Opinion
No. CA CR 79-116
Opinion delivered January 30, 1980 Released for publication February 20, 1980
1. APPEAL ERROR — MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL — TIMELY FILING. — A person convicted may file a motion for a new trial, but it must be filed prior to the time fixed to file a notice of appeal. 2. APPEAL ERROR — NOTICE OF APPEAL — TIME FIXED FOR FILING. — The "time filed" for filing notice of appeal is 30 days from the date of the sentence and entry of judgment by the trial judge. 3. APPEAL ERROR — MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL — NOTICE OF APPEAL — FILED AFTER MITIGATION HEARING. — Where the ultimate pronouncement of sentence occurred after a mitigation hearing held 7 days after the original pronouncement of sentence, the time for filing notice of appeal, within high time a motion for a new trial must be filed commenced upon ultimate pronouncement of sentence rather than upon earlier pronouncement of sentence.
Appeal from Pulaski Circuit Court, First Division, Floyd J. Lofton, Judge; reversed and remanded.
P. A. Hollingsworth and Janet L. Pulliam for appellant.
Steve Clark Atty. Gen., by: Catherine Anderson, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
The question here is whether a motion for new trial was filed in time. The appellant was convicted of second degree battery by the court sitting without a jury at a trial held April 10, 1979. On that same date, and at the time the verdict was announced, the trial judge announced a sentence of five years confinement with two years suspended. A judgment including that sentence was signed April 11, 1979. Then the appellant moved to be allowed to present matters in mitigation, and the court held a mitigation hearing on May 8, 1979. A document referring to the mitigation hearing appears in the record, and it concludes as follows: Sentence imposed as previously stated at the Court Trial on April 10, 1979.
Notice of appeal was filed May 8, 1979 and a motion for new trial was filed May 25, 1979. Thus, the motion was filed within 30 days after the mitigation hearing but not within 30 days of the first pronouncement. Ark. R. Crim. P. 36.22 provides in part:
A person convicted may file a motion for new trial . . . but [it] . . . must be filed prior to the time fixed to file a notice of appeal.
. . .
Although in this case the notice of appeal has been filed, that is irrelevant, as the rule gives the appellant the time fixed to file a notice of appeal to file his motion for new trial. The time fixed for filing notice of appeal is 30 days from the date of the sentence and entry of judgment by the trial judge." Ark. R. Crim. P. 36.9.
On October 11, 1979, the trial judge entered an order denying the motion for new trial, and reciting that it had not been timely filed in accordance with Rule 36.22.
The appellee concurs in the appellant's position that the order was incorrect, as the ultimate pronouncement of sentence occurred May 8, 1979, and the time for filing notice of appeal and thus for moving for new trial commenced that date rather than the earlier one. We agree with the parties.
The appellant is thus entitled to a hearing on the merits of his motion for a new trial, and the case is remanded to the trial court for that purpose.
The appellant has raised two other points for reversal with which we do not deal in view of the necessity of remanding for the hearing on the motion for new trial. If the trial court denies the motion for a new trial after a hearing, we will resume jurisdiction of this case to rule on the appellant's other two grounds for reversal. In that case, the appellant will give written notice to the appellee of the trial court's ruling, and the appellee will have 21 days from receipt of such notice to file a brief responding to he appellant's points II and III.
Any such resumption of jurisdiction to consider those points will, of course, be without prejudice to any appeal the appellant may perfect as a result of the trial court's ruling on his motion for new trial.
Reversed and remanded.