On January 30, 1998, the applicant, Frank P. Sizemore, applied, pursuant to App.R. 26(B) and
State v. Murnahan
(1992),
In August 1994, the grand jury indicted him on three counts of felonious assault, each with a firearm and aggravated felony specification, and one count of having a weapon while under disability, also with firearm and violence specifications. The evidence at trial showed that after Sizemore argued with Jerry Spatny at a bar, he conspired with a friend, Patrick Russell, to ambush Spatny later that night. As Spatny and his friends left the bar, Sizemore shot him and then pistol-whipped him; Russell, who had donned a ski mask and was hiding with a sword in some nearby bushes, emerged and attacked Spatn/s friends. At trial, Sizemore stipulated to the aggravated felony and violence specifications.
In January 1995, the jury found him guilty on all counts. When he failed to appear at trial for the jury’s verdict, the court issued a capias for his arrest. In October 1995, following his arrest on the capias, the trial court sentenced him to twelve to fifteen years on Count One, consecutive to three years’ actual incarceration for the gun specification; and to twelve to fifteen years on Counts Two and Three, concurrent with each other but consecutive to Count One; and to two to five years on Count Four, to be served concurrently with the other counts.
Sizemore then appealed to this court, which affirmed his convictions and sentences on December 9, 1996. On April 14,1997, Sizemore filed a pro se notice of appeal with the Supreme Court of Ohio, but on June 13, 1997, the Supreme Court dismissed that appeal. He then filed the current application to reopen his case with our court on January 30, 1998.
*145 App.R. 26(B)(1) and (2)(b) require applications claiming ineffective assistance of appellate counsel to be filed within ninety days from journalization of the decision unless the applicant shows good cause for filing at a later time. The January 30, 1998 filing is approximately fourteen months after this court’s decision and approximately six months after the decision by the Ohio Supreme Court. Thus, the application is untimely.
Sizemore endeavors to show good cause for untimely filing by claiming that his pleas for assistance from the public defender’s office went unanswered and that a fellow inmate “conned” him into believing that he could prepare Sizemore’s pleading for him. These arguments are not persuasive.
This court has repeatedly rejected arguments that counsel or a fellow inmate abandoned or betrayed the applicant. In
State v. Durr
(May 22, 1996), unreported, disallowing second application for reopening of (Dec. 7, 1989), Cuyahoga App. No. 57140, unreported,
Just as this court has ruled that misplaced reliance on an attorney does not state sufficient good cause to justify untimely filing, so, too, misplaced reliance on a fellow inmate who is not even an attorney must also fail to state good cause. Thus, Sizemore’s application to reopen is denied as untimely.
Additionally, the doctrine of
res judicata
properly bars consideration of this application to reopen. The principles of
res judicata
may be applied to bar further litigation in a criminal case of issues which were raised or could have been raised previously in an appeal. See, generally,
State v. Perry
(1967),
Accordingly, Sizemore’s application to reopen in this case is denied.
Application denied.
