Wright v. State, 4-881A102
Decision Date | 10 June 1982 |
Docket Number | No. 4-881A102,4-881A102 |
Citation | 436 N.E.2d 335 |
Parties | Joseph WRIGHT, Appellant-Defendant, v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee-Plaintiff. |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
George M. Fisher, Crown Point, for appellant-defendant.
Linley E. Pearson, Atty. Gen., Joseph N. Stevenson, Deputy Atty. Gen., Indianapolis, for appellee-plaintiff.
Joseph Wright was charged with murder in Lake Superior Court. Trial was held before a jury and Wright was found guilty of the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to ten years imprisonment. Wright's appointed trial counsel filed a motion to correct errors which was overruled. Another attorney was appointed to perfect an appeal to this court. Permission was granted to file a belated motion to correct errors. Wright now appeals the overruling of the belated motion to correct errors.
We affirm.
1. Is the current "mockery of justice" standard for review of convictions alleging denial of effective assistance of counsel unconstitutional?
2. Does the method of selecting public defenders in Lake County, Indiana deprive defendants of the effective assistance of counsel?
3. Did the actions of Wright's attorney at trial deprive him of effective assistance of counsel under the "mockery of justice" standard?
Joseph Wright, the defendant/appellant, left his apartment on April 2, 1980, with his brother James Wright to visit bars in Gary, Indiana. James drove Joseph to two different bars in a car owned by Joseph. Joseph has been blind for over 10 years and is unable to drive. At the second bar Robert Early on the morning of April 3, James received a call from Joseph asking him to come to the apartment. When James arrived he found Robert Scales lying outside the apartment, beneath a second floor window. Joseph told his brother that he had killed Scales because Scales was a homosexual and wanted to have sex with him. James refused to help Joseph dispose of the body but did take a bloodstained tire iron to the car. James returned to the room and assisted Joseph in removing bloodstained sheets from the bed. The brothers departed in the car and threw the sheets out a few blocks away.
Scales approached the Wright vehicle and initiated a conversation with Joseph. The conversation between Scales and Joseph Wright grew into a heated argument. At that point Joseph ordered James to leave the car and Scales took the driver's seat. The men then departed in Joseph's car.
Willie Wright, another brother of James and Joseph, lived in a room down the hall from Joseph. When he awoke at 3:00 to 3:30 a. m. on April 3 he could hear noise in the hallway. When he investigated he saw that the window at the end of the hall was open and the plastic covering the window was ripped and blood splattered. Willie looked outside the window and saw a man lying on the concrete below. A trail of blood led from the window to Joseph's room. Willie related the situation to the landlord who called the police.
When the police arrived they found the body lying in a pool of blood with lacerations on the forehead and a smashed jaw. In Joseph's room police found blood on the floor and walls and a large pool of blood on the mattress. The coroner took samples of blood from the body, identified as Robert Scales, and from the blood in the room. These blood samples were consistent with blood taken by swabbing from the arms of Joseph Wright and blood on a lug wrench found in the Wright car. After autopsy the cause of death of Robert Scales was determined to be intracranial hemorrhaging and laceration of the brain caused by a beating of the outside of the head.
Wright attempts to persuade us to declare unconstitutional the current Indiana standard of reviewing claims of inadequate assistance of counsel. The current rule is expressed as follows:
(Citations omitted.)
Rahim v. State, (1981) Ind., 417 N.E.2d 343, 345.
The only authority cited by Wright to support his argument are a series of Supreme Court cases discussing the sixth amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. 1 None of those cases have imposed a fixed standard upon the states to use when assessing the competency of trial counsel.
The Indiana Supreme Court and the Fourth District Court of Appeals have recently reaffirmed the "mockery of justice" test. Adams v. State, (1982) Ind., 430 N.E.2d 771; Weaver v. State, (1982) Ind., 432 N.E.2d 5; Shull v. State, (1981) Ind.App., 421 N.E.2d 1. Stare decisis prevails, mandating affirmance of the trial court's adherence to the "mockery of justice" standard.
Wright's second argument challenges the public defender selection system in Lake County. In his opinion the pauper attorneys are subject to outside pressure and cannot function as independent advocates.
Public defenders of the Criminal Division, Lake Superior Court are assigned to specific courtrooms in the division and "are hired by and serve at the pleasure and behest of the judges of that division." Each public defender is subject to the rules and regulations of the judge presiding in that room. Other employees serve under different terms of employment, either fixed term or employment contract, and may only be discharged for cause by majority vote or by a presiding judge, after a hearing, for insubordination. Wright contends the pauper attorney system in Lake County precludes a truly independent public defender corps. In his view, the knowledge that the public defender must serve two masters prohibits an independent and zealous defense.
Wright offers two bases for holding the Lake County system unconstitutional. The first is that the American Bar Association, legal commentators, commissions and organizations have proposed standards that would limit judicial interference in the public defender's representation of indigents. Although the recommendations of these committees are commendable goals for the judicial system, they have no binding effect. States are still free to adopt methods of providing legal assistance tailored to the extant circumstances. No constitutional infirmity is indicated by Wright's argument. To the contrary, the attorney has a specific status in relation to his client that is unaffected by the source of his remuneration. 2
The only delimiting rule imposed on the public defender system by the sixth amendment is that the State respect the independence of the public defender. In Polk County v. Dodson, (1981) --- U.S. ----, ----, 102 S.Ct. 445, 451, 70 L.Ed.2d 509, the Supreme Court said:
"Second, and equally important, it is the constitutional obligation of the State to respect the professional independence of the public defenders whom it engages. This Court's decision in Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (83 S.Ct. 792, 9 L.Ed.2d 799) (1963), established the right of State criminal defendants to the "guiding hand of counsel at every step in the proceedings against (them).
Although Polk County was brought under 42 U.S.C. 1983, that analysis is germane to the present inquiry. 3 Wright has made only a minimal showing of possible prejudice resulting from the pauper attorney system of Lake County. Absent a positive showing of prejudice we cannot hold the Lake County public defender appointment procedures violative of the sixth amendment.
Wright also contends that judicial supervision of pauper attorneys violates the Canons of Ethics and is therefore unconstitutional. Specifically, he argues violations of EC 5-21, EC 5-22 and Canon 9. EC 5-21 is as follows
EC-5-22 states:
Canon 9 states:
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