On December 23,1963, plaintiff Richardson entered a plea of guilty to a District Attorney’s information that charged him with larceny in a store. He also waived grand jury indictment. He was then represented by counsel. He was sentenced to 5 years in the Correctional Institution.
Richardson now brings this post conviction proceeding claiming that he failed to appeal the judgment because of ignorance of his right to appeal and to have court appointed counsel to represent him on appeal. The trial court in the instant proceeding sustained a demurrer to the complaint. Plaintiff appeals. The claim is without merit.
The only question that this court could have considered on an appeal from the original judgment was whether the punishment was cruel and unusual or not proportioned to the offense. ORS 138.050.
State v. Gidley,
1962,
Plaintiff’s appointed counsel wisely chose not to bring so useless an appeal.
Douglas v. California,
1963,
Richardson also claims that prior to the time he entered the plea of guilty that he had made a confession to the police. He alleges that at the time of the confession he did not have the advice of counsel nor was he advised of his right to counsel. He now claims that he would not have plead guilty if he had then known that the confession might have been inadmissible because of our later decision in
State v. Neely,
1965,
The instant case has none of the essential ingredients of the
Claudy
case. There is was charged that a defendant, without counsel, had given a coerced confession and had plead guilty because of duress and ignorance. Here defendant plead guilty with counsel. Whether or not defendant knew the confession was admissible was irrelevant because the plea of guilty with the advice of counsel was a judicial admission of all the material allegations of the indictment in a most indisputable form.
Barnett v. Gladden,
1964,
*379 The complaint does not allege any violation of dne process nor any other infirmity in the proceedings which would justify further consideration.
Judgment affirmed.
