Ivory Davis was convicted in a state court of Illinois of robbery and murder, and was sentenced to prison. His conviction was affirmed by the Illinois Appellate Court
sub nom. People
v.
Day,
Althоugh the petitioner complains about the summary nature of the district judge’s denial of the petition, and asks that we direct the judge to call for and examine the record of the state court proceedings and perhaps even grant an evidentiary hearing, these steps are neither necessary nor proper unless the factual allegations in the petition, if true, would shоw that the petitioner is being held in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States. So the first question we must consider— which may also be the last, depending on how we answer it — is whether the petition alleges such facts.
The petition alleges, first, that the prosecution did not present enough evidence to prove Davis guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes he was charged with. Technically, this allegation is insufficient to raise a constitutional issue. A conviction is not unconstitutional merely because the trier of fact makes a mistake and convicts a person on insufficient evidence; it is unconstitutional only “if it is found that upon the record evidence adduced at the trial no rational trier of fact could have found proof of guilt beyond а reasonable doubt.”
Jackson
v.
Virginia,
Now it might appear that such an allegation could never be rejected by the habeas corpus judge without his examining the trial record to see whether it contained sufficient evidence to persuade a rational trier of fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. But this is not so where, as here, the testimony at the trial is summarized in the state appellate court’s opinion and the petitioner (loes not quarrel with that summary but simply contends that a rational trier of fact could not have inferred from it guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The record relevant to that determination is the rеcord as summarized in the reviewing court’s opinion.
According to that opinion, two young black men held up a grocery store and one of them shot the owner to death; there were eyewitnesses but they were unable to identify Davis and his codefendant Day as the assailants. The two assailants were seen fleeing the store and getting into a car which drove away; again witnesses could not identify the men. However, William Tensley testified for the state that he was the driver of the car. He had dropped off Davis and Day who said they wanted to buy food in the store. He heard shots and then the two came out of the store “walking fast” and got into the back of the car. Tensley saw that Davis had a .32 caliber pistol (the caliber of the bullet that killed the store owner) and that bоth Davis and *1058 Day had money. Tensley heard Day tell Davis, “I sure liked the way you popped that dude. I thought he had me for a minute but you came right up on time.” (The store owner had had a pistol and had gоtten off one shot before he was killed.)
Davis contended at trial, as he does in his petition for habeas corpus, that inconsistencies between Tensley’s testimony and that of other witnesses show that Tensley’s testimony was unreliable. For example, one witness testified that the two assailants ran from the store to the car, whereas Tensley testified that they were merely walking fast, and thе same witness also testified that the car left at a high rate of speed whereas Tensley testified that he drove away at a normal rate of speed. The Illinois Appellate Court dеscribed these and the other inconsistencies noted by Davis as “very trivial,” and we agree they were not so serious that no rational trier of fact could have believed Tensley and concluded that Davis and Day were guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
The petition for habeas corpus also complains that Davis’s Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him was denied by the admission in evidence of Tensley’s statement, which was hearsay, that Day had said that Davis had “popped that dude.” Davis does not question the constitutionality of the exception to the heаrsay rule for co-conspirators’ statements, but he contends that the evidence showing a conspiracy between him and Day was inadequate to lay a proper foundation for applying the exception. • However, Tensley’s (other) testimony identifying Day and Davis as the robbers, together with the evidence of the witnesses who were in the store, was sufficient to show that Day and Davis acted in concert in robbing the store. This was all the foundation that was necessary to make Day’s statement admissible against Davis.
In any event, this court has held that the admission of evidence in viоlation of the hearsay rule is not a per se violation of the Sixth Amendment.
United States v. Cogwell,
The remaining issue we discuss is whether Davis was denied the effective assistance of counsel, in violation of the Sixth Amendment, because he and Day were representеd at their trial by lawyers from the same public defender’s office. “[Ujntil a defendant shows that his counsel actively represented conflicting interests, he has not established the constitutional prеdicate for his claim of ineffective assistance.”
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
The other grounds raised in the petitioner’s pro se appeal brief are not discussed in the brief of his appointed counsel in this court, for the very good reason that they are frivolous. We shall not discuss them either.
AFFIRMED.
