428 S.E.2d 325 | Ga. | 1993
We granted Brand’s application for a certificate of probable cause to appeal the superior court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus, to determine: (1) the propriety of the clerk of the superior court’s action in withholding the habeas record on appeal to this court until payment of costs in the habeas proceeding, and (2) the application of our decision in Ford v. State, 262 Ga. 602 (423 SE2d 255) (1992) to this case.
1. The superior court, acting as habeas court, granted Brand leave to proceed in forma pauperis and, following a hearing, denied Brand’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The habeas court also assessed court costs against Brand, citing Newsome v. Graham, 254 Ga. 711 (334 SE2d 183) (1985) as authority for doing so.
We agree with Brand that the superior court clerk’s failure to forward the habeas record to this court effectively denies his right under OCGA § 9-14-52 (b) to apply for a certificate of probable cause to this court. Accordingly, where, as here, the habeas court has assessed costs against an indigent prisoner/petitioner, and the prisoner/ petitioner shows that he is unable to pay those costs,
2. In Ford v. State, supra, we reversed the felony murder conviction where the underlying felony was possession of a firearm because, under the special circumstances of that case, the possession of the firearm could not reasonably have been seen as creating a “foreseeable risk of death.” Id. at 603. No such special circumstances were demonstrated at the trial of Brand’s case, and our holding in Ford provides him no relief.
3. Following our grant of Brand’s application for a certificate of probable cause, the superior court forwarded the habeas record to this court. Having reviewed the record, we conclude the superior court did not err in denying the petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Judgment affirmed.
We affirmed Brand’s conviction and sentence to life imprisonment for felony murder at 258 Ga. 378 (369 SE2d 896) (1988), but vacated the conviction and sentence for the underlying felony of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
In Newsome, we held it to be within a trial court’s discretion whether to assess costs against an indigent defendant under OCGA §§ 9-15-1 and 9-15-11, and that a party’s indigency does not relieve him from paying those costs. Here, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in assessing costs against Brand.
Brand submitted his request to proceed in forma pauperis which he had filed in the habeas court, showing he had no income or property, as well as documentation from prison officials showing a negative balance in Brand’s prison account.