Appellant was convicted of first degree murder in the former Court of General Sessions, New York County, and was sentenced to life imprisonment on February 6, 1952. He was represented by assigned counsel both at trial and at sentencing. He did not appeal from his conviction. In September, 1963, he applied to the Supreme Court, for a writ of error
coram nobis,
seeking to be resentenced
nunc pro tunc
so that he could file a timely notice of appeal from his 1952 conviction. Appellant alleged that within the thirty-day period following his conviction within which a notice of appeal had to be filed under N.Y.Code Crim.Proc. § 521, he had asked a friend to speak to his trial counsel about an appeal, and the lawyer had told his friend that “there was very little chance of success in the matter.” The New York Supreme Court denied appellant’s application on the grounds that a “negative or pessimistic opinion [of trial counsel] cannot be deemed a prevention of the taking of an appeal warranting relief in effect of an extension of time to appeal * * * ” People v. Bjornsen,
Having exhausted his state remedies, appellant sought a writ of habeas corpus from the federal district court, contending that he had been denied his right to appeal in violation of his federal constitutional rights. The District Court denied the application as not presenting a federal claim of substance.
We agree with the District Court. Appellant concedes that he never asked anyone representing the State for advice on his right to appeal or for assignment of counsel on appeal, and never informed any representative of the State of his desire to appeal. The case accordingly differs from United States ex rel. Mitchell v. Follette,
Affirmed.
