Ernest Cox v. Harold J. Cardwell, Warden

464 F.2d 639, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8975
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1972
Docket71-1939
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 464 F.2d 639 (Ernest Cox v. Harold J. Cardwell, Warden) 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
Ernest Cox v. Harold J. Cardwell, Warden, 464 F.2d 639, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8975 (6th Cir. 1972).

Opinions

O’SULLIVAN, Senior Circuit Judge.

We consider the appeal of Harold J. Cardwell, Warden of the Ohio State Penitentiary, from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, directing that appellee Cox be given a new trial in the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County, Ohio. There, on March 1, 1966, a jury had convicted him of armed robbery.

The prosecution evidence at trial was that at 8:30 in the evening of November 10, 1965, a small store located in Beaver Creek Township, Ohio, was held up by two men. The clerk on duty at the time identified appellee Ernest Cox and the latter’s nephew, Thomas Keelor, as the robbers. This witness said that Cox brandished a pistol in prosecuting the robbery and that the robbers, with their loot, left the scene in a blue station wagon. There was evidence from which a jury could find that the “get away” car was a blue Rambler station wagon, similar to one possessed by Cox at the time of the robbery. A pistol identified by the clerk as simlar to the one used by Cox was discovered under the mattress on a bed at the time and place of Cox’s arrest — a room in the Mountain Top Inn, an establishment in Crossville, Tennessee. There was other evidence supporting the prosecution, such as the discovery in a room occupied by Cox in Dayton, Ohio, of a bag of similar make and size as the one into which the clerk, at the robbers’ command, had emptied the contents of the cash register. Cox and his nephew, Keelor, were arrested two days after the robbery. Keelor pleaded guilty. There is no claim that the probative worth of the clerk’s identification of Cox and Keelor was in any degree impaired by an element of suggestion by the police. Cox’s belated recital that he was not one of the robbers- — made for the first time at the evidentiary hearing in the United States District Court — did not detract from the accusing clerk’s credibility. Except for Cox’s claim that he had an alibi, and was denied an opportunity to prove it, there is nothing to suggest any inadequacy or lack of cogency in the prosecution’s case.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the District Judge ruled that the Common Pleas Judge who presided at Cox’s trial, offended the United States Constitution by his rulings relative to petitioner’s attempt to assert a defense of alibi. He held also that failure of petitioner’s counsel to have given timely notice of such a claimed alibi defense denied petitioner the effective assistance of counsel.

We reverse.

It is our opinion that there is no merit in Cox’s claims and also we hold that his petition should have been dismissed for failure to exhaust state court remedies still available to him.

If we take the easy road and merely hold that dismissal should have been granted for appellee’s failure to exhaust available state remedies, we will only add to the ever-increasing burdens put upon state and federal courts by the litigating and relitigating of state court convictions. We are satisfied that if this matter is returned to it for Cox’s employment of presently unused post-conviction remedies, Ohio will, understandably, deny his claim that it had deprived him of due process. He would then return to the United States District Court for another run over the course in the federal courts. We therefore, initially set out the reasons which prompt us to find that the evidentiary hearing in the District Court failed to disclose merit in appellee’s claim for relief.

[641]*641 1. The merits.

We prefatorily recite the still existing rule that state prisoners carry the burden of establishing their claims of constitutional wrongs when asking federal courts to set aside their convictions. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a); Walker v. Johnston, 312 U.S. 275, 61 S.Ct. 574, 85 L.Ed. 830, 836 (1941); Allen v. Perini, 424 F.2d 134, 138 (6th Cir. 1970); Jones v. Russell, 396 F.2d 797 (6th Cir. 1968); Waddy v. Heer, 383 F.2d 789, 793 (6th Cir. 1967), cert. denied 392 U.S. 911, 88 S.Ct. 2069, 20 L.Ed.2d 1369 (1968); Gray v. Johnson, 354 F.2d 986 (6th Cir. 1965).

Our study of the entire record before us leads to our conclusion that not only was Cox not denied the opportunity to offer alibi evidence, but that, except for testimony given by his criminal accomplice, he indeed did not have any such evidence. At this trial, Cox’s alleged accomplice, who had already ' pleaded guilty, was allowed to testify to support Cox’s claim of alibi.

Crossville, Tennessee, was about a six or seven hour drive from the place in Ohio where the crime was committed. It was the home town and wonted stamping ground of Cox and Keelor. Cox said that he was in Crossville at the time of the robbery and had been seen there by a substantial number of his friends and relatives. None of these, however, could ever be persuaded to make the short trip from Crossville to the place of trial or to the District Court to support Cox’s claim that one or more of them had seen him in Crossville at the time of the crime. The only, and total, material that Cox and his counsel have been able to produce after the passage of five years from his conviction consists of two unique affidavits which are attached as appendices hereto. None of his assertions of entitlement to relief in his various post-conviction proceedings in the Ohio Courts was supported by even the meager substance of these novel affidavits. A fair reading of them discloses that they provide no evidence that at the time of the robbery —8:30 in the evening of November 10, 1965 — appellee Cox was not in Greene County, Ohio, but in Crossville, Tennessee.

Thomas Keelor, Cox’s nephew who had pleaded guilty to the charged crime, was called as a defense witness at appellee’s trial and there denied that Cox took part in the holdup. He said that another person, one “Rocky” Keeton, was his accomplice. Keeton, said Keelor, had come into his life just before the robbery and went out of it the next day when “Rocky” Keeton was last seen in Cross-ville, Tennessee, the place to which Keelor and whoever was his accomplice must have driven immediately after the robbery. Keelor said that a blue Rambler station wagon similar to the one possessed by Cox was indeed the “get away” car; but, said Keelor, it was not Cox’s blue Rambler station wagon. It belonged to “Rocky” Keeton. This station wagon, as well as “Rocky” Keeton, disappeared from Crossville on the day after the robbery. Without further recital of his story, we observe that the jury’s disbelief of it is understandable. Its integrity is impaired by the testimony of petitioner-appellee Cox, given in the United States District Court’s evidentiary hearing. There appellee Cox testified that his nephew, Tom Keelor, did not commit the crime to which he had pleaded guilty. He testified that the nephew not only did not commit the robbery, but was with him, Cox, at the time it occurred.

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Ernest Cox v. Harold J. Cardwell, Warden
464 F.2d 639 (Sixth Circuit, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
464 F.2d 639, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 353, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernest-cox-v-harold-j-cardwell-warden-ca6-1972.