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SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
No. CR-13-1143
Opinion Delivered February 20, 2014
PRO SE MOTION FOR BELATED
ROBERT LEE WILLIFORD APPEAL [FAULKNER COUNTY
PETITIONER CIRCUIT COURT, No. 23CR-87-70,
No. 23CR-87-71]
v.
HONORABLE CHARLES E.
STATE OF ARKANSAS CLAWSON, JR., JUDGE
RESPONDENT
MOTION DISMISSED.
PER CURIAM
In 1987, a single judgment was entered in the Faulkner County Circuit Court
reflecting that petitioner Robert Lee Williford had entered a plea of guilty to two counts of
burglary and two counts of theft of property in cases No. 23CR-87-70 and No. 23CR-87-
71. Petitioner was placed on ten years’ probation.
Approximately twenty-three years later in 2010, petitioner filed in the trial court a pro
se petition and amended petition for writ of error coram nobis in the two cases. On August
29, 2012, the trial court denied the relief sought. On June 6, 2013, petitioner filed a motion
for reconsideration, which was denied on June 14, 2013. Petitioner filed a notice of appeal from
the June 14, 2013 order. The filing of the motion for reconsideration, however, did not extend
the time to file a notice of appeal from the original order entered August 29, 2012. See McJames
v. State, 2010 Ark. 71. When petitioner tendered the record on appeal to this court, our clerk
declined to lodge it, and petitioner now seeks leave to proceed with a belated appeal.
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We need not consider the merits of the motion for belated appeal because it is clear from
the face of the record that the petition filed in 2010 was moot. An appeal from an order that
denied a petition for postconviction relief, including a petition for writ of error coram nobis, will
not be permitted to go forward where it is clear that the appellant could not prevail. Edwards v.
State, 2013 Ark. 517 (per curiam); Demeyer v. State, 2013 Ark. 456 (per curiam); Morgan v. State,
2013 Ark. 341 (per curiam).
Where the petitioner in a coram-nobis proceeding has served the sentence imposed in
the criminal judgment, the petition is moot. See Hayden v. State, 2013 Ark. 275 (A coram-nobis
proceeding was moot inasmuch as the petitioner had served the sentence being challenged.). As
stated, petitioner filed the petition in 2010, approximately twenty-three years after the probated
sentence had been imposed in 1987. Petitioner did not argue in the 2010 coram-nobis petition
that he was still serving the sentence that had been imposed in 1987.1 The writ provides a
petitioner relief from his or her criminal judgment of conviction, and, if granted, the petitioner
will be given a new trial, or, in the case of a revocation, a new revocation proceeding. See Smith
v. State, 2011 Ark. 306 (per curiam) (citing Penn v. State, 282 Ark. 571, 574, 670 S.W.2d 426, 428
(1984)) (A coram-nobis petition was moot where sentence imposed on revocation of probation
had been served.). As petitioner had served the sentence by the time he filed the petition, his
claim was moot, and a new trial or revocation proceeding, if applicable, would not be an
appropriate remedy, even if there were cause to grant the writ. Id.; Webb v. State, 2009 Ark. 497
1
In a response to the State’s response to the motion for belated appeal, petitioner asserted
that probation was revoked three years after it had been imposed in 1987. Even if the statement
is accurate, and probation was revoked in 1990 or 1991, there is nothing in the record to indicate
that the sentence was still being served approximately twenty years later in 2010.
2
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(per curiam); see also Anderson v. State, 352 Ark. 36, 98 S.W.3d 403 (2003) (per curiam).
Motion dismissed.
Robert Lee Williford, pro se petitioner.
Dustin McDaniel, Att’y Gen., by: David R. Raupp, Sr. Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
3