In Penn v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
Penn being financially unable to employ counsel, the trial court appointed an able and experienced attorney — in fact, an outstanding practitioner — to represent him. That attorney conducted his trial and prosecuted his appeal to this court. The record certainly does not evince any suggestion of ineptitude or lack of zeal in his performance. When the RCr 11.42 motion now before us was filed the trial court again provided counsel for Penn’s assistance, and again he has been ably represented in both the trial court and this court.
The basis for the allegation that Penn was denied the effective assistance of counsel in the earlier proceedings is that the trial attorney did not attack the indictment, the instructions and the ultimate convictions on the ground that the breaking and entering and the attempt to open a safe were parts of one and the same act and could not legally be split into two offenses. This, it is contended, was an oversight of constitutional proportions.
This court meant what it said in Rice v. Davis, Ky.,
The order is affirmed.
