365 F. Supp. 1374 | E.D. Va. | 1973
MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff brings this action to effectively forestall the threatened revocation of his driver’s license on the basis of a traffic record which includes one traffic conviction which plaintiff claims to be constitutionally infirm, due to the fact that he was not afforded the assistance of counsel with respect thereto. Cf. Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U.S. 25, 92 S.Ct. 2006, 32 L.Ed.2d 530 (1972).
Basically, the facts are the following. On October 3, 1969, plaintiff was convicted of the offense of driving on a revoked driver’s license in the County Court for the County of Rockingham. Plaintiff alleges that he was not represented by counsel in that action and claims not to have waived his right to counsel.
Plaintiff seeks an order from this Court directing the defendant to disavow his previous certification of plaintiff’s driving record and to revise that record by deleting the traffic conviction in question.
The recent decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Marston v. Oliver, 485 F.2d 705 (1973) makes clear that plaintiff’s claim must fail. The Court in Marston clearly held that Argersinger should not be applied retroactively solely to preclude the imposition of civil disabilities as a collateral consequence of a misdemeanor conviction wherein the accused’s right to counsel was not observed.
Finally, the requirement that a threat of future imprisonment be shown, in order to establish a case for the retroactive application of Argersinger, is not met by the fact that plaintiff may be imprisoned at some future date for driving without a license, assuming the revocation of his driver’s license in the state proceedings presently under way. This vague possibility is simply too remote to provide the necessary ingredient called for in Marston. Cf. Fer
As plaintiff has alleged nothing in this case suggesting a direct possibility of future imprisonment resulting from his alleged invalid conviction, which possibility could be averted by a decision favorable to him in this action, defendant’s motion to dismiss will be granted and judgment will be entered for the defendant.
An appropriate order shall issue.
. It is to be noted that under the decision in Argersinger v. Hamlin, supra, not all accused misdemeanants have a constitutional-right to counsel. However, due to the ultimate disposition of this ease, the Court does not find it necessary to reach the question of whether this plaintiff had a right to counsel with respect to the traffic conviction complained of.
. Of particular significance is the fact that the decision in Marston, supra, also involved a Virginia resident and was reached in the context of the very statute under which plaintiff here is threatened with the loss of his driving privileges.
. Although it is not necessary to the decision in this case, the Court would note that its understanding of the Marston holding is that Argersinger would apply prospectively as grounds for collaterally attacking a misdemeanor conviction where future imprisonment is not threatened but civil disabilities resulting from that conviction are still a possibility. Accordingly, assuming Argersinger would be applicable in the first instance and assuming the petitioner in Marston and the plaintiff in this case had been convicted subsequent to the Argersinger decision, they would not be precluded from relief for the reasons stated in Marston.
. These are the very facts on which Marston was decided.