Harris v. State , 2017 NV 85 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                          133 Nev., Advance Opinion 65
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEVADA
    LAMAR ANTWAN HARRIS,                                  No 7Ø6
    Appellant,
    vs.
    FILED
    THE STATE OF NEVADA,                                                 NOV 1 6 2017
    Respondent.
    at digg7TZ■
    al;       IIIIena
    Appeal from an order of the district court dismissing
    postconviction petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Eighth Judicial
    District Court, Clark County; Carolyn Ellsworth, Judge.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Carling Law Office, PC, and Matthew D. Carling, Las Vegas,
    for Appellant.
    Adam Paul Laxalt, Attorney General, Carson City; Steven B. Wolfson,
    District Attorney, and Jonathan E. Van Boskerck, Chief Deputy District
    Attorney, Clark County,
    for Respondent.
    BEFORE SILVER, C.J., TAO and GIBBONS, JJ.
    OPINION
    By the Court, GIBBONS, J.:
    This case arises from an untimely postconviction petition for a
    writ of habeas corpus stemming from a conviction, entered pursuant to a
    jury verdict, of battery with the use of a deadly weapon resulting in
    substantial bodily harm. In his petition and supplement, appellant Lamar
    Antwan Harris alleged he had good cause for the delay in filing the
    petition because he believed counsel had filed a petition on his behalf, his
    belief was reasonable, and he filed the petition within a reasonable time of
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    discovering his petition had not been filed. The district court dismissed
    the petition as procedurally time-barred.
    In this appeal, we consider whether counsel's affirmative
    misrepresentation regarding filing a postconviction petition and
    subsequent abandonment of the petitioner can be an impediment external
    to the defense to satisfy cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a) for
    filing an untimely petition. We conclude it can. We hold that to
    demonstrate cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a) in such a
    circumstance, a petitioner must show: (1) the petitioner believed counsel
    filed a petition on petitioner's behalf; (2) this belief was objectively
    reasonable; (3) counsel abandoned the petitioner without notice and failed
    to timely file the petition; and (4) the petitioner filed the petition within a
    reasonable time after the petitioner should have known counsel did not
    file a petition. Because we conclude Harris demonstrated cause for the
    delay under the approach set forth above, we reverse the district court's
    order and we remand for further proceedings.
    PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY
    Harris was convicted of battery with the use of a deadly
    weapon resulting in substantial bodily harm and was sentenced to 70 to
    175 months in prison. After sentencing, Harris opted to have his previous
    counsel withdraw and he hired new counsel, Leslie Park, to represent him
    in his post-trial proceedings. Through Park, Harris filed a direct appeal
    from his judgment of conviction. Harris' conviction was affirmed on direct
    appeal. Harris v. State, Docket No. 59817 (Order of Affirmance, Dec. 13,
    2012).
    More than two years after the remittitur on direct appeal
    issued, Harris filed an untimely pro se postconviction petition for a writ of
    habeas corpus. As good cause to excuse the untimely filing, Harris
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    claimed he reasonably believed Park had filed a petition on his behalf, and
    when he discovered she had not, he filed his petition within a reasonable
    time after that discovery.
    The district court concluded Harris might be able to establish
    good cause to overcome the procedural bar and appointed counsel to
    supplement Harris' petition. In the supplement, counsel argued for an
    extension of the Hathaway' reasoning regarding good cause when counsel
    fails to file a direct appeal from a judgment of conviction. Specifically,
    counsel argued cause to excuse the procedural time bar should exist in
    situations where a defendant reasonably believes counsel filed a
    postconviction petition on his behalf, and the petitioner files a petition
    within a reasonable time of realizing counsel did not file a petition.
    The district court scheduled an evidentiary hearing on Harris'
    good cause claim. However, on the scheduled hearing date, a senior judge
    presided over the proceedings, declined to hold an evidentiary hearing,
    and denied the petition. The district court subsequently granted Harris'
    motion for reconsideration and held an evidentiary hearing.
    At the hearing, Harris testified he hired Park to represent him
    for both his appeal and his postconviction petition and claimed they
    agreed to a fee arrangement of $8,000 for handling both cases. After
    initially denying she agreed to represent Harris for his postconviction
    petition, Park agreed she was retained for both the direct appeal and the
    petition. She also agreed the fee was $8,000, but stated Harris had only
    paid her about half of that.
    'Hathaway v. State, 
    119 Nev. 248
    , 254-55, 
    71 P.3d 503
    , 507-08
    (2003).
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    Harris testified he received a copy of a document drafted by
    Park entitled "Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus" approximately five
    months after the remittitur issued in his direct appeal. The petition was
    signed by Park and included information causing it to appear as though it
    had been served on the Clerk of the Supreme Court, the Clark County
    District Attorney, and the Nevada Attorney General. The caption also
    indicated it was being filed in the Nevada Supreme Court.
    Harris testified that sometime later he was informed by a
    fellow inmate his petition was filed in the wrong court. In December of
    2013, before the expiration of the one-year time limit for filing a
    postconviction petition, Harris contacted counsel to point this error out
    and she told him she would immediately correct it and file it in the district
    court. Throughout 2014, Harris attempted to contact Park to no avail.
    Because he understood postconviction proceedings could take
    some time, Harris waited until December of 2014 to contact the district
    court and the Nevada Supreme Court to inquire into the status of his
    petition. Between the end of December 2014 and the beginning of January
    2015, Harris learned his petition had not been filed in either the district
    court or the Nevada Supreme Court. Harris then filed his petition on
    March 11, 2015.
    Park confirmed at the evidentiary hearing she never filed the
    petition. Park claimed she was waiting for Harris to pay her the
    remainder of her fee before filing the petition. She stated she signed the
    petition and filled out the certificate of service in case Harris paid her
    right before the deadline to file.
    After hearing this testimony, the district court concluded
    Harris' testimony was more credible than Park's because Park's responses
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    were equivocal in nature, Park stated she lacked knowledge in response to
    many questions, and she conceded to many of the factual allegations put
    forth by Harris. Although troubled by Park's performance, the district
    court also concluded Harris did not demonstrate good cause to overcome
    the procedural time-bar. Specifically, the district court concluded
    Hathaway could not be extended because "Hathaway's holding was clearly
    couched in the fact that the petitioner there had a Sixth Amendment right
    to the effective assistance of counsel on direct appeal, a claim that could
    excuse his late petition filing." The district court further concluded,
    because Harris was not entitled to the effective assistance of
    postconviction counsel, he was "precluded from relying upon a claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel to show good cause to excuse the
    procedural default." Therefore, the district court granted the State's
    motion and dismissed the petition as procedurally time-barred. This
    appeal follows.
    DISCUSSION
    Harris claims the district court erred by denying his petition
    as procedurally barred. He asserts he demonstrated cause and prejudice
    to excuse the procedural time-bar because his counsel's actions prevented
    him from timely filing a postconviction petition and deprived him of his
    statutory right to seek postconviction relief
    Pursuant to NRS 34.726(1), a postconviction petition for a writ
    of habeas corpus "must be filed within one year after entry of the
    judgment of conviction or, if a timely appeal is taken from the judgment,
    within one year after [the Nevada Supreme Court] issues its remittitur,
    absent a showing of good cause for thefl delay." State v. Huebler, 
    128 Nev. 192
    , 197, 
    275 P.3d 91
    , 94 (2012). Harris filed a direct appeal from his
    judgment of conviction and the remittitur issued on January 9, 2013.
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    However, Harris did not file his petition until March 11, 2015, more than
    two years after the remittitur issued. Thus, Harris' petition was
    procedurally barred absent a demonstration of good cause for the delay.
    "[GI ood cause for delay exists if the petitioner demonstrates to
    the satisfaction of the court: (a) [t]hat the delay is not the fault of the
    petitioner; and (b) [Chat dismissal of the petition as untimely will unduly
    prejudice the petitioner." NRS 34.726(1). "Generally, good cause means a
    substantial reason; one that affords a legal excuse."    Colley v. State, 
    105 Nev. 235
    , 236, 
    773 P.2d 1229
    , 1230 (1989) (internal quotation marks
    omitted), abrogated by statute on other grounds as recognized by 
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    n.2, 275 P.3d at 95 
    n.2.
    Harris was not entitled to the effective assistance of
    postconviction counsel and he could not establish good cause to excuse the
    delay in filing his petition based on a claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel.   See Brown v. McDaniel, 130 Nev. , 
    331 P.3d 867
    , 870
    (2014) (recognizing a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel does not
    constitute good cause to excuse the procedural bar where a petitioner does
    not have a Sixth Amendment or statutory right to the appointment of
    counsel). Harris, however, argues there is a distinction between a claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel for purposes of habeas relief and a good
    cause claim that counsel's actions interfered with or created an
    impediment that prevented a petitioner from filing a postconviction
    petition within the procedural time limits. He argues there are some
    circumstances where counsel's actions can be an impediment external to
    the defense and establish undue prejudice to satisfy good cause under
    NRS 34.726(1) for filing an untimely petition. He asserts the Nevada
    Supreme Court identified such a circumstance in Hathaway.             Harris
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    argues his counsel's actions in this case represent another such
    circumstance, and he urges this court to adopt a test, similar to the one in
    Hathaway, for evaluating a claim of good cause based on a petitioner's
    reliance on counsel's affirmative misrepresentation that counsel had, or
    was going to, timely file a petition on the petitioner's behalf.
    Cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a)
    In order to show the delay was not the fault of the petitioner,
    "a petitioner must show that an impediment external to the defense
    prevented him or her from complying with the state procedural default
    rules."   
    Hathaway, 119 Nev. at 252
    , 71 P.3d at 506. "In terms of a
    procedural time-bar, an adequate allegation of good cause would
    sufficiently explain why a petition was filed beyond the statutory time
    period." 
    Id. at 252-53,
    71 P.34 at 506.
    Generally, "mere attorney error, not rising to the level of
    ineffective assistance of counsel, such as attorney ignorance or
    inadvertence," will not constitute cause to overcome a procedural bar
    "because the attorney is the petitioner's agent when acting, or failing to
    act, in furtherance of the litigation, and the petitioner must 'bear the risk
    of attorney error." Crump v. Warden, 
    113 Nev. 293
    , 304, 
    934 P.2d 247
    ,
    253(1997) (quoting Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 753 (1991)). But
    there is an "essential difference between a claim of attorney error,
    however egregious, and a claim that an attorney had essentially
    abandoned his client."     Maples v. Thomas, 
    565 U.S. 266
    , 282 (2012).
    Where counsel severs the principal-agent relationship and abandons his
    client without notice, the actions or omissions of counsel 'cannot fairly be
    attributed to [the client]." 
    Id. at 281
    (quoting 
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 753
    ).
    In such a situation, counsel's actions or omissions then become an
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    impediment external to the defense and may constitute good cause to
    overcome the procedural bars. 
    Id. at 283.
                                   As noted by Harris, in Hathaway, the Nevada Supreme Court
    identified one circumstance where counsel's omission can constitute an
    impediment external to the defense and a petitioner can establish good
    cause for the delay under NRS 
    34.726(1). 119 Nev. at 252-55
    , 71 P.3d at
    506-08. Hathaway asserted he had good cause to file an untimely petition
    because he asked counsel to file a direct appeal on his behalf, counsel
    affirmatively indicated he would file an appeal, Hathaway believed his
    counsel had filed an appeal, and Hathaway filed his petition within a
    reasonable time after learning his counsel did not file an appeal.     
    Id. at 254,
    71 P.3d at 507. The Hathaway court held a claim that counsel
    deprived the petitioner of a direct appeal could provide good cause to
    excuse the procedural time-bar.       
    Id. at 253-55,
    71 P.3d 507-08
    . The
    Hathaway court then set forth a "test for evaluating an allegation of good
    cause based upon a petitioner's mistaken belief that counsel had filed a
    direct appeal." 
    Id. at 254-55,
    71 P.3d at 507-08.
    Consistent with Hathaway, we hold counsel's affirmative
    representation that a timely postconviction petition will be filed,
    combined with counsel's subsequent abandonment without timely filing
    the petition, presents a circumstance where counsel's actions or omissions
    can constitute an impediment external to the defense to establish cause
    for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a). Using the framework in Hathaway,
    we establish the following test for evaluating an allegation of cause for the
    delay based on such a circumstance.
    First, a petitioner must show the petitioner believed counsel
    filed a timely petition on petitioner's behalf. Second, the petitioner must
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    show this belief was objectively reasonable, i.e., there was an attorney-
    client relationship and counsel affirmatively told or represented to the
    petitioner counsel had, or was going to, timely file a petition on the
    petitioner's behalf. Third, the petitioner must show counsel then
    abandoned petitioner without notice and failed to timely file the petition.
    We emphasize that the petitioner must demonstrate abandonment by
    counsel to satisfy this prong of the test; mere attorney negligence, such as
    miscalculating a filing deadline, will not suffice. Fourth, the petitioner
    must show the petition was filed within a reasonable time after the
    petitioner should have known counsel did not timely file a petition. This
    prong requires the petitioner to be reasonably diligent in determining
    whether the petition was actually filed.
    If a petitioner can meet all prongs of this test, the petitioner
    will have established cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a). This is
    so because, in such a circumstance, counsel's abandonment of the
    petitioner will constitute an impediment external to the defense that
    prevented the petitioner from timely pursuing postconviction relief.
    Undue prejudice under NRS 34.726(1)(b)
    Under NRS 34.726(1)(b), a petitioner must also demonstrate
    there will be undue prejudice by dismissal of the petition as untimely. In
    Huebler, the Nevada Supreme Court stated that to show undue prejudice
    under NRS 34.726(1)(b), "a petitioner must show that errors in the
    proceedings underlying the judgment worked to the petitioner's actual and
    substantial 
    disadvantage." 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95. We are
    required to follow this test. However, for the reasons discussed below, we
    disagree that this is the proper test for determining undue prejudice under
    NRS 34.726(1)(b).
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    "Nevada's post-conviction statutes contemplate the filing of
    one post-conviction petition to challenge a conviction or sentence."   Brown,
    130 Nev. at , 331 P.3d at 872. NRS Chapter 34 contains several
    different procedural bars that are designed to prevent different• abuses of
    the postconviction remedy. "The purpose of the single post-conviction
    remedy and the statutory procedural bars is 'to ensure that petitioners
    would be limited to one time through the post-conviction system."            
    Id. (quoting Pellegrini
    v. State, 
    117 Nev. 860
    , 876, 
    34 P.3d 519
    , 530 (2001)).
    The purpose of the procedural bar in NRS 34.810 is to prevent
    a petitioner from raising claims that could have previously been raised,
    NRS 34.810(1)(b), and to prevent the filing of multiple petitions, NRS
    34.810(2). In contrast, NRS 34.726 and NRS 34.800 are procedural time
    bars and the purpose of each is to "ensure that claims are raised before
    evidence is lost or memories fade." Lozada v. State, 
    110 Nev. 349
    , 358, 
    871 P.2d 944
    , 950 (1994). Each of the procedural bars operate independently
    of each other. For example, a petition may be procedurally barred under
    NRS 34.726(1), but not under NRS 34.810, and vice versa. Further, as the
    Pellegrini court noted, it is conceivable that a petitioner could demonstrate
    good cause under NRS 34.726, but laches under NRS 34.800 could
    nevertheless bar the 
    petition. 117 Nev. at 875
    , 34 P.3d at 529.
    Given the different purposes behind the procedural bars in
    NRS 34.726 and NRS 34.810, and taking into account the procedural bars
    operate independently of each other, it is unsurprising different terms are
    used to describe the prejudice necessary to overcome each procedural bar.
    NRS 34.726(1)(b) requires a showing of "undue" prejudice, while NRS
    34.810 requires a showing of "actual" prejudice. We must presume that
    because the statutes are located within the same chapter but use different
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    modifiers to describe the type of prejudice that must be shown, the type of
    prejudice required under each statute is different.   See Antonin Scalia &
    Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: Thefl Interpretation of Legal Texts       170
    (2012) (IA] material variation in terms suggests a variation in meaning.").
    The material difference in terms is further evidenced by the statutory
    structure for what is necessary to overcome each procedural bar. NRS
    34.726(1) requires only a showing of good cause, which it defines as cause
    and undue prejudice. NRS 34.726(1)(a), (b). In contrast, NRS 34.810(3)
    requires a showing of both good cause and actual prejudice. This,
    however, may not have been considered in the Hue bier decision. Instead,
    the Huebler decision appears to conflate the undue prejudice requirement
    under NRS 34.726(1)(b) with the actual prejudice requirement under NRS
    34.810.
    The Huebler decision cites to Hogan v. Warden, 
    109 Nev. 952
    ,
    959-60, 
    860 P.2d 710
    , 716 (1993), for the proposition that under NRS
    34.726(1)(b), "a petitioner must show that errors in the proceedings
    underlying the judgment worked to the petitioner's actual and substantial
    disadvantage."    
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95. Yet the
    procedural bar at issue in Hogan was NRS 34.810(3), which requires a
    showing of actual prejudice, not NRS 34.726(1), which only requires a
    showing of undue prejudice. Because the Huebler decision adopted the
    prejudice test set forth in Hogan, a petitioner is now required to show
    actual prejudice in order to satisfy the undue prejudice prong under NRS
    34.726(1)(b). This requirement, however, is inconsistent with other
    Nevada Supreme Court precedent, specifically Hathaway, which Huebler
    does not purport to overrule.
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    In Hathaway, the court held prejudice is presumed for the
    purposes of NRS 34.726(1)(b) if the petitioner can show a reasonable belief
    counsel filed an appeal and the petitioner filed a petition within a
    reasonable time of learning a direct appeal had not been 
    filed. 119 Nev. at 255
    , 71 P.3d at 508. Yet under Huebler's undue prejudice test, undue
    prejudice could never have been demonstrated, much less presumed,
    under the facts in Hathaway. This is because counsel's failure to file a
    direct appeal does not "show that errors in the proceedings underlying the
    judgment worked to the petitioner's actual and substantial disadvantage."
    
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95 (emphasis added). Given the
    finding of presumed prejudice in Hathaway, it appears undue prejudice
    under NRS 34.726(1)(b) may be established by demonstrating something
    other than actual prejudice.
    It also appears the prejudice required to overcome the
    procedural time-bar and the prejudice required to establish ineffective
    assistance of counsel may have been conflated in the Huebler decision.
    Huebler found the undue prejudice test under NRS 34.726(1)(b) parallels
    the materiality prong for establishing a violation under Brady v.
    Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963). 
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 198
    , 275 P.3d at 95.
    Huebler held, where a Brady violation is alleged in the guilty-plea context
    after a specific request has been made, in order to establish undue
    prejudice under NRS 34.726(1)(b), a petitioner must show "a reasonable
    possibility that but for the failure to disclose the evidence the defendant
    would have refused to plead and would have insisted on going to trial." 
    Id. at 203,
    275 P.3d at 99; see also Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 57-60 (1985)
    (setting forth the test for the prejudice prong for establishing ineffective
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    assistance of counsel in the context of a guilty plea). This is inconsistent
    with Lozada.
    In Lozada, the Nevada Supreme Court stated, "Mlle required
    showing of prejudice to establish a claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel is separate and distinct from the showing of prejudice required to
    overcome a procedural 
    default." 110 Nev. at 358
    , 871 P.2d at 949-50.
    Despite this, Huebler set forth a prejudice test for the procedural time-bar
    that "is similar to the prejudice test that is used to evaluate ineffective-
    assistance claims by a defendant who has pleaded 
    guilty." 128 Nev. at 203
    , 275 P.3d at 98-99. Even in light of this clear inconsistency, Huebler
    does not purport to overrule Lozada.
    In effect, the Huebler decision ultimately combined the
    prejudice prongs of the two procedural bars with each other and with the
    prejudice required to demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel,
    resulting in a single standard for prejudice. As noted above, this is
    inconsistent with both Lozada and Hathaway.          Although we agree a
    petitioner who can show actual prejudice under NRS 34.810 can also show
    undue prejudice under NRS 34.726(1)(b), we do not believe that showing
    actual prejudice is required to establish undue prejudice under NRS
    34.726(1)(b). We further do not think that prejudice under the procedural
    time-bar should be equivalent to the prejudice required to establish a
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Rather, we believe the test for
    undue prejudice under NRS 34.726(1)(b) should be separate and distinct
    from the test for prejudice to overcome other procedural bars and from the
    prejudice required to demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel.
    Therefore, absent any explanation in Hue bier for departing
    from earlier precedent, we believe Hathaway and Lozada are the better
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    precedent to follow. Were we free to do so, we would hold, where a
    petitioner has demonstrated cause for the delay under the test identified
    above, a petitioner will also have demonstrated undue prejudice under
    NRS 34.726(1)(b), because the petitioner could show dismissal of the
    petition as untimely would contravene the Legislature's intent to allow
    convicted persons a single opportunity to seek postconviction relief. 2
    We recognize, however, Huebler was decided after Lozada and
    Hathaway, and we must presume Huebler intended to implicitly overrule
    those cases to the extent they are inconsistent with the test for undue
    prejudice announced in Huebler.       Under the doctrine of vertical stare
    decisis, we have no choice but to follow the precedent established in
    Huebler. See, e.g., State v. Nichols, 
    600 N.W.2d 484
    , 487 (Neb. 1999)
    ("Vertical stare decisis compels inferior courts to follow strictly the
    decisions rendered by courts of higher rank within the same judicial
    system."). Therefore, as stated in Huebler, in order to show undue
    prejudice under NRS 34.726(1)(b), "a petitioner must show that errors in
    the proceedings underlying the judgment worked to the petitioner's actual
    and substantial disadvantage." 
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95.
    As a practical matter, we note that, because this test focuses on errors
    underlying the judgment, to evaluate whether a petitioner can
    demonstrate undue prejudice under this test, a district court will likely
    have to review the merits of the claims raised in the petition.
    2We note a petition may be subject to multiple procedural bars. If a
    petition were subject to any other procedural bars, including laches, the
    petitioner would also have to overcome those procedural bars in order to
    have the petition reviewed on its merits.
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    Application to Harris
    Based on the district court's factual findings, we conclude
    Harris demonstrated cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a). 3 First,
    Harris believed his counsel filed a postconviction petition on his behalf.
    Second, based on Park's conduct, it was objectively reasonable for Harris
    to believe counsel had filed the petition on his behalf. Park provided
    Harris with a copy of a signed postconviction petition with a completed
    certificate of service, Park affirmatively represented to Harris she had
    filed the petition, and Park again affirmatively represented a petition had
    been or was going to be filed when Harris informed her the petition she
    provided to him had been filed in the wrong court. Third, Park then
    abandoned Harris without notice and failed to file the petition. Fourth,
    Harris was reasonably diligent in attempting to determine whether Park
    filed a petition on his behalf and he filed his petition within a reasonable
    time after he should have known Park did not file a petition on his behalf.
    Harris continually attempted to contact Park, he reasonably believed the
    postconviction proceedings could take some time, and within a reasonable
    time of not hearing from Park, he inquired into his petition with both the
    district court and the Nevada Supreme Court. Harris filed his petition
    approximately two months after learning Park did not file a petition on his
    behalf.
    While we can conclude Harris demonstrated cause for the
    delay based on the district court's findings, we note the district court did
    not make any findings regarding whether Harris could establish undue
    3 "We give deference to the district court's factual findings regarding
    good cause, but we will review the court's application of the law to those
    facts de novo." 
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95.
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    prejudice, and we make no determination in this regard. As stated
    previously, in order to overcome the procedural bar, both prongs of good
    cause must be met—cause for the delay and undue prejudice. NRS
    34.726(1)(a), (b). Because we conclude Harris demonstrated cause for the
    delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a), we reverse the district court's order
    dismissing Harris' petition and we remand to the district court to
    determine whether Harris demonstrated undue prejudice under NRS
    34.726(1)(b). Specifically, the district court must determine whether
    Harris showed "that errors in the proceedings underlying the judgment
    worked to [his] actual and substantial disadvantage." 
    Huebler, 128 Nev. at 197
    , 275 P.3d at 95.
    CONCLUSION
    We hold counsel's affirmative representation that counsel
    has, or will, timely file a postconviction petition, combined with
    counsel's subsequent abandonment of the petitioner without timely filing
    the petition, presents a circumstance where counsel's actions or
    omissions can constitute cause for the delay under NRS 34.726(1)(a) for
    filing an untimely postconviction petition. To demonstrate cause for
    the delay based on such a circumstance, a petitioner must show: (1) a
    reasonable belief counsel filed a petition on petitioner's behalf; (2) this
    belief was objectively reasonable; (3) counsel abandoned the petitioner
    without notice and failed to file the petition; and (4) the petitioner
    filed a petition within a reasonable time after the petitioner should
    have known counsel did not file a petition. We conclude Harris
    demonstrated cause for the delay under this test. Therefore, we
    reverse the district court's order dismissing Harris' petition. Because the
    district court did not make any findings regarding whether Harris
    established undue prejudice, we remand to the district court to
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    (0) 1947B    Aern
    determine whether Harris demonstrated undue prejudice under NRS
    34.726(1)(b).
    J.
    We concur:
    .414.g
    •
    ,   C .J.
    Silver
    Tao
    COURT OF APPEALS
    OF
    NEVADA
    17
    (0) 19473