Facts and Procedural History
A jury convicted Defendant Robert Lewis Bishop of three counts of taking indecent liberties with a child. The offenses occurred in 2015 and the victim was Bishop's five-year-old daughter. The trial court sentenced Bishop to three consecutive terms of 16 to 29 months in prison and ordered him to enroll in satellite-based monitoring for thirty years. Bishop did not challenge the trial court's imposition of satellite-based monitoring on constitutional grounds at the hearing.
Immediately after the trial court imposed its sentence and satellite-based monitoring order, the court stated, "We have another matter to take care of, I believe?" Bishop then entered an
Alford
plea to two additional counts of indecent liberties with a child. These two additional offenses occurred more than a decade before Bishop's criminal acts against his daughter. The basis of these new offenses was information, apparently obtained while investigating Bishop's crimes
The trial court sentenced Bishop to suspended sentences of 19 to 23 months in prison for these offenses, found that Bishop qualified as a recidivist, and therefore ordered Bishop to enroll in satellite-based monitoring for life. As before, Bishop did not challenge the imposition of this new satellite-based monitoring order on constitutional grounds. Bishop also did not timely appeal either of the trial court's orders imposing satellite-based monitoring. Bishop later filed a petition for writ of certiorari, asking this Court to review the trial court's satellite-based monitoring orders.
Analysis
I. Imposition of Satellite-Based Monitoring
Bishop argues that the trial court erred by ordering him to enroll in satellite-based monitoring without conducting a
Grady
hearing to determine whether that monitoring was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. Bishop concedes that his argument suffers from two separate error preservation issues. First, Bishop did not make this constitutional argument to the trial court, as the law requires. Second, Bishop did not timely appeal the trial court's satellite-based monitoring orders. Bishop therefore asks this Court to take
two
extraordinary steps to
This Court has discretion to allow a petition for a writ of certiorari "to permit review of the judgments and orders of trial tribunals when the right to prosecute an appeal has been lost by failure to take timely action." N.C. R. App. P. 21(a). A writ of certiorari is not intended as a substitute for a notice of appeal. If this Court routinely allowed a writ of certiorari in every case in which the appellant failed to properly appeal, it would render meaningless the rules governing the time and manner of noticing appeals. Instead, as our Supreme Court has explained, "[a] petition for the writ must show merit or that error was probably committed below."
State v. Grundler
,
Here, Bishop has not shown that his argument (on direct appeal, at least) is meritorious or that the trial court probably committed error. Indeed, Bishop concedes that the argument he seeks to raise is procedurally barred because he failed to raise it in the trial court. We recognize that this Court previously has invoked Rule 2 to permit a defendant to raise an unpreserved argument concerning the reasonableness of satellite-based monitoring.
State v. Modlin
, --- N.C. App. ----,
This case is different from Modlin because Bishop's satellite-based monitoring hearing occurred several months after this Court issued the opinions in Blue and Morris . Thus, the law governing preservation of this issue was settled at the time Bishop appeared before the trial court. As a result, the underlying reason for invoking Rule 2 in Modlin is inapplicable here and we must ask whether Bishop has shown any other basis for invoking Rule 2.
He has not. Bishop's argument for invoking Rule 2 relies entirely on citation to previous cases such as
Modlin
, where the Court invoked Rule 2 because of circumstances unique to those cases. In the absence of any argument specific to the facts of
this
case, Bishop is no different
As our Supreme Court has instructed, we must be cautious in our use of Rule 2 not only because it is an extraordinary remedy intended solely to prevent manifest injustice, but also because "inconsistent application" of Rule 2 itself leads to injustice when some similarly situated litigants are permitted to benefit from it but others are not.
State v. Hart
,
II. Determination of Recidivism
Bishop next argues that the trial court erred in finding that he was a recidivist, thereby qualifying him for lifetime satellite-based monitoring. As with his first argument, Bishop failed to timely appeal on this ground and this Court can address the merits only if it issues a writ of certiorari.
In our discretion, we again decline to issue the writ because Bishop has not shown that his argument has "merit or that error was probably committed below."
Grundler
,
Bishop relies on this Court's decision in
State v. Springle
, where we found that the defendant's two convictions for indecent exposure "cannot function as 'prior convictions' for purposes of categorizing defendant
Because we find that Bishop's argument is meritless, in our discretion we decline to issue a writ of certiorari and therefore dismiss Bishop's untimely appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
Conclusion
In our discretion, we deny Bishop's petition for a writ of certiorari and dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
DISMISSED.
Judges ELMORE and ARROWOOD concur.
