810 S.W.2d 337 | Ark. | 1991
Lead Opinion
The appellant is appealing the denial by the trial court of a petition for post-conviction relief filed pursuant to Criminal Procedure Rule 37. The appellant’s brief filed by the attorney appointed to represent the appellant is flagrantly deficient in that there is no abstract of the information, judgment and commitment order, the Rule 37 petition, or the court’s order denying the Rule 37 petition. Counsel now seeks permission to supplement the abstract. The state argues that it would be unfair to permit the appellant to remedy the deficiencies with a supplemental abstract after the state’s brief has already been filed.
Although the appeal is from an order denying post-conviction relief and the right to effective assistance of counsel under the sixth amendment does not extend to collateral attacks on a judgment, we will not penalize the appellant by dismissing the appeal because his attorney prepared a deficient brief. If appellant had been proceeding pro se and had submitted a deficient abstract, we would not hesitate to affirm pursuant to our Rule 9 since a litigant who elects to proceed pro se is required to conform to the rules of procedure. Peterson v. State, 289 Ark. 452, 711 S.W.2d 830 (1986). Where the error was made by appointed counsel, however, we will permit the abstract to be supplemented.
A copy of this opinion shall be forwarded to the Committee on Professional Conduct.
Motion granted.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring. There is a dramatic inconsistency in the majority’s treatment of the appellant, Herbert Wilson, and his court-appointed counsel in this case and the treatment of a pro se inmate a few short months ago. See Fruit v. Lockhart, 304 Ark. 457, 802 S.W.2d 930 (1991). In Fruit the majority held that an inmate without the benefit of counsel who failed to abstract testimony in his brief had no recourse under Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 9(e)(2). The trial court judgment in Fruit which denied the inmate relief was summarily affirmed.
Now, since the appellant has court-appointed counsel, the majority has decided that it is unduly harsh to affirm the trial court judgment, and we are giving an appellant with counsel a second chance to correct a deficient abstract at his own expense. Why was the situation not unduly harsh, when a pro se inmate was effecting on his own and neglected to abstract the record? The appellant in this case had the benefit of counsel who presumably was familiar with our Rule 9(e)(2), or should have been. The same cannot be said of an inmate without counsel. Yet we give the appellant with counsel a second chance. We should have held just the opposite in this case and in Fruit v. Lockhart. The clear message from these two decisions is that an unrepresented appellant does not receive the same consideration under our rules as an appellant with counsel.