The petitioner Carl DeFlumer, Jr. was indicted in 1947 by the Albany County Grand Jury, charged wih the first-degree murder by hanging of a 7-year-old boy. DeFlumer himself was 15 years of age. Acting with the advice of counsel, DeFlumer entered a plea of guilty to the lesser, noncapital crime of second degree murder. On July 7, 1947 the Albany County Court imposed the minimum sentence of 20 years to life. For 16 years DeFlumer did not contest his conviction of sentence. In 1963, however, he began a series of post-conviction proceedings in state and federal courts, arguing that for several reasons his guilty plea was constitutionally invalid. 1 He now appeals from the district court’s denial, without a hearing, of his petition for federal habeas corpus relief.
Petitioner has wisely shifted emphasis away from the argument on which he placed primary reliance below and in the state courts: that his plea was compelled by the existence of an allegedly involuntary confession. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in McMann v. Richardson,
DeFlumer also attacks his plea on the ground that it represented a decision reached solely between his court-appointed counsel and his parents. It is not clear that DeFlumer’s habeas petition raised this contention below. In any event, the record is totally devoid of any suggestion that his will was overborne, either by counsel or parents, at any stage in the proceedings. The minutes of the state
coram nobis
hearing clearly disclose that DeFlumer’s attorney, a former Children’s Court judge and a prominent and respected leader of the juvenile court reform movement in this state, carefully explained to petitioner and his parents that his recommendation that DeFlumer should plead guilty to a lesser charge than first degree murder, represented a balancing of the relative likelihood of acquittal and conviction for first degree murder, with the mandatory death sentence if convicted. It is entirely comprehensible that this 15 year old defendant should have responded as he did — that he would abide by his parents’ advice. This method of arriving at the final decision to enter a guilty plea under all the circumstances present here, suffers from no constitutional infirmity. Compare, e. g., United States ex rel. Codarre v. Gilligan,
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DeFlumer’s final claim is that his plea was induced by the allegedly unequal treatment afforded defendants in murder cases who were under 16 years of age. At the time of DeFlumer’s plea,
2
persons between 7 and 16 could be held criminally liable only for the few serious acts punishable by death; other offenses were considered noncriminal juvenile delinquency. Former Penal Law § 2186. A consequence of this restricted definition of juvenile criminality was that a defendant under 16 on trial for murder could not be convicted of the lesser offense of manslaughter, although a similar defendant 16 or over could be the “beneficiary” of such a compromise verdict. People v. Murch,
Affirmed.
Notes
. See United States ex rel. DeFlumer v. LaVallee,
. A statutory amendment enacted shortly after DeFlumer’s conviction abolished all criminal liability of persons under 16.
. We thus need not pass on the state’s contention that under McMann v. Richardson, supra, DeFlumer’s voluntary decision to enter a guilty plea forecloses his equal protection claim.
