Gibson v. Lainson, 48360
Decision Date | 17 November 1953 |
Docket Number | No. 48360,48360 |
Citation | 60 N.W.2d 797,244 Iowa 1396 |
Parties | GIBSON v. LAINSON, Warden. |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
Roy E. Burns and A. J. Wassom, Osceola, for appellant.
Leo A. Hoegh, Atty. Gen., Raphael R. R. Dvorak, Asst. Atty. Gen., and Robert N. Johnson, County Atty. of Lee County, Fort Madison, for appellee.
Plaintiff was sentenced in 1926 to imprisonment for life upon conviction of the murder of Sheriff Collings of Union County. He appealed and the judgment was affirmed. State v. Gibson, 204 Iowa 1306, 214 N.W. 743. The present proceeding is against the warden of the penitentiary where he has since been confined. The trial court denied his petition holding
I. The petition is captioned 'in equity' but of course the proceeding 'does not invoke the court's equitable powers and the appeal is not de novo'. Cummings v. Lainson, 239 Iowa 1193, 1196, 33 N.W.2d 395, 397. See also Adams v. Stewart, 197 Iowa 490, 495, 197 N.W. 464. In this respect the present case differs from habeas corpus cases to determine custody of minor children. See Ellison v. Platts, 226 Iowa 1211, 1215, 286 N.W. 413; Lancey v. Shelley, 232 Iowa 178, 187, 2 N.W.2d 781.
II. The various matters here urged were (with one exception later referred to herein) all disposed of on the criminal appeal. State v. Gibson, supra. They did not involve the question of the court's jurisdiction and if they had merit they at most constituted error, reviewable on appeal.
We said in Reeves v. Lainson, 234 Iowa 1034, 14 N.W.2d 625, where there had been no appeal from the sentence:
Petitioner cites no case that announces a contrary rule. In McCormick v. Hollowell, 215 Iowa 638, 642, 246 N.W. 612, 614, cited by him, there had been no appeal from the conviction. The opinion, after conceding possible reversible error in the criminal trial, says:
We are not impressed by the attempt here to raise a constitutional question by the claim that petitioner did not have a 'fair and impartial trial,' basing the contention upon the assertion that the trial court, over objection, allowed eight jurors to serve who upon voir dire 'expressed fixed opinions as to the guilt (of petitioner) and feelings that would prevent them from rendering a fair and impartial verdict.'
The abstract of record on the appeal actually shows that of the twelve jurors selected only three were even challenged and we find that on their voir dire examination the eligibility of these three was satisfactorily established, judged by any fair and impartial standard. One said: Another designated his 'opinion' as rather an 'impression.' The third, referring to his opinion based 'on what I have read and heard' added:
Nor is the suggestion warranted that there was 'a good defense' known to defense counsel (petitioner's own brother) but not presented to the jury. The petition attempts to support this charge by reargument of the evidence as to the course of the bullet (fired from ambush) that killed the murdered sheriff and by alleged testimony that petitioner 'was one-half mile from the scene of the shooting within ten to twelve seconds after the shot was fired' and that his 'counsel failed to point out and explain to the jury that it would have been humanly impossible for plaintiff (defendant there) to have been in said barn and fired the fatal shot.' There is no merit in the contention.
Petitioner asserts that the record of the proceedings in the criminal case showed a 'conspiracy to deprive (him) of his constitutional right to a fair and impartial trial' and that 'the proceedings were so grossly irregular that the Trial Court lost jurisdiction and the judgment rendered therein was void.'
It would be sufficient here to answer these irresponsible statements by the mere quotation above cited from Reeves v. Lainson. We have taken the trouble nevertheless to examine carefully the abstract of record in the criminal case. We find no basis for them. The arguments to the jury, so far as the abstract shows, were not reported. We have no knowledge as to what was or was not argued to the jury. It is inconceivable, or at least improbable, that defense counsel would fail to make an honest defense of his own brother under the circumstances shown in that record. There is no indication he did so fail.
III. Petitioner's theory seems to be that his trial...
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...In re Trombley, 31 Cal.2d 801, 193 P.2d 734; People ex rel. Wakefield v. Montgomery, 365 Ill. 478, 6 N.E.2d 868; Gibson v. Lainson, 244 Iowa 1396, 60 N.W.2d 797, certiorari denied, 347 U.S. 945, 74 S.Ct. 641, 98 L.Ed. 1093; Ryan v. Nygaard, 70 N.D. 687, 297 N.W. 694. The Supreme Court of Il......
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...was no jurisdiction in the court, the judgment is not void and he cannot attack it collaterally by habeas corpus. Gibson v. Lainson, 244 Iowa 1396, 1398, 60 N.W.2d 797, 798; Reeves v. Lainson, 234 Iowa 1034, 1035, 14 N.W.2d 625; Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 58 S.Ct. 1019, 82 L.Ed. 1461.......
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