OPINION
By the Court,
In September of 1978, appellant pled nolo contendere to a charge of sexual assault. Judgment of conviction was entered in October of 1978 and appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole in five years. In April of 1979, appellant filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court challenging the voluntariness of his plea. The petition was denied and appellant appealed to this court. Respondent now moves to dismiss the appeal and contends that the legislature, in amending NRS 34.380 in 1979, removed the right to appeal from the denial of a post-conviction petition for habeas corpus.
In Gary v. Sheriff,
In 1979, the Nevada Legislature amended NRS 34.380. 1979 Nev. Stats, ch. 216, § 1, at 312. Section 6 of NRS 34.380, which provided that an applicant “may appeal to the supreme court from the order and judgment of the district judge or district court refusing to grant the writ,” was deleted. The state’s right to appeal was preserved. NRS 34.380(6),(7) (as amended). Because the deleted section did not previously distinguish between pretrial or post-trial petitions, respondent now argues that there can be no appeal from any denial of a habeas petition.
Of course, we recognize that the intent of the legislature is the controlling factor and that, if the statutes under consideration are clear on their face, we cannot go beyond them in determining legislative intent. Cirac v. Lander County,
Although the main subsection allowing for an appeal of a decision on a habeas petition was deleted in 1979, there remain references to a party’s ability to appeal. We note that some parties may still appeal from decisions in extradition habeas proceedings. NRS 34.560. And, even though pretrial appeals were abolished in 1979, there is some ambiguity in remaining sections referring to pretrial petitions and appeals. See, e.g., NRS 34.375(l)(b)(3).
In O’Donnell v. District Court,
The legislative history of the 1979 amendments indicates that the legislature was primarily concerned with trial delays due to appeals from denials of habeas petitions. At a hearing by the senate judiciary committee, District Judge Michael Griffin stated that the Judge’s Association requested a bill be introduced to limit pretrial habeas corpus appeals. Nevada Senate Committee on Judiciary, Minutes of Feb. 2, 1979, at 3. The subsequent discussion also reflected concern about trial delay and a desire to return authority for a state appeal from the grant of a petition. Id. at 4. At a later meeting, “Judge [J. Charles] Thompson said that this bill is designed to preclude intermediate appeals to the Supreme Court from pretrial denials of petitions for writs of habeas corpus.” Nevada Assembly Committee on Judiciary, Minutes of Apr. 6, 1979, at 2-3. The clear import of this legislative history is that the legislature only intended to limit appeals from a pretrial denial of a petition for habeas corpus in criminal cases. We do not agree with respondent state that the excision of former NRS 34.380(6) was a purposeful act by the legislature to preclude appeals from denials of post-conviction habeas petitions. Absent a clear expression from the legislature, we will not find an intent to bar an appeal in the context of this case. 1
Notes
We express no opinion as to the constitutionality of a clear action by the legislature limiting the right to appeal from the denial of a post-conviction petition for habeas corpus. This court will avoid consideration of constitutional questions when such consideration is unnecessary to the determination of an appeal. Union Pacific R.R. v. Adams,
