Opinion by
Grover Fink, appellant, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to a term of 6 to 12 years imprisonment. No post-trial motions were filed and no appeal was taken. Two months after his sentence commenced Fink filed certain hand drawn papers, treated by the court as a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, in which he sought the right to file new trial motions and, if necessary, prosecute a direct appeal to this Court. It tvas appellant’s contention that his two court-appointed counsel refused to take an appeal for him in violation of
Douglas v. California, 372
U.S. 353,
Appellant admitted at the hearing below that trial counsel did inform him of his absolute right of appeal, and even prepared new trial motions. However, Fink asserts that once these motions were prepared, one of his two lawyers told appellant that he saw no merit in the appeal and that he ivould withdraw from the case immediately after the motions were filed. 2 Fink testified that he was without funds to hire a new attorney and that he was never informed of his right to have free appellate counsel. Accordingly, appellant maintains that although he went through the formalities of waiving his right to file post-trial motions by telling the trial judge at sentenc *267 ing that no such motions would be filed, in fact, he never intelligently waived his appellate rights. 3
There is no doubt that if Fink’s trial counsel really threatened to withdraw from the case, they were at least under a duty to tell their indigent client that a new court-appointed attorney would be made available, without charge, to assist appellant on appeal.
Commonwealth v. Ezell,
On the basis of the testimony below, however, it is still possible that Fink believed that even his court-appointed trial counsel would not continue the case on appeal unless paid. Moreover, neither of appellant’s attorneys, in their testimony below, specifically addressed themselves to this precise matter. Because of
*268
this silence on the part of trial counsel, a proper resolution of appellant’s waiver claim might be made somewhat more difficult if the
Commonwealth,
had the burden of proving a knowing and intelligent waiver. But the prosecution has the burden only in cases where the
Douglas
claim is coupled with a silent trial record.
Commonwealth v.
Wilson,
Although we held in the first Fink case that the sentencing colloquy (set out in note 3 of this opinion) was not alone sufficient to show conclusively that there had been a waiver of appellate rights, nevertheless the responses by appellant to the trial judge, in the presence of counsel, are certainly sufficient to take this case out of the “silent record” category. Accordingly, appellant must show that the words spoken at sentencing did not amount to a waiver. In view of the fact that Fink’s own testimony mentions a lack of funds only in connection with the alleged withdrawal of counsel and with appellant’s alleged inability to hire a new attorney for appeal, we do not believe Fink has carried his burden of showing that he did not know court-appointed counsel included assistance at the appellate level. Moreover, because the burden is on appellant to show a nonwaiver, and the hearing judge chose to disbelieve Fink’s testimony, a rejection of his story must equate with a failure to carry the burden of proof.
Accordingly, we agree with the court below that appellant knowingly and intelligently waived his right to file new trial motions and appeal. Belief must therefore be denied.
*269 Order affirmed.
Notes
Immediately after this Court remanded Pink’s case for a
Douglas
hearing appellant filed a second habeas corpus petition in which he raised several substantive issues. The court below ordered a separate evidentiary hearing on this petition. At that hearing, however, appellant, in the presence of counsel, voluntarily withdrew the petition with prejudice, even though he had been carefully and correctly warned by the hearing judge that this withdrawal would constitute a waiver of all present and future collateral claims except his alleged
Douglas
denial, which was the subject of a separate proceeding. See
Commonwealth v. Satchell,
Appellant admits that only one of his two attorneys threatened withdrawal; he testified, however, that he assumed the threat applied to both counsel, since they tried the case together, and since both had told Pink that they saw little merit in an appeal.
The relevant portion of Fink’s sentencing hearing is as follows: “The Court: Q. Mr. Fink, I presume you have discussed with your attorneys since the verdict the matter of your appearance for sentence this morning? A. [by appellant] Yes sir. Q. I also assume that they have discussed with you the advisability or inadvisability of recpiesting a new trial? A. Yes sir. Q. And from your appearance here it would appear you and they have decided that no such motion be filed? A. Yes sir. Q. You are in accord with that decision, are you? A. Yes sir.” (Sentencing record at 2.)
