203 P.2d 205 | Kan. | 1949
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a direct proceeding in habeas corpus wherein petitioner seeks to be discharged from confinement in the state penitentiary at Lansing.
The cause has been submitted on the petition and the answer together with the affidavits of the county attorney and counsel appointed for petitioner at his trial. These pleadings disclose the following facts:
Petitioner was convicted September 5, 1944, of forgery and sentenced to the reformatory at Hutchinson. December 20, 1945, he was paroled therefrom. November 14, 1946, he pleaded guilty to burglary in the second degree and larceny while committing a burglary. Counsel was appointed for him by the court. His pre
The first three grounds urged by him are some form of the argument that one may only be prosecuted for a felony after indictment by a grand jury. This argument has been settled against the petitioner, see Bailey v. Hudspeth, 164 Kan. 600, 191 P. 2d 894.
He next argues that the informations in both cases were erroneously drawn because they did not contain any degree or statute numbers and do not allege that he violated any specific statute. We are concerned only with the information pursuant to which he is now held. He is not entitled to a writ of habeas corpus on that account. (See Lang v. Amrine, 156 Kan. 382, 133 P. 2d 128; also Pennebaker v. Hudspeth, 165 Kan. 662, 197 P. 2d 939.)
He next argues that his plea of guilty was secured by fraud, coercion and deceit on the part of his counsel and the county attorney. We are favored with affidavits by both these officials. They are sufficient to overcome the statement of conclusions made by petitioner.
Petitioner contends that the journal entry in the case in which he was last convicted does not conform to G. S. 1947 Supp. 62-1516. At the time this case was submitted counsel for the respondent conceded this to be the situation because it did not state the section numbers of the statutes, for a violation of which petitioner was convicted. While the cause was being prepared for submission, however, we are advised steps had already been taken by service of notice upon petitioner and the filing of a motion in the district court where the conviction occurred to cause the court to issue a nunc pro tunc order meeting this deficiency. Since the case was finally submitted we have been furnished with such an order. It is now in the files in this action. It meets that argument of the petitioner.
Petitioner next argues that his conviction in the forgery case was void because he was not given counsel when he pleaded guilty so that the sentence thereon could not be made the basis of the sen
The writ is denied.