SHAWN T. RAINER v. WENDY KELLEY, DIRECTOR, ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION
No. CV-19-531
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
December 5, 2019
2019 Ark. 359
PRO SE MOTIONS TO COMPEL APPELLEE TO PRODUCE FILE-MARKED COPIES AND TO SUPPLEMENT ADDENDUM [LINCOLN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, NO. 40CV-19-37]
APPEAL DISMISSED; MOTIONS MOOT.
KAREN R. BAKER, Associate Justice
Appellant Shawn T. Rainer filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus in the circuit court of the county where he was incarcerated, and the circuit court denied and dismissed the petition. Rainer appealed the order denying his habeas petition, and he filed pro se motions in which he seeks a copy of documents from the record on appeal in order to prepare his brief and some accommodation for the resulting delay in filing his brief.1 There is no need for this court to consider the motions and whether Rainer should be provided a copy or access to the record because Rainer’s habeas petition was clearly without merit. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal, and the motions are moot.
Rainer alleged in the habeas petition that (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter a 2011 Mississippi County judgment reflecting Rainer’s conviction on a charge of second-degree murder as a habitual offender and (2) the judgment was facially invalid because he was convicted under a statute not in effect when the crime was committed. In support of these claims, Rainer reiterates many of the allegations that this court addressed in Rainer v. State, 2019 Ark. 42, 566 S.W.3d 462. In that case, Rainer sought to proceed with a petition for writ of error coram nobis, and he contended that the judgment was facially illegal and void, that it imposed an illegal sentence, and that the judgment imposed an enhancement under
Rainer is correct that in Rainer, this court acknowledged that the earlier statute was applicable. However, although Rainer alleged that he was sentenced under
Rainer’s claim that he was sentenced under the statute as amended in 2009 is conclusory and without factual support.2 More importantly, even if Rainer was incorrectly sentenced under the later version of the statute, Act 1395 of 2009 Acts of Arkansas made no change to the sentencing range in the statute as it applied to Rainer. See Timmons v. Kelley, 2018 Ark. 361, 562 S.W.3d 824 (holding that ex post facto claim not alleging the sentence was rendered void or illegal due to the alleged error does not challenge the facial validity of the judgment). Despite Rainer’s contention that there was no “serious violent offender” enhancement prior to passage of the Act, the language in both
Appeal dismissed; motions moot.
HART, J., concurs without opinion.
