed; a motion for
    out-of-time appeal can be granted only if one particular kind of
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim succeeds, and all sorts of other
    ineffectiveness claims not raised on direct appeal can be brought
    only in habeas.
    For these reasons, we hold today that a granted motion for out-
    of-time appeal does not confer a right to file an otherwise-untimely
    motion to withdraw a guilty plea. As a result, we conclude that the
    trial court did not err in denying Schoicket’s motion for leave.9 We
    therefore deny her request to remand this case for consideration of
    9 We hereby overrule decisions of the Court of Appeals that suggested ⸺
    very reasonably at the time, given the statements in Ponder and Maxwell ⸺
    that a defendant could file a motion to withdraw a guilty plea upon the grant
    of an out-of-time appeal. See Sosa v. State, 
    352 Ga. App. 637
    , 639 (2) & n.1 (835
    SE2d 695) (2019) (vacating denial of motion for out-of-time appeal, remanding
    for proceedings consistent with Collier, and noting that if defendant “is
    successful on remand in obtaining an out-of-time appeal, he may be able to
    challenge the voluntariness of his plea in that proceeding”); Dawson v. State,
    
    302 Ga. App. 842
    , 843 (691 SE2d 886) (2010) (concluding that defendant had
    to file second motion to withdraw guilty plea following grant of out-of-time
    appeal from denial of first motion to do so in order to claim that post-conviction
    counsel was ineffective for failing to raise trial counsel’s ineffectiveness in first
    motion to withdraw).
    18
    the merits of her motion to withdraw. Her remedy, if any, lies in
    habeas corpus. 10
    2. Schoicket argues that she should not have received a 10-year
    sentence, running concurrently to the life sentence on the murder
    count, for tampering with evidence (Count 7), because that count
    was a misdemeanor. The State concedes this error, which is properly
    raised on appeal of a conviction, and our review of the record
    confirms the parties’ contentions.
    Count 7 charged Schoicket, as the accused, with knowingly
    concealing a pistol with the “intent to obstruct the prosecution of
    said accused.” Because she was found guilty of tampering with
    evidence in her own case, she was guilty only of a misdemeanor and
    should not have received a 10-year sentence. See OCGA § 16-10-94
    (a), (c); see also Byers v. State, 
    311 Ga. 259
    , 268 (3) (857 SE2d 447)
    (2021) (“A person who tampers with evidence of [her] own crime is
    10Justice Ellington’s dissent closes with the thoughtful suggestion that
    the Council of Superior Court Judges consider adopting a new Uniform
    Superior Court Rule requiring as part of a plea colloquy that the judge
    accepting the plea inform the defendant of the various requirements for plea
    withdrawal and appeal. We agree that such a rule merits consideration.
    19
    guilty of only a misdemeanor.”); White v. State, 
    287 Ga. 713
    , 717 (1)
    (d) (699 SE2d 291) (2010) (felony sentence is permitted only when a
    person   tampers    with   evidence   involving   apprehension    or
    prosecution of a person other than himself). Accordingly, we vacate
    the sentence on Count 7 and remand for resentencing on it.
    Judgment affirmed in part and vacated in part, and case
    remanded. All the Justices concur, except Ellington and Colvin, JJ.,
    who dissent as to Division 1.
    20
    ELLINGTON, Justice, dissenting in part.
    In his special concurrence in Collier v. State, Justice Peterson
    posited that it “would appear to be merely a logical extension of
    statements we have previously made” to hold that “a granted
    motion for out-of-time appeal from a guilty plea authorizes not only
    an appeal but also a motion to withdraw the guilty plea[.]”11 I agree,
    although we stopped short of saying so in the majority opinion in
    Collier because the issue was not then before the Court. Indeed, I
    would go further and say that such a holding is the logical result,
    not merely of some of our prior statements, but of our prior holdings,
    which involved the application of federal and state constitutional
    law and state statutory law. Now that the issue is squarely
    presented for our decision, the majority arbitrarily declines to
    extend to guilty-plea convictions the practice that has long been
    available for trial convictions – that a granted out-of-time appeal
    constitutes permission, not just to proceed directly to review by an
    11Collier v. State, 
    307 Ga. 363
    , 380 (834 SE2d 769) (2019) (Peterson, J.,
    concurring).
    21
    appellate court, but to start the post-conviction process anew in the
    court of conviction. In light of the underlying principles concerning
    post-conviction remedies, there is no reasonable basis on which to
    treat guilty-plea defendants differently from similarly situated
    trial-convicted defendants. I therefore respectfully dissent as to
    Division 1 of the majority opinion.
    Under Georgia law, a criminal defendant has an unqualified
    right to appeal directly from a judgment entered on a guilty plea. 12
    Compliance with the statutory deadline for filing a notice of appeal
    is required to confer jurisdiction on an appellate court. 13 Upon a
    finding by the trial court of the county of a prisoner’s current
    12  See Ringold v. State, 
    309 Ga. 443
    , 446 n.3 (847 SE2d 181) (2020);
    Collier, 307 Ga. at 367-369 (1); see also Rodriquez v. United States, 
    395 U. S. 327
     (89 SCt 1715, 23 LE2d 340) (1969).
    13 See OCGA §§ 5-6-38 (a) (A notice of appeal must be filed within 30 days
    after entry of the appealable decision or judgment complained of, or within 30
    days after the entry of an order granting, overruling, or otherwise finally
    disposing of a timely-filed motion for new trial, a motion in arrest of judgment,
    or a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.); 5-6-39 (Provided an
    application for an extension of time to file a notice of appeal is filed before the
    time for filing the notice of appeal expires, the court may grant a single
    extension of no more than 30 days.); Kelly v. State, ___ Ga. ___, ___ (860 SE2d
    740, 742) (2021); Collier, 307 Ga. at 371 (2); Gable v. State, 
    290 Ga. 81
    , 83 (2)
    (a) (720 SE2d 170) (2011).
    22
    confinement (the habeas court) that the prisoner’s right to a direct
    appeal was frustrated by the ineffective assistance of counsel, the
    habeas court may allow an out-of-time appeal under the Habeas
    Corpus Act of 1967, OCGA §§ 9-14-40 et seq. 14 In 1974, this Court
    held that the Act
    provided an adequate post-conviction remedy to a
    prisoner seeking relief upon a claim arising from the
    substantial denial of rights guaranteed by the federal or
    state constitutions or by the statute laws of the state,
    including, . . . the denial of the right of appeal or of the
    effective assistance of counsel on appeal.
    Neal v. State, 
    232 Ga. 96
    , 96 (205 SE2d 284) (1974) (citations
    omitted).15
    14 See Dos Santos v. State, 
    307 Ga. 151
    , 159 (5) (834 SE2d 733) (2019).
    15  Originally, the Code section providing the grounds for habeas relief
    provided: “Any person imprisoned by virtue of a sentence imposed by a state
    court of record who asserts that in the proceedings which resulted in his
    conviction there was a substantial denial of his rights under the Constitution
    of the United States or of the State of Georgia or the laws of the State of
    23
    As we observed in Collier, for decades we have allowed an
    alternative method to co-exist for a defendant to obtain an out-of-
    time appeal from a judgment of conviction, despite the principle
    that “courts have no authority to create equitable exceptions to
    jurisdictional requirements imposed by statute.” Collier v. State,
    
    307 Ga. 363
    , 371 (1) (834 SE2d 769) (2019), quoting Gable v. State,
    
    290 Ga. 81
    , 85 (2) (b) (720 SE2d 170) (2011) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). While at times questioning the propriety of
    doing so, we allowed this alternative track, which proceeds in the
    trial court where the defendant was tried and sentenced and which,
    like the habeas track, excuses a defendant’s failure to timely file a
    Georgia may institute a proceeding under this section.” Ga. Laws 1965, p. 835,
    § 1. See Ga. Code. of 1933, § 50-127. In 1982, the Code section was amended,
    eliminating the provision for raising denials of rights under Georgia’s statutory
    laws. See Ga. Laws 1982, p. 786, §§ 1, 3 (“Any person imprisoned by virtue of
    a sentence imposed by a State court of record who asserts that in the
    proceedings which resulted in his conviction there was a substantial denial of
    his rights under the Constitution of the United States or of the State of Georgia
    may institute a proceeding under this Section.”); Parker v. Abernathy, 
    253 Ga. 673
    , 673 (324 SE2d 191) (1985). The relevant Code section now provides: “Any
    person imprisoned by virtue of a sentence imposed by a state court of record
    who asserts that in the proceedings which resulted in his conviction there was
    a substantial denial of his rights under the Constitution of the United States
    or of this state may institute a proceeding under this article.” OCGA § 9-14-42
    (a).
    24
    notice of appeal, because the required finding – that the defendant’s
    right to a direct appeal was frustrated by the ineffective assistance
    of counsel – “is a violation of constitutional magnitude.” Collier, 307
    Ga. at 371 (2).
    We have consistently deemed the grant of an out-of-time
    appeal to be “the functional equivalent of the entry of a judgment,”
    even after three Justices joined in Justice Peterson’s special
    concurrence in Collier, questioning whether the out-of-time appeal
    process should be maintained. Pounds v. State, 
    309 Ga. 376
    , 379 n.5
    (2) (b) (846 SE2d 48 (2020).16 Because the time allowed to initiate
    post-conviction proceedings begins to run when a judgment of
    conviction is entered, the grant of an out-of-time appeal, as the
    functional equivalent of the entry of the judgment, serves to “reset”
    16 See also Moore v. State, 
    303 Ga. 743
    , 745 (814 SE2d 676) (2018) (The
    grant or denial of a motion for an out-of-time appeal is the functional
    equivalent of the entry of a judgment.); Berrien v. State, 
    300 Ga. 489
    , 491 n.2
    (1) (796 SE2d 718) (2017) (The grant of a motion for an out-of-time appeal is
    the functional equivalent of the entry of a judgment.); Cody v. State, 
    277 Ga. 553
    , 553 n.1 (592 SE2d 419) (2004) (same); Fairclough v. State, 
    276 Ga. 602
    ,
    603 (1) (581 SE2d 3) (2003) (same).
    25
    the trigger date for the time allowed for post-conviction
    proceedings. See id. at 379 (2) (b); Lay v. State, 
    305 Ga. 715
    , 715 n.1
    (827 SE2d 671) (2019). That is why we have said that the grant of
    an out-of-time appeal permits a defendant to start the post-
    conviction process anew.17 From our earliest cases on this issue,
    permission to file an out-of-time appeal included permission to file
    a motion for a new trial. 18 The defendant’s motion for a new trial
    17    The majority opinion concludes that many of these “statements” of
    principles did not constitute “holdings” in that they were not strictly limited to
    the scope of the factual context of the cases being decided and the issues that
    such context necessarily raised. Maj. Op. at 11. Much of the system that has
    built upon around our post-conviction jurisprudence was generated by such
    extra-contextual statements by us, as opposed to being mandated by our
    technical holdings. As is demonstrated by the transcripts of the hearings in
    this case, trial courts and officers of the court often believe themselves to be
    bound by such statements of principle by this, the highest court in Georgia. It
    is unreasonable to expect them to heed only the most limited technical holdings
    in our decisions.
    18 See Furgerson v. State, 
    234 Ga. 594
    , 595-597 (2) (216 SE2d 845) (1975)
    (The defendant “filed his pro se motion for out of time appeal [in the trial court],
    counsel was appointed, the motion was granted, a motion for new trial and an
    amendment thereto were filed and overruled, and this appeal followed.”); see
    also Maxwell v. State, 
    262 Ga. 541
    , 542-543 (3) 422 SE2d 543) (1992) (A granted
    out-of-time appeal “permits a defendant, by the grace of the court, to start the
    post-conviction process anew.” (footnote omitted)), disapproved of by Kelly v.
    State, ___ Ga. at ___; Ponder v. State, 
    260 Ga. 840
    , 841 (1) (400 SE2d 922)
    (1991) (“[T]he scope of the permission given when an out-of-time appeal is
    granted must be broader” than “only permission to file a direct appeal to an
    appellate court and not any form of post-conviction relief from the lower court
    itself. . . . [T]he grant of an out-of-time appeal constitutes permission to pursue
    26
    did not need to address trial counsel’s ineffective assistance in the
    failure to perfect an appeal that the defendant desired to pursue,
    because the trial court necessarily made that determination in
    granting the request for an out-of-time appeal. A motion for a new
    trial filed after a defendant was granted an out-of-time appeal could
    address other aspects of the effectiveness of trial counsel. Moreover,
    the defendant could raise issues as diverse as asking the trial court
    to weigh the evidence as the “13th juror”; 19 to consider questions of
    alleged prosecutorial misconduct in discovery; 20 to consider
    questions of improper communications with jurors; 21 etc.
    Now we are tasked with deciding whether, in the case of guilty-
    plea convictions, permission for the defendant “to start the post-
    appropriate post-conviction remedies, including a motion for new trial.”),
    disapproved of by Kelly v. State, ___ Ga. at ___.
    19 See OCGA §§ 5-5-20; 5-5-21; Felts v. State, 
    311 Ga. 547
    , ___ n.6 (858
    SE2d 708, 714) (2021); Holmes v. State, 
    306 Ga. 524
    , 527-528 (2) (832 SE2d
    392) (2019).
    20 See Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U. S. 83
     (83 SCt 1194, 10 LE2d 215)
    (1963); Mitchell v. State, 
    307 Ga. 855
    , 860-863 (2) (b) (838 SE2d 847) (2020);
    Hall v. State, 
    286 Ga. 358
    , 360-361 (3) (687 SE2d 819) (2010).
    21 See Turner v. Louisiana, 
    379 U. S. 466
    , 473-474 (85 SCt 546, 13 LE2d
    424) (1965); Radford v. State, 
    263 Ga. 47
    , 48-50 (426 SE2d 868) (1993).
    27
    conviction process anew” includes the right to move to withdraw the
    defendant’s guilty plea. That is, is there a second track in the court
    of conviction for obtaining out-of-time post-conviction relief from a
    guilty plea, in addition to the habeas track available in the court of
    confinement? 22 The majority opinion says, “no.” Certainly issues
    like the weight of the evidence, prosecutorial misconduct, and
    improper communications with jurors are not small stakes in the
    22 The majority opinion states that Georgia does not recognize untimely
    standalone motions to withdraw a guilty plea. Maj. Op. at 8. It is true that in
    some cases we have held that a trial court properly dismissed (or improperly
    failed to dismiss) an untimely, standalone motion to withdraw a guilty plea, as
    least where the defendant failed to allege that counsel’s constitutionally
    deficient performance deprived him of his right to timely file a motion to
    withdraw his plea. See, e.g., Sims v. State, ___ Ga. ___, ___ (Case No.
    S21A0587, decided Aug. 24, 2021). We have, however, also considered on the
    merits an appeal from the denial on the merits of a pleading that the trial court
    construed to be an out-of-time motion to withdraw his guilty plea. See Gude v.
    State, 
    229 Ga. 831
     (194 SE2d 445) (1972). In Gude, the trial court found that
    the plea was knowing and voluntary and made with the assistance of counsel.
    This Court determined that the prisoner’s motion made other arguments that
    “might appropriately be urged in a petition for writ of habeas corpus” and,
    therefore, had to be filed in the county of confinement. But we considered the
    plea-validity ruling on the merits, holding that “the record sustained the
    finding that the plea of guilty was intelligently and voluntarily made.” 
    Id. at 832
    . Gude has not been overruled, nor was it even discussed in any of the cases
    cited by the majority opinion. The majority opinion suggests that, if Gude can
    be read as having permitted untimely motions to withdraw a guilty plea, that
    holding was effectively overruled by our more recent decisions holding
    otherwise. Why then has the holding in Neal not been effectively overruled by
    the scores of more recent decisions permitting out-of-time appeals?
    28
    arena of constitutional due-process and fair-trial rights. But a
    motion to withdraw a guilty plea often goes, as in this case, to the
    very heart of the validity of the waiver of numerous constitutional
    protections through the entry of a guilty plea. 23 I fail to see a
    principled reason to deny guilty-plea defendants access to the
    procedural tool we created. If, as the majority opinion theorizes, a
    motion to withdraw a guilty plea is filed, pursuant to a granted out-
    of-time appeal, many years after the plea, and lost or destroyed
    records and dead or forgetful witnesses hinder the State in carrying
    its burden of proving that a guilty plea was voluntary, knowing, and
    intelligent, it should be short work for the State to establish the
    defense of prejudicial delay. See Maj. Op. at 10-11; Collier, 307 Ga.
    at 374-375 (2).
    Our judicially created out-of-time appeal procedure has
    23In Schoicket’s second amended motion for an out-of-time appeal, she
    contends that her mental health deteriorated during her pretrial incarceration
    to the extent that she was not capable of making a competent, knowing, and
    voluntary plea and that her plea counsel’s assistance was ineffective in failing
    to investigate her mental health and request a postponement of the plea
    hearing for a competency evaluation. Schoicket listed her medications and
    described their effects and attached copies of jail records reflecting her
    diagnoses.
    29
    presented Georgia courts with many confounding questions over
    several decades. At multiple points, we could have retracted our
    recognition of the out-of-time appeal procedural vehicle and once
    again adhered to our conclusion in Neal that the General Assembly
    in the Habeas Corpus Act provided an adequate remedy – and the
    exclusive one 24 – for the right of appeal frustrated by the ineffective
    assistance of counsel. 25 As the majority opinion intimates with its
    24  See OCGA §§ 9-14-40 (a) (“The General Assembly finds that: (1)
    Expansion of the scope of habeas corpus in federal court by decisions of the
    United States Supreme Court together with other decisions of the court
    substantially curtailing the doctrine of waiver of constitutional rights by an
    accused and limiting the requirement of exhaustion of state remedies to those
    currently available have resulted in an increasingly large number of
    convictions of the courts of this state being collaterally attacked by federal
    habeas corpus based upon issues and contentions not previously presented to
    or passed upon by courts of this state; (2) The increased reliance upon federal
    courts tends to weaken state courts as instruments for the vindication of
    constitutional rights with a resultant deterioration of the federal system and
    federal-state relations; and (3) To alleviate such problems, it is necessary that
    the scope of state habeas corpus be expanded and the state doctrine of waiver
    of rights be modified.”); 9-14-41 (“Notwithstanding the other provisions of this
    chapter [Title 9, Article 1, general provisions for habeas corpus], this article
    [Title 9, Article 2, procedure for person under sentence of a state court of
    record] provides the exclusive procedure for seeking a writ of habeas corpus for
    persons whose liberty is being restrained by virtue of a sentence imposed
    against them by a state court of record.”); Ga. L. 1967, p. 835, § 1.
    25 As the majority opinion puts it, we have begun to trim back and retreat
    from our broad statements in Ponder and Maxwell, cases we disapproved of in
    Kelly. Maj. Op. at 5 and 7. We expressly held in Kelly that “the effect of the
    grant of an out-of-time is to restore the defendant to the position [she] occupied
    30
    citation to Duke v. State, 
    306 Ga. 171
    , 186 (4) (829 SE2d 348) (2019),
    and as Justice Colvin persuasively explicates in her dissent, we
    have the power to do so. See Maj. Op. at 11.
    In his special concurrence in Collier, Justice Peterson was
    rightly critical of the Court’s improper, if “well-intentioned,”
    incursion into policy-setting territory but warned that unweaving
    our “tangled mess” of judicially created post-conviction remedies
    could be “unduly disruptive to the system that has built up around”
    motions for out-of-time appeals. See Collier, 307 Ga. at 379
    (Peterson, J. concurring specially). And the majority opinion now
    at the time [she] forfeited [her] right to appeal (or seek other post-conviction
    relief).” ___ Ga. at ___. Our holding in Kelly creates the next point we will have
    to clarify. In more than three-quarters of Georgia’s superior courts, by my
    count, a new term of court did not commence before Schoicket forfeited her
    right to appeal, that is, when she failed to file a notice of appeal within 30 days
    after the court entered judgment on October 11, 2016. See OCGA § 15-6-3. If
    Schoicket had entered her guilty plea in one of those superior courts, and the
    granted out-of-time appeal restored her to the position she occupied at the time
    she forfeited her right to “seek other post-conviction relief,” per Kelly, she
    would have been restored to the position she occupied when she had forfeited
    her right to appeal but had not yet forfeited her right to file a motion to
    withdraw her guilty plea. Because Schoicket entered her guilty plea in the
    Superior Court of Walton County, however, she had already forfeited her right
    to file a motion to withdraw her guilty plea when she forfeited her right to
    appeal, see OCGA § 15-6-3 (2) (B), and settling this aspect of the tangled mess
    can be left for another day.
    31
    insists that this Court lacks the authority “to substitute our policy
    preferences for those of the General Assembly and thereby allow a
    defendant to skirt the legislatively established process.” Maj. Op. at
    14. Yet, by allowing out-of-time appeals, we have, repeatedly,
    already substituted our policy preferences for those of the General
    Assembly and allowed defendants to skirt the legislatively-
    established habeas process. And in Collier this Court unanimously
    opted once again not to terminate the practice. In my view,
    Schoicket is not asking that we “mak[e] up new policy” and “invent
    [an] additional remed[y],” as the majority opinion assumes.
    Schoicket is merely asking that we recognize that the parallel post-
    conviction process we have already invented includes guilty-plea
    convictions. Limiting the effect of a granted out-of-time appeal for
    guilty-plea defendants, because of practical considerations, while
    continuing to allow trial courts to permit trial-convicted defendants
    to start the post-conviction process anew, because of amorphous
    interests in stability and because the General Assembly has
    tolerated that scheme and indeed “appropriated substantial funds
    32
    to make that system work,” is no less setting policy than it was to
    permit the procedure in the first place. See Maj. Op. at17. If we
    must continue to wait for the General Assembly to “save us from
    ourselves” (as we have been waiting for decades),26 at least we can
    ensure that access to the misbegotten procedure is provided in an
    even-handed manner. If we are unwilling to do so, we should do as
    Justice Colvin suggests in her dissent and fix the problem outright.
    The General Assembly is fully capable of resolving how to allocate
    funds to make the system work. Indeed, the General Assembly
    would be freed from having to appropriate, in addition to funds to
    make the post-conviction system work as it intended when it
    adopted the Habeas Corpus Act over 50 years ago, additional
    substantial funds to make our judicially-created parallel system
    work.
    I question too whether we as the judiciary can do nothing to
    26 I join Justice Colvin in wondering what legislative fix we are waiting
    for, given the General Assembly’s provision of the exclusive – and, as we found
    in Neal, an adequate – vehicle for prisoners to obtain post-conviction relief from
    a substantial denial of their constitutional rights.
    33
    ameliorate this tangled mess, at least partially, short of entirely
    abolishing the procedure. Georgia’s uniform court rules already
    provide a useful checklist for plea colloquies that incorporate many
    elements embodied in decisional law of what a defendant must
    understand in order for a waiver of fair-trial rights to be knowing. 27
    Trial courts routinely include in such colloquies the statutory
    mandate that, before a trial court accepts a guilty plea, the
    defendant be informed of the four-year (for felonies) or one-year (for
    misdemeanors) limits, adopted in 2004, for filing a petition for a
    writ of habeas corpus. 28 If the General Assembly is not inclined to
    act to entirely clean up the mess we have created, at the very least
    we could ameliorate some of the issues by adopting a court rule
    that, before accepting a guilty plea, a trial court should inform the
    27  See Uniform Superior Court Rule 33.8; Uniform State Court Rules,
    preamble (Except as otherwise provided, the Uniform Rules for the Superior
    Courts shall be applicable in State Courts.).
    28 See OCGA § 9-14-42 (c) (limitation periods), (d) (requirement that, at
    the time of sentencing, the court inform the defendant of the statutory periods
    of limitation); Ga. L. 2004, p. 917, §1. The record in this case shows that the
    trial court concluded the plea hearing by stating, “I advise you that you have
    four years from the date that these sentences are final to file for a habeas
    corpus. Do you understand that?” Schoicket responded affirmatively.
    34
    defendant on the record that her ability to file a timely motion to
    withdraw her guilty plea ends on the last day of the term of court; 29
    to specify that date; to inform the defendant that she has a right to
    a direct appeal; and to specify the date by which a notice of appeal
    must be filed. In addition, trial courts could be required to inform a
    defendant that plea counsel is required to represent the defendant,
    unless either another attorney is substituted in place of plea
    counsel or plea counsel is allowed by court order to withdraw as
    counsel, until the later of the end of the term of court or the last day
    to file a notice of appeal; 30 that plea counsel is required to avoid
    procedural default of those remedies if the defendant desires to
    pursue them;31 and that the defendant is not entitled to file
    pleadings on her own behalf while she is still represented by
    counsel. 32 If a defendant was provided this information, it would be
    29See Lay v. State, 
    289 Ga. 210
    , 211 (710 SE2d 141) (2011).
    30See Dos Santos, 307 Ga. at 157-159 (5).
    31 See McAuliffe v. Rutledge, 
    231 Ga. 745
    , 746 (204 SE2d141) (1974);
    McAuliffe v. Rutledge, 
    231 Ga. 1
    , 2-3 (200 SE2d 100) (1973).
    32 See Dos Santos, 307 Ga. at 154-155 (3).
    35
    less unfair to rest the responsibility for a procedural default on the
    defendant’s own shoulders, and the remedies created by statute (a
    motion in arrest of judgment33 and habeas 34) would suffice.
    I respectfully dissent as to Division 1.
    33 See OCGA § 17-9-60 et seq. (A party may move in arrest of any criminal
    judgment within the term at which the judgment was entered for any non-
    amendable defect that appears on the face of the record or pleadings.); Lay, 
    289 Ga. at 211
     (A claim that an indictment failed to allege an essential element of
    the crime raised a proper ground for a motion in arrest of judgment.).
    34 See OCGA §§ 9-14-40 et seq.
    36
    S21A0840. SCHOICKET v. THE STATE.
    COLVIN, Justice, dissenting in part.
    After we correctly ruled in Neal v. State, 
    232 Ga. 96
     (205 SE2d
    284) (1974) that a prisoner seeking to file an out-of-time direct
    appeal must do so in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 
    id. at 96
    ,
    this Court “created out of whole cloth . . . a tangled mess of post-
    conviction jurisprudence” that permitted prisoners to instead
    pursue post-conviction relief through a standalone motion for an
    out-of-time direct appeal in a court of conviction, see Collier v. State,
    
    307 Ga. 363
    , 379 (834 SE2d 769) (2019) (Peterson, J., concurring
    specially). Today, a majority of this Court acknowledges once again
    that we should never have invented this procedural vehicle, which
    has caused headache after headache as courts seek to define the
    contours of a made-up post-conviction proceeding. See Maj. Op. at
    2, 4. Nevertheless, the majority chooses to trim the edges of our
    jurisprudence rather than to address the root cause of the problem.
    In my view, it is inappropriate for us to continue waiting for
    37
    the General Assembly “to save us from ourselves.” Collier, 307 Ga.
    at 379 (Peterson, J., concurring specially). It is our responsibility,
    not the General Assembly’s, to fix our own mistakes, and this is
    particularly true when, as here, the General Assembly clearly
    addressed the issue more than 50 years ago by providing an
    adequate and exclusive vehicle for prisoners to obtain post-
    conviction relief from a substantial denial of their constitutional
    rights – namely, a habeas petition. See Neal, 
    232 Ga. at 96
     (“Under
    the Habeas Corpus Act of 1967, there is provided an adequate post-
    conviction remedy to a prisoner seeking relief upon a claim arising
    from the substantial denial of rights guaranteed by the Federal or
    State Constitutions . . . .” (citation omitted)); see also OCGA § 9-14-
    41 (“[T]his article provides the exclusive procedure for seeking a writ
    of habeas corpus for persons whose liberty is being restrained by
    virtue of a sentence imposed against them by a state court of
    record.”). I see no good reason to require the General Assembly to
    pass new legislation stating that it really meant what it said when
    it passed the Habeas Corpus Act of 1967, OCGA §§ 9-14-40 et seq.
    38
    The law, as written, governs.
    In explaining the decision not to take any steps toward
    untangling   our   post-conviction    jurisprudence   ourselves,   the
    majority appears to be under the impression that eliminating the
    standalone out-of-time appeal procedure might be “disruptive to the
    system that has developed around it,” and that this Court need not
    eliminate the procedural vehicle to avoid “add[ing] to th[e] mess.”
    See Maj. Op. at 12–13 & n.6. No doubt, reverting to the status quo
    as of 1974, when we issued Neal, would disrupt the system to some
    extent. Indeed, that would be the point – to follow the law set out
    by the General Assembly rather than the conflicting law we
    invented.
    I disagree, however, that the majority has avoided adding to
    the mess by trimming back some of our precedent.          As Justice
    Ellington notes in his partial dissent, the majority has declined to
    follow the clear logical import of our precedent. As a result, the
    majority has created an even more inconsistent legal landscape that
    favors prisoners found guilty at trial over those who entered a guilty
    39
    plea – all in an effort to “avoid dispensing unwarranted windfalls.”
    See Maj. Op. at 2, 10. Let me suggest, however, that receiving an
    out-of-time appeal without having first prevailed in a habeas
    proceeding is itself an “unwarranted windfall” – given that the
    General Assembly did not provide a vehicle for prisoners to seek
    such relief in the court of conviction and a majority of this Court
    appears to agree that granting such relief in an “invented” post-
    conviction proceeding does not comport with the law. See Maj. Op.
    at 2, 4. That being the case, we should follow Neal rather than our
    made-up subsequent precedent that has caused no shortage of
    difficulties.
    I agree with the majority that “[w]e lack the authority to
    substitute our policy preferences for those of the General Assembly
    and thereby allow a defendant to skirt the legislatively established
    process.” Maj. Op. at 15. Indeed, that is the reason I believe we
    ought to fix the problem outright and require prisoners seeking an
    out-of-time appeal and associated remedies to use the habeas
    procedures that the General Assembly has afforded. Barring that,
    40
    however, we should follow the logic of our prior holdings as Justice
    Ellington suggests. Doing so would at least ensure that similarly
    situated prisoners are treated equally, whether their convictions
    resulted from a guilty plea or a jury verdict, and that trial courts,
    litigants, and the public at large can follow our reasoning.
    Given a choice between the majority’s decision to unfairly
    narrow our post-Neal precedent and Justice Ellington’s consistent
    application of that precedent, I would favor the latter approach. In
    my view, however, neither approach fully comports with the
    governing law. Accordingly, I separately dissent with respect to
    Division 1.
    41