In this direct appeal from the judgment of sentence imposed for murder of the first degree, burglary and conspiracy, appellant contends that his trial counsel was' constitutionally ineffective in seven separate instances. 1 We disagree and affirm the judgment of sentence.
On September 25, 1974, the remains of Martha Metzger, who had been reported missing from her Delaware County home on August 18, 1974, were found in a field behind a farm house in Farnham, New York. The cause of death was determined to be suffocation and strangulation caused by a cloth which had been stuffed into her mouth and secured with adhesive tape. Her body had been bound with rope, wrapped in bed clothes, covered with plastic and buried in a shallow grave.
A month later, appellant and Diane Hamill fled, abandoning the farm house and leaving the children alone in a nearby motel. Appellant was not arrested until July 11, 1975, when he was found in Boise, Idaho. On March 29, 1976, he entered a plea of guilty to a general charge of murder. He also waived trial by jury on the burglary and conspiracy charges and agreed that trial should be consolidated with the degree of guilt hearing to be held before the Honorable Clement J. McGovern. After trial, Judge McGovern found appellant guilty of burglary and conspiracy and fixed the degree of guilt as murder in the first degree. In July, 1976, appellant appeared pro se to present a motion to withdraw his guilty plea to murder and a separate motion for the appointment of new counsel. New counsel was appointed, but the motion to withdraw his plea and post-trial motions were unsuccessful, and sentence was imposed.
The standard for evaluating the effectiveness of counsel is clear: we must determine whether the particular course chosen by counsel had some reasonable basis designed to effectuate his client’s interests.
Commonwealth ex rel. Washington v. Maroney,
The first alleged dereliction of trial counsel is his failure to file a motion to suppress the finding of the body and the items with which the body had been tied and wrapped. The failure to file a suppression motion under some circumstances may be evidence of ineffective assistance of counsel. However, if the grounds underpinning that motion are without merit, counsel will not be deemed ineffective for failing to so move.
Commonwealth v. Ransome,
In the instant case, an application to suppress the evidence found in the yard of the abandoned farm house would have been futile. “The Fourth Amendment,” it has been said, “protects people, not places.”
Katz v. United States,
Appellant’s trial counsel testified at an evidentiary hearing that he had considered a motion to suppress and had rejected it because, in his opinion, appellant had abandoned
It is also significant that the victim’s body was found in a grassy area two hundred feet to the rear of the farm house. In
Hester v. United States,
For these reasons we conclude that a motion to suppress the corpse and the evidence found with it would have been futile, and trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to file or pursue the same.
Appellant next contends that his trial counsel was ineffective because he stipulated to the testimony of several witnesses and for failing to cross-examine others. Appellant has failed completely, however, to show in what manner he would have benefitted by a contrary course of action. Appellant entered a plea of guilty to the murder of his wife.
Trial decisions, including a decision as to whether to cross-examine a witness, are within the exclusive province of counsel.
Commonwealth v. Roundtree,
For the same reason, counsel cannot be held ineffective for entering stipulations concerning the testimony of defense character witnesses in lieu of calling them to the witness stand to testify. Indeed, in the instant case, counsel testified that by stipulating to testimony of appellant’s good character, he was able to eliminate a concern, which had arisen after interviews with the character witnesses, that some witnesses would disclose flaws in appellant’s reputation which were better left undisclosed.
Counsel also cannot be faulted for withdrawing a defense motion for change of venue after appellant had decided not to berried by jury and to enter a plea of guilty to murder. The principal reason for changing venue is to insure trial by an impartial jury.
Commonwealth
v.
Frazier,
The facts of the instant case are vastly different from and are not controlled by the decision in
Commonwealth v. Potts,
Appellant also contends that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate fully whether the medical cause of his wife’s death was suffocation or the blow to the
Appellant’s final contention that counsel was inadequately prepared is frivolous. The record discloses that appellant’s counsel, an- able attorney, interviewed witnesses, spent hours in preparation, monitored the co-defendant’s trial, consulted frequently with appellant and kept him advised so that he could make informed and intelligent decisions.
We conclude, therefore, that appellant failed to prove ineffective representation by his trial counsel. The judgment of sentence is affirmed.
Notes
. When this appeal was initially before a panel of the Superior Court, it was remanded on motion of the appellant to permit an additional averment of ineffective assistance. That averment was made, an evidentiary hearing was held thereon, and the entire appeal has been returned to the panel for decision.
