296 N.E.2d 574 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1973
On May 15, 1969, the defendant was indicted on five counts of pocket picking. On April 22, 1971, he entered pleas of guilty to counts one and two; the remaining three counts were nolled, and subsequently, he was sentenced to the Ohio Penitentiary on both counts, the sentences to run concurrently. Eight months later the defendant was granted leave to appeal, and he assigns two prejudicial errors by the trial court.
The appellant contends that the acceptance by the trial *122
court of a guilty plea in this case was unconstitutional because the record does not affirmatively show that the court had complied with "the mandatory guidelines as set forth by this court before the acceptance of a guilty plea;" State v.Griffey (1972),
The transcript of proceedings discloses that the defendant appellant was indicted by the Grand Jury of Cuyahoga County charging him with five counts of pocket picking in violation of Section
Under the test set forth by the Supreme Court in State v.Piacella (1971),
In other words, Griffey did not hold that the record must contain detailed waivers of all constitutional rights forfeited by a plea of guilty, much less was it intended to make the fifteen point guideline mandatory in all guilty pleas. Nor didGriffey imply that a plea accepted in only partial compliance with the guidelines is inherently involuntary and unintelligent.1 Our experience is that the more constricted the inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the guilty plea, the greater the likelihood that the plea will be found constitutionally infirm upon review. It was our purpose inGriffey to minimize that risk by suggesting a battery of relevant questions by which the court may explore to the fullest practical extent the defendant's understanding *124 of his rights in the criminal process, his willingness to plead guilty, and his awareness of the consequences.
The appellant, after entering his guilty plea, moved the court to give credit in his sentence for the time spent in jail prior to imposition of sentence. This motion was overruled on the grounds that the court was not empowered under statutory law to give credit for "dead time." The defendant contends that the overruling of his motion by the trial court was error. He further charges that a defendant in a criminal case who serves time in jail prior to a verdict or plea of guilty is entitled to credit upon his ultimate sentence for that period of time spent in jail, and a denial of a request for credit results in the deprivation of his constitutional rights of due process of law and equal protection of the laws, and that such denial subjects him to multiple punishment for the same offense. We find this assignment of error without merit.
In passing on this assignment we must consider several recent court decisions and a newly enacted amendment to the Revised Code. First, in Workman v. Cardwell (N. D. Ohio 1972),
The second federal decision, however, does command greater import. In White v. Gilligan (S. D. Ohio, 1972),
Within a few weeks after the announcement of Gilligan, the General Assembly passed an amendment to R. C.
The question remains whether a sentencing court may exercise powers heretofore withheld by the legislature6 for ordering adjustments to indeterminate sentences. We conclude that it cannot. The Gilligan opinion, which was directed against the executive branch of the state government under whose jurisdiction prisoners come after sentencing, in no way intimated that a court has authority to order credits and limitations to sentences. Moreover, R. C.
Judgment affirmed.
MANOS, C. J., and SILBERT, J., concur.
"The adult parole authority upon proper certification by the trial judge of time served, in the journal entry of sentence and upon recommendation of the trial judge may reduce the minimum sentence of a prisoner by the number of days the prisoner was confined at the county jail or workhouse or confined at a state facility for a pre-sentence examination as provided in section
This statute has since been amended. See note 5 infra.