DocketNumber: No. SD 35274
Judges: Scott
Filed Date: 7/9/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Gene Haynes timely moved pro se for postconviction relief which the motion court immediately and fully granted by return mail. The court then dismissed the case without appointing counsel, which the State concedes was error. We agree, reverse the dismissal, and remand for appointment of counsel and further proceedings.
*886Background
Haynes pleaded guilty to four crimes in four separate cases. His victim-tampering sentence (four years) was ordered to run concurrently with all others. The judgment said so three times:
"To run concurrent with any other time may serving [sic] in DOC," and
"TO RUN CONCURRENT WITH ANY OTHER TIME SERVING IN DOC," and
"Sentence to run concurrent with any other sentence maybe [sic] serving in DOC."
Six months later, the court received Haynes' forma pauperis affidavit and pro se Rule 24.035 motion alleging that DOC was not treating his sentence concurrently and asking the court to amend its judgment so DOC would do so. That very day, the court entered a "Corrected Judgment" to make concurrency even clearer (if that was possible) and sent certified copies to Haynes, defense counsel in the underlying cases, and DOC. The court then dismissed the pro se motion by docket entry without appointing PCR counsel.
Discussion
Haynes, the Public Defender, the State, and this court all agree and understand that the motion court sought to do the right thing in expeditiously and fully granting the pro se motion, arguably in record time.
Yet a timely pro se motion is but "a threshold" to postconviction relief. Vogl v. State ,
Thus, appointment of counsel for an indigent pro se movant "is mandatory." Ramsey v. State ,
JEFFREY W. BATES, J.-CONCURS
MARY W. SHEFFIELD, J.-CONCURS
Dismissed "without prejudice," but Rule 24.035's filing deadline and provisions for finality and against successive motions (subsections (b), (k), and (l) ) effectively rendered the dismissal final and appealable.
Haynes' indigency is not contested on appeal.