Howard v. State
| Decision Date | 26 January 1967 |
| Docket Number | 4 Div. 272 |
| Citation | Howard v. State, 280 Ala. 430, 194 So.2d 834 (Ala. 1967) |
| Parties | George W. HOWARD v. STATE of Alabama. |
| Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
C. Neal Pope, Phenix City, for appellant.
Richmond M. Flowers, Atty. Gen., and Paul T. Gish, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
Appellant, on April 26, 1966, petitioned the Circuit Court of Russell County for a writ of error coram nobis to set aside a judgment of that court rendered on April 23, 1956, adjudging him guilty of murder in the second degree and sentencing him to imprisonment for ninety-nine years. After an oral hearing on the petition, the Circuit Court rendered a judgment denying the petition. This appeal is from that judgment. See Crawford v. State, 279 Ala. 559, 188 So.2d 520, and cases cited.
Court-appointed counsel represented appellant at the coram nobis hearing in the circuit court. The same lawyers were appointed to represent him on this appeal. A free transcript of the proceedings below was ordered furnished to the appellant and it is before us. One of the lawyers so appointed has filed a brief in this court on behalf of the appellant.
The appellant, in his petition for writ of error coram nobis, based his right to relief on averments to the effect that his conviction of murder in the second degree, in 1956, came about solely because of the incompetency of the lawyer who represented him on that trial. This seems to be a common practice in proceedings of this kind.
We will not delineate all of the charges which appellant directed against his lawyer, whom we judicially know to be competent and experienced, because the evidence adduced at the trial here under review justifies a consideration of only one of the charges.
In his petition appellant alleged, in part, as follows:
At the coram nobis hearing appellant did not seek to prove those averments. Instead he testified, in substance, that he did not plead guilty; that a plea of guilty to murder in the second degree was interposed by his lawyer without his knowledge or consent; that he did not become aware that such a plea had been entered until after the murder trial was over; that the then trial judge did not inform him as to the effect of such a plea or explain to him the 'consequences and possible sentence' that could be imposed under such a plea.
The only other witness called on behalf of appellant was Judge James H. Caldwell, who was the judge of the Circuit Court of Russell County at the time of the trial of the coram nobis proceeding. Judge Caldwell had been the Circuit Solicitor at the time of the murder trial in 1956. Consequently he recused himself from the trial of the coram nobis proceeding and an outstanding lawyer of many years' experience was named to conduct that trial.
On direct examination Judge Caldwell testified that as a circuit solicitor he had prosecuted appellant on the murder trial. He was then asked the following questions and gave the following answers:
On cross-examination of Judge Caldwell it was shown that on the murder trial the State offered the testimony of two witnesses, a doctor and the wife of the deceased. A jury was impaneled and sworn and the two witnesses were examined before the jury. The appellant's lawyer, Hon. Pelham Ferrell, was with the appellant 'at all times during that trial.'
The State called no witnesses. It did offer in evidence as its Exhibit No. 1 certain judgment entries, the material parts of which read as follows:
'The Defendant being present in open court, and attended by his counsel, on arraignment interposes his plea of not guilty to the offense charged in the indictment against him. * * *
'This cause coming on to be heard, comes the State by its Solicitor and comes also the Defendant in his own proper person, and defended by his Counsel, and the Defendant interposes his plea of not guilty. Issue being joined, thereupon came a jury of twelve good and lawful men: H. S. Hester and 11 others, who, having first been duly sworn, and impanelled according to law, and having heard all of the evidence offered upon the trial of this cause, both for the State and the Defendant, and the charge of the Court, do on their oath say:
We are confronted with the fact that the judgment entered on the murder trial shows that only a plea of not guilty was interposed to the murder indictment and we have said that a judgment entry speaks absolute verity (Ex parte McDermott, 224 Ala. 684, 141 So. 659) and controls where there is a conflict in the record.--Keeton v. State, Ala. 190 So.2d 694, and cases cited. See Hamilton v. State, 270 Ala. 184, 116 So.2d 906.
In the Hamilton Case just cited a minute entry showed that Hamilton, who had been indicted for the offense of burglary in the first degree, was...
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Gwin v. State
...366 So.2d at 343. The trial court's judgment is presumed correct, as is the voluntariness of a guilty plea. See Howard v. State, 280 Ala. 430, 433, 194 So.2d 834 (1967) ("[T]here is a presumption of reliability which attaches to the recital in a judgment entry and we do not think that ordin......
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Rickard v. State
...or given through ignorance, fear or inadvertence, it is void since it is a violation of constitutional safeguards. * * *' Howard v. State, 280 Ala. 430, 194 So.2d 834. ...
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Little v. State, 6 Div. 958
...entries and written statements or forms executed by the petitioner. Our Supreme Court recognized this principle in Howard v. State, 280 Ala. 430, 433, 194 So.2d 834 (1967), when it stated that "there is a presumption of reliability which attaches to the recital in a judgment entry and we do......
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Holsclaw v. State, 8 Div. 726
...testimony alone is not sufficient to overcome the presumption of reliability which attaches to that document. See Howard v. State, 280 Ala. 430, 433, 194 So.2d 834 (1967) (holding that the presumption of reliability which attaches to the recital in a judgment entry ordinarily cannot be over......