OPINION
for the Court.
The applicant, William Willis, appeals from the Superior Court’s denial of his application for postconviction relief. This case came before the Supreme Court for oral argument pursuant to an order directing the parties to show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be decided summarily. After reviewing the record and considering the memoranda and arguments of the parties, we conclude that this case may be decided without the necessity of further briefing or argument. We affirm the order of the Superior Court.
Facts and Procedural History
On October 30, 2002, Mr. Willis pled nolo contendere to two counts of second-degree child molestation and was sentenced to an aggregate of twenty years in prison, twelve of which were suspended, with probation.
On June 17, 2003, Mr. Willis filed a
pro se
application for postconviction relief alleging ineffective assistance of counsel, and a motion for appointment of counsel. Attorney Kenneth Vale was appointed as counsel for Mr. Willis. After reviewing the case, however, Mr. Vale moved to withdraw, explaining that he found “the issues raised in defendant’s petition for post conviction relief to be wholly frivolous, without merit, and neither supported by existing law, nor by a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.” To support his motion to withdraw, Mr. Vale filed a sixty-seven page “no-merit” memorandum in accordance with the requirements set forth by this Court in
Shatney v. State,
The hearing justice granted Mr. Vale’s motion to withdraw, and Mr. Willis was allowed to proceed pro se. 1 After a hearing on multiple dates, the hearing justice denied the application on the ground that Mr. Willis failed to present sufficient evidence to demonstrate that his counsel’s level of service was objectively unreasonable. An order to that effect was entered on June 10, 2004.
From that point on, as the hearing justice later noted, Mr. Willis’s case became “rife with a procedural quagmire.” Although a note in the Superior Court file indicates that the hearing justice informed Mr. Willis of his right to appeal, the record is devoid of any notice of appeal. Nevertheless, on January 13, 2005, Mr. Willis filed a motion in the Supreme Court for appointment of counsel to “represent [my] interests in this appeal from denial of Post Conviction Relief.” We granted the motion and appointed Attorney Judith Crowell to represent the applicant with respect to his “appeal.” Ms. Crowell assessed the viability of a petition for certio-rari in an attempt to cure Mr. Willis’s failure to file a timely notice of appeal, but she found “no basis in law or in fact for such an argument.” Concluding that Mr. Willis had “no arguably meritorious appellate issues” and that the reinstatement of
On remand, Mr. Willis sought the appointment of counsel to represent him in the Superior Court, and Ms. Crowell was again appointed. A hearing was held on November 29 and December 6, 2005, at which Mr. Willis and one of his neighbors testified. Mr. Willis also submitted medical records indicating that he underwent a vasectomy shortly before the alleged molestation.
At the end of the hearing, Mr. Willis conceded that the evidence presented to the Superior Court was known to him at the time of his trial, and thus it did not meet the legal standard for newly discovered evidence set forth in
State v. Hazard,
The hearing justice rejected applicant’s entreaties that he be permitted to press a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. The hearing justice explained that the Supreme Court had remanded the case to the Superior Court for the sole purpose of assessing newly discovered evidence, and he also noted that Mr. Willis had not submitted a motion to expand or amend his postconviction-relief application. The hearing justice declined to expand the scope of the inquiry beyond the Supreme Court’s limited remand. He then ruled that the evidence was not newly discovered and he ordered the papers transferred back to the Supreme Court. On December 9, 2005, Mr. Willis filed a notice of appeal.
Mr. Willis then moved in the Supreme Court for the appointment of Ms. Crowell as appellate counsel for his postconviction-relief appeal, which we granted on February 16, 2006.
3
On March 29, 2006, howev
Before this Court, Mr. Willis concedes that the evidence he presented does not meet the legal standard for newly discovered evidence set forth in
Hazard,
Discussion
In the Superior Court, as well as in this Court, Mr. Willis has conceded that the evidence presented after remand does not meet the legal standard for newly discovered evidence. Thus, the only issue we now consider is the hearing justice’s determination not to expand this Court’s remand order so as to consider Mr. Willis’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
As we have observed, “the opinions of this Court speak forthrightly and not by suggestion or innuendo.”
Fracassa v. Doris,
In this case, the only issue pending before the Superior Court was by virtue of our remand order. Mr. Willis’s original application for postconviction relief had been denied but not appealed. Notwithstanding this seemingly insurmountable procedural barrier, counsel was appointed; that counsel assessed and rejected the viability of fifing a petition for writ of certiorari. Nevertheless, we granted Mr. Willis’s motion to remand so he could seek to present newly discovered evidence. Conceding, however, that his proffered evidence does not qualify as newly discovered, he has, in effect, waived the issue, precluding appellate review. Plainly stated, the hearing justice appropriately limit
Conclusion
For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the order and remand the papers to the Superior Court.
Notes
. The applicant proceeded pro se, but later attempted to secure another appointed attorney, which request the hearing justice denied.
. As
State v. Hazard,
" 'When a motion for a new trial is based on newly discovered evidence, that evidence must satisfy a two-pronged test.’ * * * The first part is a four-prong inquiry that requires that the evidence be (1) newly discovered since trial, (2) not discoverable prior to trial with the exercise of due diligence, (3) not merely cumulative or impeaching but rather material to the issue upon which it is admissible, (4) of the type which would probably change the verdict at trial. * * * Once this first prong is satisfied, the second prong calls for the hearing justice to determine if the evidence presented is ‘credible enough to warrant a new trial.’ ” Id. at 463-64 (quoting State v. L’Heureux,787 A.2d 1202 , 1207-08 (R.I. 2002)).
. The Rhode Island Office of the Public Defender declined to represent Mr. Willis in his
