THOYT HACKNEY v. STATE OF MARYLAND
No. 53, September Term, 2017
Court of Appeals of Maryland
May 9, 2018
Barbera, C.J.
Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Case Nos. 198022020, 23. Argued: February 5, 2018.
CRIMINAL PROCEDURE — POST-CONVICTION PETITIONS — FILING — The Court of Appeals adopted the “prison mailbox rule,” under which a pleading is deemed to have been filed by an unrepresented inmate when the inmate delivers the pleading to prison authorities for mailing to the circuit court. The rule applies to the filing of a pro se petition for post-conviction relief under Maryland Code Annotated, Criminal Procedure
Barbera, C.J., Greene, Adkins, McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, JJ.
Opinion by Barbera, C.J.
Filed: May 9, 2018
In this case, Thoyt Hackney, Petitioner here and unrepresented at the time of the events in question, testified that he delivered a petition for post-conviction relief to prison authorities three days before a statutory ten-year filing deadline. Two days later, prison authorities mailed the petition to the circuit court. It arrived and was date-stamped by the clerk one day after the deadline. The circuit court rejected the petition as untimely, finding that the relevant rule of procedure,
Petitioner urges this Court to adopt the “prison mailbox rule,” under which the papers or pleadings of unrepresented, incarcerated litigants are deemed to be “filed” when formally delivered to prison authorities for mailing to the circuit court. For the reasons that follow, we adopt the prison mailbox rule in the post-conviction context and apply it to the case at bar. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals with the direction that it remand the matter to the circuit court for that court to accept the petition as timely filed and proceed to consider the merits of the petition.
I.
Facts and Procedural History
A. The Underlying Conviction
In 1998, Petitioner was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City of two counts each of second-degree
B. Post-Conviction Proceedings
Nearly ten years later, Petitioner, incarcerated and procеeding without the assistance of counsel, endeavored to file a post-conviction petition in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Such petitions are governed by the Maryland Uniform Postconviction Procedure Act, codified at Title 7 of the Criminal Procedure Article (“CP“) of the Maryland Code. Absent extraordinary cause, post-conviction petitions are subject to a ten-year statute of limitations,
Petitioner submitted to the prison mailroom an envelope containing his petition and a certificate of service to the Baltimore City State‘s Attorney‘s Office bearing the date of October 20, 2008. There are two date stamps on the envelope. One stamp is on the back and appears to reflect that, on October 22, 2008, the mailroom date-stamped the envelope containing the petition and certificate of service. The other stamp, also dated October 22, 2008, is on the front of the envelope and appears to be the postmark, evidencing that prison authorities forwarded the envelope to the United States Post Office on that date. The Clerk of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City received and docketed the petition on October 24, 2008, one day after the statute of limitations had expired. On October 28, 2008, the Baltimore City State‘s Attorney filed a motion to dismiss the petition or, alternatively, a response to it. The motion to dismiss did not raise the statute of limitations issue.
Thereafter, counsel from the Public Defender‘s office entered an appearance and filed two supplemental petitions on Petitioner‘s behalf. In a footnote in the first supplemental petition, Petitioner‘s counsel argued that Petitioner‘s original petition had been timely filed. On September 10, 2010, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City held a hearing on the post-conviction petition. The court heard abbreviated argument on the statute of limitations issue, accepted into evidence various documents offered by the Public Defender, and heard testimony from Petitioner regarding dates relevant to the statute of limitations. Specifically, Petitioner testified that on October 20, 2008, he signed a certificate of service at the end of his petition, put it in an envelope with postage affixed, and mailed it.
The circuit court decided to reserve judgment on both the statute of limitations issue and the merits of the petition. For reasons not apparent in the record, the court delayed for five years before issuing an order dated November 19, 2015, dismissing Petitioner‘s petition as untimely under
C. The Appeal
Petitioner filed an application for leave to appeal in the Court of Special Appeals. The intermediate appellate court granted the application, transferred the case to the regular appeals docket, and in an unreported opinion affirmed the judgment of
Unless extraordinary cause is shown, in a case in which a sentence of death has not been imposed, a petition under this subtitle may not be filed more than 10 years after the sentence was imposed.
(a) Generally. The filing of pleadings and other papers with the court as required by these rules shall be mаde by filing them with the clerk of the court, except that a judge of that court may accept the filing, in which event the judge shall note on the papers the filing date and forthwith transmit them to the office of the clerk.
A pleading or paper is filed by actual delivery to the clerk. This may be accomplished in person or by mail. However, the date of filing is the date the clerk receives the pleading, not the date when the pleading was mailed. Filing therefore differs from service of a pleading or paper by mail, which is, in fact, complete upon mailing[.]
Molé, 381 Md. at 34 (emphasis added) (quoting Paul V. Niemeyer & Linda M. Schuett, Maryland Rules Commentary 35 (2d ed. 1984)). The Molé Court deemed the clerk to have received the appellant‘s notice of appeal when it arrived at the post office box because the clerk‘s office had set up the post office box for its own convenience. Id. at 38.
The Court of Special Appeals held that Petitioner‘s petition for post-conviction relief was untimely under
second, even if they were, the statute “provide[s] an extremely long time to file a
Finally, the Court of Special Appeals declined Petitioner‘s invitation to adopt the prison mailbox rule. The court reasoned that it lacked the authority to do so, concluding that this Court‘s decision in Molé controls the date of filing. We issued a writ of certiorari to determine whether the prison mailbox rule should be the law in Maryland.
II.
Standard of Review
On appeal, we review de novo the interpretation and application of Maryland statutory and case law. Wallace v. State, 452 Md. 558, 573 (2017); Collins v. State, 383 Md. 684, 688 (2004). As this case turns on the interpretation of the Uniform Postconviction Procedure Act and the Maryland Rule that controls filing under that statute, we “determine whether the lower court‘s conclusions are legally correct.” Gray v. State, 388 Md. 366, 375 (2005) (quoting Nesbit v. Gov‘t Emps. Ins. Co., 382 Md. 65, 72 (2004)). We interpret the Maryland Rules under the same standard. Id. (citing Davis v. Slater, 383 Md. 599, 604 (2004)).
III.
Discussion
A. The Parties’ Contentions
Petitioner first urges this Court to adopt the prison mailbox rule as set forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in Houston v. Lack, 487 U.S. 266 (1988). The Supreme Court recognized in Houston that the “situation of prisoners seeking to appeal without the aid of counsel is unique.” Id. at 270. The Court held that under the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, an unrepresented prisoner is deemed to have filed his or her petition when the prisoner delivers it to prison authorities to be mailed to the court. Id. at 276. Petitioner acknowledges that Houston concerned the timeliness of an appeal from the dismissal of a petition for writ of habeas corpus, but he argues that the statute and rule at issue here—
Petitioner also maintains that several Maryland cases, decided both before and after Houston, set the stage for applying the prison mailbox rule in the post-conviction context. Petitioner chаllenges, in particular, the Court of Special Appeals’ reading of Molé. As noted earlier, in Molé, we interpreted
Next, Petitioner argues that, per the Supreme Court‘s reasoning in Houston, adopting the prison mailbox rule avoids
If this Court decides not to adopt the prison mailbox rule, Petitioner would have us clarify to what extent the “extraordinary cause” provision of
Following the reasoning of the Court of Special Appeals, the State‘s argument begins with an analysis of the language of the post-conviction statute,
It is undisputed that the clerk received Petitioner‘s petition one day after the ten-year limitations period expired. The State therefore asserts that, under the Maryland authorities cited above, the petitiоn was correctly rejected by the circuit court and the Court of Special Appeals rightly affirmed.
Additionally, the State avers that Petitioner failed to claim in the circuit court that he had “extraordinary cause” for his late filing. And, as the statute mandates, where extraordinary cause is not shown, a petition “may not be filed more than 10 years after the sentence was imposed.”
The State argues next that this Court “need not, and should not, adopt and apply the prison mailbox rule to [Petitioner‘s] post-conviction case.” In the State‘s estimation, Houston is distinguishable. First, the State reads Houston as deciding that the prison mailbox rule applied to unrepresented inmates who, having done all that they could reasonably do to timely file an appeal, nonetheless could not meet a strict thirty-day filing window. The State argues that this was also true in Fallen v. United States, 378 U.S. 139 (1964)—a case producing a concurrence upon which the Houston Court relied—where the time to file was a
The State further notes that the Supreme Court in Houston interpreted a federal rule of procedure; it did not make a constitutional pronouncement. Therefore, the decision is not binding on state courts. The State points to instances in which other state courts considered adopting the rule but declined to do so, generally for fear of encroaching on legislative authority to set deadlines and an unwillingness to declare judicially what could easily be established in a rulemaking capacity. In this case, the State argues that
The State would also have us distinguish the other cases upon which Petitioner relies. The State asserts that in Coates v. State, 180 Md. 502 (1942), and Beard v. Warden of the Maryland Penitentiary, 211 Md. 658 (1957), both of which predated Houston, we concluded that a prisoner must have made every effort to timely file an appeal. The State points out that Petitioner waited until the very end of the ten-year filing period. Moreover, according to the State, Petitioner chose to file his petition on his own behalf even though he was entitled under
As for Petitioner‘s constitutional arguments, the State argues that constitutional proteсtions already exist in the statute. Ten years to file a claim with an exception for extraordinary cause, the State asserts, is more than enough to avoid any constitutional issue. The State argues that this Court should reject Petitioner‘s claim, as it “simply represents one self-interested litigant‘s attempt to obtain post-conviction review despite his own unjustified failings.”
Finally, the State insists that if this Court plans to adopt the prison mailbox rule, we should do so through the established rulemaking process and not Petitioner‘s appeal. The State notes that the holding of Houston was based (at least in part) on the Supreme Court‘s determination that the federal prison system had “well-developed procedures for recording the date and time at which [prison authorities] receive papers for mailing.” Houston, 487 U.S. at 275. And, the State argues, there is no evidence in the record that Maryland prisons either have appropriate prоcedures in place or could adopt them cost-effectively. The State claims that these types of inquiries are best handled by the Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure, which can consider these and other relevant factors in drafting a new rule.3
B. Analysis
For the reasons explained below, we adopt the prison mailbox rule as the law in Maryland for post-conviction petitions filed by unrepresented prisoners. And because it is an “application of new interpretations of constitutional provisions, statutes or rules,” the prison mailbox rule applies to “the case before us and all other pending cases where the relevant question has been preserved for appellate review.” Polakoff v. Turner, 385 Md. 467, 488 (2005); id. at 485 n.11 (observing that “[i]f the litigant who successfully contests a standing rule of law is denied relief because the new rule applies purely prospectively, there would be little motivаtion to attack settled rules of law” (quoting Stover v. Stover, 60 Md. App. 470, 476 (1984))); see also Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314, 328 (1987).
1. Houston and Its Federal and State Court Progeny
We are guided in our decision by the reasoning of the Supreme Court in Houston. There, Houston, a federal prisoner unaided by counsel, filed in federal district court a petition for writ of habeas corpus. 487 U.S. at 268. His petition was dismissed. Id. Pursuant to the applicable rule, Houston had thirty days to file a notice of appeal. Id. at 269. On day twenty-seven, he delivered his notice of appeal to prison authorities. Id. at 268. The district court received his appeal on day thirty-one, and it was eventually dismissed as untimely. Id. at 269.
The Supreme Court recognized at the outset that the “situation of prisoners seeking to appeal without the aid of counsel is unique.” Id. at 270. The Court explained:
Such prisoners cannot take the steps other litigants can take to monitor the processing of their notices of appeal and to ensure that the court clerk receives and stamps their notices of appeal before the 30-day deadline.
Unlike other litigants, pro se prisoners cannot personally travel to the courthouse to see that the notice is stamped “filed” or to establish the date on which the court received the notice.
Id. at 270-71. Further distinguishing prisoners proceeding without the aid of counsel from other litigants, the Court stated:
Other litigants may choose to entrust their appeals to the vagaries of the mail and the clerk‘s process for stamping incoming papers, but only the pro se prisoner is forced to do so by his situation. And if other litigants do choose to use the mail, they can at least place the notice directly into the hands of the United States Postal Service (or a private express carrier); and they can follow its progress by calling the court to determine whether the notice has been received and stamped, knowing that if the mail goes awry they can personally deliver notice at the last momеnt or that their monitoring will provide them with evidence to demonstrate either excusable neglect or that the notice was not stamped on the date the court received it. Pro se prisoners cannot take any of these precautions; nor, by definition, do they have lawyers who can take these precautions for them. Worse, the pro se prisoner has no choice but to entrust the forwarding of his notice of appeal to
prison authorities whom he cannot control or supervise and who may have every incentive to delay.
Id. at 271. The Court then highlighted the central problem faced by an unrepresented prisoner:
Unskilled in law, unaided by counsel, and unable to leave the prison, his control over the processing of his notice necessarily ceases as soon as he hands it over to the only public officials to whom he has access—the prison authorities—and the only infоrmation he will likely have is the date he delivered the notice to those prison authorities and the date ultimately stamped on his notice.
The Court grounded its holding in textual analysis. The habeas statute in question,
[N]o appeal shall bring any judgment, order or decree in an action, suit or proceeding of a civil nature before a court of appeals for review unless notice
of appeal is filed, within thirty days after the entry of such judgment, order or decree.
The Court noted that the statute “does not define when a notice of appeal has been ‘filed’ or designate the person with whom it must be filed.” Houston, 487 U.S. at 272. The Court then turned to the relevant rules of procedure.
An appeal permitted by law as of right from a district court to a court of appeals may be taken only by filing a notice of appeal with the district clerk within the time allowed by Rule 4.
At the time of Houston,
In a civil case in which an appeal is permitted by law as of right from a district court to a court of apрeals the notice of appeal required by Rule 3 shall be filed with the clerk of the district court within 30 days after the date of entry of the judgment or order appealed from[.]
Given this language, the Court concluded, “nothing in the statute suggests that, in the unique circumstances of a pro se prisoner, it would be inappropriate to conclude that a notice of appeal is ‘filed’ within the meaning of
The Houston Court relied, in part, on Justice Stewart‘s concurrence in Fallen v. United States, 378 U.S. 139 (1964). That case involved the timeliness of a notice of a direct appeal that was filed by a convicted and incarcerated defendant without the assistance of counsel. Under then-effective
The
In Houston, the Court applied the logic of the Fallen concurrence. The Court reasoned that strictly construing “filing” in the context of an unrepresented prisoner would not comport with the Court‘s understanding of the terms “filing” and “receipt.” Houston, 487 U.S. at 273. As applied to non-incarcerated litigants, “filing” might mean the moment at which the clerk receives a pleading or the moment at which the clerk formally files, stamps, or records the pleading. Id. The Court explained that the earlier point in time—receipt by the clerk—is the moment of filing because “the appellant has no control over delays between the court clerk‘s receipt and formal filing of the notice.” Id. By contrast, “the lack of control of pro se prisoners over delays extends much further than that of the typical civil litigant.” Id. Such a difference, the Court held, warranted a departure from the general rule in civil appeals that receipt constitutes filing. Id. at 273-76.
Following Houston, a number of our sister state courts have adopted the prison mailbox rule for unrepresented prisoners.4 For example, in Sykes v. State, 757 So. 2d 997 (Miss. 2000), the Supreme Court of Mississippi considered whether a three-year statute of limitations barred a post-conviction petition that was deposited with prison authorities three days before the limitations period expired but stamped by the clerk of the court one day late. Id. at 998. The relevant statute provided, in pertinent part, “The motion under this article shall be filed as an original civil action in the trial court.”
a pro se prisoner‘s motion for post-conviction relief is delivered for filing under the [post-conviction statute] and the Mississippi Rulеs of Civil Procedure when the prisoner delivers the papers to prison authorities for mailing. Prison authorities may initiate such procedures as are necessary to document reliably the date of such delivery, by means of a prison mail log of legal mail or other expeditious means. Henceforth, an inmate‘s certificate of service will not suffice as proof.
Sykes, 757 So. 2d at 1000-01. Nothing in the statute or rule of procedure—though the words “filed” and “filing” seem clear—compelled the conclusion that filing only happens at the moment of receipt or stamping by the clerk. Id. at 1000.
In Holland v. State, 621 So. 2d 373 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993), the Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama held that a post-conviction petition placed in the mail by an unrepresented prisoner four days before the limitations period expired, even though the clerk of the court received it one day after the deadline, was timely filed. Id. at 374. Other out-of-state cases with similar facts in the post-conviction context have followed the holding and reasoning of Houston. See, e.g., State v. Rosario, 987 P.2d 226 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1999); Haag v. State, 591 So. 2d 614 (Fla. 1992); Wahl v. State, 344 P.3d 385 (Kan. 2015).
Still other state courts have rejected the prison mailbox rule in actions for post-conviction relief and elsewhere. For the most part, those courts have articulated three main reasons militating against adopting the rule: (1) Houston, as an interpretation of a federal procedural rule, is not binding precedent; (2) the language in the statutes and rules in their jurisdictions would not square with the prison mailbox rule; and (3) the reliability of the prison mail system described in Houston is not present in their jurisdictions. Delaware and Missouri offer two examples of states in which supreme courts have rejected the prison mailbox rule for these reasons.
The Supreme Court of Delaware held that Delaware procedural rules precluded the adoption of the prison mailbox rule, stating that “a notice of appeal filing deadline is not subject to enlаrgement in Delaware.” Carr v. State, 554 A.2d 778, 779-80 (Del. 1989). Further, the court found “the procedure used to mail letters in the Delaware prison system” to be “very different from that employed in the federal penal system.” Id. at 780. The court reasoned that if the prison mailbox rule were to be adopted, “no one would have any record of when a piece of mail was posted” because inmates anonymously place their mail into a prison mailbox with no recording procedures. Id. In O‘Rourke v. State, 782 S.W.2d 808 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990), an intermediate appellate court in Missouri, citing Carr, came to the same conclusion for similar reasons. The court rejected the prison mailbox rule partly because the relevant procedural rule clearly “specifie[d] that a motion for post-conviction relief is to be filed with the clerk of the trial court.” Id. at 809. The court also noted “a lack of institutional safeguards,” id., such as federal prison authorities’ “well-developed procedures for recording the date and time” that inmate mail is received, Houston, 487 U.S. at 275.
2. Maryland Authority
This Court last addressed the issue of timely filings in Molé. In that case, a plaintiff suing for negligence and battery prevailed in the trial court with respect to her negligence claim, but she took issue with the trial court‘s refusal to instruct the jury on battery. 381 Md. at 29. As permitted by the clerk of the court, she sent a notice of appeal to the clerk‘s post office box. Id. at 36-37. The notice of appeal was received at the post office box on the last day of the filing deadline, but the clerk did not physically receive or date-stamp it until three days later. Id. at 37. Interpreting
In In re Vy N., 131 Md. App. 479 (2000), the Court of Special Appeals decided a similar issue. There, the District Court dismissed as untimely petitions that were physically delivered to the clerk‘s office around 4:30 p.m. on the last day for filing but were not stamped by the clerk until the next day. Id. at 481. The intermediate appellate court held that because an authorized person received the petitions within the filing window, it did not matter that the petitioners were not officially stamped. Id. at 486 (“[The petitions] were actually delivered to a person authorized to receive them on January 11th, [so] they were filed on—and should have been ‘stamped in’ as of that date.“).
In Coates, an unrepresented prisoner incorrectly addressed a letter constituting an appeal to the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals. 180 Md. at 504. Because of this error, and because the warden to whom the prisoner entrusted the letter delayed in sending it, the letter was not timely filed. Id. We held that “[t]he prisoner did all that his ignorance and lack of advice permittеd in forwarding his appeal in time, and the nature of his objection requires that it be accepted as of that time.” Id. This was because “he gave the letter to the warden of the penitentiary, as disciplinary rules require, for mailing, within the time fixed by the rule of court for appeals,” id., a situation not unlike the one in the instant case.5
Likewise, in Beard, a prisoner attempted to file a petition for writ of habeas corpus within ten days of sentencing. 211 Md. at 660. Due to a presumptive delay on the part of prison authorities, his petition arrived late. Id. at 660-61. We remanded the case for the trial court to determine whether he should be granted a “delayed appeal,” depending on whether it was prison authorities or the prisoner himself who was to blame. Id. at 661 (citing Coates, 180 Md. at 504).6
3. The Prison Mailbox Rule in Maryland
We adopt the prison mailbox rule in Maryland for unrepresented prisoners attempting to file post-conviction petitions. From now on, an unrepresented prisoner is deemed to have filed his or her post-conviction рetition at the moment the prisoner formally delivers it to prison authorities for forwarding to the circuit court.7 This result not only is reasonably grounded in the language of
None of the holdings of the Maryland cases cited above are disturbed by this pronouncement, nor do they preclude it.
permitting his petition to proceed was a “corrective procedure.” Bernard v. Warden of Md. House of Correction, 187 Md. 273, 282 (1947).
Coates does not stand in the way of our adoption of the prison mailbox rule. Indeed, as noted above, the reasoning of that decision is wholly in line with the rationale undergirding our adoption of the rule. And, though neither Molé nor In re Vy N. dealt with unrepresented prisoners attempting to file post-conviction petitions, the teachings of those cases apply to the case at bar. Both Molé and In re Vy N. involved relinquishing authority over documents to a government agent, and in neither case did the litigants have control over what happened next. A prisoner acting without the assistanсe of counsel has even less control over his or her filings than did the parties in those two cases.
It is true that, in Molé, we also stated that “the date of filing is the date the clerk receives the pleading, not the date when the pleading was mailed.” 381 Md. at 34 (emphasis added) (quoting Niemeyer & Schuett, Maryland Rules Commentary 35). But Molé and, for that matter, In re Vy N., were decided in different contexts—neither involved the “unique” position of unrepresented inmates who must surrender all outgoing mail to prison authorities for forwarding. Houston, 487 U.S. at 270-71. The circumstances of an unrepresented inmate are undeniably different from those of a non-incarcerated litigant—represented or unrepresented—who can physically assure the delivery of papers or pleadings on a particular day, call and check in with the clerk‘s office regarding the receipt of any mailed documents, and make emergency provisions if necessary.
At bottom,
The cases from our sister state courts upon which the State relies, including Carr and O‘Rourke, do not persuade us to reach a contrary conclusion. The courts in those cases engaged in rigid analyses based solely on the text of applicable rules and statutes in their jurisdictions. Both courts specifically noted that, because Houston interpretеd a federal statute and rule of procedure, they were not bound by the Supreme Court‘s holding. And, in our view, both courts focused on the impracticability of implementing the prison mailbox rule without fairly weighing the interests of the prisoners whom the rule was designed to protect.
Like we do today, the Supreme Court of Georgia adopted, by way of a judicial opinion, the prison mailbox rule in cases involving appeals from habeas corpus petitions. See Massaline v. Williams, 554 S.E.2d 720 (Ga. 2001). In doing so, the court implemented a creative yet pragmatic solution that addresses the concerns about reliability cited in Carr and O‘Rourke and raised by the State here:
We recognize that the mechanics for administering this Court‘s adoption of a mailbox rule may require some refinements after it is put in practice. Whether the unrepresented inmate-litigant delivered his court papers to the prison officials on or before the court deadline will be the question. Absent an established system for logging the date an inmate‘s outgoing legal mail is delivered to prison officials, a pro se prisoner may prove the timeliness of his filing in, at least, the following ways:
(a) an official United States Postal Service post-mark showing a date before the deadline will be conclusive;
(b) the date on the certificate of service will give rise to a rebuttable presumption that the prisoner handed his filing to the prison officials on that date; or
(c) an affidavit reflecting the date and the fact the prisoner provided his legal filing with sufficient prepaid postage for first-class mail will give rise to a rebuttable presumption.
The State may rebut the presumption that arises when a litigant relies on methods (b) or (c) by proving that, contrary to the representation in the certificate of service or affidavit, the prisoner delivered his application or notice of appeal to the prison officials after the deadline for filing.
Id. at 723. Although we leave such particulars to our rulemaking process, these measures offered by the Supreme Court of Georgia suggest, at the least, a possible framework for assisting courts in determining with accuracy the date on which a pro se petition may fairly be deemed to have been deposited with prison authorities.
We decline to adopt what the State has characterized as the “‘did all he could do’ legal standard” from the majority opinion in Fallen and our decisions in Beard and Coates. None of those cases set a legal standard for an unrepresented prisoner‘s conduct that focuses on his or her efforts to timely file; rather, those cases recognize the point at which—given the unique circumstances an unrepresented prisoner faces—those efforts no longer matter. As the Supreme Court explained, “[o]ther litigants may choose to entrust their appeals to the vagaries of the mail and the clerk‘s
Further, it would be unreasonable—and unfair—to have a statutorily-fixed filing window and then mandate that a prisoner, advocating on his or her own behalf, could not use all of that available window to craft a request for relief. See In re Jordan, 840 P.2d 983, 991 (Cal. 1992) (“[T]he conclusion . . . that the prison-delivery rule has lost its vitality because that rulе was adopted when the filing period comprised only 10 days, overlooks the critical point that the rule rests in large measure on the proposition that prisoners and nonprisoners are entitled to have available an equal period of time in which to pursue their appellate rights.“).9
Nor do we accept the State‘s argument that Petitioner could have—or should have—obtained the assistance of the Public Defender‘s Office to ensure receipt of his petition by the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. The record does not establish, one way or the other, whether Petitioner elected to proceed without attempting to secure counsel or whether the Public Defender‘s Office would have assisted him in filing the petition.10
Regardless, Petitioner should not be penalized for failing to request assistance from the Public Defender.
Finally, the State suggests that, rather than judicially adopt the рrison mailbox rule in this opinion, we should have the Rules Committee take the initiative. We decline the suggestion.11 As in Houston,
We are confident that Maryland prison authorities are capable of creating or continuing documentation procedures for outgoing legal mail sent by prisoners. These procedures ensure that unrepresented litigants have a fair chance at accessing our courts and seeking justice within the timeframes spelled out by applicable rules and statutes.
on [their] own, or apply to Post Conviction Defenders Division to have an attorney file a petition for [them].” Post Conviсtion Defenders Division, Frequently Asked Questions, Maryland Office of the Public Defender (emphasis added) (last visited Apr. 23, 2018), https://perma.cc/9ZLC-GPFQ. If a prisoner files a petition without the assistance of the Public Defender, and “[i]f the petition alleges that the petitioner is indigent, the clerk shall promptly notify the [Post Conviction Defenders Division] by forwarding a copy of the petition.”
IV.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we hereby adopt the prison mailbox rule. A post-conviction petition by an unrepresented prisoner is deemed to be “filed” at the moment the petition is formally submitted to prison authorities for forwarding to the circuit court. Accordingly, as applied to Petitioner, an unrepresented and incarcerated litigant, his petition for post-conviction relief was timely filed when he delivered it to prison authorities at least two days before the limitations period expired. Because the petition was timely filed, Petitioner‘s action for post-conviction relief may proceed.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED; CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH DIRECTIONS TO VACATE THE ORDER OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY DISMISSING THE PETITION AND REMAND THE CASE TO THAT COURT FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY RESPONDENT.
