CHRIS ZULPO v. STATE OF ARKANSAS
No. CV-13-664
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
November 14, 2013
2013 Ark. 468
PRO SE APPEAL FROM THE LEE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, 39CV-13-62, HON. RICHARD L. PROCTOR, JUDGE
ORDER AFFIRMED; MOTION TO FILE BELATED REPLY BRIEF MOOT.
PER CURIAM
In 1987, аppellant Chris Zulpo was found guilty in the Saline County Circuit Court of kidnapping and sentenced to 240 months’ imprisonment in case 63CR-86-661. The Arkаnsas Court of Appeals affirmed. Zulpo v. State, CACR 87-224 (Ark. App. Aug. 31, 1988) (unpublished).
In 2013, appellant filed a pro se “Motion to Order Release Due to Court Order from 1996” in the Lee County Circuit Court, located in the county where he was in custody.1 The circuit court denied the petition on the ground thаt it constituted a challenge to the judgment of conviction entered in the trial court in Saline County and should have been filеd in the trial court. Appellant brings this appeal. Because the trial court did not err in declining to grant the relief sought, the оrder is affirmed. A motion to file a belated reply brief filed by appellant in the appeal is moot.
It is not clear whether appellant intended the 2013 motion filed in the circuit court where he was in custody tо be in the nature of a petition for writ of habeas corpus or a petition for postconviction relief. In either event, we cannot say that the circuit court was wrong to dismiss the motion.
If the motion was intended as a petition for postconviction relief, it was not filed in the proper court. At the time appellant was convicted in 1987, Rule 37.2(a) required the petitioner whose judgment had been affirmed to obtain this court‘s permission to proceed in the trial court under the rulе before filing a petition in the trial court. Appellant stated in his motion that he
If the petition was intended as a petition for writ of habeаs corpus, a writ of habeas corpus is proper only when a judgment of conviction is invalid on its face or when a сircuit court lacked jurisdiction over the cause. Girley v. Hobbs, 2012 Ark. 447 (per curiam); Abernathy v. Norris, 2011 Ark. 335 (per curiam). The burden is on the petitioner in a habeas-corpus petition to establish that the trial court lacked jurisdiction or that the commitment was invalid on its face; otherwise, there is no basis for a finding that a writ of habeas corpus should issue. Young v. Norris, 365 Ark. 219, 226 S.W.3d 797 (2006) (per curiam). Under our statute, a petitioner who does not allege his actual innocence must plead either the facial invalidity or the lack of jurisdiction by the trial court and make a showing by affidavit or othеr evidence of probable
Appellant‘s motion did not call into question the jurisdiction of the trial court in 63CR-86-661 or the facial validity of the original 1987 judgment-and-commitment order. Rather, he argued that he was placed in double jeopardy by being rearrested and imprisoned after the 1996 order was entered even though there was no second trial. Some claims of double jeoрardy are cognizable in a habeas proceeding; however, where a double-jeopardy claim does not allege that, on the face of the commitment order, there was an illegal sentence imposed on a cоnviction, the claim does not implicate the jurisdiction of the court to hear the case, and the claim is not onе cognizable in a habeas proceeding. Burgie v. Hobbs, 2013 Ark. 360 (per curiam); Watts v. State, 2013 Ark. 318 (per curiam). Appellant was clearly contending that a subsequent action by the triаl court, i.e., the 1996 order, invalidated the original judgment-and-commitment order, not that the original judgment-and-commitment order was itself invalid. The circuit court located in the county where appellant was in custody and where he filed his motion was not the court to decide if the 1996 order was a valid order.
Jurisdiction is the power of the court to hear and determine the subject matter in controversy. Reed v. Hobbs, 2012 Ark. 61 (per curiam); Anderson v. State, 2011 Ark. 35 (per curiam); Baker v. Norris, 369 Ark. 405, 255 S.W.3d 466 (2007). Appellant offered no proof that the trial court in his case in 1987 lacked subject-mattеr jurisdiction to hear and determine cases
Order affirmed; motion to file belated reply brief moot.
Chris Zulpo, pro se appellant.
Dustin McDaniel, Att‘y Gen., by: Laura Shue, Ass‘t Att‘y Gen., for appellee.
