Johnson v. State

442 S.W.2d 41, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 849
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 9, 1969
DocketNo. 54260
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 442 S.W.2d 41 (Johnson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. State, 442 S.W.2d 41, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 849 (Mo. 1969).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Commissioner.

Appellant, under Supreme Court Rule 27.26, V.A.M.R., seeks to have three consecutive sentences of ten, ten, and five years on charges of first degree robbery vacated and set aside. Along with these sentences, appellant also attacks a sentence of twenty-five years on a charge of assault with intent to rob (this sentence to run concurrently with the other three). Upon a hearing below, the motions on all four sentences were consolidated, the relief as to the three first degree Jobbery sentences was denied, but the sentence on the charge of assault with intent to rob was vacated and set aside, and appellant was ordered to be resentenced in accordance with the provisions of § 559.190, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. (prescribing a maximum of five years imprisonment for the offense).

The grounds for relief asserted by appellant in the motions are essentially the same: That he was unconstitutionally deprived of effective assistance of counsel at arraignment; that his court-appointed counsel did not render him proper assistance; that he entered his pleas of guilty without understanding the nature of the charges, and the possible ranges of punishments; and that the sentences of ten, ten and five years were based in part upon the twenty-five-year sentence for assault with intent to rob, it being in excess of the maximum sentence authorized by law (a separate ground for relief as to the motion attacking the latter sentence).

The points here on appeal are: “I. Appellant was denied the right of effective assistance of counsel. II. Appellant was denied due process of law in that his pleas of guilty were not understandably made. III. Appellant was denied due process of law in that his sentences were based on an illegally imposed sentence.”

At the outset of the hearing the state confessed that the sentence of twenty-five years for assault with intent to rob was based upon an information which did not “allege malice aforethought” and that the sentence should be set aside and appropriate relief be granted appellant.

Appellant testified that he was arraigned on January 11, 1962, without counsel. On February 19, 1962, Mr. Alex Peebles was appointed for him. Mr. Peebles consulted with appellant for approximately fifteen minutes total, once upstairs in the jail and on the morning of sentencing. Mr. Pee-bles told him that it was his opinion that since he was eighteen years old at the time he could secure appellant a fifteen-year sentence. He told Mr. Peebles that he was not guilty in the assault charge and would like to have a jury trial. He did not see Mr. Peebles again until the morning of sentencing, at which time Mr. Peebles told him that all of his charges were in Judge Stubbs’ court, his advice was for appellant to accept the twenty-five year sentence, [43]*43and explained to him that if he “bucked the State” on the assault charge all his sentences would be consecutive, and he would have approximately a total of forty or fifty years, and possibly a life sentence on the assault charge. As to possible defenses, Mr. Peebles explained nothing. He did not tell him that the penalty on the three robbery charges went from time in the penitentiary to death. Appellant alleged then and at the hearing below that he was not guilty of the assault, but his testimony was that he never denied his guilt in the robberies, and did not do so at the hearing on the motions.

Appellant further testified that at the time of the sentencing he was eighteen years old, “and in a sense a functionally illiterate.” He could not cope with the law and his appointed counsel told him he was too busy to adequately prepare a defense —he was too busy to go to trial. His counsel, Mr. Peebles, did not consult with him in length concerning his charges. He was deprived of assistance of counsel at the preliminary hearing and at arraignment. The “Court at the time of the sentencing did not take into account any of these things, the circumstances, it did not afford me a chance to defend myself against this assault charge, which should have been done, because I feel, I strongly feel that if I had been able to defend myself against this assault charge I would not have received, in the Court’s words, I would not have received an amount of sentencing totalling twenty-five years.”

During cross-examination, in answer to a question from the court, appellant testified that the fact that he had no counsel at arraignment, when the court entered a plea of not guilty for him, it did not hurt his position. In answer to questions from the state, appellant testified that he had no mental problems that he knew of. He had a preliminary hearing in the assault case, but not in the robbery charges — he waived it himself — his mother had talked to lawyer Phelps who sent word that appellant should do this. His lawyer, Mr. Peebles, came to the jail and first asked if he were guilty. Appellant told him he was guilty of the robbery charges, but not on the assault charge. His defense to the assault charge was that his brother brought (bought?) the pistol after the assault, and appellant not only was not there but had no knowledge of the assault, but had no witnesses.

Mrs. Rosalie Johnson, appellant’s mother, testified that she visited her son often while he was in the County Jail. She talked with his lawyer, Mr. Peebles, on the day appellant was sentenced. He told her that he was going to try to get appellant fifteen years, “That would be the smallest,” and that he would do his best. Appellant told his mother essentially the same things to which he testifed on this hearing concerning his guilt. Mrs. Johnson regarded Mr. Peebles as a good lawyer, but felt that he had not the chance to look into her son’s case.

For respondent, Mr. Alex Peebles testified. He began his practice of law in 1936 and had been a, member of the Missouri Bar for thirty-two years. In the last ten or fifteen years his practice trended toward criminal law, and he participated in the defense of a number of criminal cases, some appointment cases for indigent defendants. He was appointed to represent appellant six and a half years before, but could not remember everything he said. “But I am sure that I went into his case with him, and solely and only for the purpose of trying to do the best job I could for him, and to fulfill my duty to the Court.” The only purposes of Mr. Peebles going to the jail would have been to have gone into appellant’s various charges and primarily to find out if he was guilty or innócent to find out which way they should go. “Had I talked with him and had he told me that he was not guilty of any of these charges, then I would have prepared a defense, because I would not plead any person guilty who was not guilty. So that —and strictly on my procedure, I will have to say that he must have told me he was guilty or I would not have pled him [44]*44guilty. And that is all I can — I can’t remember it.”

At the time he participated in'the plea, Mr. Peebles was under the assumption that the assault charge carried a sentence running to life. He also recalled advising appellant that the robbery charges carried that penalty and even a heavier penalty. He discussed the possibilities, and appellant’s future, with appellant and his mother, and they all three decided that the best thing for him to do was to plead guilty, go down to the penitentiary, take whatever sentence he had and work hard to get out of there. Appellant was caught three times, and Mr. Peebles’ opinion was: “[I]t would be silly to try three of these cases, because stacked end on end he might never get out, and so we threw ourselves on the mercy of this Court. * * * ” As Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
442 S.W.2d 41, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-state-mo-1969.