405 S.W.2d 935 | Ark. | 1966
Robert Lee Burks, an inmate at the State Penitentiary, filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus
Por reversal, appellant relies principally upon our case of Swagger v. State, 227 Ark. 45, 296 S. W. 2d 204, but there are clearly factual differences in the two cases. Por one thing, Swagger was a nineteen-year-old boy, who had never before been convicted of any crime. The record does not reflect appellant’s age, but does reflect that Burks was already serving a fifteen year sentence for assault with intent to kill at the time of the events here complained of (his plea of guilty to grand larceny). Furthermore, in Swagger, the court did not tell the defendant that an attorney would be appointed for him, if desired.
Appellant’s charge of intimidation by the superintendent has a rather hollow ring. Burks, under the statute, could have received a sentence of twenty-one years for grand larceny, and, in addition, could have received as high as five years on the charge of escaping from the penitentiary. However, as previously stated, he was only given a three-year sentence on the larceny count, and the record does not reflect that an escape charge was even filed against him. It does not appear from these circumstances that the superintendent (or any other state official) acted against Burks with animosity or in a spirit of revenge. Appellant says in his brief that his statements of intimidation by Henslee are not contradicted, but it could not be otherwise — since Mr. Henslee is deceased. The Attorney General’s office pointedly comments that appellant’s account of intimidation is directed at one who is unable to answer.
The judge of the Desha County Circuit Court is also the judge of the Jefferson County Circuit Court, and this jurist was presiding at the time that Swagger entered his plea of guilty in Jefferson County. After briefly discussing the 8%vagger case, the trial judge, in the instant matter, commented that, after the reversal in Swagger, before accepting a plea of guilty from any prisoner, the court would first “read the information to him and instruct him that he did not have to plead guilty, that he may get him an attorney and get him a jury trial; that if he does not have funds with which to employ an attorney, the court will appoint him one and then ask him what’s his wishes. That was done in this case and he indicated that lie did not wish an attorney and wished to plead guilty.” This statement is in accord with the docket entry made -when appellant entered his plea of guilty in the Lincoln County Circuit Court, “4-21-58 plea of guilty after all his constitutional rights were explained to him and sentenced to three years in the State Penitentiary, same to run consecutively with what time he has in the penitentiary on previous sentence.”
We agree with the trial court that appellant’s petition is without merit.
Affirmed.
This court, on October 18, 1965, by per curiam order, announced the adoption of Criminal Procedure Rule No. 1, such rule setting up the procedure to be followed by prisoners who assert an unlawful conviction or sentence, or a violation of a constitutional right. The instant matter will be disposed of as though it were filed under this rule.