LYNDALE “WIMPY” WALKER v. STATE OF ARKANSAS
5626
Supreme Court of Arkansas
Opinion delivered October 18, 1971
471 S.W. 2d 536
Ray Thornton, Attorney General; John D. Bridgforth, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
JOHN A. FOGLEMAN, Justice. Appellant Walker was convicted of burglary and grand larceny in a jury trial on September 9, 1970. He was then represented by employed counsel of his own choice. On November 6, 1970, Walker filed his handwritten petition for postconviction relief under Criminal Procedure Rule No. 1. The circuit judge denied this petition on the same date, without any evidentiary hearing, and filed detailed written findings of fact and conclusions of law. We find the requisite record support for the court‘s ruling as to four of the five grounds alleged by appellant. As to the remaining ground, we find that appellant should be granted an evidentiary hearing because of lack of support in the record for the findings by the trial judge.
Appellant‘s contention that a confession was illegally obtained from him by means of threats was an issue which was resolved against him during his trial, after a full hearing by the circuit judge in the absence of the jury. The judge‘s findings made then were sufficiently supported by evidence. Appellant asserted nothing in his petition on this ground that was not asserted during his trial.
Another ground was that evidence seized through an illegal search was admitted. There was evidence showing that the seizure was made after appellant‘s wife invited the officers into the house where she and appellant lived, and the search was conducted with her permission. This evidence was not denied, even though both appellant and his wife testified in the case. Such a search was not constitutionally unreasonable. Asher v. City of Little Rock, 248 Ark. 96, 449 S.W. 2d 933. It was probably for this reason that no objection was made to the introduction of this evidence. Furthermore, appellant testified in his own defense that he had possession of the seized articles by virtue of his purchase of them from one Jimmy Stinnett. Appellant is in no position to raise this question now.
Appellant‘s contention that excessive bail was demanded of him is little more than his bare conclusional statement. Standing alone, it is hardly a sufficient allegation to support a collateral attack on his sentence. A hearing on this point would not be justified.
The following findings by the circuit court relating to appellant‘s contention that he was not afforded a speedy trial and that the jury was handpicked clearly justify denial of a hearing on those points:
The prisoner next seeks relief on a right to a speedy and public trial and that the jury was handpicked by the prosecuting attorney. The record reflects that there were present twenty-nine prospective jurors at the time the jury panel was sworn and having been called one at a time in numerical order, the record reflects that twelve jurors were selected. The State exercised one peremptory challenge and the defendant none. The prisoner cannot now complain of a jury for which he did not exercise any of his eight peremptory challenges.
This prisoner was committed to the State Hospital immediately after being incarcerated, and upon the first setting of such case for trial the defendant had escaped from the jail and was later tried as early as the Court calendar would permit, and the defendant physically present.
The fifth point raised by appellant is rather vaguely stated in appellant‘s handwritten petition.1 He alleges that he had been threatened with a long term in prison,
On the same day that the jury returned the verdict of guilty as aforesaid, the prisoner in the presence of his attorney waived the time for being sentenced and requested the Court to sentence him at this time. Upon the Court sentencing the prisoner, the prisoner and his attorney plea-bargained with the prosecuting attorney and worked out pleas of guilty on some seven or eight other cases, heretofore enumerated, for which he entered pleas of guilty, and that such sentences ran concurrently with the sentence aforesaid, excepting one sentence of five years which ran consecutively, making a total sentence of fifteen years.
A motion for relief under
Petitioner‘s allegations on this fifth ground, although ineptly stated, can only be construed to constitute a prayer for relief from the sentence imposed because of insanity at the time of the trial and sentencing. Apparently, he is also asserting that his lack of mental
Long before the adoption of
The judgment on the petition is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
BYRD, J., dissents.
When we remember that the record shows that immediately after this man‘s arrest, he was sent to the State Hospital for a mental examination and returned for trial, we know from prior experience and the requirements of our laws that if the State Hospital had found other than that petitioner was without psychosis, the record would have shown such proceedings. Thus it appears to me that we are overtechnically overworking society by requiring it to hold a post conviction hearing to make a finding of fact that is evident from the beginning.
For this reason I respectfully dissent.
