Roy C. Lewellen appeals a decision of the Supreme Court ■ Committee on Professional Conduct (“Committee”) issuing Lewellen a Caution under the Arkansas Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct, Section 17(D)(5) (2002), due to Lewellen’s failure to timely file a notice of appeal. Lewellen argues that the notice of appeal was filed late only because he justifiably believed that the motions for new trial filed before the judgment and commitment order extended the time within which to file the notice of appeal. He asserts that the statutes and case law as interpreted by this court at the time laid a trap for an attorney in that they gave the impression that a motion for a new trial in a criminal case could be filed at any time before a judgment was entered. We hold that LeweEen violated the Model Rules of Professional Conduct when he faded to comply with the then-existing case law of this court holding that a motion for a new trial filed before a judgment was entered was void. Because the new trial motions were void, the notice of appeal filed on July 8, 1999, was filed more than thirty days from entry of judgment, making the notice untimely. We find no merit in LeweEen’s remaining arguments and affirm the findings and action of the Supreme Court Committee on Professional Conduct.
Facts
LeweEen was retained to appeal the convictions and sentences of Terrance and Tamagum Robinson. After the jury trial and verdict, defense counsel filed separate motions for new trial, one for Terrance and one for Tamagum. The motions were filed May 10, 1999. However, the judgment and commitment orders were not entered until May 24, 1999. Notice of appeal was filed on July 8, 1999.
Thus, the notice of appeal was not filed within thirty days of the judgment and commitment orders. However, LeweEen argued that the time to file the notice of appeal was extended by filing the motions for a new trial. In Robinson v. State,
On October 24, 2000, LeweEen filed a motion to reinstate the appeal and admitted to faEure to file a timely notice of appeal. On November 16, 2000, a per curiam opinion was issued accepting LeweEen’s admission of fault and granting the motion to file a belated appeal. See Robinson v. State,
Standard of Review
Lewellen asserts that this court’s standard of review on decisions from the Supreme Court Committee on Professional Conduct is confused in that the court declares that it reviews the decision de novo and yet will affirm the Committee’s action unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Lewellen asserts that de novo means that the matter must be heard by this court anew as if it had never been heard before.
In the context of an appeal to circuit court from municipal court, this court stated, “When a case is appealed to the circuit court it is to be tried de novo, i.e., as though there had been no trial in the lower court.” Harrell v. Conway,
Therefore, as this court has stated previously, the Committee’s findings of fact will not be reversed unless they are clearly erroneous, and the action taken by the Committee will be affirmed unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Cortinez, supra; Fink v. Neal,
Obligation to be Aware of Case Law
At the time Lewellen filed the motions for a new trial, the binding law in Arkansas was that a motion for a new trial filed before the judgment and commitment order was entered was void. Brown v. State,
At the time Lewellen filed his motions for a new trial, Brown and Hicks were the controlling law. Case law is controlling precedent. Under the doctrine of stare decisis, we are bound to follow prior case law. Chamberlain v. State Farm Mut. Auto,
Lewellen argües, nonetheless, that Ark. Code Ann. Section 16-89-130 (1987) allows the filing of a new trial motion up until the judgment is filed and, therefore, because the motions were filed before the judgment was entered, it was timely, and therefore effective to preserve the time within which to file a notice of appeal. Section 16-89-130 dates from the 1869 Criminal Code and has been called into question in the past. In Cigainero v. State,
Cigainero also relies on Ark. Code Ann. § 16-89-130 (1987) as a grant of extra time to file. It provides in part: ‘The application for a new trial must be made at the same term at which the verdict is rendered, unless the judgment is postponed to another term, in which case it may be made at any time before judgment,’ and notes that this applies in cases including where, because of jury misconduct, the court is of the opinion that the defendant did not receive a fair trial. To the contrary, A.R.Cr.P. Rule 36.22 and Ark. Code Ann. § 16-91-105 (1987) have set the time frame, thirty days from date of judgment, and they have effectively superseded and taken precedence over Ark. Code Ann. 16-89-130. Chisum v. State,274 Ark. 332 ,625 S.W.2d 448 (1981). Cigainero’s motion is not timely, and her issue of whether the trial court erred in refusing to grant a. new trial will not be considered on appeal.
Cigainero,
As Lewellen argues, section 16-89-130 speaks to filing a motion for a new trial within the term, but in 1981, in Chisum v. State,
The Criminal Code of 1869 required that a motion for a new trial in a criminal case for newly discovered evidence be filed within the same term of court as the entry of the judgment. Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 43-2202 and 2203(6) (Repl. 1977); Delaney v. State,212 Ark. 622 ,207 S.W.2d 37 (1948). Our present criminal procedural rule and its predecessor statute both fix the time for filing a motion for a new trial as that allowed for the filing of a notice of appeal (ordinarily 30 days). Criminal Procedure Rule 36.22; Ark. Stat. Ann. §43-2704. A motion filed 20 months after the judgment is obviously too late.
Chisum,
Public Caution
LeweEen next argues that Section 10(D) of the Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct is in conflict with section 17(E). Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct (2002). The two sections are not in conflict. The sections relate to different matters. Section 17(E)(6) provides a means to resolve the aEeged misconduct by issuance of a Warning before a complaint is prepared. Section 10(D)(l-2) provides a procedure where a complaint has been prepared and issued, and a panel has voted to issue a Warning. Contrary to LeweEen’s assertion, Section 17(E)(6) does not provide that a Warning may only be imposed before a Committee vote. Section 17(E)(6) provides that under the circumstances stated in Section 17(E)(6), the Committee is authorized to issue a Warning before preparation of a complaint, and Section 10(D) provides that the Committee may impose a Warning after a baEot vote. Taken together, the two sections authorize the Committee to impose the sanction of a Warning at any time prior to a public hearing where the requirements of the sections are met.
LeweEen also argues that the prohibition of issuance of a Warning foEowing a public hearing is a penalty on the exercise of the lawyer’s right to appeal. LeweEen asserts that it is a violation of due process for a Warning to be available as a sanction before a public hearing, but not afterward. Lewellen further argues that denying the right to the sanction of a Warning after a public hearing constitutes a penalty for the exercise of a constitutional right.
On March 29, 2001, Panel A issued a Caution. A Caution is a public warning. Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct Section 17(D)(5) (2002). Lewellen filed a notice of appeal with the Committee to avail himself of his right to a public hearing and de novo consideration of his case by Panel B. Under the Procedures, the sanction of a Warning was not available once Lewellen sought a de novo public hearing. Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct, Section 12(B) (2002). Lewellen was informed by letter from the Committee that a Warning would not be an available sanction if he proceeded to a public hearing.
Lewellen expressed a desire to avoid the public nature of the Caution. Obviously, once a public hearing is announced, and then held, the matters that occurred in that hearing are public. The issue of keeping the matter entirely private is moot. Further, the Arkansas Reports in Robinson v. State,
Section 17(E)(6) provides that, “[a] Warning is not a sanction available to a panel of the Committee when issuing a formal letter of disposition following public adjudication of the disciplinary matter.” Procedures Regulating Professional Conduct Section 17(E)(6) (2002). The right to practice in state courts is not a privilege or immunity under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. McKenzie v. Burris,
Affirmed.
