88 N.E.2d 769 | Ind. | 1949
This is an appeal from an order and judgment denying appellant's amended motion to annul and vacate a judgment entered by the trial court convicting appellant of the offense 1, 2. of inflicting physical injury upon Laura Lambertson with a dangerous instrument while engaged in the commission of a robbery,1 and imposing a life sentence therefor. *720
The motion also prayed leave to withdraw his plea of guilty to the affidavit. Although the pleading is designated as such motion, it is in fact a petition for a writ of error coram nobis and will be so considered here. Sanders v. State (1882),
Although on appeal this court presumes the action of the trial court was correct, undisputed facts will be taken as true, and as said by Myers, C.J. in Atkinson v. State (1920), 190 3. Ind. 1, 6, 128 N.E. 433, 434: ". . . the only course open to us is to pronounce judgment of law upon these facts." See also Batchelor v. State (1920),
The amended petition, among other allegations, averred that appellant "was induced into entering the plea of guilty by reason of threats of mob violence which were communicated to him by policemen and other officers . . ." and ". . . he was fearful of death or great bodily harm at the hands of a mob, in view of the information *721 conveyed to him by said officers and policemen."
The record discloses that the offense was alleged to have been committed September 9, 1947, and the affidavit filed three days later. On Saturday, September 13th, appellant was arraigned, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to imprisonment for life.
The evidence, when considered most favorably to the state, discloses the appellant and his stepmother were arrested on the preceding Tuesday by the police officers of Madison, Indiana. The chief of police of Madison stated to appellant's mother in substance that appellant was "better off in jail and that if you [appellant] got out you might be strung up." He also advised appellant's mother not to furnish bond. The sheriff of Jefferson County testified fifteen to twenty people from Ripley and Jefferson Counties inquired about Beard, which inquiries continued until after appellant had been removed from the Jefferson County jail, at which time some of these persons said that his removal might save the sheriff some trouble and that "there had been a lynching in Ripley County some forty years ago that week and there might be another one." The sheriff took precautions in order to protect the prisoner while in his custody, although he did not tell Beard about the threats.
On the day of the arrest one of the Madison police officers told Lucille Beard, stepmother of appellant, who was under arrest for the same offense, that "people were coming down from Ripley County tonight and take both Lauery and me out of jail for what we had done to the old lady [Mrs. Lambertson]." The same policeman told appellant's mother "he is safer locked up. If the men outside get him they will string him up to a tree." The evidence of Lucille Beard, the appellant, the sheriff of Ripley County, and the state policeman all revealed that *722 when appellant was removed from the Jefferson County jail on Saturday, the day of arraignment, the two officers said in substance they would protect the prisoners, but that if there was any trouble when they got to Versailles they were to lie down and the officers would take care of them, and that the prisoners were warned by both officers that if any shooting occurred in the courtroom they were to lie down between the benches and the officers would protect them. The sheriff stated, "Well, when it happened [the offense] and we went down there, there was some pretty rough talk in that crowd." The state policeman testified, "I told him when we parked the car exactly what they were to do, where the steps were that led to the courtroom and that if any trouble started they were to lie down in the grass and we were to take care of the trouble. I told them if there was any trouble in the courtroom they were to lie down between the seats and stay there." During most of the time appellant was in the courtroom, there were four armed officers present.
Immediately after sentence appellant and his stepmother were taken to the state police post at Connersville where they had their fingerprints taken and their pictures made. They were then taken at once to the Decatur County jail at Greensburg. The sheriff of Ripley County testified appellant was put there "for his protection, they had a better jail than here. If we put somebody in jail here we couldn't separate them, they have a more modern jail, and he was safe and better off and I knew I wouldn't have any trouble if he wasn't here." Appellant was taken to the Indiana State Prison the following Monday.
The appellant testified that before and at the time of arraignment he "didn't know hardly what was going on. I was scared of a mob," and that if he stood trial he *723 might not even see a trial, that he would not have pleaded guilty but for the fear he had.
Before arraignment the trial court informed the appellant of the nature of the offense and the penalty therefor, that he had the right to a public trial by an impartial jury in the 4, 5. county where the offense was committed, to be heard by himself and counsel, to have a copy of the affidavit, meet the witnesses face to face, and compulsory process for obtaining witnesses, and that he was not compelled to testify against himself, that if he pleaded not guilty he was entitled to a trial as quickly as it can be done without unreasonable delay. Appellant answered that no one had made any promises to him or threatened him to plead guilty, that he was ready to be arraigned and that he did not have an attorney. Before he was instructed as to these constitutional rights, and after appellant had stated he did not have an attorney, the trial court asked him this question: "As explained to Mrs. Beard, you are entitled to an attorney to council with before being arraigned, if you haven't any money and if you feel you are not guilty it is the duty of the court to appoint an attorney for you, do you want an attorney or are you ready to plead?" This left the inference that the accused was not entitled to an attorney unless he felt he was not guilty. This was error. Appellant had a constitutional right to counsel regardless of the question of his guilt. Batchelor v.State (1920),
Appellant made no charge of bad faith against any peace officer connected with the events. Undoubtedly *724
they acted in the light of the history of the locality. 6, 7. "The history of a state, which may be said to have a state-wide significance, is judicially known to the courts of that state. . . ." 1 Jones, Commentaries on Evidence
780, § 439 (2d Ed.). A riotous assembly in another state may be judicially noticed. Heyl v. State (1887),
The facts in this appeal closely parallel those in Sanders v.State (1882),
No federal question is presented by the contention of appellant's brief that his rights under the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution were violated. The Fifth 10, 11. Amendment is not a limitation on state action. To present the federal question, a violation of the "due process" clause of the Fourteenth Amendment must be alleged. See authorities, dissenting opinion Todd v. State (1948),
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to grant the 12. petition, and to permit appellant to withdraw his plea of guilty.
NOTE. — Reported in
"That Lyle Levi, having been incarcerated in the jail, and not being satisfied with his surroundings or associates, and knowing that Wilder Levi's revolver was at McCoy's store in Osgood, broke jail — it's not important in this connection to ascertain how he broke jail — and went to Osgood — the manner of his getting to Osgood is likewise immaterial — that he broke into McCoy's store, stole Wilder Levi's revolver, returned to Versailles, broke back into jail, without the knowledge of the guards, who apparently were asleep at their posts at this time, returned to his cell, shot himself, then killed Schuter and Jenkins and with a rope that he had got hold of somehow — but the evidence does not disclose how or in what place he obtained it — hung the dead bodies of Schuter and Jenkins to the tree, put the finishing touches to his crime by hanging Andrews and Gordon, and then, in order that suspicion might be directed against innocent men, finally hung himself, and his nefarious conduct in attempting to distract attention from himself and divert suspicion to the good citizens of Osgood, Napoleon, Milan and Versailles, all of whom were in the habit of retiring to their beds (and followed that habit on this particular night) immediately after eleven o'clock at night — the hour at which, under the law, saloons are required to be closed — is the more reprehensible, as apparently nothing in his life so became him as the leaving of it."