Steven E. WILLIAMS a/k/a Steven Edward Williams, Appellant
v.
STATE of Mississippi, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Mississippi.
*1059 Steven E. Williams, Appellant, pro se.
Office of the Attorney General by Jean Smith Vaughan, Attorney for Appellee.
Before McMILLIN, C.J., BRIDGES, and CHANDLER, JJ.
McMILLIN, C.J., for the Court.
¶ 1. The appellant, Steven E. Williams, in this pro se appeal, seeks appellate review of an order of the Circuit Court of Itawamba County denying his request for post-conviction relief from incarceration. Williams had originally pled guilty to a charge of grand larceny and was sentenced to serve five years. The sentence was suspended conditioned on his good behavior and completion of a substance abuse rehabilitation program. His probation was revoked in September 1997 after he was arrested in Alcorn County for driving while intoxicated.
¶ 2. Williams filed several post-detention pleadings seeking release from incarceration that included a number of alternate theories for relief. The trial court consolidated these pleadings for consideration and, treating them all as requests for pоst-conviction relief, denied relief by an order that was dated and entered on February 8, 1999. Williams did not take an appeal from that order. Rather, on May 30, 2000, he filed anothеr motion for post-conviction relief, in which he claimed broadly that "the trial court was without jurisdiction to impose sentence" in the grand larceny case. Alternatively, in an apparent attempt to get around the three year statute of limitations, Williams claimed that he had newly-discovered evidence concerning the propriety of his original sentence. That newly-discovered evidence was his assertion that he had a previously-undisclosed felony conviction in Alabama dating back to 1991. The trial сourt denied relief without hearing, finding that the motion was an impermissible successive filing raising the same issues that had been presented in the previous filings.
¶ 3. It is from that order that Williams perfеcted the appeal that is now before this Court. We affirm the decision of the trial court.
¶ 4. We have afforded Williams substantial latitude in reviewing the record and his brief in support of his claim for relief regarding the attack on the court's jurisdiction to sentence him originally. We do so in view of his status as a pro se litigant. Myers v. State,
¶ 5. As we have observed, Williams also claims that newly-discovered evidence now renders his original plea void. Williams makes that claim by revealing that, at the time he was sentenced in 1997, he had a previous felony conviction in Alabama arising in 1991, and that this fact deprived the trial court of authority to enter a suspended sentence. See Miss.Code Ann. § 47-7-33(1) (Rev. 2000). Whether a defendant may maintain his silence regarding a felony conviction in another jurisdiction in order to obtain a suspended sеntence but then raise the issue at a later date when he deems it advantageous seems, at best, a dubious proposition. We are, in all events, content to leavе the merits of that assertion for adjudication in a case where it would affect the outcome. We do not think such a claim, which necessarily had to be known to the defendant himself when he pled guilty in 1997, is the type of newly-discovered evidence that would avoid a successive-filings bar. In effect, we draw a distinction between newly-discovered evidence, which may not be subjected to the procedural bar, and newlydisclosed evidence that was known to the movant from the inception of the proceeding but, for reasons not apparent on the record, was not disclosed at the time of sentencing. Williams had to be well aware that he had a prior felony conviction when he was being sentenced and when his probation was being revoked in 1997, whether or not the prosecution and the sentencing judge were aware of it. To the extent Williams was entitled to sоme form of relief for this purported illegal sentence, his entitlement to assert that relief arose immediately upon his incarceration in 1997 and could have been raised in any of the multiple filings the trial court combined for consideration under the post-conviction relief statutes and disposed of in February 1999. The bar against successive filings applies, not only to issues actually determined in a previous post-conviction relief proceeding, but to those issues that could have been raised. Smith v. State,
¶ 6. There is the alternate argument, not made by Williams but which we acknowledge to exist, that the illegal nature of his sentence adversely affected some right so fundamental to Williams as to rеquire the trial court (and this Court) to ignore any procedural bars and proceed to consider the claim on the merits. See, e.g., Luckett v. State,
¶ 7. Though there is language in prior case law to the effect that a judgment of sentence that does not comply with the statutory penalties for a particular crime is void (see, e.g., Lanier v. State,
¶ 8. We, therefore, find that Williams's efforts to raise the existence of his 1991 Alabama felony conviction as a basis to vacate his guilty plea are barred under the provisions of the post-conviction relief statute prohibiting successive filings.
¶ 9. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ITAWAMBA COUNTY DENYING POST CONVICTION RELIEF IS AFFIRMED. COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO ITAWAMBA COUNTY.
KING AND SOUTHWICK, P.JJ., BRIDGES, THOMAS, LEE, IRVING, MYERS, CHANDLER AND BRANTLEY, JJ., CONCUR.
