On October 12, 1966, the defendant pleaded guilty to the charge of assault with intent to rob being armed. MCLA § 750.89 (Stat Ann 1962 Rev § 28.284). The plea was accepted by Detroit Recorder’s Court, Judge Vincent J. Brennan, and on the same day defendant was sentenced to *652 serve from 7-1/2 to 15 years. Defendant’s application for delayed appeal has been granted.
The first issue raised by defendant is whether in accepting the guilty plea the trial judge complied with GCR 1963, § 785.3(2). The only possible deviation from the above rule was that the trial judge permitted the police to recite the facts concerning the commission of the crime. The rule requires only a reasonable ascertainment of the truth of the plea.
People
v.
Bartlett
(1969),
Defendant’s motion for a new trial and withdrawal of his guilty plea was denied by the trial court without holding an evidentiary hearing on the voluntariness of the plea. Defendant does not contest that the withdrawal of a plea of guilty after sentence rests in the sound discretion of the court. See
People
v.
Wolschon
(1966),
Defendant supports his allegations of involuntariness in the following paragraph of his affidavit:
“That I was misled by my attorney and the sergeant in charge of this case to enter the plea of guilty, and such plea was not understanding^ made, but was made with undue influence, compulsion and *653 in understanding that leniency in sentence would follow”.
These allegations constitute the barest of legal conclusions. Defendant specifies no conduct on the part of his attorney or the “sergeant” which might have “misled” him into his plea. Neither does he specify the source of his “understanding that leniency in sentence would follow”. These general complaints add nothing to defendant’s clearly expressed feeling that he should he relieved of a sentence which may have surprised him. As in People v. Kinsman, supra, “defendant does not protest his innocence, hut, in effect, only that his sentence is too harsh”, (p 243.) There is nothing in these allegations which would justify an evidentiary hearing.
Affirmed.
