Counsel for the petitioner failed to file the required notice of appeal in time to preserve review of his forgery conviction. This Court accordingly ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
State
v.
Parizo,
As a result the petitioner sought post-conviction relief under 13 V.S.A. § 7131. The lower court found that petitioner wanted and intended that his conviction should be appealed, and that his two attorneys were aware of that fact. Apparently each lawyer thought the other was to file the necessary notice. One attorney was assigned, but when the petitioner indicated dissatisfaction with that lawyer, retained counsel was allowed to enter as co-counsel. Both attorneys were found to be well aware of the thirty-day jurisdictional requirement pertaining to notice of appeal. V.R.A.P. 4; V.R.A.P. 26 (b).
*367 In the post-conviction proceedings the lower court sought to rule in the petitioner’s favor. To accomplish this, after filing formal findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court issued an order setting aside the judgment and remanding the case to the district court with directions to enter a new judgment. The form of this judgment, as petitioned for by counsel, was directed to be “a new Judgment, nunc pro tunc as of April 27, 1978, so that a timely Notice of Appeal may be filed.”
Since the original judgment order was entered on that same April 27, 1978, the literal effect of that disposition would make the notice of appeal filed July 3,1978, as untimely as before. The legal significance of nunc pro tunc or “now for then” is to set the effective date of a present order at a particular and appropriate time in the past, on the basis that the correct entry was inadvertently or mistakenly departed from by the court involved. 2 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary 2385 (8th ed. 1914).
The purpose of the trial court, although at variance with the text of its order, stands clearly forth in the phrase “so that a timely Notice of Appeal may be filed.” The State, in bringing this appeal, does not focus on the impossibility inherent in the language of the order, but rather challenges it on the ground that the intended result was not within the statutory authority of post-conviction proceedings as set out in 13 V.S.A. § 7133, and on the further ground that, in any event, the petitioner did not make any claim or showing that the failure to perfect his appeal was to his prejudice.
There was a time, even in criminal law, when the burden of shortcomings of counsel fell on the client as a matter of course. Although the right to counsel was given limited recognition at least as early as the English Treasons Act of 1691, and in this state widely accorded long before
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
State as well as federal judges are bound to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States, and, where there is a conflict and the Supremacy Clause is applicable, enforce the federal law irrespective of contrary state law. See, e.g.,
In re Dunkerley,
But with jurisdictional doctrine barring, as a matter of state law, consideration of an untimely appeal, how can the dilemma be resolved? We have many times said that it is not the function of post-conviction review (13 V.S.A. § 7131) to perform the office of an appeal. Moreover, the device used below in this case was flawed by its verbal form. But the persisting question is whether the constrictions of jurisdictional requirements can be escaped by the device of a nunc pro tunc or similar entry. The answer has to be in the negative.
Does this mean that the remedy for attorney incompetency is lost in our jurisprudence, if established? Again, the answer is no. The problem is not one of attempting to resolve an inconsistency in our own law. The doctrine involved,
*369
as already noted, is the right to counsel required by the Sixth Amendment, and made applicable to the states under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supremacy Clause, Article Six of the Constitution of the United States, determines that it prevails over any contrary state law. As such, it comes under a defined ground of 13 V.S.A. § 7133 as a denial or infringement of constitutional rights such as to make a criminal judgment vulnerable to collateral attack. See
Shipman
v.
Gladden,
In this case such an evaluation may ultimately demonstrate a right to appeal in spite of the tardiness of the notice of appeal and the earlier dismissal here. This result would be based on federal law, not on the invalidation or repeal of any state appellate requirements.
Smith
v.
Buraczynski, supra,
This cause must accordingly be sent back for rehearing in the light of these substantive requirements. If the lower court determines that the petitioner has established the justifying facts called for by these standards, and sets them out appropriately in findings and conclusions of law, it may permit the filing of a new notice of appeal under the authority of this case, irrespective of the former dismissal. The matter will then assume the posture of an appeal as of right under Vermont Rules of Appellate Procedure and will proceed accordingly. If the State wishes to challenge the soundness of the trial court’s justification for permitting a new notice of appeal to be filed, it may raise the issue by motion to be heard *370 in advance, or in conjunction with, the appeal itself, as this Court may determine.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the requirements of this opinion.
