We granted certiora/ri “for the sole purpose of determining whether or not the Court of Appeals has authority to issue writ of error coram nobis."
*215 In State v. Green, discussed below, this specific question was not presented to or considered by the Court of Appeals or by this Court. A brief resume of the factual situation and of the decisions in Green is appropriate.
In
State v. Green,
Upon Green’s appeal to this Court under G.S. 7A-30, the decision of this Court,
State v. Green,
“We hold that defendant was charged with a petty offense and his trial without counsel did not violate his constitutional right to counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.
“Defendant’s appeal, treated as a petition to this Court for leave to file a petition in the Recorder’s Court of Reidsville for a writ of error corcum nobis, is denied. The decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the denial order of Godwin, J., is Affirmed.”
Our decision in Green was based on these propositions: (1) To obtain relief by writ of error coram nobis, Green was required to file his petition for such writ in the court in which the judgment had been rendered, namely, the Reidsville Recorder’s Court; (2) Green was not entitled to file such petition as of right but only in the event the Supreme Court of North Carolina granted his application for permission to do so; and (3) Green could not avail himself of the procedures of our Post-Conviction Hearing Act, G.S. 15-217 et seq., because he was not an “imprisoned” person.
*216 We deem it appropriate to reconsider the decisions of this Court on which the second proposition in Green was based.
“A writ of error
coram nobis
is a common-law writ of ancient origin devised by the judiciary . 24 C.J.S.
Criminal Law
§ 1606(1), at 662 (1961). “It lies to vacate or correct a judgment, civil or criminal, for errors of fact as distinguished from errors of law. Application for the writ is made to the court which rendered the judgment.” Annot.,
In
Roughton v. Brown,
As succinctly stated in the first headnote in Roughton v. Brown, supra: “A writ of error coram nobis lies from any court of record returnable to itself, and not from a superior to an inferior court.”
In 5 Encyclopaedia of Pleading and Practice 27-28 (1896), it is stated that “ (t) he office of the writ of
coram nobis
is to bring the attention of the court to, and obtain relief from, errors of fact,” such as (1) the death of a party pending the suit and before judgment as in
Tyler v. Morris, supra;
(2) the infancy of a party who was not properly represented by guardian as in
Williams v. Edwards, supra;
or (3) coverture, where the common law disability still existed, as in
Lassiter v. Harper,
In civil cases, the writ of error became obsolete upon adoption in North Carolina of the Code of Civil Procedure. The
*217
remedy previously available by writ of error
coram nobis
was superseded by the statutory remedy of motion in the cause.
Lynn v. Lowe,
Prior to the Taylor and Daniels cases, discussed below, we find no criminal case in which this Court considered the writ of error coram nobis. The cited decisions in civil actions contain no suggestion that permission from the Supreme Court was required before a motion for writ of error coram nobis could be filed in the court in which the judgment under attack was rendered.
The second proposition in our decision in
State v. Green, supra,
is based upon the decisions in the
Taylor
and
Daniels
cases.
In re Taylor
(I),
At January 1947 Term of Pitt Superior Court, Laurie D. Taylor, a minor, was indicted in each of seven cases. Three indictments charged the capital felony of burglary in the first degree; four charged the felony of larceny. Taylor pleaded guilty of burglary in the second degree in the burglary cases and judgments of life imprisonment were pronounced. He pleaded guilty in each of the larceny cases and judgments imposing prison sentences were pronounced.
On July 8, 1948, Taylor applied for and obtained a writ of habeas corpus. In his application, he asserted that, although he was unable to employ counsel and was denied the benefit of counsel, he was required to plead to the seven indictments at January 1947 Term. At a hearing conducted July 19, 1948, on return of the writ of habeas corpus, Taylor’s application for discharge was denied.
By letter dated September 7, 1948, Taylor requested a review by this Court of the judgment entered July 19, 1948, in the habeas corpus proceeding. The Court treated the letter as *218 a petition for certiorari. Pending decision thereon, J. C. B. Ehringhaus, Jr., Esq., a member of the Raleigh Bar, was appointed to investigate the case and report his findings to Taylor and to the Court. In his report, Mr. Ehringhaus reviewed the allegations in Taylor’s petition in the habeas corpus proceeding, discussed various procedural questions and suggested inter alia that Taylor’s remedy might be by petition to the Supreme Court for permission to file a petition for writ of error coram nobis in the Superior Court of Pitt County. The report included the following: “If upon petitioner’s verification and the record in the Habeas Corpus proceeding, a prima facie showing of substan-tiality is made, the Court, in the exercise of its supervisory powers over inferior courts, could grant the petition and permit petitioner to proceed as above in Pitt Superior Court.”
This Court denied
certiorari. In re Taylor
(I),
supra.
The opinion of Chief Justice Stacy contained the following: “Where the defendant in a criminal prosecution, less than capital, is unable to employ counsel, the appointment of counsel for him is discretionary with the trial court.
S. v. Hedgebeth,
Thereafter, Taylor sought to test the legality of his imprisonment through habeas corpus proceedings in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. The federal court dismissed his petition on the ground he had not exhausted his State remedies. Thereafter, in Chief Justice Stacy’s language: “Again of his own volition and inops consilii, he (Taylor) filed application here for leave to apply to the Superior Court of Pitt County for writs of error coram nobis to determine the lawfulness of his present incarceration.” Taylor’s unverified application was referred to Mr. Ehringhaus with a request that he advise Taylor as to further procedures. Taylor then verified the petition. It alleged in greater detail the facts concerning Taylor’s age, his inexperience, his inability to employ counsel, etc., which he had set forth in earlier petitions. The Supreme Court granted Taylor’s application in respect of the capital (burglary) charges but held no sufficient showing had been made to warrant the granting of the application “in respect of the non-capital indictments.” In re Taylor (II), supra.
The opinion of Chief Justice Stacy in
In re Taylor
(II),
supra,
states: “The instant application for permission to apply to the trial court for relief is addressed to the supervisory authority of this Court over ‘proceedings of the inferior courts’ of the State. Const. Art. IV, Sec. 8; S.
v. Lawrence,
The permission granted by the Supreme Court authorized the further proceedings set forth in the following excerpt from the opinion:
“The prison authorities will afford the petitioner an opportunity to appear at the next term of the Superior Court of Pitt County to be held for the trial of criminal cases, so that he may apply for writs of error coram nobis in respect of the three capital indictments as sought in his petition. Before entertaining his application, however, the trial court will see to it that the petitioner is represented by counsel, either of his own choosing and employment, or by appointment of the court. If under the advice of counsel, the petitioner elect to proceed further, *220 the court will entertain his application and make decision thereon. If the application be denied, findings of fact should be made as a basis therefor, the petitioner returned to the Central Prison, and allowed to appeal as in other proceedings.
“If the application be granted, the judgments should be vacated, the pleas stricken out or permitted to be withdrawn, and the cases restored to the docket for trial. In this latter event, the petitioner will be afforded an opportunity to confer with counsel, prepare his defense, and appear at his trial.”
In State v. Daniels (I), supra, the defendants had been convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death at May 1949 Term of Pitt Superior Court. Upon the solicitor’s motion, the trial judge struck out the defendants’ purported statement of case on appeal because of their failure to prepare and serve it within the time fixed by the court. Thereupon, the defendants filed petitions for certiorari to enable them to perfect their appeals. After stating the grounds for denial of certiorari, and after restating in substance what had been stated by Chief Justice Stacy in In re Taylor (II) concerning writs of error coram nobis, Justice Seawell pointed out that the writ of error coram nobis was available to petitioners but only “if they can bring themselvese within the purview of such a writ.”
Thereafter the defendants filed a petition in the Supreme Court for permission to apply to the Superior Court of Pitt County for a writ of error coram nobis. The Supreme Court, referring to the Taylor cases and the prior Daniels case, denied the petition on the ground the defendants did not make the prima facie showing of substance necessary to bring themselves within the purview of the writ. State v. Daniels (II), supra.
In State v. Daniels (III), supra, after brief references to "the prior Daniels decisions, judgments of the lower court were affirmed and the appeals therefrom were dismissed.
In accord with our cited civil cases, Taylor and Daniels held that an application for a writ of error coram nobis to attack collaterally a final judgment of a trial court must be made to .and the hearing thereon conducted by the court which rendered the judgment. The innovation introduced by the Taylor and Daniels decisions was the requirement that permission from the Supreme Court must be obtained before application for *221 such writ could be made. Decisions cited as authority for this requirement in the Ehringhaus report in In re Taylor (I) and in the opinion of Chief Justice Stacy in In re Taylor (II) are cited in the following numbered paragraphs.
1.
Hysler v. State,
2.
Chambers v. State,
3.
Ex Parte Taylor,
Further investigation of the
Hysler
case discloses : Prior to the cited decisions, the defendant’s conviction and sentence had been affirmed on direct appeal in
Hysler v. State,
Further investigation of the
Chambers
case discloses: Prior to the cited decision, the Supreme Court of Florida in
Chambers v. State,
*222
This excerpt from the opinion in
Chambers v. State,
Further investigation of the Alabama case of
Ex Parte Taylor
discloses: Prior to the cited decisions, the Supreme Court of Alabama in
Taylor v. State,
There is a sharp diversity of opinion as to whether permission to apply for a writ of error
coram nobis
must be obtained from an appellate court which on direct appeal has affirmed the judgment of the lower court. See Annot., “Writ of
coram nobis
after affirmance,”
We have found no decision other than Taylor and Daniels which purport to hold that application for permission to an appellate court is a prerequisite for an application for a writ of error coram nobis to attack a final judgment of a lower court from which no appeal was taken.
Although not cited in
Taylor
and
Daniels,
we take notice of the decision of this Court in
Latham v. Hodges,
Decisions cited in Taylor and Daniels other than those referred to in the above numbered paragraphs relate to other aspects of the writ of error coram nobis.
Petitioner did not appeal from the judgment of the Superior Court of Rutherford County. We perceive no sound reason why she should be required to apply either to the Court of Appeals or to the Supreme Court of North Carolina for permission to file a petition for a writ of error coram nobis in the Superior *224 Court of Rutherford County to attack a final judgment of that court. The records were in Rutherford County. No records pertinent to the case were in either of the appellate courts. No appellate court had affirmed the judgment of the Superior Court of Rutherford County.
If petitioner were presently imprisoned, she could have proceeded under our Post-Conviction Hearing Act. G.S. 15-217
et seq.
In express terms, this procedure is available when an imprisoned person seeks relief by petition for writ of error
coram nobis.
G.S. 15-217. There is' no requirement that such imprisoned person obtain leave from an appellate court even though on direct appeal the appellate court has affirmed the judgment the petitioner seeks to attack. This is because the collateral attack is based on facts not disclosed by the record on appeal.
State v. White,
“The writ of error
coram nobis
can only be granted in the court where the judgment was rendered.”
State v. Daniels
(I),
supra
at 25,
The Constitution of North Carolina, Article IV, § 12(1), provides that the Supreme Court “may issue any remedial writs necessary to give it general supervision and control over the proceedings of the other courts.” Article IV, § 12(2), provides that “(t)he Court of Appeals shall have such appellate jurisdiction as the General Assembly may prescribe.”
The provisions of G.S. 7A-32 relate to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and of the Court of Appeals with reference to the issuance of remedial writs. No question is presented as to distinctions between the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and of the Court of Appeals with reference to the issuance of such writs. Taylor and Daniels are in accord with other decisions *225 in North Carolina and elsewhere in holding that a writ of error coram nobis is issued only by the court which rendered the judgment. As indicated, the Taylor and Daniels decisions imposed a new requirement upon the ancient common-law writ of error coram nobis, namely, a requirement that permission be first obtained from the Supreme Court, such permission to be granted under the supervisory power presently conferred upon the Supreme Court by Article IV, § 12(1), of the Constitution of North Carolina. We have concluded that such requirement is neither necessary nor desirable under present conditions with reference to a final judgment of a trial court from which there was no appeal. In this respect, Taylor, Daniels and Green are overruled. It is unnecessary to decide on this appeal whether permission should be required with reference to a judgment affirmed on appeal by the Court of Appeals or by the Supreme Court or both.
The foregoing leads to this conclusion: It was unnecessary for petitioner to obtain leave from the Court of Appeals or from the Supreme Court before she applied to the Superior Court of Rutherford County. She applied to the Superior Court of Rutherford County as was her right and Judge Snepp conducted a plenary hearing upon her petition. His authority to do so was in no way impaired by the order of the Court of Appeals which had approved this course. Judge Snepp conducted the plenary hearing, found the facts and denied relief. Hence, in the light of the present decision, the case was and is for hearing on the exceptions brought forward by petitioner in her appeal to the Court of Appeals. Therefore, the cause is remanded to the Court of Appeals for its consideration of the exceptions presented by petitioner’s appeal from Judge Snepp’s order.
Error and remanded.
