*9 OPINION
By the Court,
By reason of guilty pleas the appellant stands convicted of grand larceny and robbery and presently is serving concurrent sentences therefor at the Nevada State Prison. He asks that we annul those judgments and sentences on the ground that appropriate inquiry regarding his waiver of constitutional trial rights was not made when his guilty pleas were accepted.
Prior to our recent opinion, Heffley v. Warden,
In
Heffley,
supra, we departed from our prior rulings and joined with a growing body of case authority which accords
Boykin
a more ample interpretation than had we. Brady v. United States,
The court’s inquiry of the appellant when he pleaded guilty to grand larceny failed to refer to any of the three trial rights mentioned in Boykin. However, the canvass otherwise is adequate to show a voluntary and intelligent plea entered with a full understanding of its consequences. In line with McChesney v. Henderson, supra, and the reasoning of Heffley, we conclude that there need not be an express articulation and waiver of the three constitutional trial rights mentioned in Boykin when a defendant who is represented by counsel pleads guilty and it appears from the record that his plea was voluntarily and intelligently entered with knowledge of. its consequences.
However, we reiterate the statement in Heffley that “the criteria of Higby remain suitable as a guideline for our courts to follow.”
Each conviction is affirmed.
