Application of McDaniel

1956 OK CR 104, 302 P.2d 496, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1956
DocketA-12388
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1956 OK CR 104 (Application of McDaniel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of McDaniel, 1956 OK CR 104, 302 P.2d 496, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 236 (Okla. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

POWELL, Judge.

This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus instituted by Burford McDaniel, a minor of the age of 18 years, through his mother and next friend, Ozetta McDaniel, to secure his release from confinement in the Oklahoma Reformatory at Granite.

From the verified petition and certified copies of instruments attached, it appears that on the 1st day of February, 1954, a preliminary complaint charging petitioner and three other minors with second degree burglary, was filed in the Justice Court of D. R. Kershaw, at Antlers. The crime charged was alleged to have been committed on the 26th day of January, 1954. Petitioner was arrested February 2, 1954. A plea of guilty was entered on arraignment and the petitioner was bound over to the District Court. On February 3, 1954, petitioner was released on bond signed by petitioner’s mother and Lizzie Thomas, the latter scheduling as to financial requirements. Neither the petitioner nor the respondent attach a copy of the judgment and sentence, but it otherwise appears from the record before us that based on the information that was filed in the District Court of Pushmataha County on February 5, 1954,-charging the petitioner and others with second' degree burglary, that on the same day petitioner entered his plea of guilty to the. charge-and was sentenced by the court to serve five years in the penitentiary at McAlester, but the sentence was suspended for and during petitioner’s good behavior.'

On October 19, 1954, the county attorney of Pushmataha County'filed in the District Court an application to revoke the suspended sentence in question, and notice of hearing was issued and served on petitioner the same day. The hearing was set for the following day, October 20, 1954. The county attorney as ground for the revocation sought, alleged that subsequent to the suspended sentence and on the 19th day of October, 1954, he had filed an information in the District Court of Pushmataha County charging petitioner with the crime of grand larceny. The District Court at the hearing on October 20, 1954, set aside and revoked the suspended sentence theretofore entered and petitioner was immediately on that day transported to and received by the Warden of the State Penitentiary at McAlester. He was later on transferred to the Oklahoma State Reformatory at Granite to serve the remainder of his sentence and is at present confined in said institution.

Petitioner as grounds for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus alleges that at the time of his arrest and sentence that he was a minor 16 years of age, that he had never before been arrested, brought before a court or confined. He was the eldest of eight children in a broken home; the mother, who was on government relief, looked after the family; petitioner’s formal education was very meager. It is alleged that while petitioner was confined in jail at Antlers officers of Pushmataha County questioned him concerning the burglary with which he and three other young boys were charged and promised him that if he would plead guilty to said crime that they would see that he would receive a sus *500 pended sentence and that-he 1 would not have to serve any time in prison; that he was not informed that he did not have to, answer any questions and that ■ anything, which he might say. could be, used .against him; • that the officials did not tell him that he was entitled to -be represented by counsel and if he was unable to employ counsel that the court would appoint .counsel for him. It is further alleged that petitioner being young, inexperienced and. ignorant of his rights and- being afraid that he would go to prison agreed to plead guilty. .

It is further set out that neither the examining magistrate before whom petitioner, was arraigned on preliminary /complaint nor the district judge before whom he was arraigned a day later, advised him what-his constitutional rights were; that he -was. not aware that he was entitled to a preliminary hearing prior to arraignment in district court; -that he did not know that the court would appoint a lawyer to advise him of his rights and to- defend him if he was-unable to employ counsel. ... ■

From the petition, response and evidence heard by this court on September S, 1956, it appears that at some date prior to October 20, 1954, petitioner was again arrested and placed in the Pushmataha County jail and charged with grand larceny, and that, as heretofore recited, he' was transported to the State Penitentiary on October 20, 1954.

On September 5, 1956, Ozetta McDaniel' and counsel for petitioner appeared before this court and evidence was heard supporting the allegations of the petition. Thére-after and on September 19, 1956, respondent was permitted to filé a response to the petition a.nd among the exhibits-.was. an affidavit of S..'J. Thornton, Chief Deputy Sheriff of, Pushmataha County .relating the facts and circumstances, surrounding the conviction of Burford McDaniel, and .minutes of the Court Clerk in Case No. 1867. The Deputy Sheriff sets.out.that at the time petitioner was arraigned in the District Court in Case No. 1867 his mother was present, and that.prior to. entry of plea that, he and the County, Attorney conferred with the mother and advised her that she was entitled to have an. attorney, but that she in substance said that she did not want an attorney if her son got a suspended sentence. Affiant goes on to relate the circumstances of the grand larceny charge and the revocation of the suspended sentence, but as we .view the matter, the petition must be either granted or denied based on the circumstances of the entry of the judgment ánd sentence in Case No! 1867," the second degree burglary charge.

The minutes of the trial court fail to show that the court advised petitioner prior to accepting his plea that he was entitled to be represented by counsel and that if he was unable to employ an .attorney that the court would appoint one to- represent him. 1 The minute is brief, and merely states that petitioner entered a plea of guilty.

At the hearing before this court the attention of both counsel and Mrs. McDaniel was called to the fact that the petitioner had already sérved a good portion of the sentence'in'Case No. 1867 and that if a writ wás granted that no doubt petitioner would be retried and might receive a more severe sentence, and that they risked the hazard of being tried on the grand larceny *501 charge that might be-refiled arid that had formed the basis for the revocation of the suspended' sentence. After a suggested conference between them by the court, Mrs. McDaniel seemed to feel deeply that the constitutional rights 2 of the petitioner had been denied and insisted on this court meeting the issue squarely. ' . •

The issues raised in the within case are largely determiried by the law án-nounced in the recent case of In re Potts’ Petition, Okl.Cr., 296 P.2d 180, April 11, 1956. Paragraphs 1 to 11, and 13 of the syllabus by the court in that case are here adopted. The facts there and here are strikingly similar, except herein the mother of the minor was consulted by the Deputy Sheriff and County Attorney prior to the entry by petitioner of a plea of guilty in the District Court, and was present when the plea was entered.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK CR 104, 302 P.2d 496, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-mcdaniel-oklacrimapp-1956.