Larry Matthew PUCKETT
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Mississiрpi Office of Capital, Post-Conviction Counsel by Terri L. Marroquin, Robert Ryan, for appellant.
Office of the Attorney General by Marvin L. White, Jr., for appellee.
EN BANC.
ON MOTION FOR CLARIFICATION
SMITH, Presiding Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. The motion for clarification is granted. The original opinion in this case is withdrawn, and this opinion is substituted therefor.
¶ 2. Larry Matthew Puckett, convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death, has not filed his application for leave to seek post-conviction relief. This matter is before the Court en banc on the Motion to Reconsider Extension of Time, Motion to Apply Statute of Limitations Established by Miss.Code. Ann. § 99-39-5(2) to Petitioner's Post-Conviction Petition, and Mоtion to Stay Filing Deadline, filed on Puckett's behalf by Robert Ryan and Terri Marroquin of the Mississippi Office of Capital Post-Conviction Counsel. The *677 State has filed no response or objection to these motions.
¶ 3. Puckett was convicted and sentenced in 1996. On direct appeal, this Court remanded the case for the limited purpose of conducting a Batson hearing. Puckett v. State,
THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
¶ 4. To address the issues raised, the Court must consider the proper construction of the recently amended statute of limitations for filing applications for leave to seek post-conviction relief in death penalty cases, and must apply that statute to the facts of this case. Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-5(2) (Supp.2002) was amended effective July 1, 2000, to provide that a motion for post-conviction relief in capital cases is to be "filed within one year after conviction."[1] This amendment which was adopted as part of a package of legislation which created the Office of Capital Post-Convictiоn Counsel and established new procedures for post-conviction proceedings in cases where the petitioner is under a sentence of death. Recognizing that death eligible inmates are, under these statutes and under Jackson v. State,
¶ 5. The first question to be decided is when the statute of limitations begins to run. The phrase "filed within one year after conviction," requires construсtion. The Court has previously recognized that the Legislature holds the prerogative of placing reasonable time limitations on the filing of post-conviction applications. Cole v. State,
¶ 6. To hold that conviction, as used in this statute, means the entry of the judgment of the trial court, would not recognize the statutory and constitutional requirements that the Supreme Court review all death penalty cases. In a death penalty context, a conviction is final only when the mandatory state appellate review is complete, i.e., when this Court's mandate on appeal issues.
¶ 7. There are two decisions of this Court which touch on the subject and both offer differing perspectives. One is a majority opinion, the other a plurality. Both of theses opinions involved calculation of the running of the three-year statute of limitations set forth prior to the statute's *678 amendment in 2000. In one case, this Court unanimously found that the three-year limitations period ran from the date on which this Court denied the defendant's motion for rehearing in his direct appeal. Lockett v. State,
¶ 8. In a subsequent case, Booker v. State,
¶ 9. The Booker and Lockett decisions are not compatible in their selection of dates from which the limitations period is to run. Booker is a plurality decision, and this Court has previously held that "normally a majority vote of all sitting judges is required to create precedent" and that a "plurality vote does not create a binding result." Churchill v. Pearl River Basin Dev. Dist.,
¶ 10. Under such a construction, the time period for filing Puckett's application for post-conviction relief expired on July 19, 2002. However, the special facts of this case require that we determine whether the statute has been tolled, and, if so, for what period.
TOLLING OF THE STATUTE
¶ 11. While the Court is not at liberty to extend or modify statutory limitations, when a party is prohibited from exercising his right to proceed by circumstances which are clearly beyond his control and rise to such a dimension as to implicate due process and fundamental fairness, the Court may and should toll the limitations for the period of the impairment. Application оf this limited equitable rule requires recognition that "state post-conviction efforts, though collateral, have become part of the death penalty appeal process at the state level." Jackson,
¶ 12. Our sister state of Tennessee has recently addressed the equitable tolling of the statute of limitations in Williams v. State,
We emphasize that under no circumstances are we allowing a petitioner to *679 file an untimely application fоr permission to appeal with the belief that the one-year statute conviction would commence upon this Court's dismissal of that untimely application. As the dissent aptly states, filing an untimely application for permission to appeal to this Court does not constitute `an appeal' as that tеrm is used in Tennessee Code Annotated § 40-30-202(a) and therefore does not delay commencement of the one-year post-conviction statute of limitations. Indeed, in this case, the statute of limitations began to run ... when the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Williams's conviction. The sole inquiry here, however, is whethеr this limitation period is tolled because of due process concerns surrounding possible attorney misrepresentation.... [The statute of limitations] gives defendants one year to file their petitions, and we are simply remanding the case to the trial court for an evidentiary hearing to determine (1) whether due process tolled the statute of limitations so as to give the appellee a reasonable opportunity after the expiration of the limitations period to present his claim in a meaningful time and manner; and (2) if so, whether the appellee's filing of the post-conviction petition [after the statutory period had run] was within the reasonable opportunity afforded by the due process tolling. To summarily terminate his claim without further inquiry would be an "abridgement of both direct and post-conviction avenues of appeal-without ever reaching the merits of the appell[ee's] case-[and] wоuld be patently unfair." Crittenden v. State978 S.W.2d 929 (Tenn.1998).
.... In conclusion, the 1995 Post-Conviction Procedure Act clearly requires that post-conviction claims be filed in a timely manner. Although we agree that Williams filed his petition beyond the statutory deadline, due process considerations may have tolled the limitations period. Hence, the statute cannot be strictly applied without further inquiry, to deny him a reasonable opportunity to seek post-conviction relief.
Williams,
¶ 13. Equitable tolling of the statute of limitations in post-conviction proceedings is likewise recognized in the federal system. Dunlap v. United States,
¶ 14. Puckett brings to this Court's attention the facts that indicate without doubt that he has bеen prevented from filing his application through no fault or neglect on his part. On February 9, 2001, the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel contracted with Steve Presson of Norman, Oklahoma, to represent Puckett. Then, by order dated October 31, 2001, the Circuit Court of Forrest County declared Puckett to be indigent аnd further found that Steve Presson of Oklahoma should be appointed as Puckett's post-conviction counsel, if funds were available to pay him, *680 and that "in the event that such funds do not become available, then an attorney from the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel should be appointed as post-conviction counsel for Mr. Puckett effective December 4, 2001." Funds were determined to be unavailable, and C. Jackson Williams, then director of the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel, was substituted as counsel for Puckett on December 7, 2001. Williams thereafter resigned as director of the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel on January 2, 2002. The new director, Robert Ryan, and Terri L. Marroquin filed appearance forms with the Clerk of this Court on February 22, 2002.
¶ 15. It appears that in the interim, Presson had obtained important files and documents including trial counsel's files, police reports and discovery materials and rеmoved them to his offices in Oklahoma. The Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel began to attempt to recover these materials in order to proceed on Puckett's behalf. Presson however ignored requests to turn over the files, and Ryan was ultimately forced to file a complaint with the Oklahоma Bar Association seeking their return. On June 13, 2002, this Court entered an order directing Presson to return all of Puckett's files. Presson eventually delivered three boxes of material to the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel on July 8, 2002. The record before us demonstrates that during the period from late December 2001 the Office of Capital Post Conviction Counsel conscientiously tried to retrieve those documents and to obtain duplicates from other sources. Counsel for Puckett now seeks relief from this Court requesting an extension of time in which to file the application for leave to seek post-convictiоn relief.
¶ 16. In the present case, it cannot be said that Puckett has slept on his rights or that he seeks relief because of mere excusable neglect. Due to circumstances completely beyond his control, Puckett has been unable to timely file an application for leave to seek рost-conviction relief within the one-year time frame. His former attorney's actions have affirmatively frustrated his efforts through new counsel to pursue the post-conviction process. Pursuant to this Court's decision in Jackson v. State,
CONCLUSION
¶ 17. While it is impossible to determine at what point the circumstances here became so serious as to toll the statute of *681 limitations, equitable relief is due, and the Court will grant Puckett an additional 180 days after the date of this decision in which to complete and file his application for leave to seek post-conviction relief. It should be said that the equities are bаsed on the unique facts of this case. While other jurisdictions have applied the doctrine of equitable tolling to non-capital cases, we do not do so today; the fact that Puckett is under a sentence of death and subject to a shortened one year statute of limitations weighs heavily in this decisiоn. Further, we emphasize that we do not base this action on mere excusable neglect or ignorance by Puckett or his counsel, but upon our recognition that the actions of former counsel were such as to rise to the deprivation of fundamental due process.
¶ 18. The Motion to Reconsider Extеnsion of Time, the Motion to Apply Statute of Limitations and the Motion to Stay Filing Deadline are granted. Puckett shall file his application for leave to seek post-conviction relief within 180 days after the date of this decision.
¶ 19. MOTIONS GRANTED.
WALLER, COBB, DIAZ, EASLEY, CARLSON AND GRAVES, JJ., CONCUR.
McRAE, P.J., DISSENTS.
PITTMAN, C.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In his Motion to Apply the Statute of Limitations Established by Miss.Code § 99-39-5(2) to Petitioner's Post Conviction Petition, Puckett argues that the statutory limit rather that the 180 day provision of M.R.A.P. 22 should control as the deadline for filing. Although the rule established a presumptive time table for proceedings, one which attorneys must follow in the absence of order of the Court, it does not constitute a limitation cutting off the petitioner's ultimate right to file within the one-year limitation set by statute.
