In this appeal, Jimmy Lee Jones maintains that he is entitled to relief from his child molestation conviction. Additionally, he claims that the trial court erred by denying his motion for the appointment of appellate counsel. For reasons that follow, we affirm the denial of the motion for appellatе counsel, and dismiss the remainder of this appeal.
In 1995, in the Superior Court of Clayton County, Jones entered a negotiated guilty plea to a child molestation charge on a multi-count indictment, and the remaining charges against him were dismissed; Jones was granted first offender treatment,
Before the expiration of the probationary period, the state filed a petition for adjudication of guilt and imposition of sentence, alleging that Jones had violated certain probationаry terms. After a hearing thereon, the trial court executed an order on August 20, 1997 (which was entered on August 25, 1997), determining that Jones had violated probationary terms, adjudicating Jones guilty of child molestation and sentencing him to imprisonment. On September 19, 1997, Jones filed a notice of appeal; the state movеd the trial court to dismiss it on the ground that an appeal from a probation revocation was discretionary pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-35.
More than a decade later, on May 31, 2012, Jones, proceeding pro se, filed in the Superior Court of Clayton County a “Motion to Set Aside Void Order Dated August 20th, 1997,” which Jones subtitled, “Petitions — Error Coram Nobis and/or Audita Querela-sic.” Therein, Jones complained that, without counsel, he had been confronted with the probation revocation proceedings that rеsulted in an order of adjudication of guilt and the imposition of a sentence of imprisonment. Further, Jones pointed out that, at the probation revocation hearing, he had objected to proceeding without appointed counsel. The transcript of the probation revocatiоn hearing shows that the trial court overruled Jones’s objection, explaining that Jones had been afforded an opportunity to have an attorney, that a court administrator had interviewed him, that Jones had refused to talk to the court administrator and had refused to provide him any financial information, and that Jones thus had not complied with the conditions necessary to get a court-appointed attorney. Nevertheless, in his 2012 motion, Jones relied upon a line of cases, represented here by Barnes v. State,
The trial court summarily denied Jones’s 2012 motion, and Jones thereafter filed a motion seeking the appointment of appellate counsel, which the trial court also denied. Jones proceeds pro se in this appeal, challenging these rulings.
1. In several related claims of error, Jones contests the denial of his motion, characterizing his sentence of imprisonment as “void” and citing OCGA § 17-9-4.
“A sentence is void if the court imposes punishment that thе law does not allow.”
In Chester v. State
Given the foregoing, “[Jones] was not entitled tо file a motion to vacate his criminal conviction and his appeal [therefrom] is subject to dismissal.”
2. Jones’s remaining attacks upon his child molestation conviction do not rescue this portion of his appeal from dismissal.
(a) Jones contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to vacate void order “without giving a written opinion, or citing any authority of law.” Contrary to Jones’s bare assertion on appeal, the summary order (ruling on a motion that Jones was not entitled to file
(b) Jones’s characterization of his 2012 motion as “Petitions — Error Coram Nobis and/or Audita Querela-sic” is unavailing.
(i) Several decades ago, the Supreme Court of Georgia “established that a writ of error coram nobis is merely the ancient grandfather of an extraordinary motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence” and thereupon
recommend [ed] to the Bar [and hence, pro se parties] to finally grant this lingering ghost a peaceful rest. Indeed, with the myriad of avenues for post-conviction relief, differing nomenclature for identical modes of procedure merely serves to muddle trial practice and confuse those judges and justices charged with the task of appellate review.22
Accordingly, this court recently observed:
[A]s [a petition for writ of error coram nobis] is the ancestor of an extraordinary motion fоr new trial based on newly discovered evidence, the prerequisites for issuing a writ of error coram nobis or for granting an extraordinary motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence appear to be identical. Before a court authorizes either, it is generally required that the moving or petitioning party base the pleading on facts which are not part of the record and which could not by due diligence have been discovered at the time of the trial. 23
The pleading at issue here, Jones’s 2012 motion challenging the child molestation conviction,
Moreover, Jones pled guilty to child molestation; and as stated above,
(ii) Jones’s reference to an “Audita Querela” is unaccompanied by any legаl authority that such a writ is a cognizable vehicle for providing him relief from the child molestation conviction. Unsupported, Jones’s reference is unavailing.
(c) Jones asserts that his “1997 notice of appeal is still valid” to directly appeal his child molestation conviction for reason that the “[t]rial court does not have jurisdiction to dismiss a notice of appeal which is properly filed.” While Jones might have timely pursued a challenge to the dismissal of the 1997 notice of appeal,
3. Jones challenges the trial court’s order denying his motion for the appointment of appellate counsel.
[A] trial court retains jurisdiction over certain matters including appointment of counsel on appeal. However, an indigent defendant is entitled to representation by counsel only for trial and for the directappeal from the judgment of conviction and sentence. 32
Accordingly, the trial court correctly determined that Jones was not entitled to appointed appellate “counsel to pursue either the [Motion to Set Aside Void Order Dated August 20th, 1997] or an appeal from the denial thereof.”
Judgment affirmed in part and appeal dismissed in part.
Notes
See OCGA § 42-8-60 et seq.
See Dean v. State,
OCGA § 17-9-4 provides: “The judgment of a court having no jurisdiction of the person or subject matter, or void for any other cause, is a mere nullity and may be so held in any court when it becomes material to the interest of the parties to consider it.”
See State v. Green,
Rooney v. State,
See generally Jackson v. State,
See Williams v. State,
Harper, supra (explaining the holding in Chester, supra) (footnote omitted).
Supra.
Id. at 218 (1), overruling Chester, which had authorized a defendant to move to have a judgment of conviction declared void pursuant to OCGA § 17-9-4.
Harper, supra at 217 (1), n. 1.
See id. at 217 (1); Matherlee v. State,
Wright v. State,
Id., citing OCGA § 17-9-61 (b).
Jones’s motion underlying this appeal was filed in 2012, more than a decade after his child molestation conviction.
Wright, supra (footnote omitted). At the time he filed his motion, Jones represented that he was then incarcerated at Ware State Prison, Warе County. Notably, in this court, Jones represents that the challenged (child molestation) “conviction in Clayton County was used in Fulton County to Enhance Sentence,” hut see Smith v. State,
Harper, supra at 218 (2) (dismissing appeal, where appellant was not entitled to file a motion to vacate his criminal conviction); see Williams, supra (because a motion to cоrrect illegal sentence or conviction is not an appropriate remedy to attack a conviction in a criminal case, appeal is subject to dismissal, where claim is a challenge to criminal conviction); Roberts v. State,
Supra (concerning a direct appeal).
See Division 1, supra.
Waye v. State,
Seabrook v. State,
See text accompanied by footnote 8.
See Parris v. State,
Seabrook, supra; see Parris, supra.
See Division 1, supra.
See Wright, supra (citing Davis v. State,
See American Med. Security Group v. Parker,
See Pierce v. State,
Supra.
Id. at 7 (4) (citations and punctuation omitted).
Id. (citation omitted); see Orr v. State,
See Rooney, supra; Orr, supra.
