SHERWOOD GOOCH v. RAY HOBBS, DIRECTOR, ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION
No. CV-12-690
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
February 20, 2014
2014 Ark. 73
HONORABLE JODI RAINES DENNIS, JUDGE
APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. CV-2012-221-5]. AFFIRMED.
PAUL E. DANIELSON, Associate Justice
Aрpellant Sherwood Gooch, an inmate incarcerated in the Arkansas Department of Correction under a sentence of life imprisonment without parole, appeals from the circuit court‘s order dismissing his petition for writ of habeas corpus directed to appellee Ray Hobbs, Director of the Arkansas Department of Correction. His sole point on appeal is that the cirсuit court erred in dismissing his petition without holding a hearing. We affirm the circuit court‘s order.
On April 25, 2012, Gooch filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus. In it, Gooch alleged four bases for issuance of thе writ: (1) that he was not sentenced according to statute; (2) that the sentencing court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction; (3) that the sentencing court illegally sentenced him to capital-felony murder when he had been charged with murder in the first degree; and (4) that his constitutional rights were violated when he was sentenced for a crime with which he had not been charged. Relevant to the instant appeal,
Gooch asserted that his judgment and his commitment orders inaccurately stated that he had pleaded guilty to and been sentenced for capital-felony murder, “an offense with which he was never charged.” He сontended that
Hobbs opposed Gooch‘s petition and asserted that Gooch had been properly charged with the “highest homicide offense available” in 1975, which was murder in the first degree, a capital felony. Hobbs contended that, at that time, the sentence authorized for the type of first-degree murder alleged was either death or life imprisonment without parole, as it was a capital-felony offense. More specifically, Hobbs asserted,
The circuit court dismissed Gooch‘s petition by its order filed July 16, 2012. In the order, the circuit court ruled, in pertinent part, that Gooch‘s penitentiary commitment order “specifically reads that the petitioner entered a plea of guilty to capital felony murder for two (2) charges. The resulting sentence was within the range of punishment as established by the law at the time he committed the offenses.” The ordеr further denied Gooch‘s request for a hearing, finding that “[w]hile the petition may have stated one cognizable ground for habeas relief, petitioner failed to state probable cause for issuance of the writ.” It is from this order that Gooch now appeals.
For his sole point on appeal, Gooch argues that the circuit court erred in dismissing his habeas petition. He claims, as he did below, that murder in the first dеgree, a capital felony, the offense with which he was charged, and capital-felony murder, the offense for which he was sentenced, are separate offenses with each having a separate penalty. He contends that because his sentencing orders reflect that he was sentenced in accord with the offense of capital-felony murder, an offense with which he had never bеen charged, his commitment was invalid on its face, and the circuit court erred in dismissing his petition. Hobbs counters that Gooch was sentenced correctly and in accord with the sentencing statutes
A writ of habeas corpus is proper when a judgment of conviction is invalid on its face or when a circuit court lacks jurisdiction over the cause. See Noble v. Norris, 368 Ark. 69, 243 S.W.3d 260 (2006). Unless a petitioner can show that the trial court lacked jurisdiction or that the commitment was invalid on its face, there is no basis for a finding that a writ of habeas corpus should issue. See id. The petitioner must plead either the facial invalidity or the lack of jurisdiction and make a “showing, by affidavit or other evidence, [of] probable cause to believe” that he or she is illegally detained.
A review of the record in the instant case reveals that the informations filed against Gooch provide that he was charged with three counts of “MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE, A CAPITAL FELONY (41-2205),” as he did unlawfully “and feloniously, murder [the victims] during the perpetration of a robbery.”2 The judgment then recited:
[A]fter both the State of Arkansas and the defеndant had waived the Jury and the State of Arkansas had waived the death penalty, and by leave of the Court the defendant does enter a plea of guilty to the charge of Capital Felony Murder. The Court, in thе presence of defendant and his Counsel, after advising the defendant of his right to a Jury trial, the elements of the crime for which he was charged, and after explaining the effect of the plea of guilty to the defendant, and the defendant admitting to the Court his participation in the crime as charged, the Court accepts the said plea of guilty, and fixes his punishment at Life Without Parole [with credit for time spent in the сounty jail].
Likewise, the penitentiary-commitment orders reflected the trial court‘s acceptance of Gooch‘s “said plea of guilty to the crime of Capital Felony Murder and fixed the defendant‘s punishment at life without parole.”
We must turn then to the statutory provisions in effect at the time of Gooch‘s offense, which occurred on October 20, 1975. Gooch was charged with first-degree murder pursuant to
All murder whiсh shall be perpetrated by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate, malicious and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration of or in the attempt to perpetrate, arson, rape, robbery, burglary or larceny, shall be deemed murder in the first degree.
In 1973, the General Assembly enacted Act 438, which reclassified felonies for the purpose of sentence and further set forth the punishment for eаch category of felony. See Act
In the instant case, the informations averred that Gooch had committed murder during the course of a robbery, and he was charged with murder in the first degree, a capital felony. In other words, of the two classes of first-degree murder in section 41-2205, Gooch was chаrged with the class of felony murder. See, e.g., Murray, supra. Following the passage of Act 483, felony murder was an offense classified as a capital felony.3 See
Affirmed.
Stuart Vess, for appellant.
Dustin McDaniel, Att‘y Gen., by: Kent G. Holt, Ass‘t Att‘y Gen., for appellee.
