STATE of Florida, Petitioner,
v.
Madison Lee REYNOLDS, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*599 Earl Faircloth, Atty. Gen., and James Robert Yon, Asst. Atty. Gen., for petitioner.
Robert E. Jagger, Public Defender, and Edwin I. Ford, Asst. Public Defender, for respondent.
ADKINS, Justice.
By petition for certiorari, we are requested to review a decision of the District Court of Appeal, Second District (
The respondent while incarcerated in Texas filed a petition seeking post-conviction relief in the Florida court. The District Court held that respondent was "in custody" within the meaning of Rule 1.850, Cr.P.R., 33 F.S.A., relating to post-conviction remedies. This decision is in conflict with the decisions of the First District in Holstein v. State,
*600 In Lawson v. State, Fla.,
This does not necessarily mean that each prisoner filing such a petition or motion must be brought before the Florida court. If the motion is defective in form or substance and insufficient to state a prima facie case entitling the prisoner to relief, the Court may make a summary disposition. If the motion appears to be sufficient, but the files and records in the case conclusively refute the allegations or otherwise conclusively preclude relief, summary denial is proper. Lawson v. State, supra; State v. Weeks,
If the motion reflects substance and there is nothing conclusively in the record to the contrary, a hearing should be granted. Even in this instance the presence of the prisoner is not always required. Bryant v. State,
"When there are questions of fact to be decided, it may be the better practice to receive evidentiary statements from a movant either by his being present in the court or by written interrogatories or by deposition taken before a commissioner at the penal institution wherein the movant is incarcerated."
Where evidence is to be heard at the hearing and the petitioner is not represented by counsel, due process requires that petitioner be produced so that he may confront all of the witnesses, interrogate his own witnesses and cross-examine those of the State. Dickens v. State,
The writ of certiorari is discharged.
ERVIN, C.J., DREW and CARLTON, JJ., and HENDRY, District Judge, concur.
