In October of 1960 the appellant, David Higbee, pleaded guilty to an indictment in the Hopkins Circuit Court charging him with incest and was sentenced to 21 years in prison. KRS 436.060. He was committed to the penitentiary at Eddyville and in May of 1962 filed in the Lyon Circuit Court a petition for habeas corpus based on sworn allegations to the following effect:
(1) On the date of the trial in circuit court "counsel for the defense spent approximately three to five minutes with defendant prior to his assignment and therefore your petitioner did not and could not have a reasonable length of time to make, prepare and present an adequate defense * * * all of which denied to your peti *306 tioner effective ‘assistance of counsel for liis defense,’ ” etc.
(2) After “the approximate three to five ■minute conference with said court appointed counsel who dominatedly insisted on entering a ‘plea of guilty,’ and further your ■petitioner being overwhelmed by both court .and aforesaid counsel also being deceived ,by an oral statement from the Hopkins ■County Sheriff to your petitioner’s wife in ■words to the effect that if Dave (meaning •me — the petitioner) will plead guilty, he won’t get over two to five years, and therefore your petitioner being deceived and under duress and coercion made the plea to .the court but not of his own free will.”
(3) The prosecuting witnesses, Betty L. Higbee and Rowena Higbee, had demanded withdrawal of the incest charge in October of 1960.
The Lyon Circuit Court sustained the Commonwealth’s motion to dismiss the petition for habeas corpus on the ground it did not state facts upon which relief could be granted. Higbee then appealed to this court in forma pauperis. Our decision affirming the dismissal was expressed as follows in a memorandum opinion written by Judge Moremen:
“(1) The broad allegation contained under this item is not sufficient to cause the writ to issue. Three to five minutes of time on the day of the trial may have been sufficient if defendant intended to plead guilty. Etherton v. Jones, Warden, Ky.,
“(2) Item two is subject to the same •criticism because it is merely alleged that .counsel ‘dominatedly insisted on entering a ■plea of guilty’ and petitioner was overwhelmed by the court and counsel. The allegation is entirely too general to be the "basis for the issuance of the writ. The .allegation that reliance was had upon the •statement made by the sheriff to his wife • indicates that he was willing to plead guilty in order to receive a short sentence. The -sheriff has no right or authority to bind the court or the Commonwealth’s attorney or the jury with such a promise.
“(3) The alleged crime was committed against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the right of prosecution was not a personal one vested in the two complaining witnesses. As was pointed out in Roberson’s New Kentucky Criminal Law and Procedure, 3d Edition, page 7, wrongs are either public or private ‘and in case of a crime, when the state’s right and duty to punish has accrued, the person particularly injured has no control over the criminal proceedings and he can make no settlement with the wrongdoer that can take away the right of the state to punish it. Thus a woman who has been ravished can not condone the crime by excusing or forgiving her ravisher.’
“We find nothing in the foregoing allegations, even if true, which would have rendered the judgment void. At most, it would have been merely erroneous and such a judgment may not be reached by a writ of habeas corpus. See Owen v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
The Supreme Court of the United States has sustained Higbee’s petition for a writ of certiorari and remanded the case to this court “for further consideration in light of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ex rel. Herman v. Claudy,
The opinion in Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ex rel. Herman v. Claudy states categorically that if Claudy should prove the allegations of his petition he would be entitled to relief. Claudy’s allegations, however, were very different from Hig-bee’s, and we must confess that the rather oblique mandate of the Supreme Court in this case leaves us in the dark as to whether, if Higbee’s factual allegations (distinguished from the legal conclusions con- *307 taiiied- in' his petition) prove true, his conviction was void. In the fashion of a shell game, having guessed once we are simply told to guess again.
This much now seems certain, that Higbee’s petition for habeas corpus said enough to entitle him to a hearing. Cf. Rice v. Davis, Ky.,
Since the inception of this proceeding a new post-conviction review procedure has been established in the form of RCr 11.42, which provides for a direct attack upon any conviction that would otherwise be subject to collateral attack.
1
An RCr 11.42 motion is a resumption or continuation of the criminal proceeding, in which the movant is entitled to appointed counsel upon a showing that he is financially unable to employ one. As the motion is in the same court wherein the conviction was had the records are available. A habe-as corpus action, on the other hand, is essentially civil in nature. Crady v. Cranfill, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The statement in Tipton and Sprinkle v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
. See Ayers v. Davis, Ky.,
