The Superior Court of Clayton County sua sponte dismissed Victoria Nguyen’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus seven days after it was filed and one day after the sheriffs entry of service on the respondents. In her petition, Nguyen attacked the judgment of conviction entered against her in the City of Forest Park’s municipal court for violating city ordinances governing permits and hours of operation, for which violations she had been sentenced to pay a fine of $200. The habeas court based its sua sponte dismissal of the habeas
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petition on Nguyen’s failure to comply with the statutory requirement to attach to the habeas petition a copy of the legal process forming the pretext of the restraint she purportedly suffered (see OCGA§ 9-14-3), and her failure to appeal the judgment of conviction. In addition to dismissing Nguyen’s petition, the habeas court disposed of the merits of the petition (Nguyen’s assertion her conviction was invalid because she had not been provided counsel) by stating that the constitutional right to counsel is triggered by the imposition of a sentence of actual imprisonment or a suspended or probated sentence of imprisonment, and not the possibility of a sentence of imprisonment. See
Jackson v. State,
1. “It is the duty of this Court to raise the question of its jurisdiction in all cases in which there may be any doubt as to the existence of such jurisdiction.”
Rowland v. State,
Whether Nguyen has a right of direct appeal or must bring her appeal by way of application depends upon whether the judgment of conviction was rendered by “a state court of record.” We conclude that one restrained of liberty as a result of a municipal court conviction for violation of municipal ordinances is entitled to a direct appeal from a habeas court’s final order on a habeas petition because a municipal court presiding over the trial of such charges is not a
state
court of record. The judicial power of the state is constitutionally vested exclusively in the magistrate, probate, juvenile, state, and superior courts, as well as this Court and the Court of Appeals. 1983 Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. I, Par. I. A municipal court is established and maintained by the municipal corporation it serves (see OCGA § 36-32-1 (a); see also
City of Lawrenceville v. Davis,
2. The habeas court dismissed Nguyen’s petition after determining that Nguyen had not complied with the statutory requirement that a petitioner attach to the habeas petition a copy of the legal process forming the pretext of the petitioner’s restraint, to apprise the court of the cause or pretense of the restraint purportedly suffered by the petitioner. See OCGA § 9-14-3 (3).
While the ... Code... provides that there must be “a distinct averment of the alleged illegality in the restraint,” [OCGA § 9-14-3 (4)] and that the “cause or pretense of the restraint” must be stated [OCGA§ 9-14-3 (3)], it will not do ... to apply to a proceeding of this character the strict rules applicable to pleadings in suits between parties. The utmost liberality consistent with a due observance of the forms and substance of legal requirements should be allowed. The State is interested in seeing that no citizen is illegally deprived of his liberty, and the law is designed to encourage, and make easy and expeditious, inquiry into the cause of an imprisonment, whenever its legality is brought in question.
Simmons v. Ga. Iron & Coal Co.,
3. The habeas court ruled that the petition was subject to dismissal due to Nguyen’s failure to appeal her municipal court conviction to superior court. While claims raised in a direct appeal are barred from review in a habeas case and claims that could have been raised in a direct appeal and were not are defaulted in a habeas case
(Schofield v. Palmer,
4. We also disagree with the habeas court’s resolution of the merits of Nguyen’s habeas petition that, because Nguyen was not sentenced to a term of imprisonment or a suspended or probated sentence, she was not entitled to counsel as a matter of constitutional right. See
Jackson v. State,
supra,
[a]ny municipal court . . . having jurisdiction over the violation of municipal ordinances . . . shall not impose any punishment of confinement, probation, or other loss of liberty, or impose any fine, fee, or cost enforceable by confinement, probation, or other loss of liberty, as authorized by general law or municipal or county ordinance, unless the court provides to the accused the right to representation by a lawyer, and provides to those accused who are indigent the right to counsel at no cost to the accused.
Whether OCGA § 36-32-1 (f) was applicable to Nguyen and, if so, whether Nguyen was advised of her right to counsel and knowingly and intelligently waived that right are matters for determination in the habeas court.
Judgment reversed and case remanded to the habeas court.
Notes
In 1967, the General Assembly amended the habeas corpus statutory scheme “so as to provide a new exclusive procedure for persons whose liberty is being restrained by virtue of a sentence imposed against them by any state court of record . . .” (Ga. L. 1967, p. 835), and thereby drew a distinction between petitioners who were restrained of their liberty “as a result of a sentence imposed by any state court of record” (OCGA § 9-14-1 (c)), and those restrained “under any pretext whatsoever, except under sentence of a state court of record. . . .” OCGA § 9-14-1 (a).
The failure to include within the coverage of OCGA § 9-14-52 (b) all persons convicted of the violation of a state statute or municipal or county ordinance, regardless of the court of conviction, results in the anomalous situation wherein one convicted of murder must file an application for review of the denial of a habeas petition while one convicted of violating a local ordinance may he entitled to a direct appeal to this Court from the denial of habeas relief.
See also
Wojcik v. State,
We express no opinion whether a municipal court is a state court of record when it tries a defendant for violation of the state misdemeanor offenses over which the General Assembly has given the municipal court jurisdiction.
The effective date of OCGA § 36-32-1 (f) was January 1, 2005. Ga. L. 2003, pp. 191, 222, 10 (c). Petitioner was convicted on March 24, 2006.
