The relator is serving a sentence imposed upon him as a second offender by the County Court of Queens County on his plea of guilty.
1
The conviction which the Queens County court accepted as making him a second offender was a sentence imposed in 1945 by the court of Richland County, Wisconsin upon charges to which he had there pleaded guilty. His present writ seeks to inquire into the legality of his conviction in Wisconsin. He contends that he was denied his constitutional rights of “due process” when sentenced on his plea of guilty, because the judge did not inform him of his right to counsel and cause a record of such advice to be made upon the minutes of the court or in a transcript of the proceedings, as required by section 357.26(2) of the Wisconsin statutes.
2
Whether his sentence was regular under the Wisconsin statutes does not determine the application of the federal rule of due process. The Fourteenth Amendment does not require that counsel be assigned to the accused in all felony prosecutions,
3
although, if he asks for counsel, the refusal to assign one in a capital case is a denial of due process. Williams v. Kaiser,
Notes
. A prior order denying the relator’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus was reversed by this court in United States ex rel. Turpin v. Snyder, 2 Cir.,
. See State ex rel. Doxtater v. Murphy,
. Betts v. Brady,
