Howard v. Wolff

511 F. Supp. 189, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11677
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedFebruary 13, 1981
DocketNo. CIV-R-79-89-ECR
StatusPublished

This text of 511 F. Supp. 189 (Howard v. Wolff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Wolff, 511 F. Supp. 189, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11677 (D. Nev. 1981).

Opinion

ORDER

EDWARD C. REED, Jr., District Judge.

Larry N. Howard, an inmate at the Nevada State Prison, has petitioned for a Writ of Habeas Corpus on five separate grounds, four of which were denied by order of this Court on September 6,1979. On April 29,1980, June 30,1980, and December 22, 1980, evidentiary hearings were held in respect to the remaining claimed ground for habeas, to wit: whether the guilty plea entered by petitioner on December 12,1962, to the charge of “Accessory to Robbery” was made voluntarily and understandingly. Review in this case is also proper since the 1962 conviction petitioner seeks to invalidate has been used to enhance the sentence petitioner received on account of a subsequent conviction. United States v. LaVallee, 330 F.2d 303 (2nd Cir. 1964); see also, Honeycutt v. Ward, 612 F.2d 36 (2nd Cir. 1979). Petitioner’s standing to bring this petition is conceded.

The principal issue addressed by the parties in the presentation of evidence and testimony was whether petitioner believed at the time of his plea that he was pleading guilty to a gross misdemeanor rather than a felony. Without question, at the time of the plea the crime of Accessory to Robbery was a felony under Nevada law. See, NRS 193.120(2), NRS 195.040.

Petitioner testified in the present proceedings that because he had two prior felony convictions, he was conscious of the habitual criminal statutes providing an enhancement in penalty on a third felony conviction. For that reason he says he recalls very specifically his understanding in 1962 that he was pleading only to a gross misdemeanor.

There is one piece of possibly corroborative evidence to support petitioner’s position. This is Exhibit 1 in these proceedings, a copy of the Amended Information to which petitioner pleaded, taken from the official file of the state court. On that copy, the printed word “felony” appears to have been lined out with a pen or pencil and words generally undecipherable, possibly reading “gross mis” or “gross misd” (and also in turn apparently lined out) interlined in handwriting above the word “felony.” Adjacent to the interlineation are the initials “H.F.A.”

Mr. Herbert F. Ahlswede, then deputy District Attorney of Washoe County, Nevada, signed the Amended Information and the appended witness list. Testifying in this case, he is unsure as to whether these [191]*191initials are his. He is suspicious of the “F and the tail on the “A”, but in all he is not certain of the authenticity of the initials. To the layman the initials look strikingly similar to those same letters in Mr. Ahlswede’s signatures which appear on the same document.

Petitioner also testified that he had a private interview with Mr. Ahlswede prior to entry of his plea and at that time was given to believe he would be allowed to plead to a gross misdemeanor. Mr. Ahlswede recalls such an interview, but has only a hazy recollection of the details of the meeting. However, he emphatically denies that he could have led petitioner to believe he would be allowed to plead to a gross misdemeanor.

At the hearing on December 22,1980, Mr. Howard testified that Mr. Ahlswede showed him a printed information form which he claims had been amended in the manner of Exhibit 1, the file copy of the Information found in the court file. The file copy of the Information, taken from the District Attorney’s file, does not show the alteration crossing out the word “felony” and making the interlineation. This is some corroboration of Mr. Ahlswede’s testimony. It seems likely that the District Attorney’s file would have been changed if Mr. Ahlswede had in fact shown the altered Information to Mr. Howard.

On stipulation of the parties Frank Hart was appointed by the Court as the Court’s expert witness to review the subject Information in an effort to ascertain exactly what alterations were made to the printed form and whether Mr. Ahlswede placed his initials at the point of the alteration. Mr. Hart filed a written report (which was made part of the record of the case) and testified in Court. He found that both the word “felony” on the printed form of Information and the interlined words “gross mis.” were lined out by a pencil or pen. He was unable to determine if Mr. Ahlswede’s initials were on the form. Mr. Hart was unable to reach a conclusion in answer to these questions because of a lack of adequate exemplars of the initials of Mr. Ahlswede from the time period of the subject proceedings.

The remainder of the evidence adduced at the hearing militates quite strongly against petitioner’s position. From the transcript of the plea sentencing hearing on December 12, 1962, and Mr. Ahlswede’s testimony, it seems quite clear that petitioner’s plea was the result of a plea bargain whereby the charges were reduced from “Robbery” to “Accessory to Robbery.” At the plea hearing Mr. Ahlswede stated that he did not have sufficient evidence to convict on the robbery charge, but at the instant hearing he explains he argued in this vein to persuade the judge to grant probation. The accessory charge did permit a sentence of probation. The credible evidence is that the plea bargain was obtained because of services rendered by petitioner as an informant to the police.

The principal concern of attorneys and the judge at the plea hearing'was for the safety of petitioner, who had become a police informant and was, it was claimed, in personal danger if he were sentenced to the Nevada State Penitentiary. Arrangements were worked out at the hearing so that the two- to five-year prison sentence to be imposed would be suspended, obviating incarceration in the state prison. Petitioner was also fined $1,000.00, to be worked off at the rate of $4.00 per day (250 days) in the county jail. He was also sentenced to a year’s probation to commence on release from jail.

Petitioner’s stated concern about a felony conviction, as it might relate to an habitual criminal charge, seems to the Court incredible. It is unlikely that a person in Mr. Howard’s shoes, where the conviction does not carry a possible habitual criminal enhancement penalty, will be looking down the line to the commission of a further crime and consequent conviction which could at a later date result in an habitual sentence. Rather, it may be inferred that petitioner really had the same concern as the judge and the attorneys, that probation be given to avoid imprisonment in the penitentiary. Cf. Honeycutt v. Ward, 612 F.2d [192]*19236, supra (self serving declaration of habeas petitioner as to allegedly uncounseled conviction resulting habitual sentencing insufficient to overcome strong presumption of regularity as to state proceeding.)

The record before the Court supports the proposition that petitioner knew he was pleading to a felony. Mr. Howards’ attorney, Marshall Bouvier, an experienced criminal defense lawyer, testified that he was highly conscious of the difference between a gross misdemeanor and a felony and would have spoken up emphatically had his client been sentenced for a felony (as he was), after a plea to a gross misdemeanor.

While Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
511 F. Supp. 189, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-wolff-nvd-1981.