The defendant, Carlos Lopez, appeals the Superior Court’s
(Coffey,
J.) denial of his post-conviction motion for a new trial, which sought to withdraw his guilty pleas to two drug-related charges on the grounds that they were not knowingly or voluntarily made. The petitioner, Guillermo Rivera, appeals the Superior Court’s
(Nadeau,
J.) denial of a post-conviction claim that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when he pled guilty to sexual assault because his then-counsel had a conflict of interest. We shall refer to Lopez and Rivera hereafter as the defendants. Both defendants applied for court-appointed counsel on appeal. We accepted both appeals and appointed the Appellate Defender for the limited purpose of addressing the question whether, in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Halbert v. Michigan,
The defendants, however, urge us to find a right to court-appointed counsel on appeal of a collateral challenge to a guilty plea under Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution. We conclude that there is no such entitlement, but hold that under certain circumstances, we may appoint counsel in such cases.
I. Right to Counsel Under the Federal Constitution
In
Halbert v. Michigan,
the United States Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires that an indigent defendant be provided with court-appointed counsel when he flies a direct appeal from a plea-based conviction to a first-tier court that conducts discretionary, but merits-based, review.
Halbert,
In
Douglas v. California,
In
Ross v. Moffitt,
the Court held that the right articulated in
Douglas
does not extend to discretionary appeals when the discretion to review is not based upon the merits of the appeal.
Ross v. Moffitt,
In
Pennsylvania v. Finley,
In
Halbert,
the question was whether an indigent defendant is entitled to court-appointed counsel when he files a first, direct appeal from a plea-
*196
based conviction to a court that conducts discretionary but merits-based review.
Halbert,
The question before the United States Supreme Court was whether Halbert’s asserted right to court-appointed counsel was more properly aligned with
Douglas v. California
or
Ross v. Moffitt. Halbert,
First, unlike the North Carolina Supreme Court and the Michigan Supreme Court, which sit to decide “matters of larger public import,”
Halbert,
Second, “indigent defendants pursuing first-tier review in the Court of Appeals are generally ill equipped to represent themselves.” Id. at 617. The Court noted that whether it is “formally categorized as the decision of an appeal or the disposal of a leave application, the Court of Appeals’ ruling on a plea-convicted defendant’s claims provides the first, and likely *197 the only, direct review the defendant’s conviction and sentence will receive.” Id. at 619. Appeals from guilty pleas, like appeals after trial, can involve complex or technical issues. Id. at 621-22. Many indigent defendants are “particularly handicapped as self-representatives,” id. at 620, due to factors such as incarceration, lack of formal education, illiteracy, learning disabilities and mental impairments, id. at 621. Accordingly, Halbert was entitled to counsel when seeking first-tier review of his conviction and sentence in the Michigan Court of Appeals, even though the appeal was discretionary rather than mandatory. Id. at 616-17.
Applying these principles to appeals in New Hampshire, we note first that the federal constitutional right established in
Halbert
has not been questioned in this State. The New Hampshire Supreme Court is the only appellate court in this State, and we provide mandatory review of every direct appeal from a criminal conviction. Sup. Ct. R. 3. The review is merits-based.
Id.
Based upon the language of Supreme Court Rule 3, such review applies whether the appeal follows a conviction arising out of a trial, or from a guilty or
nolo contendere
plea.
See
SUP. Ct. R. 3 (“Mandatory appeal” includes “an appeal from a final decision on the merits issued by a superior court [or] district court----”). The issues that might be raised by a person appealing directly from a guilty plea include,
inter alia,
whether an on-the-record colloquy demonstrates that the plea was knowing, voluntary and intelligent,
State v. Arsenault,
The contrary result obtains when a defendant collaterally challenges a guilty plea after the period for direct appeal has expired, and then seeks discretionary review in this court under Supreme Court Rules 3 and 7(1)(B). The United States Supreme Court has never held that the right to counsel on appeal extends beyond first-tier, direct review of a conviction. In concluding that a plea-convicted defendant has a right to counsel when directly appealing his conviction to a first-tier court of error correction, Halbert did not question the authority of the Finley decision establishing *198 that there is no right to counsel in an appeal of a collateral attack on a criminal conviction. We decline to read such a requirement into the United States Constitution when the United States Supreme Court has not done so itself.
There are factors present in New Hampshire which, at first blush, suggest that the result might be otherwise. First, our Rule 7 notice of discretionary appeal form asks, among other things, whether the decision that is being appealed conflicts with the law or is “erroneous, illegal, unreasonable or was an unsustainable exercise of discretion.” Sup. Ct. R. Forms. In this sense, our error-correcting function even in discretionary appeals is equivalent to the first-tier review performed by Michigan’s intermediate court of appeals. Second, we have no reason to believe that indigent defendants pursuing review in this court are better equipped to represent themselves than the defendants described in the Halbert opinion. However, there is a critical difference between a defendant who collaterally challenges a plea-based conviction in New Hampshire and the defendant in Halbert. Unlike the review at issue in Halbert, discretionary review of a collateral challenge to a criminal conviction is not the only review of the defendant’s conviction and sentence in New Hampshire, because, as discussed above, the defendant has an opportunity for mandatory direct review under Rule 7(1)(A). Put another way, a defendant making Halbert’s claim in New Hampshire would have an opportunity for first-tier review through mandatory appeal to this Court. We believe this distinction is critical, and supports our conclusion that the federal right to counsel articulated in Halbert does not extend to an appeal from the denial of a collateral challenge to a plea-based conviction.
II. Right to Counsel Under the State Constitution
Halbert requires the appointment of counsel for an indigent defendant appealing a challenge to a plea-based conviction through a direct appeal-as-of-right to this court. Since we are bound by Halbert’s narrow holding, we need not perform a separate analysis under Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution and we express no opinion whether there exists a state constitutional right to counsel under these circumstances. What remains is the question whether Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution provides a right not afforded by the United States Constitution; namely, the right to counsel when appealing a collateral attack on a plea-based conviction.
In
State v. Hall,
*199
require appointment of counsel to criminal defendants are not present.”
Id.
at 182. Instead, we employed the three-prong test of
Mathews v. Eldridge,
To determine whether Part I, Article 15 mandates that counsel be appointed for a defendant who appeals an unsuccessful collateral challenge to a plea-based conviction, we begin by determining whether it requires the appointment of counsel at the trial court level, since if it does not provide such right in the trial court, then there is certainly no such right on appeal. Balancing the Eldridge factors, we find that it does not, although for slightly different reasons than in Hall.
When we considered the
Eldridge
factors in
Hall,
we found first that the petitioner’s liberty interest in a collateral attack was less substantial than his liberty interest at trial or on direct appeal.
Hall,
The defendants in this case concede that their liberty interests are similar to Hall’s, since they are incarcerated upon facially-valid convictions, and concede that the government interests in their cases are similar to those in Hall. They argue, however, that the second Eldridge factor weighs more heavily in their favor and we should therefore distinguish Hall and find a right to counsel in their appeals. Specifically, Rivera argues that because he had no direct appeal, he does not have transcripts, motions or briefs prepared by counsel, and the reliability of his conviction has not been tested through appellate review. Although Lopez *200 has a transcript of his plea hearing, his claim is otherwise identical to Rivera’s.
We agree that the factors which insured the reliability of Hall’s conviction are not present for a defendant whose conviction is plea-based, unless the defendant has mounted a direct appeal. However, there are other factors which sufficiently minimize the risk of the erroneous deprivation of liberty when a defendant challenges a plea-based conviction in a collateral attack.
These begin with the requirements of the plea itself. Under
Boykin v. Alabama,
In
Duval v. Duval,
Both Lopez and Rivera proceeded pro se when challenging their guilty pleas in the trial court, and it is unclear from the record whether they requested court-appointed counsel at that level. Although both requested court-appointed counsel on appeal, we did not direct the parties to address the applicability of Hall to their particular cases. Accordingly, if either defendant wishes to have counsel appointed on appeal, he may file a motion for the appointment of counsel in this court specifying the complicating factors that indicate counsel should be appointed.
Lopez argues that a procedural error in his case may have led him to pursue a collateral attack rather than a direct appeal and that counsel should therefore be appointed. Specifically, he argues that the trial court and trial counsel incorrectly advised him that he had no right to directly appeal his conviction. When he pled guilty, Lopez signed a standard acknowledgment and waiver of rights form stating that he was giving up, among other things, his right to appeal if convicted. The sentencing court similarly indicated that Lopez was giving up this right. However, simply because a defendant’s conviction is based upon a plea rather than a judge or jury verdict, a defendant does not waive his right to appeal. Lopez argues that because the advice he received from counsel and the court was misleading and could have discouraged him from pursuing a direct appeal where he would have been entitled to court-appointed counsel, the incorrect advice, standing alone, entitles him to counsel. We disagree. The record does not contain any evidence that the defendant would have directly appealed his plea had he been correctly advised. Thus, the incorrect advice, standing alone, does not complicate the defendant’s challenge to his plea-conviction to the extent that counsel is required. Accordingly, the defendants’ requests for the appointment of counsel are *202 denied, without prejudice to either defendant filing a motion, as indicated above.
So ordered.
