Memorandum Decision
'I 1 Juan Mardoniz-Rosado appeals the district court's denial of his motion to withdraw
T2 Mardoniz-Rosado pleaded guilty on November 12, 1996. The docket and minute entry indicate that Mardoniz-Rosado was "advised of [his] rights," but the record contains neither a transcript of the plea colloquy nor a written waiver form.
13 In 2012, sixteen years after pleading guilty, Mardoniz-Rosado filed a motion to withdraw his plea in the district court, The motion alleged that Mardoniz-Rosado had received ineffective assistance of counsel at the time of his plea because his counsel had not advised him of the immigration consequences of pleading guilty. See generally Padilla v. Kentucky,
4 The district court conducted a hearing on the motion, at which Mardoniz-Rosado testified. After the hearing, the district court entered a written order finding that Mardoniz-Rosado had not been advised of his right to appeal at the 1996 plea hearing and that "the November 12, 1996 court docket note stating, 'Deft advised of rights," is not sufficient." In light of these findings, the district court reinstated Mardoniz-Rosado's right to pursue a direct appeal. See generalty Manning,
T5 On appeal, Mardoniz-Rosado challenges the district court's denial of his motion to withdraw his plea. A threshold issue is whether the district court had jurisdiction to entertain the motion. Pursuant to the version of Utah Code section 77-18-6 in effect at the time of his plea, Mardoniz-Rosado was required to move to withdraw the plea within thirty days of its entry. See Utah Code Ann. § T7-18-6(2) (Michie 1995) (stating that a motion to withdraw a guilty plea "shall be made within 30 days after the entry of the plea")
16 Mardoniz-Rosado's 2012 attempt to withdraw his 1996 guilty plea obviously fell outside the thirty-day window for seeking withdrawal. He nevertheless argues that his efforts were timely because, under his interpretation of the district court's order, the district court found that he was never advised of the time limits for filing a motion to withdraw his plea. See Utah R.Crim. P. 11(g) ("Failure to advise the defendant of the time limits for filing any motion to withdraw a plea of guilty ... may be the ground for extending the time to make a motion under Section 77-13-6."). Mardoniz-Rosado argues that because he was never advised of the thirty-day time limit to file his motion,
T7 We lack the record we would need to accept Mardoniz-Rosado's interpretation of the district court's order. Mardoniz-Rosado prepared an order for the district court that provides no insight into the court's basis for denying the motion to withdraw his plea and contains no express finding that he was not advised of the time limit to withdraw his plea. Mardoniz-Rosado also did not designate the transcript of the motion hearing as a part of the record on appeal. Thus, the record before us is silent as to why the district court denied Mardoniz-Rosado's plea withdrawal motion. Furthermore, the ree-ord does not provide us with a basis to conclude that the district court found, or should have found, that Mardoniz-Rosado was not advised of the timeline for seeking to withdraw his plea.
18 Mardoniz-Rosado suggests that we can excavate between the district court's expressed findings to unearth an implied finding that he did not receive a proper rule 11(e) plea colloquy and therefore was never made aware of the timing requirements for a motion to withdraw his plea
To place the burden on the State to prove compliance [with rule 11], when no transcript is available due to defendant's delay, is unreasonable. Such a rule would require this court, and the trial court hearing the motion to withdraw, to presume irregularity in the prior proceedings. However, we do not presume error simply because the record is unavailable.
State v. Morello,
19 On the record before us, Mardon-iz-Rosado cannot establish that he can avoid the thirty-day limit for his motion to withdraw his plea. We must therefore conclude that the motion was not timely filed and the
{10 Rather than travel the statutorily mandated route, Mardoniz-Rosado raises two arguments in an attempt to find a path around the requirement that he proceed under the PCORA. Mardoniz-Rosado first argues that the district court possessed jurisdiction to withdraw his guilty plea sua sponte. See State v. Ott,
{11 We agree with Mardoniz-Ro-sado that section T7-13-6 does not supplant the district court's jurisdiction to act sua sponte. See Lopez,
112 Mardoniz-Rosado next argues that the district court had jurisdiction to allow the withdrawal of his guilty plea under three common law remedies. He first argues that the district court possesses jurisdiction pursuant to the "ancient writ of coram nobis." See Manning v. State,
13 Resort to these common law theories is premature because Mardoniz-Rosado has not yet sought relief under the PCRA and rule 65C of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure as required by Utah Code section Ti-138-6. See Utah Code Ann. § 77-18-6(2)(c). Mardoniz-Rosado cannot invoke the powers traditionally associated with the writ of coram nobis, or avail himself of any exception to the PCRA, if the PCRA provides him with "an adequate remedy at law." State v. Rees,
{14 Because Mardoniz-Rosado has yet to seek relief under the PCRA and rule 65C, he is not entitled to pursue relief under any of the common law theories that he identifies. Instead, he must seek post-conviction relief via the PCRA and, should such relief be denied on procedural grounds, seek extraordinary relief and argue for the application of coram nobis principles or the unusual cireumstances or egregious injustice exceptions.
115 Mardoniz-Rosado's 2012 motion to withdraw his plea was untimely under Utah Code section 77-18-6, and the district court therefore lacked jurisdiction to entertain his motion. The district court also lacked jurisdiction to set aside Mardoniz-Rosado's plea sua sponte due to the pronouncement of final judgment against him in 1996. Under the plain language of Utah Code section 77-18-6, Mardoniz-Rosado must seek relief under the PCRA and rule 65C of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, and until he does, he cannot test the vitality of the common law remedies that he identifies on appeal.
16 For these reasons, we affirm the district court's denial of Mardoniz-Rosado's motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
Notes
. At oral argument before this court, the parties agreed that a record of the 1996 plea hearing originally existed but that it was unavailable at the 2012 withdrawal hearing because of the intervening decade and a half.
. When Mardoniz-Rosado filed his motion, it was an open question whether Padilla v. Kentucky,
. The current version of the statute requires that a motion to withdraw a guilty plea not held in abeyance be made "before sentence is announced." Utah Code Ann. § 77-13-6(2)(b) (LexisNexis 2012).
. Specifically, Mardoniz-Rosado asks us to draw his proposed inference from the district court's findings that he was not advised of his right to appeal and that "the November 12, 1996 court docket note stating, 'Deft advised of rights," is not sufficient."
. For the same reasons, we cannot accept Mar-doniz-Rosado's argument that he is entitled to withdraw his plea regardless of the timing of his motion due to an implicit district court finding that he was not advised of any of the constitutional rights that rule 11(e) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure is designed to protect. Mar-doniz-Rosado argues that his plea colloquy is governed by State v. Lovell,
. In a related argument, Mardoniz-Rosado relies on State v. Jackson,
. Because Mardoniz-Rosado has raised his common law arguments prematurely, we need not address whether the 2008 amendments to the PCRA and subsequent modifications to rule 65C have subsumed the powers Mardoniz-Rosado has attempted to invoke. See Winward v. State,
