delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Maryland the punishment upon conviction of rape is prescribed by statute. Code, Art. 27, § 461 provides:
“Every person convicted of a crime of rape or as being accessory thereto before the fact shall, at the discretion of the court, suffer death, or be sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for the period of his natural life, or under *229 go a confinement in the penitentiary for not less than eighteen months nor more than twenty-one years; * *
The statute applies to all cases in which a jury trial has been waived and the conviction rendered by the court as the trier of fact. It applies also to cases tried before a jury but there is a proviso which limits the discretion generally vested in the sentencing judge. “The jury which finds any person guilty of rape * * * may add to their verdict the words ‘without capital punishment,’ in which event the sentence of the court shall not exceed twenty years in the penitentiary; and in no such case in which the jury has returned a verdict including the words ‘without capital punishment’ shall the court in imposing sentence, sentence the convicted person to pay the death penalty or to be confined in the penitentiary for more than twenty years.” Code, Art. 27, § 463.
On 29 June 1972 the Supreme Court of the United States decided three cases upon grant of certiorari. In
Furman v. Georgia,
JEROME JOHNSON was charged with rape. His trial was removed from the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County to the Circuit Court for Kent County. On 26 August 1969 he was found guilty by a jury, who did not add the words “without capital punishment.” He was sentenced to life imprisonment. He did not appeal. On 2 February 1972 he collaterally attacked the judgment through post conviction procedures. On 7 June 1972 there was a hearing on his petition and on 23 June relief was denied. Timely application was made for leave to appeal.
One of the allegations of error raised below was “that his sentence was illegal in that he was sentenced to life imprisonment when the maximum amount allowed by statute is twenty (20) years imprisonment when the Death Penalty is not an issue which can be considered by the Jury or the Court.” At the hearing Johnson stated that the issue was predicated upon the Supreme Court finding capital punishment to be unconstitutional “and that unless and until this should occur the question raised *231 is at best premature.” His counsel conceded in a Memorandum in Support of the Petition that “clearly at this writing the law is otherwise.” The hearing judge disposed of the issue by stating that “the sentence to life imprisonment was allowable and legal.” Furman was decided six days after the denial of relief.
Johnson pursues the point in applying for leave to appeal: “that his sentence was illegal because the death penalty, clearly recently held to be ‘cruel and unusual’ by the Supreme Court of the United States, could not have been constitutionally considered by the Jury; thus their Verdict would have to have been ‘without capital punishment’ and this would place a 20 year limit on his sentence * *
As above pointed out the provision of Code, Art. 27, § 461 that a person convicted of a crime of rape or as being an accessory thereto before the fact shall, at the discretion of the court, suffer death, is void as unconstitutional. Therefore, the permissible punishment under that statute on conviction of those crimes is confinement in the penitentiary for life, or for a period of not more than 21 years, at the discretion of the court. We think that Furman has no effect on § 463. It is true that the court could not impose the death penalty whether or not the jury added the words “without capital punishment” to their verdict, but by adding those words the jury limits the maximum punishment which may be imposed to imprisonment for not more than 20 years. This may be explained to the jury. In other words it was the obvious intent of the legislature that by adding the words of limitation to their verdict the jury could preclude the imposition not only of the death penalty but also of life imprisonment. That intent may still be fulfilled. We hold that Code, Art. 27, § 463 is in full force.
It follows that Johnson’s contention is without merit. The life sentence he received stands constitutionally valid in the face of Furman. The jury did not add the limiting words. Had they done so not only capital punishment but a life sentence would have been prohibited. They *232 were content to leave the sentence to the discretion of the court. The sentence it imposed was legal then and is legal now.
Johnson’s other reasons why the order of the lower court should be reversed afford no basis to grant his application.
The judge below found that Johnson’s trial counsel was not incompetent “in his failure to ask for a voir dire question specifically on racial prejudice when he was requested to do so” by Johnson. Johnson admitted he did not request his lawyer to propound such a question. It was stipulated that the trial court told the jurors that the victim was white and the defendant was black and then asked the jury “whether they harbored any racial or other prejudice which would prevent them from rendering a fair and impartial verdict based upon the evidence.” It was shown that the jury included “four regular black jurors and one alternate black juror.” The hearing judge found no error nor do we.
The question as to the voluntariness of a confession was waived under post conviction procedures. It could have been presented on direct appeal. Johnson did not meet his burden of proving the existence of special circumstances to excuse the failure to make such allegation nor to rebut the presumption that he intelligently and knowingly failed to make it. Code, Art. 27, § 645A (c) ; Maryland Rule BK48. Code, Art. 27, § 645A (d) is not here applicable. In any event the judge below found that the confession was constitutionally obtained; it was voluntarily given after Johnson had been informed of his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
Johnson asserts that “his trial counsel and the State illegally combined to suppress evidence which could have tended to prove his innocence by keeping from the jury the fact that he had syphilis at the time the alleged rape occurred and that the victim never contracted it, thus
*233
also tending to prove that there was no penetration, a fact never proved by the State at the original trial.” Of course, as to the evidence of penetration, the sufficiency of the evidence is not a ground for post conviction relief.
Anglin v. Director,
The allegation that trial counsel was incompetent because he failed to make Johnson adequately aware of his right to appeal and to have a review of sentence was not pressed at the hearing. Ip any event, it appears that the trial court “following sentencing advised the Defendant in open court of his right to appeal and of his right to review of sentence. This was done at the request of defense counsel. * * * In addition, just a day or two after sentencing the defense counsel wrote [Johnson] a letter advising him of his right to appeal and that he must do so within thirty days of sentencing.” Shortly thereafter Johnson wrote his counsel expressing concern as to whether, he had been sentenced to “natural life” or just “lifehe made no mention of a desire to appeal. Johnson offered no testimony at the hearing tending to show that he was not informed of his right to appeal or of his right to review of sentence. The hearing court found that Johnson “was effectively and timely advised of his right to appeal and of his right to have a review of sentence.” There was evidence sufficient to support this finding. The contention, which, if meritorious, would at best entitle Johnson to no more than a belated appeal and a *235 belated review of sentence, fails because its basis is factually incorrect.
Application denied.
Notes
- Certiorari was also granted in a fourth case,
Aikens v. California,
but the writ was dismissed after the California Supreme Court,
. Mr. Justice Douglas, Mr. Justice Brennan, Mr. Justice Stewart, Mr. Justice White and Mr. Justice Marshall.
. The Chief Justice, Mr. Justice Blackmun, Mr. Justice Powell, and Mr. Justice Renquist.
. Only Justices Brennan and Marshall believed the death penalty was unconstitutional per se. Mr.'Justice Douglas did not reach the point, determining that the capital punishment statutes, being discriminatory in application, were not compatible with equal protection implicit in the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. The basis of the rationale of the opinions of Justices Stewart and White was the infrequency and manner of the imposition of the death penalty. “Thus capital punishment in its present form was rendered ‘cruel and unusual’ by the operation of what was intended to be, at the time of its introduction, an ameliorative feature of the criminal justice system” — the discretion to impose a lessor sentence. 11 Cr. L. 4107.
