Opinion by
This proceeding is another example of the abuse of habeas corpus. Such repeated petitions by relator, an experienced offender,
1
manifest a lack of sincerity and an absence of any meritorious ground for a writ. The present petition filed on April 30, 1957, was the third petition by relator which has been presented to the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County. The first petition filed October 27, 1954, was dismissed by the court on January 6, 1955. On appeal the order of the court below was affirmed in
Com. ex rel. DeSimone v. Maroney,
Each petition is characterized by an attempt to state some new issue that may be receptively received by some court.
In the proceedings which were before us in
Com. ex rel. DeSimone v. Maroney,
supra,
Eelator alleges in the present petition that his court-appointed counsel was not present when he was sentenced on September 5, 1940, the same day the verdict of the jury was returned. From the dismissal of this petition he has appealed to this Court.
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It is relator’s sole contention at this time. Relator had ample opportunity to present such allegation in his previous petition, and under the circumstances he was obliged to do so, although, in a habeas corpus proceeding, a court is not ordinarily bound by the legal rule of res judicata. See
Com. ex rel. Allen v. Claudy,
Although the record does not affirmatively establish counsel’s presence at the time of sentence, it is not material in this case. The presumption is that everything in connection with the trial was rightly done, and that the proceeding was regular and lawful.
Holmes v. The Commonwealth,
Assuming, however, that counsel was not present at the time of sentence, relator has not averred that any unfairness or harm resulted. See
Com. ex rel. Presecan v. Ashe,
Eelator was sentenced on September 5, 1940, by the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Fayette County to the Western State Penitentiary for a term of not less than seven and one-half years and not more than twenty years. He was paroled on July 14, 1951. Thereafter he was sentenced in Erie County to the Allegheny County Workhouse on a plea of guilty to a charge of receiving stolen goods, but he is now confined as a parole violator. See
Com. ex rel. DeSimone v. Maroney,
supra,
The belated attempt after sixteen years to raise this question is entitled to no serious consideration under the circumstances. As Judge Weight said, speaking" for this Court in relator’s previous appeal,
Com. ex rel. DeSimone v. Maroney,
supra,
Judge Morrow (now deceased), who tried and sentenced relator and appointed counsel for him, properly dismissed the present petition without a hearing, as it failed to show any denial of due process in the procedure that resulted in relator’s confinement.
The order of the court below is affirmed.
Notes
See United States of America ex rel. John DeSimone v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Frank C. Johnston, Warden, et al., Western State Penitentiary. (The United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, Civil Action No. 14406; testimony at hearing on April 13, 1956, pp. 63, 64).
In relator’s petition in the United States District Court, lie set forth, among the fourteen alleged violations of his rights at his trial on September 4 and 5, 1940, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Fayette County, that he was not represented by counsel at the time of sentencing (thirteenth). In denying the petition for writ of habeas corpus after hearing, Judge Marsh of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania said:
“In the light of these inconsistencies, we attach no credence to relator’s present testimony that.he was in jail-when the-verdict-of guilty was pronounced and that he was sentenced in absence of, his. counsel. . . . When all the foregoing contradictions are considered in conjunction, with the court records, the presumption of' regularity which attaches to a trial of a noncapital felony, and the long delay in presenting the alleged violations, the court is constrained to conclude that relator has failed .to meet his burden of establishing any of the averments of his- petition by a fair -proponderan.ee of .the evidence.’’
