              This opinion is subject to revision before final
                    publication in the Pacific Reporter


                               2015 UT 4

                                  IN THE

       S UPREME C OURT OF THE S TATE OF U TAH
                    DOUGLAS STEWART CARTER,
                           Appellant,
                               v.
                        STATE OF UTAH ,
                           Appellee.

                           No. 20130517
                       FILED January 23, 2015

                    Fourth District, Provo Dep’t
                   The Honorable Lynn W. Davis
                          No. 060400204

                               Attorneys:
         Loren E. Weiss, David A. Christensen, Salt Lake,
           Paula K. Harms, Phoenix, AZ, for appellant
    Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Thomas B. Brunker, Erin Riley,
          Asst. Att’ys Gen., Salt Lake City, for appellee

   JUSTICE DURHAM authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING ,
             JUSTICE PARRISH , and JUSTICE LEE joined.

JUSTICE DURHAM , opinion of the Court:
                          INTRODUCTION
   ¶1     In this case, Douglas Stewart Carter asks us to review two
district court rulings against him. The first is the district court’s
denial of his rule 60(b) motion seeking to overturn a judgment
denying him post-conviction relief. The second is the court’s
dismissal of one of Mr. Carter’s successive postconviction petitions
for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm the district court’s
denial of Mr. Carter’s rule 60(b) motion, but reverse its dismissal of
Mr. Carter’s post-conviction petition.
                           BACKGROUND
   ¶2    Mr. Carter was convicted of first-degree murder and
sentenced to death in 1985. The evidence against him included trial
testimony from Epifanio and Lucia Tovar, undocumented
immigrants from Mexico and friends of Mr. Carter, who were with
him shortly before and after the time of the murder. At trial, the
                         CARTER v. STATE
                        Opinion of the Court

Tovars testified about statements Mr. Carter allegedly made to them
regarding details of the crime. On cross-examination by Mr. Carter’s
trial counsel, the Tovars were asked whether they had been given
anything by the state in exchange for their testimony. The Tovars
replied they had been given nothing but the court-ordered witness
fees of fourteen dollars. On redirect examination, the prosecutor did
not address this issue. After trial, the Tovars apparently could not be
located, and over the next two decades no new information surfaced
regarding their trial statements.
   ¶3     Shortly after his conviction, Mr. Carter directly appealed
his conviction and sentence. We affirmed the conviction but vacated
the sentence, State v. Carter (Carter I), 776 P.2d 886 (Utah 1989), and
ultimately affirmed the death sentence after the district court held a
new sentencing hearing, State v. Carter (Carter II), 888 P.2d 629 (Utah
1995).
    ¶4      Mr. Carter then began pursuing postconviction relief. He
first filed two claims under Utah’s Post Conviction Remedies Act
(PCRA), in which he challenged, among other things, aspects of his
trial, his counsel, and his confession. Mr. Carter’s first PCRA petition
(First Petition) was denied, and we affirmed that judgment in 2001.
Carter v. Galetka (Carter III), 2001 UT 96, 44 P.3d 626. Mr. Carter then
filed his second PCRA petition in 2006 (Second Petition), which was
denied by the district court on April 27, 2009. Mr. Carter
subsequently appealed, and we affirmed the district court’s denial
of the Second Petition in October 2012. Carter v. State (Carter IV), 2012
UT 69, 289 P.3d 542.
   ¶5       In 2011, while Mr. Carter’s appeal of the Second Petition
was pending, Mr. Carter’s appellate counsel finally located the
Tovars, then living in Mexico, and interviewed them about their trial
statements. Contrary to what they had stated on the stand, the
Tovars maintained, in signed affidavits, that during the pendency of
the trial the police moved the Tovar family to a new apartment, paid
for rent and utilities, bought food for the family and toys for the
children, and sang Christmas carols at their home. The couple’s
affidavits further stated that the police told them they were to
remain silent about the police’s payment of rent and living expenses,
and further threatened Epifanio with arrest and deportation if the
couple did not cooperate with the investigation and prosecution.
Mr. Carter’s counsel also obtained affidavits from retired police
personnel who had worked on Mr. Carter’s case in 1985. These
affidavits supported some of the Tovars’ allegations that they
received financial assistance. Armed with this new information,


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Mr. Carter’s counsel attempted to overturn Mr. Carter’s conviction
through a series of related filings.
   ¶6     First, on August 5, 2011—more than two years after the
Second Petition was denied—Mr. Carter filed a rule 60(b) motion for
relief from the district court’s denial of the Second Petition. See
generally UTAH R. CIV . P. 60(b). Mr. Carter argued that the signed
affidavits from the Tovars and the retired officers constituted “newly
discovered evidence” under rule 60(b)(2) that required relief from
the judgment. Alternatively, Mr. Carter argued that rule
60(b)(6)—which allows a court to relieve a party from a judgment for
“any other reason justifying relief”—could be used to achieve the
same result.
   ¶7     Rule 60(b) requires that a motion based upon subsection
(2)—newly discovered evidence—be brought within ninety days of
the judgment. UTAH R. CIV . P. 60(b). But motions based upon
subsection (6)—any other reason justifying relief—must be brought
only “within a reasonable time.” Id. Although more than two years
had passed since the district court’s judgment on the Second
Petition, Mr. Carter argued that the nature of his newly discovered
evidence required either an exception to the ninety day time bar in
subsection (2) or application of subsection (6)’s “reasonable time”
standard. Mr. Carter alleged that his newly discovered evidence was
entitled to this treatment because it had been suppressed by the
prosecution in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). In
essence, Mr. Carter argued it would be inequitable to apply rule
60(b)(2)’s ninety-day time bar to preclude a defendant from
obtaining relief under circumstances involving evidence suppressed
by the state.
   ¶8     The district court denied Mr. Carter’s rule 60(b) motion as
untimely, concluding that because Mr. Carter’s motion was based
upon “newly discovered evidence,” the motion should have been
brought within ninety days of the judgment. Moreover, the court
determined that because subsection (2) clearly governed Mr. Carter’s
claims, Mr. Carter could not alternatively use the catchall provision
in subsection (6) to avoid the ninety-day time bar. The court noted,
however, that its denial of the rule 60(b) motion did not preclude
Mr. Carter from “rais[ing] his newly discovered evidence claims in
a separate petition for post-conviction relief.”




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                        CARTER v. STATE
                       Opinion of the Court

   ¶9     Accordingly, Mr. Carter filed a new PCRA petition on
March 27, 20121—his third to date (Third Petition)—based upon the
same newly discovered evidence presented in his rule 60(b) motion.
The filing was captioned “Third Petition for Post-Conviction Relief.”
Mr. Carter’s counsel left a blank space for a case number in the
caption but listed Judge Davis as the presiding judge. The body of
the Third Petition contained a footnote that stated the pre-2008
amendments to the PCRA should apply because the filing was
intended only to “amend and supplement” his Second Petition.
Approximately three weeks after filing the petition, however,
Mr. Carter’s counsel filed a notice of errata striking this footnote.
    ¶10 Because Mr. Carter’s counsel had included Judge Davis’s
name on the Third Petition,2 the clerk of court was confused about
whether this filing was simply an additional motion that should be
filed in one of Judge Davis’s existing cases, or rather a new PCRA
petition that required a new case number. The clerk called
Mr. Carter’s counsel to remedy the confusion, but the parties dispute
what was said during that conversation. Mr. Carter’s counsel claims
the clerk informed him that this petition had to be filed under one of
Mr. Carter’s two existing cases before Judge Davis. Mr. Carter’s
counsel stated that given the choice between the two cases, he
reluctantly agreed to have it filed under the Second Petition since it
was more closely related. He maintained, however, that he felt this
procedure was improper because he intended the filing to be a new
and separate PCRA petition. In contrast, the clerk claims that upon
informing Mr. Carter’s counsel of her confusion, he directed her to
file the petition under the case number already assigned to the
Second Petition. Whatever actually transpired during that telephone
conversation, the clerk ultimately did not assign the Third Petition
a new case number, as would have been proper in light of its
caption, but instead filed it under the case number already assigned
to the Second Petition.

  1
    This filing would have been roughly four months prior to the
PCRA’s one-year deadline, assuming, as the parties do, that the date
the Tovars signed their affidavits, April 19, 2011, is the “date on
which petitioner knew or should have known, in the exercise of
reasonable diligence, of [the particular] evidentiary facts on which
the petition is based.” UTAH CODE § 78B-9-107(2)(e).
  2
    Appellant’s brief asserts that counsel reasonably assumed that
a successive petition would be assigned to Judge Davis, who had
overseen Mr. Carter’s Second Petition case. See UTAH R. CIV . P.
65C(g).

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   ¶11 The state seized upon this fact and moved to dismiss the
Third Petition on grounds that the district court lacked jurisdiction
to consider it. Relying on the previously described footnote
(notwithstanding its removal as errata)—which characterized the
Third Petition as an “amendment” to the Second Petition—the state
contended that because Mr. Carter had already appealed from the
denial of the Second Petition, jurisdiction over the Second Petition
had transferred from the district court to this court. Consequently,
the state argued, the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider any
amendments to the Second Petition, including this new filing.
   ¶12 In response, Mr. Carter argued that the Third Petition
was—and always had been—a new petition rather than an
amendment to the Second Petition, regardless of the number the
clerk had assigned to it. He explained that the errant footnote had
been mistakenly carried over from a previous memorandum in
support of the Second Petition and was “simply missed” in
proofreading the Third Petition. Accordingly, Mr. Carter urged the
court to not dismiss the Third Petition but to simply assign it a new
case number retroactive to the original filing date of March 27, 2012.
    ¶13 The court agreed with the state’s arguments and granted
the motion to dismiss the Third Petition for lack of jurisdiction. In
doing so, the court declined to assign the Third Petition a new case
number. The court held that because the case must be dismissed for
lack of jurisdiction, resolution of the factual dispute surrounding the
filing of the third petition was premature, as was any determination
regarding future nunc pro tunc relief, but that those issues would
“certainly arise if [Mr.] Carter files a [subsequent] petition and the
State asserts a time-bar defense.”
  ¶14 Mr. Carter separately appealed from both the district
court’s denial of his rule 60(b) motion and its dismissal of the Third
Petition for lack of jurisdiction. We consolidated both appeals.3
  3
     After filing these appeals, Mr. Carter refiled his Third Petition
(now the Fourth Petition), and asked the district court for nunc pro
tunc relief to backdate the Fourth Petition to the date the Third
Petition was filed. The district court denied Mr. Carter’s motion.
Though this ruling is not before us on appeal, the state filed a
suggestion of mootness with this court, arguing that the question
whether the district court had jurisdiction to grant nunc pro tunc
relief in the Third Petition case is mooted by the district court’s
holding in the Fourth Petition case. We disagree. An issue on appeal
is moot only “if during the pendency of the appeal circumstances
                                                         (continued...)

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                          CARTER v. STATE
                         Opinion of the Court

                     STANDARD OF REVIEW
   ¶15 We typically review a district court’s denial of a rule 60(b)
motion for an abuse of discretion because such rulings are usually
“equitable in nature, saturated with facts, and call upon judges to
apply fundamental principles of fairness that do not easily lend
themselves to appellate review.” Fisher v. Bybee, 2004 UT 92, ¶ 7, 104
P.3d 1198. But when the denial of a rule 60(b) motion turns in part
on the district court’s interpretation of the rule, we review those
underlying legal determinations for correctness. See Kell v. State, 2012
UT 25, ¶ 7, 285 P.3d 1133.
   ¶16 We also review for correctness the district court’s
determination that it lacked jurisdiction over the Third Petition.
See Beaver Cnty. v. Qwest, Inc., 2001 UT 81, ¶ 8, 31 P.3d 1147.
                              ANALYSIS
 I. THE DISTRICT COURT PROPERLY DENIED MR. CARTER’S
      RULE 60(b) MOTION BECAUSE IT WAS UNTIMELY
    ¶17 Mr. Carter asserts the district court erred by denying his
rule 60(b) motion on timeliness grounds. Rule 60(b) of the Utah
Rules of Civil Procedure allows “the court . . . in the furtherance of
justice [to] relieve a party or his legal representative from a final
judgment, order, or proceeding” for one of the enumerated reasons
listed in subsections (1) through (5) or for “any other reason
justifying relief from the operation of the judgment” as provided in
subsection (6). The rule requires the motion to “be made within a
reasonable time” and, if it is predicated on one of the first three

   3
     (...continued)
change so that the controversy is eliminated, thereby rendering the
relief requested impossible or of no legal effect.” Navajo Nation v.
State (In re Adoption of L.O.), 2012 UT 23, ¶ 8, 282 P.3d 977 (internal
quotation marks omitted). The state mischaracterizes the question
before us on appeal. It is not whether the district court had
jurisdiction to grant nunc pro tunc relief in the Third Petition case,
but whether the district court had jurisdiction to consider the Third
Petition at all. The district court’s decision in the Fourth Petition case
regarding nunc pro tunc relief did not eliminate the controversy
between the parties on the question of the district court’s subject
matter jurisdiction over the Third Petition. Indeed, contrary to the
state’s suggestion, today’s holding that the district court had
jurisdiction to consider Mr. Carter’s Third Petition is “of [] legal
effect” because it allows the petition to go forward despite the
district court’s conclusion in the Fourth Petition case.

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                        Opinion of the Court

enumerated reasons—one of which is newly discovered
evidence—“not more than 90 days after the judgment, order, or
proceeding was entered or taken.” UTAH R. CIV . P. 60(b). A party
may not resort to subsection (6)’s catchall provision when the
grounds for relief fall within subsections (1) through (5). See Laub v.
S. Cent. Utah Tel. Ass’n, 657 P.2d 1304, 1306–07 (Utah 1982) (holding
that the residuary clause of rule 60(b) may be employed only if the
ground asserted for relief is “one other than those listed” in the
preceding subsections). Otherwise, a party could use subsection (6)
to circumvent the ninety day time limitation for filing motions
grounded in the reasons set forth in subsections (1) through (3). See
Kanzee v. Kanzee, 668 P.2d 495, 497 (Utah 1983) (holding that because
appellant asserted grounds for relief that were listed in subsection
(1), the appellant was “not entitled to use [rule 60(b)(6)] to
circumvent the three-month limitation”).
   ¶18 Despite this limitation, Mr. Carter argues that because his
newly discovered evidence was allegedly suppressed by the state in
violation of his due process rights under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S.
83 (1963), the court should have either declined to apply rule
60(b)(2)’s ninety-day time bar or resolved his claims under the
“interests of justice” and “reasonable time” standards stated in rule
60(b)(6). We disagree. Mr. Carter’s motion for relief from the
judgment is based entirely on newly discovered evidence—the
ground listed in subsection (2). Rule 60(b) makes no distinction
between different types of newly discovered evidence for purposes
of the ninety-day time bar, and we decline to create one. Moreover,
our precedent plainly prevents Mr. Carter from shoehorning his
newly discovered evidence claim into the residual clause of
subsection (6) to avoid the ninety-day time bar. We therefore affirm
the district court’s dismissal of Mr. Carter’s rule 60(b) motion
because it was brought more than two years after the judgment, long
past the expiration of the ninety-day deadline imposed by the rule.4

  4
    In doing so, we acknowledge that the PCRA places some limits
on the use of rule 60(b) in PCRA cases. As we held in Kell v. State, “[a
60(b) motion] might be an appropriate avenue when the motion does
not attempt to achieve relief that the PCRA would bar. But when a
60(b) motion acts as a substitute for a prohibited postconviction
petition, we cannot allow its use.” 2012 UT 25, ¶ 28, 285 P.3d 1133.
   Both the PCRA and rule 60(b)(2) allow petitioners to seek relief
based on newly discovered evidence. UTAH CODE § 78B-9-104(1)(e);
UTAH R. CIV . P. 60(b)(2). It is therefore conceivable that the two laws
                                                           (continued...)

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                         CARTER v. STATE
                        Opinion of the Court

      II. THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT GRANTED
              THE STATE’S MOTION TO DISMISS THE
           THIRD PETITION FOR LACK OF JURISDICTION
   ¶19 The district court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction over
Mr. Carter’s Third Petition because the clerk filed it under the
Second Petition’s case number. “A court has subject matter
jurisdiction when it has the authority . . . to decide the case.”
J.M.W. v. T.I.Z. (In re Adoption of Baby E.Z.), 2011 UT 38, ¶ 30, 266
P.3d 702 (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In Utah, that authority derives from the Utah Constitution, state
statute, or a combination of the two.5
   ¶20 “[T]he concept of subject matter jurisdiction relates to the
relationship between the claim and the forum that allows for the
exercise of jurisdiction.” Johnson v. Johnson, 2010 UT 28, ¶ 9, 234 P.3d
1100 (emphases added) (internal quotation marks omitted). It has
nothing to do with the case number assigned to a particular
pleading. Assignment of case numbers is a ministerial duty
undertaken by the clerks of court for the convenience of the court; it
does not confer upon nor deprive the court of constitutional or
statutory authority to decide a case. See Schaab v. State, 33 So. 3d 763,
765–66 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2010) (“The clerk’s assignment of a
misdemeanor case number did not affect the status of the contempt
as a circuit court matter over which the court had jurisdiction. [F]ile
numbers are merely an administrative convenience for the clerk but
  4
     (...continued)
might be in “tension” on this point, and that we may need to
articulate a doctrine that “discriminate[s] in a principled way
between postconviction uses of [rule 60(b)(2)] that are legitimate and
those that are forbidden.” Kell, 2012 UT 25, ¶ 25.
   However, all this goes to the merits of Mr. Carter’s 60(b) motion.
Because we conclude that the motion was not timely filed, we
decline to consider its merits, and the resolution of this issue will
wait until a timely 60(b) motion presents it.
  5
    The Utah Constitution provides that “[t]he district court shall
have original jurisdiction in all matters except as limited by this
constitution or by statute.” UTAH CONST . art. VIII, § 5. Consistent
with this constitutional provision, section 78A-5-102(1) of the Utah
Code grants district courts “original jurisdiction in all matters civil
and criminal, not excepted in the Utah Constitution and not
prohibited by law.” And section 78B-9-104(1) directs parties to file
post-conviction actions “in the district court of original jurisdiction
for post-conviction relief.”

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not a statutory prerequisite for filing by the parties to the action.”
(alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted)). The
jurisdictional question is resolved by looking at the claim for relief
and ascertaining whether the forum in which the claim is brought
has authority to decide it.
   ¶21 In this case, it is undisputed that the district court had
authority to hear a new PCRA petition from Mr. Carter, so the only
question is whether Mr. Carter’s filing was in fact a new PCRA
petition. To determine whether the filing was a new petition, we
investigate not the subjective intentions of Carter’s counsel, but the
legal substance of the petition as a whole. The relevant question is
this: does the petition state a claim that the district court can hear as
a new PCRA petition? If so, the district court must take jurisdiction
of the claim, regardless of any confusion in the caption, in the case
number, or in counsel’s intentions.
   ¶22 Judged by the content and substance of the petition as a
whole, Mr. Carter’s filing clearly states a claim that the district court
could hear as a new petition. It follows the standard form of a new
postconviction petition, beginning with a thirty-page summary of
the criminal proceedings being challenged and Mr. Carter’s myriad
prior appeals and collateral attacks. Notably, Mr. Carter’s “Second
Petition for State Post-Conviction Relief” is listed as denied and
pending appeal. When the petition states its own grounds for relief,
it lists three theories, all of them based on the Tovars’ recent
affidavits. None of them relate in any obvious way to the claims
raised in the Second Petition. We conclude that Mr. Carter is correct.
The Third Petition cannot reasonably be read as anything other than
what its caption describes: a third petition.
   ¶23 In sum, we conclude that the district court’s refusal to take
jurisdiction of the Third Petition was erroneous.6 The clerk’s
incorrect assignment of the Second Petition’s case number to the
Third Petition was not a jurisdictional defect but a clerical error, and
one that the court should have corrected. We therefore remand
Mr. Carter’s Third Petition and direct the district court to assign it a
new case number. And, given our holding that the district court has
jurisdiction over the Third Petition, its original filing date of March
27, 2012, is the relevant filing date for all purposes.


  6
     In so holding, of course, we do not express any opinion on the
merits of Mr. Carter’s Third Petition, or on whether it can survive
the PCRA’s various procedural bars. We merely hold that the district
court erred in concluding it could not hear the petition at all.

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                        CARTER v. STATE
                       Opinion of the Court

                          CONCLUSION
   ¶24 We affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Carter’s rule
60(b) motion on grounds that it was untimely. But we reverse the
court’s dismissal of the Third Petition for lack of jurisdiction. We
hold that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over
Mr. Carter’s Third Petition regardless of the case number assigned
to it. We remand this case to the district court with instructions to
assign Mr. Carter’s Third Petition a new case number.
                           ____________




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