ORDER
AND NOW, May 10th, 1985, the order of the trial court is reversed to the extent that the case is remanded to permit appellant to exercise his right to allocution. The order of the trial court is affirmed in all other respects.
Three questions are presented by this appeal: First, has appellant preserved any issue for appellate review? Second, if he has, what disposition should we make of such *251 issue, or issues? And third, should we remand for the appointment of new counsel?
On the first question: Judge CIRILLO’s opinion may be read as holding that appellant has preserved no issue for appellate review, for the reason that, according to Judge CIRILLO, the allegations in appellant’s second PCHA petition are inadequate. This conclusion ignores the fact that when appellant filed the petition he was without counsel, and its error is demonstrated by Judge POPOVICH at pages 749-751 of his opinion. See in particular the first paragraph of footnote 2 on page 750. 1
On the second question: Three issues have been preserved for appellate review: the rubber stamp issue; the Riggins issue; and the allocation issue. Counsel could not have been ineffective in failing to raise the first two issues, for they are without merit. However, Judge CIRILLO’s dictum to the contrary (if it is dictum; see note 1 supra), the allocution issue does have merit, again as demonstrated by Judge POPOVICH, at pages 751-753 of his opinion. I therefore agree with Judge POPOVICH that the judgment of sentence should be vacated and the case remanded so that appellant may exercise his right of allocution.
On the third question: Judge POPOVICH states that “the assignment of counsel for appellant on appeal cures” the trial court’s error in dismissing appellant’s pro se petition without hearing and without appointing counsel. Judge CIRILLO, in dictum, agrees. I do not.
Rule 1504 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure provides that the appointment of counsel in PCHA proceedings is required unless “a previous petition involving the same issue or issues has been finally determined adversely to the petitioner and hе either was afforded the opportunity to have counsel appointed or was represented
*252
by counsel in proceedings thereon.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 1504.
See Commonwealth v. Finley,
Commonwealth v. Lohr,
It is, moreover, quite inaccurate to state that the review this court conducts now will remedy the failure of the trial court to appoint counsel. The review this court conducts *253 now extends only to appellant’s pro se claims. Neither Judge POPOVICH nor Judge CIRILLO claims to have reviewed the entire record for any meritorious claims appellant might raise, if advised by appointed counsel. Cfi Commonwealth v. McClendon, supra (after requirements of Anders have been met, reviewing court must make an independent determination of merits of appeal). Judge POPOVICH’s statement that we may consider appellant’s PCHA petition now “since there is no indication of record that appellant was hindered from raising any issue he wished,” see his op. at 748, is no excuse for not following Rule 1504. No authority is cited for the statement; I know of none; and settled authority is directly contrary. Both the Supreme Court and this court have repeatedly stated the basis of the requirement of Rule 1504 that an indigent petitioner must have counsel appointed for him in proceedings before the PCHA court:
We pause to note that the mandatory appointment requirement is a salutary one and best comports w th efficient judicial administration and serious consideration of a prisoner’s claims. Counsel’s ability to frame the issues in a legally meaningful fashion insures the trial court that all relevant considerations will be brought to its attention. As recognized by the American Bar Association Project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Post-Conviction Remedies § 4.4, at 66 (1967): “It is a waste of valuable judicial manpower and an inefficient method of seriously treating the substantive merits of applications for post-conviction relief to proceed without counsel for the applicants who have filed pro se____ Exploration of the legal grounds for complaint, investigation of the underlying facts, and more articulate statement of claims are functions of an advocate that are inappropriate for a judge, or his staff.” Commonwealth v. Mitchell,427 Pa. 395 , 397,235 A.2d 148 , 149 (1967).
See also Commonwealth v. Finley,
Judge CIRILLO chastises me for “search[ing] for perfect justice.” See his opinion at —. “Prisoners”, he says, “who are in fact guilty of the crimes of which they stand convicted must learn to accept the consequences of their guilt____” Id. at —. These comments seem to me to beg the question. I doubt that following Rule 1504 will enable us to realize perfect justice. I submit, however, that when a rule squarely controls a case — as Rule 1504 controls this *255 case — we should follow the rule. As for prisoners accepting the consequences of their guilt: If counsel was ineffective, how do we know that the prisoner was guilty? Besides, are not even the guilty entitled to effective counsel?
The judgment of sentence should be vacated and the case remanded so that appellant may exercise his right to allocution, and also, so that the trial court may pursuant to Rule 1504 appoint counsel to represent appellant and advise him on whether his pro se petition should be amended.
I do not find fault with the determination of the Opinion in Support of Affirmance that appellant’s plea renders his rubber-stamp issue waived. Its non-jurisdictional attribute is not remedied by its association with an ineffectiveness claim absent an assertion that the alleged defect was the primary motivation for the plea.
See Commonwealth v. Chumley,
Further, I agree with the Opinion in Support of Affirmance that the assignment of counsel for appellant on appeal cures any defect that may have been engendered by the PCHA court’s dismissal of appellant’s second pro se petition without appointing counsel to assist him in drafting an amended petition. In other words, since there is no indication of record that appellant was hindered from raising any issue he wished, the present appeal is the appropriate stage at which to assail any and all matters arising out of his conviction. Accordingly, appellant’s right to counsel to assist him in the perfection of his second PCHA petition has been rectified by the appointment of appellate counsel by the PCHA court.
*256
I believe that such an approach is sanctioned by our Supreme Court in
Commonwealth v. Lohr,
In affirming, the
Lohr
Court utilized a “judicial economy” approach to address all of the issues raised by appellant in his
pro se
brief.
Id.,
Here, counsel’s actions are clearly outside the requirements of McClendon. However, the goal pursued by McClendon, review of the merit of the appeal, is fulfilled by the instant review, negating the possibility of prejudice inuring to appellant from the omissions of counsel. Furthermore, notwithstanding counsel’s dereliction, any relief this Court might extend to appellant would be merely duplicitous of the instant review and, thus, consistent with principles of judicial economy, we decline the opportunity to remand for proceedings consistent with McClendon.
Id.,
I see no reason to deviate from Lohr, for review of the merits of appellant’s claims is being accomplished without any evidence of prejudice to the accused. Moreover, notwithstanding the ineffectiveness of counsel claims, I find, as did the Court in Lohr, that “any relief this Court might extend to appellant would be merely duplic[ative] of the instant review and, thus, consistent with the principles of judicial economy,” I would decline appellate counsel’s invita *257 tion to remand for proceedings below. (Appellant’s Brief at 11-12)
However, I depart from the Opinion in Support of Affirmance on the question of the reviewability of the claims that: 1) the lower court failed to state “any reasons” for the sentence imposed as required by
Commonwealth v. Riggins,
I find that, inasmuch as present counsel is other than counsel whose stewardship is being questioned,
1
the issues raised are properly before us for review.
See Commonwealth v. Cooke,
Before addressing any of appellant’s complaints, I find it necessary to respond to the Commonwealth’s argument that “[t]he issues presented in the second P.C.H.A. petition were either waived or finally litigated.” (Commonwealth’s Brief at 4) In support of its protestation, the Commonwealth relies heavily upon
Commonwealth v. Alexander,
In
Alexander,
a plurality opinion written by Justice Larsen, the Court, albeit decrying the proliferation of PCHA petitions filed by one litigant as an intolerable assault on the appellate process requiring judicial curtailment, endorsed the allowance of “at least one
meaningful
opportunity to have ... issues reviewed, at least in the context of
*258
an ineffectiveness claim.”
Id.
Initially, I would hold that
Alexander’s
“one meaningful opportunity for review of an ineffectiveness claim” legitimately came to appellant on this appeal. Prior thereto, he was represented by counsel from the public dеfender’s office, and, under
Commonwealth v. Dancer,
It is beyond cavil that if a petitioner fails to raise issues in a prior counselled post conviction proceeding, he waives these issues for purposes of a subsequent post conviction proceeding unless he establishes that extraordinary circumstances existed which would have excused the failure to raise the issues. 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 9543(4), 9544(b)(2). Appellant has done just that through appellate counsel’s contention that the failurе to raise the issues presently before this Court is attributable to the stewardship of the first PCHA counsel, who represented the accused on appeal and
*259
was from the same office as guilty plea counsel.
2
Thus, “an extraordinary circumstance existed which would excuse his failure to raise these issues in his first PCHA petition.”
Commonwealth v. Senk,
*260 Accordingly, based on the preceding and without doing violence to the spirit of the law as capsulized in Commonwealth v. Alexander, supra, only now is appellant being availed his “one meaningful” review of the ineffectiveness claim.
As for the concrete allegation of actual prejudice also called for in
Alexander,
I find this factor to be but one point on a continuum that leads to an analysis of counsel’s claimed ineffectiveness, first, under the rubric of “arguable merit” and then scrutinization under the “reasonable basis” standard enunciated in
Commonwealth ex rel. Washington v. Maroney,
*261 Instantly, I conclude that the aforesaid translates into a vacation of the judgment of sentence and a remand to afford the accused his right of allocution.
The position of the Opinion in Support of Affirmance that the accused alleges no facts entitling him to relief when he asserts that his allocution right was denied is tenuous at best. Our Supreme Court has spoken on this subject in no uncertain terms:
In Pennsylvania, the right of allocution, long recognized with respect to capital cases, was extended by the Rules of 1973 to all criminal defendants.
The right of allocution has retained its vitality in contemporary sentencing schema. Notwithstanding the modern innovations in our law, nothing has “lessen[ed] ... the need for the defendant, personally, to have the opportunity to present to the court his plea in mitigation. The most persuasive counsel may not be able to speak for a defendant as the defendant might, with halting eloquence, speak for himself.” Allowing a defendant to address the court on the sentencing determination fully comports with this Commonwealth’s Sentencing Code, 18 Pa.C.S. §§ 1301 et seq., which embodies “the philosophy of individual sentencing,”____
Commonwealth v. Knighton, supra,
Four years after the ruling in
Knighton,
our high Court again has spoken on the subject of allocution, but this time it is in a terse fashion which leaves no doubt in this writer’s mind the deference to be accorded such a right. The scenario begins with one Julius Demetrius, III, pleading guilty to nine offenses, the substance of which is not herein relevant. Sentence was imposed following a hearing, and, thereafter, a timely filed motion to withdraw the plea and modify sentence was denied. On appeal, new counsel was appointed because prior counsel’s stewardship was assailed in regard to the plea and sentencing proceedings. This Court, in a Memorandum Opinion, affirmed the judgment of sentence, and, in doing so, determined that Demetrius’ right
*262
to allocution had not been abridged because at sentencing he answered: “No, Your Honor” when asked by the court if he had anything to say.
Commonwealth v. Demetrius,
On December 30, 1983, our Supreme Court granted Demetrius’ petition for allowance of appeal at No. 1 E.D. Appeal Docket 1984. In his brief, Demetrius claimed that, inter alia,
At the time of sentencing, the learned sentencing judge, after hearing argument from the attorney for the Commonwealth and defense counsel, asked the Defendant to stand (N.T. 11/14/80, p. 63) and thereupon imposed sentence of total confinment____ Only after imposing such sentence did the Court inquire of the Defendant as to whether he had anything to say (N.T. 11/14/80, p. 68). Not surprisingly, in view of the impact upon the Defendant by virtue of the sentence received, the Defendant responded “No, Your Honor”. (N.T. 11/14/80, p. 68). The Defendant was thus denied any meaningful exercise of his right to allocution prior to sentencing.
Because Defendant was denied his right of allocution the sentence imposed in this case is invalid and the judgment of sentence must be vacated. 8
(Demetrius’ Brief at 27, 30 & n. 8) (Emphasis in original)
Although not mentioned in the preceding passage, it requires noting that Demetrius cited
Green v. United States,
Instantly, the record of appellant’s sentencing hearing clearly demonstrates that, albeit his counsel spoke, he was not asked if he had a statement to make to the court. “The fact that appellant chose not to speak at his guilty plea colloquy does not ... indicate a subsequent desirе to remain silent.”
Commonwealth v. Bennett,
Unlike the requirement of the Opinion in Support of Affirmance that a claimed denial of one’s right to allocution is factually deficient and requires supplementation as to what one would have said had he/she been given the opportunity to speak, 4 our Supreme Court created no such *264 condition precedent in the case of Julius Demetrius, III. On the contrary, it stated no more in its per curiam order awarding the petitioner the relief sought other than:
Judgment of sentence vacated and record remanded to Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County to permit appellant to exercise his right of allocution and for resentencing by another judge.
Commonwealth v. Demetrius,
For this Court to imply, as the Opinion in Support of Affirmance does today, that a сlaimed denial of one’s right to speak can be ameliorated by the accused’s delineation of his importunings to an appellate court in, for example, his appellate brief would be the equivalent of this tribunal acting as the sentencing agent. A role reserved, and appropriately so, to the jurist initially hearing, seeing and, thus, reacting to those factors which impact on the ultimate sentence imposed. Our role in this scheme of criminal justice is to review, under an abuse of discretion standard, the after-the-fact type and length of punishment meted out, and not to act as the initial forum for hearing one’s pleas for leniency, a portrayal which the Opinion in Support of Affirmance seems bent on pursuing in the face of our Supreme Court’s advisements to the contrary. See Commonwealth v. Demetrius, supra; Commonwealth v. Knighton, supra; Rule 1405.
I am of the belief that those matters which the Opinion in Support of Affirmance would have appellant allege on appeal for evaluation, having been denied the occasion to vocalize them at sentencing, are considerations for the sentencing court, in the first instance, and not the proper subject of assessment “in the austere, dry precincts of
*265
appellate courts.”
Commonwealth v. Jackson,
Notwithstanding the preceding, as also observed by the Opinion in Support of Affirmance, appellant’s contention that counsel was ineffective in failing to obtain an on-the-record rationale for sentencing must fail. While
Commonwealth v. Riggins, supra,
now requires such an on-the-record statement, the law at the time of appellant’s sentencing (1974) was otherwise. Thus, appellant is not entitled to the solace afforded by
Riggins. Commonwealth v. Frankhouser, supra; Commonwealth v. Tolassi,
Finally, as was stated by the Court in
Alexander,
I also wish to emphasize that I do not approve of a policy that grants,
ipso facto,
a petitioner an evidentiary hearing merely by his incantation of the talismanic phrase “ineffectiveness of counsel” and affixing it to any and all allegations of impropriety. Rather, I follow in the footsteps of our high Court in continuing to approve of the “arguable merit/reasonable basis” criteria, emanating from the
Commonwealth ex rel. Washington v. Maroney
line of cases, as the framework within which a PCHA сourt must act in deciding whether to grant or deny a petitioner’s requested relief.
Commonwealth v. Clemmons,
The order of the PCHA court, save for the allocution claim, is affirmed. The judgment of sentence is vacated, and a remand is ordered, to allow the accused the opportunity to exercise his right to allocution.
Early in 1974, appellant George Walter Brown committed three separate armed robberies, each in the company of an armed cohort, in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. Pursuant to a plea agreement, Brown pled guilty on September 16,
*266
1974, to three charges of robbery arising from the incidents. The court accepted Brown’s pleas and sentenced him to three concurrent terms of five to fifteen years in prison. No direct appeal was taken; however, on December 10, 1974, Brown filed a first petition under the Post Conviction Hearing Act
1
(PCHA) alleging that he had been denied the right to representation by competent counsel, that his guilty pleas had been unlawfully induced, and that a right guaranteed him by the constitution or laws of this State had been abridged. The Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County denied the petition without a hearing, and Brown appealed to the Superior Court. On appeal Brown argued that his original counsel had been ineffective for failing to appeal to challenge (1) the validity of Brown’s waiver of the right to a jury trial, and (2) the validity of his guilty plea. The Superior Court affirmed the order of the PCHA court.
Commonwealth v. Brown,
On September 22, 1981, Brown filed his second PCHA petition, alleging the ineffectiveness of both his original counsel and his first PCHA counsel for failing to preserve or argue claims that (1) the criminal informations filed against him were rubber-stamped with a facsimile of the district attorney’s signature; (2) the sentencing judge did not put reasons for the sentence on the record in compliance
*267
with
Commonwealth v. Riggins,
An appeal from Judge Lipsitt’s order ensued, bringing Brown’s case before this Court for the second time. On appeal Brown pursues the first three of the four issues raised in his PCHA petition below. He maintains that with regard to these three issues it was error for the judge to summarily dismiss the petition without a hearing and without appointing counsel.
Preliminarily, we turn our attention to the effect of appellant’s guilty plea on the status of his current claims.
Upon entry of a plea of guilty all grounds of appeal are waived except challenges to the voluntariness of the plea, the jurisdiction of the sentencing court, and the legality of the sentence.
Commonwealth v. Lutz,
The next principle we should recognize is that issues may be waived if they are not preserved at every stage of the criminal proceedings at which orderly state procedures make it appropriate to raise them.
Commonwealth v. Harper,
A third principle worth preliminary mention is the principle of waiver written into the Post Conviction Hearing Act itself. The Act provides that
(b) For the purposes of this act, an issue is waived if:
(1) The petitioner knowingly and understandingly failed to raise it and it could have been raised before the trial, at the trial, on appeal, in a habeas corpus proceeding *269 or any other proceeding actually conducted, or in a prior proceeding actually initiated under this act; and
(2) The petitioner is unable to prove the existence of extraordinary circumstances to justify his failure to raise the issue.
(c) There is a rebuttable presumption that a failure to аppeal a ruling or to raise an issue is a knowing and understanding failure.
19 P.S. § 1180-4(b), (c) (emphasis added). See also id. § 1180-5(b):
Any person desiring to obtain relief under this act shall set forth all of his then available grounds for such relief for any particular sentence he is currently serving in such petition and he shall be entitled to only one petition for each such crime. The failure to raise any such issue in such petition shall be deemed a waiver of any right to future presentation of another petition containing grounds for relief that were available and could have been presented.
Appellant has already pursued a collateral attack on his sentence through a prior proceeding under the PCHA, and in that proceeding failed to raise the issues he now wants heard. Under the clear language of the PCHA, appellant has therefore waived the issues presented in the current appeal.
Appellant seeks to avoid the abundant evidence of waiver by alleging that his prior counsel rendered ineffective assistance in all prior proceedings. He contends that his ineffectiveness allegations entitle him to further litigation of his claims under the PCHA, on the premise that ineffectiveness of counsel is an extraordinary circumstance which precludes us from finding waiver under section 1180-4(b)(2) of the Act, supra.
A question of importance before the Court en banc on this appeal is whether appellant’s ineffectiveness of counsel allegations automatically entitle him to a forum for his claims under the PCHA; or whether, under the present *270 circumstances, appellant’s allegations are insufficient to overcome the inference that these claims are waived. We would hold the latter. 2
First,
with sole regard to appellant’s complaint that the informations filed against him contained a rubber-stamped signature, we determined in
Commonwealth v. Spiegel, supra,
that such a claim is waived if not raised pre-trial, and that ineffectiveness allegations cannot resurrect a rubber stamp claim after conviction. The rationale for the
Spiegel
holding is simple and compelling: after a case has gone to trial and conviction the interest protected by the requirement of a signed information hаs ceased to exist.
See also Commonwealth v. Veneri, supra.
Even assuming that alert counsel should have challenged a rubber-stamped information before trial to insure that a district attorney made a reasoned review of the charges, after a finding of guilt there is no longer an appropriate remedy in criminal court for counsel’s failure to have done so.
See also Commonwealth v. Watts,
*271
Furthermore, appellant’s allegations of ineffectiveness do not explain away the waiver of the rubber stamp issue that occurred when appellant entered his plea of guilty. It is elementary that ineffectiveness of counsel in connection with a guilty plea will warrant relief only where the ineffectiveness caused the plea to be entered involuntarily or unknowingly.
Commonwealth v. Lutz, supra; Commonwealth v. Klinger,
Second,
with regard to both the rubber stamp issue and the claim that the sentencing court failed to state reasons for the sentence, neither was a viable issue for an attorney
*272
to raise at the time of appellant’s conviction. The validity of rubber-stamped informations did not emerge as an issue in the law of Pennsylvania until the decision in
Commonwealth v. Emanuel,
Third,
we turn to appellant’s ineffectiveness allegations with respect to the claim that he was denied the right to speak at sentencing. Again the present attack on counsel is inadequate to resuscitate that claim. Appellant’s bare assertion that his allocution rights were denied is made in the absence of any allegation of fact which, if proven, would entitle him to relief.
See
19 P.S. § 1180-9. The claim that counsel were ineffective for not preserving these rights is thus stated without supporting facts, and our courts will not consider ineffectiveness claims in the abstract.
Commonwealth v. Floyd,
To state a valid claim for collateral relief for a denial of allocution rights, a petitioner must show that he had something to say at sentencing that likely would have had a favorable impact on the sentence imposed. The applicable law is set forth in
Commonwealth v. Barton,
A bare denial of the right to allocution, without evidence that appellant had something to say, will not require the vacation of an otherwise proper sentence. That which he wished to say, moreover, must be such as would likely have influenced the sentence imposed. To require a vacating of the sentence and a subsequent re-sentencing, appellant will have to show that the sentencing judge was either misinformеd or uninformed regarding one or more relevant circumstances. The sentence need not be vacated in order to provide appellant an opportunity to speak if he has nothing significant to say. Commonwealth v. Rivera, [309] Pa.Super. [33], [39],454 A.2d 1067 , 1070 (1982).
The right to allocution is neither constitutional nor jurisdictional. The failure to ask a defendant if he has anything to say before sentence is imposed is not a fundamental defect inconsistent with rudimentary requirements of due process or an error inherently resulting in a miscarriage of justice. Hill v. United States,368 U.S. 424 , 428,82 S.Ct. 468 , 471,7 L.Ed.2d 417 , 421 (1962). Thus, as the Supreme Court held in Hill, collateral relief is not available when a petitioner shows merely a formal failure to comply with a rule requiring the court to invite a defendant to speak before sentence is imposed.
The right of allocution in Pennsylvania is also based upon procedural rule. See: Pa.R.Crim.P. 1405(a). A mere failure to comply formally with the mandate of Rule 1405(a), which requires the court to invite a defendant to *274 speak, does not destroy the validity of an otherwise legal sentence and render it susceptible to collateral attack. Hill v. United States, supra.
Accord, Commonwealth v. Bell,
*275
A petitioner seeking a hearing under the PCHA must set forth and offer to prove
facts
which, if proven, would entitle him to relief. 19 P.S. §§ 1180-5, -9;
see also Pettus; Clemmons, supra.
We have determined that, despite his allegations that his prior counsel were ineffective, appellant has not offered to prove facts sufficient to rebut waiver of his underlying issues.
See
19 P.S. § 1180-3(d). Therefore, the PCHA court exercised its discretion properly in refusing to grant a hearing on the claims raised in appellant’s second PCHA petition.
See Commonwealth v. Jones,
We next consider the PCHA court’s failure to appoint counsel to represent appellant on his second petition under the PCHA. Counsel must be appointed to assist a petitioner in PCHA proceedings unless he has had a previous, counselled petition involving the same issue or issues. Pa. R.Crim.P. 1504.
See Commonwealth v. Garrison,
That is not the end of our inquiry, however, for we further find that the court’s error in failing to appoint counsel has been remedied and rendered harmless by the appointment of appellate counsel, making a remand for appointment of counsel at this stage unnecessary. Appellant had the opportunity in his second PCHA petition to raise the issues that he thought entitled him to relief. Neither in that petition nor in this Court has he placed any facts in dispute; instead, his claims are based purely on the
*276
legal premise that past counsel were ineffective. Though he is now represented by counsel, appellant has failed to breathe legal merit or factual content into his claims. Under the circumstances, it would be a futile act and a waste of judicial resources and time to remand for appointment of yet another counsel.
Cf. Commonwealth v. Minnick,
Our distinguished President Judge is of the view that we must remand for appointment of counsel because we cannot know that no issues remain in the record until we are assured that counsel at the hearing level has reviewеd the entire record. We cannot accept this view because it assumes too little about prior counsel’s representation, and expects too much of counsel that would be appointed.
It assumes that appellant’s prior counsel, as well as counsel on this appeal, have not reviewed the record diligently and presented to the courts all arguments of colorable merit that are there. Such an assumption is in direct conflict with the rule that counsel is presumed to be effective.
Commonwealth v. McNeil,
It is also questionable whether a remand for appointment of counsel at this juncture would reаlly provide the kind of assurance the President Judge expects. Surely our experience as an appellate tribunal teaches us that the fact that PCHA counsel has been appointed at the hearing court level provides very little assurance that no issues remain in the record. Even a long succession of attorneys having worked on a case does not necessarily preclude the next attorney from discovering “issues” that have not been explored before. Our concern should be not to see that every conceivable issue has been raised under the customary ineffectiveness of counsel rubric; rather, we should be satisfied once we can conclude that prior counsel effectively and competently stewarded his client’s case. As our colleague Judge Richard B. Wickersham said in dissent in
Commonwealth v. Bey,
In our search for perfect justice, we have been too willing to leave criminal judgments open to repeated collateral attacks, and for too long have ignored the principle that criminal litigation, like any other litigation, must some day come to an end.
See Commonwealth v. Slavik,
Another relevant rule limiting the availability of relief under the Act is that a person is entitled to only one PCHA petition. 19 P.S. § 1180-5(b).
See also Commonwealth v. Sisak,
*279
The principle of judgment finality is stultified and defeated if every prisoner thinks that bald allegations of counsel’s ineffectiveness will automatically open a sentence to repeated collateral attacks under the PCHA. It is high time we stated that not every allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel is of constitutional dimension, or constitutive of the type of truly extraordinary circumstances that justify relitigation of final judgments of sentence.
See Strickland v. Washington,
In the present case, appellant took advantage of Post Conviction Hearing Act procedures in December of 1974, when he filed his first petition for post-conviction relief and pursued his claims in an unsuccessful appeal to this Court. Not until September of 1981, seven years after he was
*280
sentenced, did appellant file his second PCHA petition attacking the criminal informations preferring charges against him, and the proceeding at which sentence was passed. A lapse of time in filing a PCHA petition is a factor in assessing its merit.
Commonwealth v. Courts,
This case is like
Commonwealth v. Lowenberg,
Prisoners who are in fact guilty of the crimes of which they stand convicted must learn to accept the consequences of their guilt; we should not encourage them to relentlessly scour the prison law library in search of new rules and holdings with which to bombard the courts.
We would affirm the order of the PCHA court denying relief.
Notes
. I am unable to tell exactly what Judge CIRILLO’s holding is. If indeed he holds that appellant has waived the issues raised in his PCHA petition and on appeal, there is of course no need for him to address, as he does, the merits of appellant’s allocution claim. Perhaps Judge CIRILLO wishes to find waiver but realizes that the cases cited by Judge POPOVICH do not permit him to.
. Appellant was represented by the Dauphin County Public Defender’s Office from the guilty plea stage to the first appeal to Superior Court. Present (private) counsel is unassociated with prior counsel and can properly raise the effectiveness issue now.
See Commonwealth v. Dancer,
. Although the appellant did not question the competency of his appellate and first PCHA counsel, we will not fault him for doing so and find waiver since the second PCHA petition was filed
pro se. Commonwealth v. Minnick,
Nonetheless, as discussed previously in this Opinion in Support of Reversal, the nature of the claims raised, as far as this writer is concerned, gives this Court the opportunity to treat them without the need for a remand.
. In
Commonwealth v. Pettus,
“The propеr recourse regarding the Court's failure to afford appellant the right to allocute on his own behalf is to vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.”
Commonwealth v. Curry,
. By inference, the Opinion in Support of Affirmance is requiring proof by a claimant as to how he has been prejudiced by the lack of an opportunity to speak on his own behalf to the person cloaked with the authority to decide the juridical fate of his liberty.
The logic for such a requirement is ill-advised since the effort it takes for a jurist to ask the accused if he has anything to say prior to issuing sentence is minimal when contrasted to the liberty interest being decided.
Moreover, as correctly noted by the Opinion in Support of Affirmance, the PCHA only requires that a person allege facts which, if established, would entitle him to relief. Given the status assigned one’s right to allocution, as evidenced by not only our high Court but those of our sister states (e.g., Vermont and Rhode Island), I find *264 Brown’s denial of such a right perforce sufficient to entitle him to relief since the record is supportive of the allegation.
. Act of Januаry 25, 1966, P.L. 1580, §§ 1-14, 19 P.S. §§ 1180-1 to 1180-14 (Supp.1965-1981), repealed by Act of April 28, 1978, P.L. 202, No. 53, § 2, effective June 27, 1980, as amended by Act of June 26, 1980, P.L. 265, No. 77, § 2, which delayed repeal until June 27, 1981, as further amended by Act of June 26, 1981, P.L. 123, No. 41, § 1, which delayed repeal until June 26, 1982, replaced by 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9541-9551. Subsequent citations to the PCHA will be to the version at Title 19 of Purdon's Statutes, in force during the prior proceedings in this case.
. Such a holding would not depart in the final analysis from the conventional wisdom that "Ineffective assistance of counsel is an extraordinary circumstance that justifies the failure to raise an issue.”
See Commonwealth v. Smallwood,
. There are admittedly conflicting lines of authority on the allocution issue, and the Judges for reversal differ with us on which line should be followed. From a practical standpoint, however, we submit that it would be pointless in the extreme to vacate appellant’s sentence so that the sentencing court could have the benefit of appellant’s as-yet undisclosed allocution. We also submit that as a practical matter it is far more reasonable to follow those cases which require a petitioner to state to the PCHA and appellate courts what he would have said at sentencing. Ordinarily, a petitioner has had a considerable amount of time to think between sentencing and appeal. If even after that time he still cannot formulate for the reviewing court what of significance he wished to say at sentencing, it will undoubtedly be a futile, uneconomical, and wasteful judicial exercise, as well as a hollow gesture of relief for the appellant, to remand for resentencing so that he may address the sentencing court. This Court should not so exalt *275 the abstract right to allocution that we lose sight of its procedural purpose in the criminal justice system — that is, to permit a realistic opportunity for the defendant to attempt personally to influence the deliberations of the sentencing judge. As important as the right to allocution is, it is not absolute, and may be waived or abandoned not only at the time of sentencing, but also thereafter if the defendant demonstrates that he really had nothing to say anyway. Appellant has now had ten years to think since he was sentenced. If there is still a serious question whether he actually had anything to say at sentencing, we are certainly not asking too much by demanding that he tell us what it was.
