Joseph Wayne Eads was convicted by jury of five counts of incest, found to be a habitual offender, and sentenced to two hundred years in the Department of Correction. Pursuant to Anders v. California,
An attorney’s request to withdraw from appellate representation on the ground that the appeal is wholly without merit must be accompanied by a brief including an abstract. Skiver v. State,
Eads’s counsel filed a brief pursuant to his motion to withdraw and submitted that no reversible errors were committed at the trial court level and that an appeal would be wholly without merit. While twelve adverse rulings are abstracted and discussed, counsel did not abstract or discuss four other adverse rulings.
In Sweeney v. State,
In accordance with this precedent, and because of counsel’s failure to comply with Rule 4-3 (j), we order rebriefing. However, we note that the United States Supreme Court has stated that an Anders brief may be submitted in lieu of a merit appeal only when such an appeal would be “wholly frivolous.” This court has also ordered rebriefing in adversary form where we have found that not to be the case. Tucker v. State,
On rebriefing, counsel may elect to either submit a brief in adversary form or one in compliance with Rule 4-3 (j) as to all adverse rulings contained in the record.
Rebriefing ordered.
