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f ARK.] MAYFIELD V. STATE 801 Cite as 323 Ark. 801 (1996) Vastie MAYFIELD v. STATE of Arkansas CR 95-937 918 S.W.2d 125 Supreme Court of Arkansas Opinion delivered March 18, 1996 1. APPEAL & ERROR ATTORNEY'S DUTY TO TIMELY GIVE NOTICE OF APPEAL AND FILE RECORD. It iS an attorney's duty to timely give a notice of appeal and file the record. 2. APPEAL & ERROR MOTION FOR BELATED APPEAL GRANTED. The supreme court granted the motion for belated appeal, noting that, in the present case, the notice of appeal was not timely given, the record was tendered more than seven months after the entry of judgment, and, after the supreme court had denied the rule on the clerk and directed counsel to file a motion for a belated appeal, counsel waited another five months to file this motion for belated appeal.
802 MAYFIELD V. STATE [323 Cite as 323 Ark. 801 (1996) Motion for Belated Appeal; granted. Paul Johnson, for appellant. No response. PER CURIAM. The procedural facts, according to appellant's motion, reflect the following. The judgment of conviction was entered on November 1, 1994. A "notice of appeal" was filed by a "Reverend" Stephen Womack on November 21, 1994. On November 23, 1994, counsel for appellant filed a motion to set aside the notice of appeal and also filed a motion to set aside the judgment of conviction. More than thirty days passed with no action by the trial court on either motion, yet no notice of appeal was timely filed by appellant. On March 6, 1995, the trial court ruled that the original notice of appeal was ineffective and entered an order denying appellant's motion to set aside the judgment of conviction. Appellant alleges that he "promptly" filed a notice of appeal. Sometime later, appellant tendered a record to the clerk of this court, but the clerk refused to file it because it was untimely. Our automatic case tracking system, or docket book, reflects that on August 8, 1995, appellant filed a motion for a rule on the clerk. On September 18, 1995, we denied the motion "without prejudice to filing a motion for a belated appeal." On Febru-ary 13, 1996, the clerk sent a letter to appellant's attorney requesting a status report. Finally, on February 21, 1996, over fifteen months after the judgment of conviction, appellant filed the motion for belated appeal now before us. [1] In this case the notice of appeal was not timely given; in addition, the record was tendered more than seven months after the entry of judgment. See Ark. R. App. P. 5(b). It is an attorney's duty to timely give a notice of appeal and file the record. Patton v. State, 320 Ark. 271, 895 S.W.2d 531 (1995). The attorney did neither in this case. Further compounding those errors, after we denied the rule on the clerk and directed counsel to file a motion for a belated appeal, counsel waited another five months to file this motion for belated appeal. [2] We grant the motion, and direct that a copy of this per curiam be filed with the Committee on Professional Conduct. !
ARK.] 803 See In re Belated Appeals in Criminal Cases, 265 Ark. 964 (1979). I
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