OPINION
This is a petition for writ of certiorari to the court of appeals. The court of appeals, in affirming the trial court, found that the trial court correctly determined that its jurisdiction to reduce petitioner’s sentence had expired when it denied petitioner’s motion 173 days after filing of the court of appeal’s mandate affirming petitioner’s conviction. After reviewing the court of appeals’ file and argument of counsel, we reverse the court of appeals.
Petitioner’s conviction for second degree murder was affirmed by the court of appeals on December 12, 1986. On January 7, 1987, within the 30-day period required by SCR A, Rule 5-801, petitioner filed his motion for modification of sentence. After certain communications between the trial court and petitioner’s trial attorney — communications which are not in the record, but which appear for the first time in the petition for writ of certiorari — the motion was not heard until May 12, 1987, at which time the trial court advised petitioner that under Rule 5-801, because the 30-day period for hearing the motion had passed, the trial court had no jurisdiction to hear the motion and thus the motion was dismissed.
Petitioner makes two arguments: (1) Even though the May 12 hearing date was more than 30 days after the court of appeals had affirmed his conviction, there is a consistent policy in the federal circuits known as the “reasonable time rule” in which trial courts in their discretion may decide to hear motions to modify sentences even after the period specified by statute has run. (For a partial list of federal circuits following the reasonable time rule, see Gaertner v. United States,
Rule 5-801 reads in pertinent part as follows: “The district court may reduce a sentence within thirty (30) days after * * * entry of any order or judgment of the appellate court having the effect of upholding a judgment of conviction.”
As to petitioner’s first challenge, this court must decide whether Rule 5-801 is jurisdictional (depriving trial courts of power to rule on any motion coming before them for hearing later than 30 days following appellate review), or whether it is discretionary (following the reasonable time rule of the federal circuits, which would allow motions filed within 30 days to be heard after 30 days if the trial court so chooses). In United States v. Addonizio,
As to petitioner’s due process challenge, a similar challenge was addressed in Sotto v. Wainwright,
Our court of appeals in its summary affirmance relied heavily on the third rationale above when it said: “One of the reasons for rejecting the ‘reasonable time’ rule * * * is that limitation on the district court’s power to reduce a sentence keeps the district courts from misusing that power as a substitute for consideration of parole by parole authorities.”
We are left then with a determination of the two following issues: Is Rule 5-801 jurisdictional or discretionary? Were petitioner’s due process rights violated by the trial court’s denial of petitioner’s motion? We hold that insofar as the filing of motions under Rule 5-801 is concerned, the statute is jurisdictional, so that motions must be filed within thirty days of the entry of the appellate judgment. As to the disposition of the motion, however, the court possesses discretion to hear and decide motions after thirty days.
Further, in a case such as the one before us, the trial court must exercise its discretion if it hopes to avoid depriving petitioner of his right to due process of law. Here petitioner was assured that this motion would be heard on May 12, but when he appeared in court, the judge changed his mind and denied petitioner a hearing. A clearer case of the deprivation of petitioner’s rights to substantive and procedural due process can hardly be imagined. Nothing in Sotto contradicts our holding. Finality is still assured; the trial court’s workload is not increased by requiring defendant to file motions to modify within a certain specified time limit, and the trial court’s supposed usurpation of the parole board’s function is an illusory argument not borne out in New Mexico practice.
Our opinion raises two final questions which must be addressed. First, because the case of State v. Sykes,
For the foregoing reasons the trial court and court of appeals are reversed and the matter remanded to the trial court for further proceedings on defendant’s motion.
