In Re Stewart
This text of 519 P.2d 568 (In Re Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
Opinion
The People appeal from an order granting a petition for a writ of habeas corpus for the limited purpose of vacating and setting aside a sentence insofar as it adjudicated defendant an habitual criminal. The adjudication was based on defendant’s admission of the truth of allegations of three prior felony convictions. (Pen. Code, § 644, subd. (b).)1 [904]*904In granting the petition the trial court found that defendant’s admissions were not knowingly and intelligently made. We hold that the fact of each of the alleged prior convictions was properly admitted by defendant and reverse the order. We remand the cause for further proceedings as hereinafter directed.
The issues herein come before us only after a tortuous route in the courts below. Defendant was charged with and convicted of armed robbery (§211) and two counts of burglary (§ 459) in the Orange County Superior Court. The information also alleged that defendant had suffered three separate prior felony convictions, the same being armed robbery in Colorado in 1955, burglary in California in 1959' and robbery in California in 1961. It was further alleged that as to each of the prior convictions defendant had served a term in a state prison. Defendant first denied but later admitted the truth of the allegations of the prior convictions. The trial court found defendant to be an habitual criminal under section 644, subdivision (b), and he was sentenced to state prison for the terms provided by law with the sentence as to each offense to run concurrently. On appeal the judgment was affirmed. (People v. Stewart (Dec. 19, 1969) 4 Crim. 3669, unpublished.)2
In January 1971, while confined in a state prison facility in Sacramento County, defendant sought a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that he had been improperly sentenced as an habitual criminal in that the 1955 Colorado conviction, on which the adjudication was based in part, was constitutionally invalid. He further complained that he had not been timely advised at the time of the admissions as to the consequences thereof. An order to show cause issued and, after a hearing at which the district attorney in behalf of the People conceded the invalidity of the 1955 Colorado conviction, the court issued an order reciting that defendant had “alleged facts which, if true, would entitle the petitioner to resentencing in the Superior Court of Orange County.” The court then ordered “the writ of Habeas Corpus issued, returnable in the Superior Court of Orange County to which court this cause is transferred.”
[905]*905Upon transfer the Superior Court in Orange County treated the petition for the writ on its merits.3 Defense counsel urged, in addition to the invalidity of the 1955 Colorado conviction, that the adjudication. of habitual criminality was invalid as to all priors in that at the time defendant admitted the truth of the allegations of the prior convictions he was not advised as to the added consequences thereof in the event of his conviction of one or more of the criminal charges.
The court conducted an evidentiary hearing upon the question of whether defendant had been advised of the consequences of his admissions of the truth of the allegations of prior convictions. It found on conflicting evidence that defendant had not been fully advised and stated that it would vacate the adjudication of habitual criminality.
Defense counsel next asked the court to rule on the validity of the 1955 Colorado conviction. The issue was submitted on certified copies of the reporter’s transcript and other documents relative to the Colorado proceedings. The court found that defendant had knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily waived the right to counsel, and that the Colorado conviction was constitutionally sound.
Following its determinations, the court entered a second amended abstract of judgment (see fn. 2, supra) wherein it is recited, contrary to the prior abstracts’ recitals, that defendant was not adjudged an habitual criminal within the meaning of section 644.4
[906]*906The People’s contention that defendant is not entitled to relief on his assertion that he was not fully and timely advised of the consequences of his admissions of the truth of allegations of prior .convictions, is well taken. In the case of In re Yurko, ante, page 857 [112 Cal.Rptr. 513, 519 P.2d 561], we announced a rule of judicial procedure which requires that an accused be so advised. That rule, however, is applicable only to admissions made on or after the filing of the Yurko opinion, and defendant’s admissions predate Yurko by more than four years. The order granting the petition, accordingly, must be reversed, and the amended abstract of judgment dated August 9, 1971, must be struck from the record.
The propriety of the trial court’s ruling as to the validity of the 1955 Colorado conviction is not, technically, before us. The People have not challenged the correctness of the court’s ruling that it was constitutionally valid and defendant could not appeal from the presumed order granting the very writ he sought. (Loustalot v. Superior Court (1947) 30 Cal.2d 905, 913 [186 P.2d 673].) We are not, moreover, able to review the merits of the issue on this appeal as all of the evidentiary matters upon which the trial court relied are not now before us.5
[907]*907It further appears that there is some substantial question whether the issue of the validity of the Colorado conviction has been resolved against defendant’s contentions in a manner which is fair and just. Not only does it appear that the invalidity was conceded by the People in the Sacramento proceedings, but the Orange County Superior Court may be deemed to have expressed divergent views. That court first held that all prior convictions were invalidly determined and then, when the issue was thus moot, stated that the Colorado conviction was constitutionally sound without, however, making any specific order relative thereto.
In view of the foregoing the ends of justice will best be served by affording defendant the opportunity upon remand to the Orange County Superior Court to again raise the issue of the validity of the 1955 Cblorado conviction.6
The order granting the petition for the writ is reversed and the amended abstract of judgment dated August 9, 1971, is ordered struck from the record. Upon motion by the defendant within 30 days after this opinion becomes final, the question of the validity of the 1955 Colorado conviction charged as a prior is to be redetermined.
McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Burke, J., Sullivan, J., and Roth, J.,
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
519 P.2d 568, 10 Cal. 3d 902, 112 Cal. Rptr. 520, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stewart-cal-1974.