Ray Green pled guilty to charges of arson and secreting property to defraud another. The trial court denied Green’s motion, filed after sentencing, to withdraw his plea. Green appealed, contending that it was error for the trial court to refuse to set aside his guilty plea because it was not entered voluntarily and because no factual basis for the plea was established on the record. The Court of Appeals affirmed,
Green v. State,
1. Where voluntariness of a guilty plea is challenged, there must be
a record of the guilty plea hearing adequate for the reviewing court to determine whether (1) the defendant has freely and voluntarily entered the plea with (2) an understanding of the nature of the charges against him and (3) an understanding of the consequences of his plea.
Goodman v. Davis,
2. Green also contends that his plea should have been set aside because no factual basis for the plea was established on the record, as required by Uniform Superior Court Rule (USCR) 33.9. We recently considered USCR 33.9 and held (1) that the rule is mandatory as opposed to permissive, (2) that the purpose of the rule is to insure that the conduct to which an individual admits actually constitutes the crime to which the individual pleads guilty, and (3) that this purpose may be achieved through a determination by the trial court that a factual basis exists, but that the record of the plea hearing must reveal the factual basis relied on so that a reviewing court may determine whether an abuse of discretion occurred.
State v. Evans,
In this case, the Court of Appeals found that a sufficient factual basis for the plea was established because
[a] valid and probing plea petition was filed by Green prior to the plea hearing, and the hearing itself confirmed that Green was well aware of the evidence against him when he entered the plea. Indeed, the court confirmed that Green understood that an Alford plea was only appropriate when the evidence indicates guilt, and the court initially accepted his plea on that basis. Subsequently a trial was held at which Green apparently was called as a State’s witness against a co-defendant. Only then was Green sentenced.
Green,
However, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision based on the transcript of the plea hearing itself. Green was charged with arson in the first degree (OCGA § 16-7-60) and secreting property to defraud *265 another (OCGA § 16-9-53). At the plea hearing, the trial court read from the indictment as follows:
Mr. Green, in Count I you’re charged that on the 22nd day of December, 1991, you did unlawfully and knowingly damage by means of fire or explosives the dwelling house of Ray F. Green located at 1077 Allen Farm Road, Lavonia, Georgia, in which Chrysler First Financial Services Corporation, Atlanta, Georgia, had a mortgage without consent of said mort-gageholder and said dwelling was occupied contrary to the laws of said State, the good order, peace and dignity thereof. In Count II, you’re charged on the same day in Franklin County, you did then and there unlawfully, knowingly and with intent to defraud Farmers Furniture Store, Lavonia, secrete (sic) property, to wit: household furniture and furnishings by concealing said property and stating same was destroyed by fire, contrary to the laws of said State, the good order, peace and dignity thereof. Is that what you wish to enter a plea of guilty to?
Green responded “Yes, it is.” After considering the relevant statutes, see §§ 16-7-60 and 16-9-53, we find that the indictment provided ample information from which the trial court could discern that the facts alleged by the state actually satisfied the elements of the charges to which Green was pleading guilty.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
At the sentencing hearing, held four days after the plea hearing, the prosecutor stated to the trial court that while the plea was initially accepted as an
Alford
plea, “ ‘[t]his is a straight-up plea.
Alford
does not apply in this case and that’s been discussed between the Court and defense counsel and Mr. Green.’”
Green,
