This is an appeal, in forma pauperis, from the denial by the District Court for the Southern District of Texas without an evidentiary hearing of appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. Appellant is attacking his separate convictions on two charges of robbery with firearms. In both cases he was found guilty after trials before a jury on pleas of not guilty. He was represented by counsel at the trials. Both convictions were affirmed on appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. See Johnson v. State,
Appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the state court was denied without written order. The sentences in the two cases were set at forty and fifty years respectively, the second sentence to run consecutively to the first. In exchange for a motion to dismiss this appeal, filed by appellant’s appointed counsel but opposed by appellant himself, the trial court resentenced appellant to make the two sentences run concurrently. This court, however, denied the motion to dismiss this appeal.
Since the writ of habeas corpus is only available in situations where discharge from custody will result from the granting of relief, if the second conviction of appellant resulting in the longer sentence is not subject to attack, it would be premature to inquire into the first conviction McNally v. Hill,
No substantial question is presented by appellant’s first allegation. This conviction became final on March 14, 1961. The Supreme Court’s decision in Mapp v. Ohio,
Appellant’s allegation regarding improper cumulation of sentences is without merit. The sentences are now to run concurrently. Additionally, this is a matter of state criminal procedure, and does not involve such a denial of fundamental fairness as to fall within the purview of federal habeas corpus. Wooten v. Bomar,
Finding appellant’s contentions to be utterly without merit, the judgment is affirmed.
