House v. Mayo

81 F. Supp. 663, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedDecember 9, 1948
DocketCivil Action No. 1496-J
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 F. Supp. 663 (House v. Mayo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
House v. Mayo, 81 F. Supp. 663, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955 (S.D. Fla. 1948).

Opinion

DE VANE, District Judge.

Petitioner, Albert House, seeks release from the Florida State Prison where he is confined by authority of a commitment from the Criminal Court of Record of Hills-borough County, Florida. He claims that the judgment of conviction is void because he had already served the sentence prior to its imposition. He also claims double jeopardy in that the information charged him with the possession of burglary tools while in another information (Case 259) he was convicted- of burglary.

In 1925 petitioner pleaded guilty to four Informations filed against him in the Criminal Court of Record of Hillsborough County and on September 11, 1925, was sentenced as follows:

Case No. 231 — Burglary of Knight & Wall Company — 20 years.

Case No. 233 — Possession of burglary tools — 10 years.

Case No-. 259 — Burglary of Maas Brothers Store — 20 years.

Case No. 238 — Robbery of Sutton (Hava-tampa payroll) — 20 years.

These sentences were all to run consecutively in the order named.

[665]*665In Case No. 231 three other persons were named in the Information along with petitioner for the offense therein charged. Petitioner and one of the other defendants entered pleas of guilty to this Information. Two of the defendants entered pleas of not guilty and were tried and convicted. On Appeal to the Supreme Court of Florida their convictions were set! aside on the ground that the evidence used by the State in their case had been obtained as the result of an illegal search and seizure. Gildrie et al. v. State, 94 Fla. 134, 113 So. 704. This case was decided July 9, 1927.

In 1935 House brought an original proceeding in habeas corpus in the Supreme Court of Florida attacking the sentences imposed in all four cases named above. The Supreme Court held in this habeas corpus case that the trial Judge had failed to adjudicate the defendant guilty upon his pleas of guilty to each of the four Informations and set the sentences aside and remanded defendant to the Sheriff of Hillsborough County, Florida, to be taken before the Judge of the Criminal Court of Record of that County for proper adjudication and sentencing. In compliance with this mandate petitioner was taken before the Judge of said Court for adjudication and sentencing on February 22, 1936.

Evidently in view of the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida in Gildrie et al. v. State, supra, the Judge of the Criminal Court of Record of Hillsborough County, Florida, imposed no sentence upon House for the offense charged in Case No. 231, but sentenced him on the remaining three cases, as follows:

Case No. 238 — Hav-a-tampa Case — 20 years to run from September 11, 1925.

Case No. 259 — Maas Brothers Store Case —20 years to run consecutively with Case No. 238.

Case No. 233 — Possession of burglary tools — 10 years to run consecutively with Case No. 259.

House took an appeal from the imposition of sentences in each of these cases and the Supreme Court of Florida, in House v. State, 127 Fla. 145, 172 So. 734, affirmed the judgments of the lower court. This decision was rendered on February 17, 1937.

On August 4, 1937, House filed in the Supreme Court of Florida a petition for leave to file an application in the Criminal Court of Record of Hillsborough County, Florida, for writs of error coram nobis to review the judgments of conviction rendered by that court in all three cases named above on which he was sentenced February 22, 1936. In this petition House alleged that at the time he entered pleas of guilty in all of said cases, in 1925, he was denied benefit of counsel after having employed and paid counsel to represent him; that he was brought before the court without any advance notice of the time he would be brought up for arraignment and pleas and that when he was brought up for such arraignment and pleas he requested an opportunity to notify his counsel, which was denied him. He also sought to have the judgments set aside on the ground of newly discovered evidence, which, he alleged, was not in his possession at the time of his trial and which he was unable to discover before the trial for the reason he was confined in the County Jail. Thq court denied the petition for leave to file an application for writs of error coram nobis in the several cases on the ground that the matters set forth therein should have been raised on the Appeal and not in the manner sought by petitioner in said petition filed with the court in that case. See House v. State, 130 Fla. 400, 177 So. 705.

Subsequently, in 1945, House filed in this court a petition for writ of habeas corpus seeking his release from the Florida State Prison on the ground that the sentence imposed upon him in Case No. 259 Vas illegal because he was not allowed counsel to represent him in that case. He alleged in his petition that this sentence being illegal he had completed the sentences imposed upon him in Case No. 238 and 233 of twenty and ten years, respectively. Under date of April 12, 1945, this court denied said petition on the ground that the sentence imposed in Case No. 259 was valid for the reason that House, who had been represented by counsel in all the other cases, had waived the presence of his counsel on the date he entered his plea of guilty to the Information filed in this case. House v. Mayo, D.C., 63 F.Supp. 169.

[666]*666Having now completed the sentences imposed upon him in Cases- Nos. 238 and 259 House seeks his release from the Florida State Prison on the ground that the sentence imposed in Case No. 233 was imposed more than ten years after his committal to the Florida State Prison and that he had already completed the service of this sentence when he was resentenced on February 22, 1936. This contention- is based upon -the fact that when the sentences were first imposed sentence in Case No. 233- was to run consecutively with sentence imposed in Case No. 231 and the sentence imposed in Case No. 231 having been set aside as illegal and not reimposed the court had no authority to resentence him in Case No. 233. In House v. State, 127 Fla. 145, 172 So. 734, the Supreme Court of Florida passed upon the legality of this sentence and the other sentences imposed when he was brought before the Judge of the Criminal Court of Record for adjudication of guilt and resentencing on February 22, 1936, and under authority of Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 817, 114 A.L.R. 1487, the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida, on the legality of the1 sentence questioned in this case, is binding upon this court. Moreover, the Supreme Court in this case explicitly states the law applicable in cases where sentences are imposed without an expressed or implied adjudication of guilt of a defendant predicated upon a verdict of guilty or a plea of guilty. When petitioner was returned to the Sheriff of Hillsborough County, Florida to be brought before the Judge of the Criminal Court of Record of that County for adjudication and resentencing, he appeared, in so far as the adjudications of guilt and sentences were concerned, as though he had never been brought before the court for such adjudications and sentences and. the court was free to select the order in which the sentences imposed in the three cases would run. Petitioner received full allowance for the time he had served in the new sentence imposed in Case No. 238. He has no legal right to claim it twice.

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67 So. 2d 657 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
81 F. Supp. 663, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-mayo-flsd-1948.