44 Mass. App. Ct. 478 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1998
The primary issue on appeal in this case is whether the judge’s order denying the defendant’s motion under Mass.R.Crim.P. 29, 378 Mass. 899 (1979),
On September 12, 1989, while at the jury session, the defendant withdrew his appeal pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 25, and received the original sentence at the District Court. He filed a timely motion to revise and revoke his sentence on October 11, 1989. Over six years elapsed before the judge was asked to rule upon the outstanding motion. On January 22, 1996, after hearing arguments, the judge denied the motion. From that order, the defendant, pro se, has appealed.
Nothing in Mass.R.Crim.P. 29, 378 Mass. 899 (1979), provides for a direct appeal, and we have found no case on point. In McGuinness v. Commonwealth, 420 Mass. 495, 496 (1995), however, both the Superior Court and the clerk of the Appeals Court refused to file the defendant’s notice of appeal from the denial of his rule 29 motion by a Superior Court judge
In Commonwealth v. Amirault, 415 Mass. 112, 114-115 (1993), S.C., 424 Mass. 618 (1997), the Supreme Judicial Court permitted the Commonwealth to appeal a Superior Court judge’s allowance of a rule 29 motion, but the vehicle was G. L. c. 278, § 28E, a statute that allows only the Commonwealth to appeal an “order or judgment of the court.” In an appeal from a District Court judge’s allowance of a rule 29 motion, the Supreme Judicial Court, in Commonwealth v. Cowan, 422 Mass. 546, 547 (1996), held that a petition under G. L. c. 211, § 3, was the appropriate statute under which the Commonwealth could seek review because G. L. c. 278, § 28E, only applies to appeals from orders or judgments of the Superior Court. The Supreme Court noted that it would be inconsistent to allow the Commonwealth to appeal from the allowance of rule 29 motions in the Superior Court but to deny the Commonwealth the right to appeal from similar orders issued at the District Court level. Cowan, supra.
Rule 29 is drawn in part from G. L. c. 278, § 29A, as inserted
With this historical perspective in mind and in view of the reality that the Commonwealth is permitted to appeal from the allowance of a rule 29 motion, we conclude that the order of the District Court judge that denied the defendant’s motion to revise or revoke his sentence under rule 29 was immediately appealable.
In the circumstances presented here there is no question that the judge committed no error in denying the rule 29 motion. Even if the grounds asserted were appropriate to a rule 29 motion, they do not support any relief here. If there had been, as the defendant implies, an agreement with the Commonwealth concerning the defendant’s withdrawal of his appeal from the jury session, it is not part of the record. We have not been presented with a transcript of any colloquy that took place at the jury-of-six session indicating that the defendant’s withdrawal of his appeal was subject to a favorable disposition of his rule 29 motion by the judge who imposed the original sentence. On this record, it does not appear that the defendant’s request for the court to revoke his sentence is based on factors in existence at the time the original sentence was imposed. See Commonwealth v. Derry, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 10, 12 & n.3, 13 (1988). The defendant has not asserted any ground that would justify any relief. The order denying the motion to revise and revoke the defendant’s sentence is affirmed.
So ordered.
Section (a) of rule 29, in pertinent part, provides:
“(a) Revision or Revocation. The trial judge upon his own motion or the written motion of a defendant filed within sixty days after the imposition of a sentence . . . may, upon such terms and conditions as he shall order, revise or revoke such sentence if it appears that justice may not have been done.”
Although in McGuinness v. Commonwealth, supra, the Supreme Judicial Court did not comment on the clerks’ refusals to file the notice of appeal, the case of Callahan v. Commonwealth, 416 Mass. 1010, 1010 (1994), stands for the proposition that a clerk should not refuse to file a notice of appeal in the absence of a court order containing that directive. Davis v. Tabachnick, 425 Mass. 1010, cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 443 (1997), and cases cited.
General Laws c. 278, § 29A, was applicable to sentences imposed upon a plea without trial in the District Court, and § 29C, as inserted by St. 1962, c. 310, § 2, was applicable to sentences imposed after plea or trial in the Superior Court. Section 29C was repealed by St. 1979, c. 344, § 48.
The better practice, of course, is for the defendant to file a motion for post-conviction relief pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. R 30, 378 Mass. 900 (1979), and to take an appeal under subparagraph (e) (8) of that rule. It would be elevating form over substance, however, to hold that this is an exclusive remedy and that it is not open to the defendant to file an appeal directly from the denial of the motion to revise or revoke in order to correct an illegal sentence. In the future, therefore, a clerk should accept for filing a defendant’s notice of appeal from a rule 29 order unless there is a rule 30 motion on file. See McGuinness v. Commonwealth, 420 Mass. at 497-498.