Jones v. Cunningham

319 F.2d 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1963
Docket8356
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 319 F.2d 1 (Jones v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Cunningham, 319 F.2d 1 (4th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

319 F.2d 1

John R. JONES, Appellant,
v.
W. K. CUNNINGHAM, Jr., Superintendent of Virginia State
Penitentiary, and Charles P. Chew, Ralph E. Wilkins, and
James W. Phillips, Members of the Virginia Parole Board,
Substitute Respondents, Appellees.

No. 8356.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 23, 1961.
Decided Sept. 14, 1961, Upon Remand June 4, 1963.

F.D.G. Ribble and Daniel J. Meador, Charlottesville, Va. (Court-assigned counsel), for appellant.

Reno S. Harp, III, Asst. Atty. Gen. of Virginia (Frederick T. Gray, Atty. Gen. of Virginia, on brief), for appellee.

Before SOBELOFF, Chief Judge, and HAYNSWORTH and BOREMAN, Circuit judges.

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

A Virginia recidivist filed a petition for habeas corpus, in which he attacked the validity of his first underlying conviction on the ground that he was not represented by counsel. The District Court denied the petition and Jones appealed to this Court. While his appeal was pending here, Jones was paroled by the Virginia Parole Board, and, with the approval of the Board, established a residence in Georgia. Thereupon, we dismissed the appeal upon the ground that Jones was no longer in Virginia's custody.1 The Supreme Court granted certiorari,2 and, after a hearing on the merits of the appeal, held that the significant restraints upon the parolee's freedom were sufficient to warrant the conclusion that he was in the custody of the Virginia Parole Board within the meaning of the habeas corpus statute. It, therefore, reversed our dismissal of the appeal and directed us to grant a motion to add, as respondents, the members of the Virginia Parole Board and proceed to consider the appeal on its merits.3

Accordingly, the motion making Messrs. Charles P. Chew, Ralph E. Wilkins and James W. Phillips, Members of the Virginia Parole Board, parties respondent will be granted.

On the merits, we conclude that the recidivist conviction was invalid because of the invalidity of the first underlying conviction when Jones, then 20-years old, was unrepresented by counsel and was not informed that he had a right to counsel.

In 1946, John R. Jones was indicted in Virginia for the theft of two automobiles. There was, at the time, a pending federal charge against him of the interstate transportation of a stolen automobile. Jones was then 20-years old and a private first class in the Army. Both of his parents were dead, and his only previous experience with judicial proceedings occurred in 1940, when, then 14-years old, he was committed to the State Training and Agricultural School.

Jones had no lawyer and no funds with which to employ one. No one informed him that he had a right to counsel or that the state would supply counsel to represent him if he could not obtain counsel for himself.

While Jones was in the custody of the state awaiting trial, the prosecuting attorney and an FBI agent conferred with him. They told Jones if he would plead guilty to the state charges, he would be given a light sentence and the federal charge would be dropped. Jones agreed. The Circuit Court of Chesterfield County accepted his plea and sentenced him to imprisonment for 18-months for the theft of one of the automobiles and for ten years, suspended, for the theft of the other. The federal charge was not prosecuted.

After Jones had served the sentence imposed upon him in Chesterfield County in 1946, he was involved in other violations of the law and was twice again sentenced to imprisonment. In consequence, in 1953, there was imposed upon him an additional recidivist sentence of ten years. Since the first underlying conviction was invalid, however, the recidivist sentence was improperly imposed for want of the necessary three valid convictions to support it.

Two months ago, on March 18, 1963, the Supreme Court in Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 83 S.Ct. 792, 9 L.Ed.2d 799, formally announced the demise of Betts v. Brady, 316 U.S. 455, 62 S.Ct. 1252, 86 L.Ed. 1595. Henceforth, state criminal courts, as the federal District Courts, are under an absolute duty to supply indigent defendants, faced with serious criminal charges, with legal assistance if the defendant desires it and cannot procure it for himself. A defendant's need of counsel and professional advice in every such case is now recognized and his right to have it is no longer dependent upon the existence of special circumstances upon which the right was theretofore conditioned under the doctrine of Betts v. Brady.

We need not now pause to consider whether Gideon v. Wainwright is to be applied retroactively in collateral proceedings attacking old convictions on the ground of lack of counsel when there were no special circumstances appearing to require counsel within the Betts v. Brady doctrine and when all direct review proceedings were terminated many years before the Supreme Court's decision in Gideon v. Wainwright,4 for we find here special circumstances requiring counsel even within the rule of Betts v. Brady.

In 1946, when the first prison sentence was imposed upon him, Jones was no seasoned offender wise to the ways of law enforcement officials and of procedures in the criminal courts. He was a youth of but 20-years and never before had been indicted. Without so much as the advice of a parent or an older relative, he was solely dependent upon his own resources when he conferred with the prosecuting attorney and an FBI agent and considered their tempting promise of leniency in return for the plea of guilty. Untrained in the law and wholly inexperienced in meeting criminal charges of the kind with which he was then faced, he had no means of knowing what defenses might be available to him, or of exercising judgment as to the worth of the promise of leniency. Had he had the assistance of able counsel committed to his defense, his attorney's investigation of the offenses, of the defendant's participation in them and of the evidence available to the prosecution and the means by which it was obtained, might well have disclosed a number of defenses which might have made a plea of guilty improvident. Even if such enlightened investigation and preparation had resulte din advice to him to enter a plea of guilty, it might well have uncovered mitigating circumstances, the relevance of which the defendant, without counsel, had no means of appreciating.

After announcing in Betts v. Brady, the rule that, in noncapital cases, the Fourteenth Amendment required a state to supply counsel for indigent criminal defendants only if special circumstances had resulted in advice to him to a number of cases in which it was required to decide whether special circumstances existed within the meaning of the rule. From a review of those decisions, it appears entirely fair to say that the existence of special circumstances is the rule rather than the exception.

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