OPINION
T1 David Eugene Falkner petitions this court for extraordinary relief pursuant to rule 65B(d) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. See Utah R. Civ. P. 65B(d). He challenges the district court's denial of his motion to reinstate his appeal from a justice court judgment, which the district court had remanded to the justice court for abandonment. We grant the petition and direct the district court to reconsider Falkner's motion to reinstate.
BACKGROUND
12 Falkner was convicted in justice court of class B misdemeanor criminal mischief. Falkner appealed the criminal judgment, and his case was assigned to Judge Denise P. Lindberg in the Third District Court. A pretrial conference was scheduled for July 12, 2011, at 9:00 a.m. Falkner's attorney informed the court in advance that he would be late for the pretrial conference due to hearings scheduled in another court at the same time. The attorney then told Falkner that he did not need to arrive at the hearing until 10:00 a.m., when the attorney himself expected to arrive. When Falkner and his attorney arrived just after 10:00 am., Judge Lind-berg's courtroom was locked. The attorney contacted Judge Lindberg's clerk, who informed him that the case had been remanded to the justice court for abandonment. See generally Utah R.Crim. P. 38(h) ("The district court may ... remand a case to the justice court if it finds that the defendant has abandoned the appeal."). The clerk confirmed that there was a note in the docket that the attorney intended to be late for the pretrial conference.
T3 On August 16, 2011, thirty-five days after the case was remanded to justice court, Falkner filed a motion to reinstate his appeal. The district court denied the motion, explaining that counsel's notice that he would be late did not excuse Falkner's failure to show up for the pretrial conference and that the district court lacked jurisdiction to reinstate the appeal either because the case had already been remanded to the justice court or because the motion to reinstate was filed more than thirty days after the remand. A motion to reconsider filed on November 7, 2011, was likewise denied. Falkner then filed a petition for extraordinary relief with this court on December 14, 2011, arguing that the district court abused its discretion by denying his motion to reinstate the appeal.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
14 Falkner argues that the district court had jurisdiction to consider his motion to reinstate and that the district court abused its discretion by denying that motion without considering whether his failure to appear at the hearing constituted exeusable neglect. Relying on this argument, Falkner requests that we grant him extraordinary relief from the district court's denial of his
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motion to reinstate. "Where no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy is available, a person may petition the court for extraordinary relief on the ground that, inter alia, "an inferior court ... has ... abused its discretion" Utah R. Civ. P. 65B(a), (d)(2)(A); see also Gordon v. Maughan,
ANALYSIS
15 We must first determine whether the district court had jurisdiction to consider Falkner's motion to reinstate after the case was remanded to the justice court and, if so, how long it retained that jurisdiction. Having analyzed supreme court cases dealing with the relationship between remittitur and jurisdiction, we conclude that remand to the justice court does not necessarily divest the district court of jurisdiction. We further determine that the district court must retain jurisdiction for a reasonable time sufficient to resolve appropriate postjudgment 1 motions. Because the district court in this case declined on an improper basis to exercise jurisdiction, we find it appropriate to grant Falk-ner's petition for extraordinary relief and remand the case to the district court with additional instructions for resolving Falk-ner's motion to reinstate.
I. We Look to the Rules of Appellate Procedure for Guidance in Analyzing the District Court's Jurisdiction Over Appeals from Justice Court.
16 "[The appeals process from a justice court decision is unique" in that "[a] defendant who has pleaded guilty or been convicted in justice court is entitled to a trial de novo in a district court, provided that he or she files a notice of appeal within thirty days of the sentence or guilty plea." Bernat v. Aliphin,
II. An Appéllate Court Does Not Necessarily Lose Jurisdiction When a Case Is Remanded to a Lower Court.
T7 In support of her assertion that the district court lost jurisdiction upon remand, Judge Lindberg points us to our decision in State v. Clark,
18 However, additional case law from our supreme court suggests that there are at least two cireumstances where an appellate court may retain jurisdiction after a case has been remitted to the district court. First, if a remittitur is premature, it cannot effectively return jurisdiction to the lower court. See Hi-Country Estates Homeowners Ass'n v. Foothills Water Co.,
A. Premature Remittitur
19 First, a remittitur cannot serve to return jurisdiction to a lower court for implementation of the appellate court's mandate while the case is still pending on appeal. See Hi-Country,
B. Limited Retained Jurisdiction
$10 Furthermore, there are circumstances where an appellate court may retain limited jurisdiction, despite the lower court having regained jurisdiction as a result of a remand. Our supreme court has rejected the idea "that jurisdiction is a zero sum game-that the acquisition of jurisdiction by one court must be matched by a jurisdictional loss by another." Lara,
%11 However, because "remitti-tur is a procedure created pursuant to the rule making authority vested in [the supreme courtl," see id. ¶13; see also Utah R.App. P. 36, its jurisdictional effect is judicially, rather than constitutionally, imposed, see Lara,
T 12 Thus, had Falkner identified a constitutional right or other appropriate claim, the district court could have exercised jurisdiction over the motion to reinstate, even if it had properly returned jurisdiction to the justice court. CL id. T21. No such claim was raised. However, because the district court remanded the case immediately, without allowing any time for filing of postjudgment motions, remittitur was premature and could not have immediately divested the district court of jurisdiction. Thus, the ultimate question of whether the district court had jurisdiction over Falkner's motion to reinstate turns on whether the motion was filed prior to the time that jurisdiction could properly have been surrendered by the district court.
III. The District Court Must Retain Jurisdiction over Appeals from Justice Court for a Reasonable Time Sufficient to Permit Consideration of Postjudgment Matters.
113 Unlike the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure do not provide clear guidelines regarding the district court's retention of jurisdiction following a remand for abandonment. Although section 78A-7-118(8) of the Utah Code provides that "[the district court shall retain jurisdiction over the case on trial de novo," see Utah Code Ann. § 78A-T-118(8) (Supp.2012), the provision in the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure which permits remand to the justice court in the case of abandonment, see Utah R.Crim. P. 38(h), suggests that jurisdiction must eventually return to the justice court after an appeal has been abandoned. Nevertheless, a remand under such cireumstances must allow at least some time for parties to file appropriate postjudgment motions before the district court loses jurisdiction.
{14 Judge Lindberg argues that we should look to the Utah Rules of Appellate *1103 Procedure as a guide in determining the appropriate deadline for returning jurisdiction to the justice court after an appeal is remanded for abandonment. Under rule 36 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, the court of appeals is expected to issue a remittitur "immediately after the expiration of the time for filing a petition for writ of certiorari," Utah R.App. P. 86(a)(2), and a "petition for a writ of certiorari must be filed with the Clerk of the Supreme Court within 30 days after the entry of the final decision by the Court of Appeals," id. R. 48(a). Thus, jurisdiction may be appropriately returned to the district court following appeal thirty-one days after the court of appeals makes its final decision. Judge Lindberg asserts that, likewise, the district court's "Jju-risdiction is lost no later than 31 days after the dismissal decision is made."
115 We agree that the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure may "serve as a model in the context of justice court appeals." Cf Gordon v. Maughan,
1 16 While the rules provide limited guidance in determining which precise post-judgment motions might be appropriate in the context of an appeal from justice court, it is clear that some postjudgment consideration must be appropriate. In particular, given that "a justice court defendant is in a similar position to a defendant appealing from a district court conviction in the first instance," and his appeal is thus subject to dismissal, unlike a defendant being originally tried in district court, see Gordon,
T17 Here, the district court declined to exercise jurisdiction based on the fact that it had already remanded the case and that the motion to reinstate was filed more than thirty days after the case was remanded. Because the district court neither loses jurisdiction immediately upon remand nor necessarily loses jurisdiction after thirty days, the district court's reasoning for not exercising jurisdiction is flawed. Nevertheless, we are not convinced that it would necessarily have been an abuse of the district court's discretion to determine that, under the facts and cireumstances of this case, the motion to reinstate, filed thirty-five *1104 days after remand, was not filed within a reasonable time.
{18 What constitutes "a reasonable time depends upon the facts of each case, considering such factors as the interest in finality, the reason for the delay, the practical ability of the litigant to learn earlier of the grounds relied upon, and prejudice to other parties." Mensgies v. Galetka,
IV. The District Court Exceeded Its Discretion When It Denied the Motion to Reinstate Without Conducting an Analysis Under Rule 28A of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.
$19 We also reject the district court's alternative ground for denying the motion to reinstate, namely, that Falkner offered no excuse for his failure to appear. Because we determine that Falkner did offer an explanation for his failure to appear, we determine that the district court exceeded its discretion by denying the motion to reinstate without considering whether Falkner's failure was excusable under rule 28A of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.
T 20 In Gordon v. Maughan,
{ 21 Here, the district court based its denial of the motion to reinstate on its determination that no justification was provided for Falkner's failure to appear, only his counsel's failure to appear. Judge Lindberg reasserts this position in her response to Falkner's petition for extraordinary relief, alleging that there was no notation in the docket explaining that Falkner himself would be late and asserting that the motion to reinstate "did not provide a detailed explanation about why the defendant failed to appear" on time. However, even assuming that a failure to explain Falkner's absence would preclude the reinstatement of the appeal on grounds of "mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect," 4 see Utah R.App. P. 23A, we do not agree with Judge Lindberg that Falk-ner's absence was unexplained. Falkner's motion to reinstate referred to and included as an exhibit a copy of a notice of court date his attorney provided to him, which instructed him to appear for the pretrial conference *1105 between 10:00 and 10:30. 5 And the subsequent motion to reconsider the motion to reinstate clearly explained that counsel had "instructed [Falkner] to arrive for the July 12 hearing when he (counsel) expected to arrive himself: at 10:00 a.m." Given this evidence that Falkner was misinformed by his counsel about when he was expected to appear for the pretrial conference, the district court should have considered whether reinstatement was appropriate under rule 28A rather than summarily denying the motion based solely on Falkner's failure to appear.
CONCLUSION
122 We determine that the district court did not lose jurisdiction immediately upon remand to the justice court and did not necessarily lack jurisdiction to consider Falk-ner's motion to reinstate filed thirty-five days after his case was remanded for abandonment. We also determine that the motion to reinstate could not be summarily denied based on Falkner's failure to appear on time for the pretrial conference. We therefore grant his petition for extraordinary relief and direct the district court to determine whether the motion to reinstate was filed within a reasonable time so as to give the district court jurisdiction to consider the motion and, if so, whether reinstatement is appropriate under the standard outlined by rule 28A of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.
1 23 WE CONCUR: J. FREDERIC VOROS JR., and MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN, Judges.
Notes
. We refer to any motions following a remand generically as "postjudgment" for convenience. However, we recognize that motions following a remand may not technically be considered "post-judgment" because a remand for abandonment may not technically be a "judgment." Furthermore, we observe that the previous version of rule 38 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure permitted the district court to "dismiss the appeal and remand the case to the justice court if the appellant ... fails to appear," Utah R.Crim. P. 38(g)-(g)(1) (2008) (emphasis added), while the current version states only that "[the district court may ... remand a case to the justice court if it finds that the defendant has abandoned the appeal" and does not explicitly mention dismissal, id. R. 38(h) (2012). The fact that this amendment was made in the context of rewriting the entire rule, rather than for the purpose of modifying this particular subsection, see id. amend. notes, makes it unlikely that a substantive change was truly intended by the omission of the word "dismiss." However, we acknowledge the possibility that, under the current version, a remand may or may not amount to a dismissal.
. "[A] justice court appellant is [not] similarly situated to a criminal defendant whose case is originally being tried in district court" but is rather "'in a similar position to a defendant appealing from a district court conviction in the first instance.'" Gordon v. Maughan,
. We recognize that such a rule may result in some uncertainty regarding jurisdiction. However, given that the current rules give no guidance as to what a befitting time for filing post-judgment motions might be, we do not consider it appropriate for us to outline a deadline for filing such motions. Additional rules regarding remand following an appeal from justice court, comparable to rule 36 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, may go a long way toward clearing up this uncertainty.
. Falkner asserts that in light of the fact that his attorney gave the court prior notice that he would be late, "[alt the very least, the District Court should have sought some confirmation from the Defendant regarding its unwarranted assumption of abandonment." We agree with Falkner that the fact that the court had some notice of a scheduling conflict could make Falk-ner's failure to appear sufficiently excusable under the circumstances to justify reinstatement of the appeal, despite the fact that the district court was not given actual notice that Falkner did not plan to arrive until his attorney did.
. We acknowledge that the significance of this note was not fully discussed in the motion to reinstate and may have easily been overlooked by the district court. However, this does not explain the subsequent denial of the motion to reconsider, which was also summarily denied.
