Fisher v. State
Fisher v. State
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
Daniel Paul Fisher filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, raising issues that could be pursued in an application for post-conviction relief under Alaska Rule of Criminal Procedure 85.1. The superior court reviewed Fisher's habeas petition and sua sponte dismissed it, instructing Fisher to refile his claim as an application for post-conviction relief. Fisher filed a motion for reconsideration, pointing out that Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 86(m) requires the court to treat a habeas corpus petition as an application for post-conviction relief if the claims can be brought under Criminal Rule 85.1. Relying on Hertz v. State,
Fisher appeals, arguing the superior court should have converted his petition to an application for post-conviction relief. Because Civil Rule 86(m) requires the court to treat Fisher's petition for habeas corpus as an application for post-conviction relief, we reverse the dismissal of Fisher's case.
Discussion
Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 86 governs petitions for writs of habeas corpus. Subsection (m) states:
This rule does not apply to any post-conviction proceeding that could be brought under Criminal Rule 35.1. The court shall treat such a complaint as an application for post-conviction relief under Criminal Rule 85.1 and, if necessary, transfer the application to the court of appropriate jurisdiction for proceedings under that rule.
As the superior court correctly noted, Fisher's petition for writ of habeas corpus involved claims that could be raised in a post-conviction relief action under Criminal Rule 35.1. Pursuant to Civil Rule 86(m), the superior court therefore should have converted Fisher's petition into an application for post-conviction relief and allowed Fisher the opportunity to amend his application to conform with the requirements of Criminal Rule 35.1. Instead, the superior court dismissed Fisher's petition without prejudice and instructed him to file an application for post-conviction relief.
The State argues that there is no direct conflict between the superior court's actions and Civil Rule 86(m) because the superior court's order was not intended to dismiss Fisher's case it was only intended as a "pleading requirement" requiring Fisher to file a new application that conformed to the requirements of Criminal Rule 35.1(d). The State asserts that under the rules of civil procedure (which govern both habeas petitions and post-conviction applications), the dismissal of a complaint does not necessarily operate to dismiss the entire case. The State therefore argues that the superior court acted within its discretion in dismissing Fisher's non-conforming pleading (the habe-as petition) and requiring him to file a new pleading that conformed to the requirements of Criminal Rule 35.1.
Moreover, when Fisher filed his motion for reconsideration pointing out that Civil Rule 86(m) required the superior court to convert his action rather than simply dismiss it, the superior court did not respond with an explanation that the action had been converted to a Criminal Rule 85.1 action and that the court was simply directing Fisher to file the necessary paperwork and amended pleadings. Instead, the court ruled that under Hertz v. State,
But this is a misreading of the holding in Hertz. In Hertz, the superior court ruled that the defendant's petition for writ of habe-as corpus involved claims that could be raised under Criminal Rule 35.1. The superior court dismissed the petition and directed Hertz to re-file his claims as an application for post-conviction relief Hertz appealed, but not on the ground that the superior court should have treated his habeas petition as an application for post-conviction relief under Civil Rule 86(m). Instead, Hertz argued that the superior court was wrong on the underlying question of whether his claims could be brought through a habeas petition. We affirmed, holding that Hertz's claims were cognizable under Criminal Rule 85.1 and therefore could only be brought as an application for post-conviction relief.
Herts therefore does not stand for the proposition that the courts are within their discretion to dismiss rather than convert a habeas petition. To the contrary, the courts are obligated to follow the clear and mandatory directive of Civil Rule 86(m), and when, as here, a defendant files a habeas petition that could be brought under Criminal Rule 35.1, the court is required to "treat such a complaint as an application for post-conviction relief under Criminal Rule 85.1 and, if necessary, transfer the application to the court of appropriate jurisdiction for proceedings under that rule."
Conclusion
We REVERSE the superior court's judgment and REMAND Fisher's case for further proceedings in accordance with this decision.
. 8 P.3d 1144 (Alaska App. 2000).
. 8 P.3d 1144 (Alaska App. 2000).
. See also Harmon v. State, 2012 WL 1580776, at *2 (Alaska App. May 2, 2012) (unpublished); Braswell v. State, 2001 WL 456091, at *2 (Alaska App. May 2, 2001) (unpublished) (recognizing mandatory nature of directive to convert the action rather than to dismiss it).
. Hertz, 8 P.3d at 1147.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Daniel Paul FISHER v. STATE of Alaska
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published