On Application for Rehearing
The unpublished memorandum issued on April 25, 2014, is withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted therefor.
Melvin Ross Bush appeals from the denial of his motion to reconsider his sentence filed pursuant to § 13A-5-9.1, Ala. Code 1975. (“Kirby motion”). Kirby v. State,
On appeal, Bush contended that the circuit court erred in denying his Kirby motion. Bush also claimed that the judge who ruled on his Kirby motion, the Honorable Michael Youngpeter, was neither the sentencing judge nor the presiding judge of the 13th Judicial Circuit (Mobile County) and, thus, that he lacked jurisdiction to rule on Bush’s Kirby motion. A Kirby motion must be filed in the court of original conviction, and only the sentencing judge, the presiding judge, or a circuit judge appointed by the presiding judge of that circuit has jurisdiction to review that motion. See Kirby, supra; § 18A-5-9.1, Ala.Code 1975. Bush’s claim that his Kirby motion had not been properly considered because it was not reviewed by the presiding judge or the sentencing judge was decided adversely to Bush on appeal because, this Court reasoned, the motion could have been properly assigned to another circuit judge in the circuit. Section 13A-5-9.1, as amended in 2007, allows any circuit judge appointed by the circuit’s presiding judge to address a Kirby motion. This Court affirmed the circuit court’s rub ing that Bush’s Kirby motion was without merit by an unpublished memorandum issued on April 25, 2014.
On application for rehearing, Bush asserts that Judge Youngpeter did not have jurisdiction to rule on his Kirby motion because, he says, not only was Judge Youngpeter not the sentencing judge or the presiding judge, he was not appointed by the presiding judge to rule on his motion. Although Bush correctly filed his motion in the Mobile Circuit Court, it does not appear that Judge Youngpeter was the judge who sentenced Bush nor is he the presiding judge of the 13th Judicial Circuit. See Ex parte Bush,
On September 8, 2014, the circuit court filed a supplemental record with this Court. In that record, Judge Youngpeter stated that there was no order appointing him to preside over Bush’s latest Kirby motion but that “[i]t is the customary practice in the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit for an incoming circuit judge to ‘take over’ the responsibility of handling the cases previously assigned to the departing circuit judge. That is what occurred with respect [to] the above-referenced case.” (Supplemental Record, C. 9.) This Court recognizes that the current customary practice in the 13th Judicial Circuit is often used in many circuits in this State; however, in many circuits, the presiding judge has issued a standing administrative order adopting that procedure. In Owens v. State,
Bush’s Kirby motion stands filed as of the date of its original filing. The circuit court is directed to proceed with Bush’s motion to reconsider in accordance with the foregoing principles.
APPLICATION FOR REHEARING GRANTED; UNPUBLISHED MEMORANDUM OF APRIL 25, 2014, WITHDRAWN; OPINION SUBSTITUTED; APPEAL DISMISSED.
