OPINION
delivered the opinion of the court,
This appeal presents two determinative issues: (1) whether post-conviction review of a death sentence should be mandatory and should proceed over the objection of a competent death-sentenced inmate; and if not, (2) whether, and under what circumstances, a competent death-sentenced inmate may revoke her waiver of post-conviction review. We conclude that post-conviction review is not mandatory and may be waived by a competent death-sentenced inmate. We also conclude that a competent death-sentenced inmate may revoke a waiver of post-conviction review so long as the revocation occurs within thirty days of the trial court’s order permitting the inmate to waive post-conviction review. Our holding is limited to death-sentenced inmates who seek to revoke an initial waiver of post-conviction relief. Our holding does not apply to death-sentenced inmates who attempt to manipulate and to delay the judicial process by repeatedly seeking to waive and thereafter to reinstate post-conviction review. Applying this rule, we conclude that Christa Gail Pike may revoke her waiver and reinstate her post-conviction petition. Pike filed a motion seeking to revoke her waiver on the twenty-ninth day after the trial court filed its order permitting her to waive post-conviction review. Pike had not previously waived post-conviction review. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals and remand this case to the trial court with instructions to reinstate the petition for post-conviction relief and to schedule an evidentiary hearing.
I. Procedural History
A jury convicted Christa Gail Pike of first degree murder and imposed a sentence of death for her role in the brutal killing of a fellow student at the Job Corps Center in Knoxville.
1
The Court of Criminal Appeals and this Court affirmed Pike’s convictions and sentences, and the United States Supreme Court denied her petition for a writ of certiorari.
State v. Pike,
On June 3, 1999, Pike timely filed a pro se petition seeking post-conviction relief. 2 The trial court appointed the Office of the Post-Conviction Defender to represent Pike. During a hearing on June 25, 2001, Pike orally advised the trial court of her desire to withdraw her post-conviction petition and to schedule an execution date. The trial court advised Pike to discuss her *260 options with her attorneys and to listen to their advice and instructed her to file a written motion seeking waiver if she persisted in her desire to waive post-conviction review.
Approximately two months later, on September 4, 2001, Pike submitted to the trial court a letter reiterating her desire to withdraw her post-conviction petition and to schedule an execution date. At an October 2001 hearing, the trial court pointed out that the courts of this State had not previously adjudicated a death-sentenced inmate’s request to waive post-conviction review. 3 After questioning Pike and confirming that Pike remained unchanged in her desire to waive post-conviction review, the trial court concluded that Pike has the right to make that choice “as long as she is competent.” The trial court then appointed Dr. William Kenner to conduct a psychiatric evaluation to determine Pike’s competency and directed Dr. Kenner to submit to the trial court a written report of his findings.
Dr. Kenner interviewed Pike, reviewed Pike’s psychological records and submitted his written report to the trial court. On June 25, 2002, one year after Pike orally announced her desire to withdraw her post-conviction petition, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing to determine Pike’s competence. The trial court considered Dr. Kenner’s written report and heard testimony from several witnesses. Dr. Kenner did not testify at the hearing. Neither the district attorney general nor counsel for Pike received Dr. Kenner’s written report until the morning of the hearing. 4 Ultimately, the trial court found that Pike had “freely and voluntarily” decided to withdraw her petition and to waive post-conviction review. The trial court commented: “Miss Pike has the right as a competent individual ... to make a decision about her case, whatever all of us feel about that decision, and I grant her ... motion to withdraw her appeals.”
On June 27, 2002, the trial court filed a written judgment dismissing Pike’s petition and setting an execution date. One day later, the trial court filed an amended judgment. On July 8, 2002, Pike’s attorneys filed a notice of appeal. On July 26, 2002, the twenty-ninth day after the trial court filed, its order finding Pike competent and granting her request to withdraw her petition, Pike’s attorneys filed a second notice of appeal, and a supporting affidavit, each of which Pike had signed. Also on July 26, Pike filed in the trial court through her attorneys a motion seeking to vacate the order dismissing her petition, to reinstate her post-conviction petition, and to set a date for an evidentiary hearing on her post-conviction petition. Attached to this motion was Pike’s sworn statement explaining that she had changed her mind and that she wished to “go forward” with the post-conviction proceeding. Pike’s *261 handwritten addendum to the sworn statement explained: “I still feel conflicted about what I want to do, but as of now I feel this is the only logical decision.”
The State filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that the trial court’s June 27 and June 28 orders were not appealable as of right and that Pike’s attorneys lacked standing to pursue an appeal. On August 1, 2002, the Court of Criminal Appeals denied the State’s motion to dismiss, granted a stay of execution, and remanded the case to the trial court for a hearing on Pike’s motion to vacate the order dismissing her post-conviction petition.
The hearing on remand occurred on February 20, 2008. Pike’s attorneys urged the trial court to grant the motion and to reinstate Pike’s post-conviction petition. Relying upon Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 28, section 11, they argued that the order dismissing Pike’s petition had not been final when Pike moved to reinstate her petition. Pike’s attorneys relied in particular’ upon section 11(A)(4), which provides in pertinent part that “[a]n order of the trial court granting withdrawal and dismissing the petition shall become final thirty days after its entry.”
Testifying at this hearing, Pike confirmed that she had changed her mind about waiving post-conviction review and emphasized that it was her desire to reinstate her post-conviction petition. Pike explained that she had not fully understood “exactly how final” her decision to withdraw her post-conviction petition and waive further appeals would be. Pike also maintained that she had not understood how her decision to waive post-conviction review would affect her family. Pike testified that she then realized that her life meant more “than being stuck in that little room” and that she had reasons to pursue post-conviction relief. Pike assured the trial judge that no one had influenced her decision-making — she stated that she had decided on her own to withdraw her post-conviction petition and that she later decided on her own to revoke her withdrawal. Pike also reported experiencing “great improvement” in her mental health since Dr. Kenner had prescribed for her an antidepressant in addition to lithium.
The trial court denied Pike’s motion to vacate the order dismissing her post-conviction petition, stating:
Again, we are in a court of law bound by rules. To me this is most akin to a decision to waive one’s right to enter ... a plea. When one does that and ... make[s] a binding decision and the Court accepts that decision, just like in this case, even five minutes later, they cannot change their mind unless they can show that then will has been overborne or ... they did not understand their rights. Only then would a guilty plea be overturned.
The trial court further found that Pike’s will had not been overborne “then or now” and that Pike had simply changed her mind. The trial court commented, “Unfortunately, I do not think she can just do that under this situation.” Accordingly, the trial court denied Pike’s motion seeking to vacate the dismissal order and to reinstate her post-conviction petition. Pike appealed, and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. We granted Pike’s application for permission to appeal.
II. Waiver of Post-Conviction Review
We first consider Pike’s argument that post-conviction review of death sentences should be mandatory, regardless of a competent death-sentenced inmate’s desire to waive post-conviction review. Pike argues that mandatory review is necessary to ensure the reliability of the process by which death sentences are imposed.
*262
We have previously recognized that post-conviction procedures are not constitutionally required.
Serrano v. State,
Pike nonetheless asserts that this Court should mandate post-conviction review of death sentences. We decline to do so. Courts have long recognized the right of competent defendants to make decisions concerning their available legal remedies.
See, e.g., Jones v. Barnes,
Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court has recognized the right of a mentally competent death-sentenced inmate to waive further appellate review.
Demosthenes v. Baal,
Mr. Reid has clearly indicated that he has no desire to pursue any post-conviction remedies. The reasons given for this choice — that he has lost confidence in the judicial system, and that he has been convicted of seven “egregious” homicides — are certainly not irrational. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has observed: “We must not assume that it is impossible for even a death-sentenced prisoner to recognize the justice of his sentence and to acquiesce in it.”
Id.
at 262 (quoting
West v. Bell,
Nevertheless, as support for her assertion that death-sentenced inmates should not be permitted to waive post-conviction review, Pike relies upon
State v. Martini,
Under our form of government it is not the inmate on death row or the accused who determines when and whether the State shall execute a prisoner; rather, *264 the law itself makes that determination. The public has an interest in the reliability and integrity of a death sentencing decision that transcends the preferences of individual defendants.
Id. at 1107.
In urging this Court to follow Martini, Pike asserts that allowing a death-sentenced inmate to waive post-conviction review “denies the people of the State of Tennessee the right to ensure that only individuals who have received a death sentence through a constitutional process are executed.” Pike maintains that the public’s interest in ensuring the fair, reliable, and consistent administration of the death penalty in Tennessee outweighs a death-sentenced inmate’s interest in discontinuing litigation.
We decline to mandate post-conviction review of a death sentence over the objection of a competent death-sentenced inmate. As the State points out, New Jersey is the only jurisdiction to adopt such a rule, and such a rule is not mandated by United States Supreme Court precedent. Furthermore, as one commentator has explained:
A defendant seeking to waive proceedings for the first time at the post-conviction relief stage is more likely to have been appropriately convicted and sentenced than a defendant seeking to waive proceedings at the early stages. Such a defendant has received a full trial, full sentencing hearing and full appellate review. Every stage serves as a checkpoint, an additional safeguard filtering out the impurities. A defendant is less likely to be wrongfully sentenced to death after each stage. Information is gained at the completion of each stage. Any other conclusion would suggest that each proceeding serves no valuable purpose and would degrade the entire capital proceeding to nothing more than a random game of chance. Therefore, because each stage reduces the chance that a defendant has been inappropriately sentenced to death, the risk of arbitrary application of the death penalty is much lower at the post-conviction relief stage than at previous stages.
Anthony J. Casey,
Maintaining the Integrity of Death: An Argument for Restricting a Defendant’s Right to Volunteer for Execution at Certain Stages in Capital Proceedings,
30 Am. J.Crim. L. 75, 103 (2002). Mandatory post-conviction review could possibly ensure a greater degree of reliability in the process by which death sentences are imposed. Without question, mandatory post-conviction review would eliminate the delay
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and expense occasioned by hearings and litigation to determine whether a death-sentenced inmate is competent to waive post-conviction review and whether a death-sentenced inmate may revoke a waiver of post-conviction review.
See O’Rourke v. State,
III. Revocation of Waiver
Pike next contends that her petition for post-conviction relief was never legally withdrawn because she moved to vacate the order dismissing her petition before the order became final. Pike argues that a death-sentenced inmate should be allowed thirty days within which to revoke a waiver of post-conviction review. Pike claims that affording a death-sentenced inmate thirty days to revoke or to withdraw a waiver of post-conviction relief is consistent with Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(f) (“Rule 32(f)”). Rule 32(f) provides:
A motion to withdraw a plea of guilty may be made upon a showing by the defendant of any fair and just reason only before sentence is imposed; but to correct manifest injustice, the court after sentence, but before the judgment becomes final, may set aside the judgment of conviction and permit the defendant to withdraw the plea.
Applying the analytical framework of Rule 32(f), the trial court denied Pike’s motion to vacate. The trial court found that permitting Pike to reinstate her post-conviction petition was not necessary “to correct manifest injustice.” The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed.
The State maintains that the lower courts appropriately analogized the circumstances of this case to Rule 32(f) and correctly applied its “manifest injustice” standard. According to the State, Pike “offered nothing beyond a change of heart and deference to her family’s feelings in support of her request to withdraw her motion to dismiss.” Therefore, the State avers that Pike failed to support her motion by a showing of manifest injustice and that, in the absence of such a showing, the trial court properly denied Pike’s motion to vacate her waiver and to reinstate her post-conviction petition.
Whether and under what circumstances a competent death-sentenced inmate may revoke a waiver and resume post-conviction review is a question of first impression. “Neither the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure nor the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure apply to post-conviction proceedings” except as specifically *266 provided by the Supreme Court Rules. See Tenn. S.Ct. R. 28, § 3(B). However, Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 28, section 11 does not answer this question. Nor do other generally applicable rules of procedure provide an answer.
Nonetheless, when an issue arises for which no procedure is specifically prescribed, Tennessee courts have inherent power to adopt appropriate rules of procedure.
State v. Mallard,
The trial court herein adhered to the principles enunciated in Reid. 9 In dealing with Pike’s motion to vacate, the trial court identified Rule 32(f) as the most analogous generally applicable rule of procedure. We agree that Rule 32(f) is the most analogous generally applicable rule of procedure and that it is a proper point of departure for our analysis. However, the analogy breaks down insofar as Rule 32(f) applies a lenient standard to motions filed before imposition of sentence and a stricter standard to motions filed after imposition of sentence. Imposition of sentence does not occur in post-conviction proceedings, and there is no readily comparable procedural event in post-conviction proceedings. Thus, in determining whether to permit Pike to revoke her waiver, the courts below had no clear basis on which to choose between the lenient “any fair and just reason” standard and the strict “to prevent manifest injustice” standard. The courts below apparently equated the order dismissing Pike’s petition with the imposition of sentence and therefore evaluated Pike’s motion under the strict “to prevent manifest injustice” standard of Rule 32(f). Upon careful consideration, we are not convinced that either of the Rule 32(f) standards provides the appropriate framework for analysis in the context of this case.
Admittedly, we have herein declined to mandate post-conviction review of death sentences. Nevertheless, in exercising our inherent power to fashion an appropriate rule of procedure, we must be mindful that “a sentence of death is final, irrevocable, and ‘qualitatively different’ than any other form or level of punishment.”
Van Tran v. State,
We emphasize the limited scope of our holding. Pike had not previously waived or attempted to waive post-conviction review. Had she done so, a very different case would have been presented. We need not and do not in this appeal adopt a rule which applies in such cases. Our holding herein affords to death-sentenced inmates a single thirty-day period to unilaterally revoke an initial waiver of post-conviction review. This holding does not afford, and should not be applied to afford, death-sentenced inmates a means by which to manipulate and to delay the judicial process.
In this case, Pike filed within thirty days her motion seeking to vacate the trial court’s order dismissing her post-conviction, to reinstate her post-conviction petition, and to schedule an evidentiary hearing. Therefore, applying our holding, Pike’s petition for post-conviction must be reinstated and an evidentiary hearing must be scheduled. Counsel for Pike should prepare for and proceed with the evidentiary hearing as expeditiously as possible and make every effort to avoid unnecessary delay.
IV. Conclusion
Having concluded that the July 26, 2002, motion to vacate shall be granted, we remand this case to the trial court with instructions to reinstate Pike’s post-conviction petition, to schedule an evidentiary hearing, and to resume post-conviction proceedings. Costs of this appeal are taxed to the State of Tennessee, for which execution may issue if necessary.
Notes
. The evidence offered to establish Pike’s guilt was summarized in
State v. Pike,
. As grounds for post-conviction relief, Pike alleged that her trial attorneys had been ineffective, that her confession had been coerced, that the prosecution had introduced illegally-seized evidence, and that the prosecution had failed to disclose evidence favorable to the defense.
. The trial court commented, "We are all plowing fairly new ground.” The initial hearings in this case occurred prior to this Court's November 21, 2002, Order which added section 11 to Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 28. Section 11 delineates procedures which trial courts must follow when a death-sentenced inmate seeks to withdraw a post-conviction petition and to waive post-conviction review.
. Pike has challenged several procedural aspects of the competency hearing, arguing that certain procedures did not comport with due process. Pike complains in particular about the timing of the disclosure of Dr. Kenner’s written report and the fact that Dr. Kenner did not testify at the hearing. Because we are directing the trial court to reinstate Pike’s petition and resume post-conviction proceedings, we need not address Pike’s challenges to the procedures employed at the competency hearing. We also deny as moot Pike's motion to supplement the record on appeal with Dr. Kenner's Addendum to Psychiatric Report.
. Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 40-30-101-122 (2003).
. Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-13-206(a)(2) (2003).
. Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-30-120(a) (2003) provides in relevant part:
When affirming a conviction and sentence of death on direct appeal, the Tennessee supreme court shall contemporaneously set a date for an execution. Such date shall be no less than four (4) months from the date of the judgment of the Tennessee Supreme Court.
. For example, should the legislature mandate post-conviction review of death sentences, this litigation, which began in June of 2001, would have been unnecessary.
. Furthermore, the procedures the trial court applied when faced with Pike's request to waive post-conviction review closely resemble the procedures thereafter adopted and included in Supreme Court Rule 28, section 11.
. The legislature has imposed a one-year statute of limitations for the filing of a petition for post-conviction relief, has provided a one-petition rule, and has prescribed limited grounds for re-opening. Tenn.Code Ann. § 40-30-102 (2003).
. In so holding, we follow the lead of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court which permitted a death-sentenced inmate to retract his waiver and to reinstate his petition for post-conviction relief.
See Commonwealth v. Saranchak,
