Carr X. Johnson v. Joseph H. Havener

534 F.2d 1232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1976
Docket75-1433
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 534 F.2d 1232 (Carr X. Johnson v. Joseph H. Havener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr X. Johnson v. Joseph H. Havener, 534 F.2d 1232 (6th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant seeks reversal of the judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Eastern Division, which, without appointing counsel and without hearing, but after reviewing the state court record, denied his petition for writ of habeas corpus.

Appellant had previously been convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in the robbery-murder of an insurance salesman in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1972. The undisputed facts in the state court trial record show that the insurance salesman had been assigned to call at appellant’s apartment on August 15,1972, after a phone call from appellant requesting an agent. The agent’s charred body, with two bullet holes and with the legs severed from the torso, was found in a swamp in his own burned automobile. Appellant was arrested *1233 two days later in a Cleveland hospital (where he had been admitted late in the afternoon of the day of the murder) suffering from first- and second-degree burns over 30% of his body.

The police officers who questioned appellant on August 17, 1972, did so after securing the permission of the attending physician. At the state court hearing upon appellant’s motion to suppress evidence of his confession, the attending physician testified that appellant was admitted to the hospital at 6:32 on the evening of August 15, 1972, and was “suffering from first- and second-degree burns of the face, neck and both upper limbs and the thighs, an area which involved approximately 30 percent of the surface area, by estimation.”

Asked to describe first- and second-degree burns, he testified: “A first-degree burn is one which merely produces a redness of the skin, similar to sunburn. . A second-degree burn produces some destruction of the superficial layers of the skin, like blistering; what is commonly known as blistering . . . . [A third-degree burn] [w]ould be total destruction of the skin and underlying tissue.”

The attending physician testified to appellant’s medication which included morphine sulphate and Demerol on the evening of admission (the 15th) and Demerol on the 16th and 17th. He testified that appellant had made normal progress up to the morning of the 17th when Detective Bolton of the Cleveland Police Department asked permission to see appellant. As to this request the doctor testified:

Q And is it your statement then, that he asked you for permission to see Carr Johnson?
A Correct.
Q And what was your reaction to that? What was your answer to that?
A I was asked if he was in a fit condition to be questioned. I thought he was and I indicated to that effect.
Q In other words, you gave him permission to see Carr Johnson?
A Correct.
Q Was it your opinion at that time that he was capable of being questioned and he was rational?
A I think he was.
Q Had you had any conversation with him on this day in question, August 17th, ’72?
A With the patient?
Q Yes.
A When I saw him in the morning, he was coherent and he was aware of his surroundings. Didn’t appear disoriented in any way that I could ascertain.

Subsequently, three police officers testified to administering full Miranda warnings to appellant in his hospital bed. Each likewise testified to the general effect that appellant was alert and articulate and answered questions responsively. Although, according to the officers, appellant originally denied involvement in the crime, he subsequently gave Detective Bolton a complete statement of the events on the 15th, which statement was taken down by typewriter by an officer summoned from Police Headquarters and acknowledged by an “X” and his initials by appellant. The officers testified that appellant made no request for counsel which he had been told he had a right to in the course of the Miranda warnings.

Appellant himself testified at the hearing on motion to suppress evidence. He claimed or acknowledged specific memory of a number of events, including his refusal to see his aunt who came to the hospital while the officers were present, and asserted that he had asked for a lawyer several times during the course of the interrogation. His testimony was to the general effect that he was suffering from pain and the effects of the drugs administered to him for pain, and that he didn’t know what he was saying.

The state trial court judge refused to suppress the typed confession, holding that it had been voluntarily provided, in accordance with the Fourteenth Amendment and the standards of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966).

*1234 Before the United States District Court appellant presented only two issues in his habeas corpus petition. First, he claimed that the trial court erred in admitting petitioner’s confession into evidence, knowing the petitioner was under the influence of drugs. Secondly, he contended that the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence. The District Court Judge correctly held that the claim pertaining to the weight of the evidence was not a federal constitutional claim. In any event defendant testified at the trial and fully described his conduct in a fashion which supported the jury’s verdict of guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

Our review of the state trial court record, which the District Judge relied upon in denying the petition for writ of habeas corpus without hearing, indicates to us that the state trial court judge had conducted a full and fair hearing upon the issue of voluntariness of the confession and that the District Judge’s denial of the petition for writ of habeas corpus was based upon competent evidence in the state trial court record of appellant’s full knowledge of what was going on.

On cross-examination appellant testified as follows:

Q Do you recall discussing suicide with Officer Bolton?
A Yes, sir.
Q Do you remember that?
A Yes, sir. I remember telling him I wanted to jump out the window.
Q You do remember your telling him that?
A Yes. That is one of the reason for trying to get him out.
Q Threatening suicide?
A I thought maybe he would go, leave me alone. To me he seemed harassment than anything.
Q In State’s Exhibit 1A, where you have an X — do you know if you wrote the X?
A Yes, sir.
Q “Do you care to make a statement?” You wrote an X?
A Yes, sir.

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Bluebook (online)
534 F.2d 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-x-johnson-v-joseph-h-havener-ca6-1976.