This is an appeal from the denial of a petition for permission to file a belated motion to correct errors. The petition was filed and is governed by Post Conviction Rule 2, Section 2.
James was tried by a jury in absentia and sentenced in absentia on March 4, 1987. He was caught on April 24, 1987, and received by the Department of Correction on April 27, 1987, within sixty days from the date of sentencing, and thus within the sixty-day period granted by Criminal Rule 16 for filing the motion to correct errors. No timely motion to correct errors was filed, but on May 11, 1987, about a week after the sixty day period ran, the public defender received a letter from James requesting assistance. Though no such timely motion was filed, James did file a pro se petition for post-conviction relief on July 6, 1987.
The state public defender filed a petition for permission to file a belated motion to correct errors on April 21, 1988, which the trial court denied without a hearing, finding that he did not show that his failure to timely file such motion was not due to his own fault. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
James v. State
(1989), Ind.App.
The sentencing of James in absentia was proper.
Williams v. State
(1988), Ind.,
Here, the trial court denied appellant’s petition for authority to file the belated motion without an evidentiary hearing. In
Zellers v. State
(1977),
The decree denying the petition for authority to file the belated motion is reversed, and the case is remanded to the trial court with instructions to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the petition and for further consistent proceedings.
