Joseph Muncie Victor v. Ward Lane, Warden of Indiana State Prison

394 F.2d 268, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7075
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1968
Docket16234_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 394 F.2d 268 (Joseph Muncie Victor v. Ward Lane, Warden of Indiana State Prison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Muncie Victor v. Ward Lane, Warden of Indiana State Prison, 394 F.2d 268, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7075 (7th Cir. 1968).

Opinions

FAIRCHILD, Circuit Judge.

Joseph Muncie Victor is in custody in an Indiana prison, pursuant to conviction and sentence in an Indiana court. He petitioned the district court for habe-as corpus. The district court decided, without an evidentiary hearing, that Victor had failed to assert a deprivation of constitutional rights, and dismissed the petition. Victor has appealed.

Victor was indigent, and was represented by court-appointed counsel at his trial. He was convicted July 15, 1960. His trial counsel filed a timely motion for a new trial, which was overruled September 23, 1960. It is undisputed that under Indiana practice appointed trial counsel was neither obliged nor authorized to proceed further.

Victor had 90 days after September 23 within which to appeal. It is undisputed that he would have been provided a transcript and counsel for the purpose of appeal, without expense to him, had he made a request to the trial court.1 He failed to make the request.

Several years later Victor acquired enough money to purchase a transcript and employ counsel. In 1965, with the assistance of counsel, he petitioned the Supreme Court of Indiana for a belated appeal. He alleged that he had not known that he had a right to have counsel appointed to prosecute an appeal, and that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for new trial. As to the merits of his appeal he said only that the motion contained 18 specifications of error and raised substantial questions of law.

The Supreme Court of Indiana denied his petition. The court stated that under its decisions allowing a belated appeal, “there must be sufficient cause shown to excuse the delay, and there must be a prima facie showing that there is merit in the appeal sought.” It decided, without an evidentiary hearing, that Victor’s petition made neither showing.2

Victor’s petition to the district court, also made with assistance of counsel, contained allegations similar to his state petition.

With respect to his knowledge of his rights, he alleged that he is blind, that until recently he was unaware that he had a right to have an appeal prosecuted at public expense, that he believed he could only obtain an appeal by payment of expenses and attorney fees, and that his trial counsel did not inform him of his right to prosecute an appeal at public expense.

He disclosed nothing more concerning alleged errors in his trial than he had said in his state petition.

It is now axiomatic that at the trial stage (and certain pre-trial stages) it is not presumed that an unrepresented defendant knows his rights with respect to retained or appointed counsel.

There is, however, a presumption of some force that a completed trial has been properly conducted, and that reversible error is more improbable than probable. In many cases an appeal would be futile effort. Although most would agree that it is good practice for a trial court to inform a convicted defendant of his right to appeal, and to be furnished counsel if he is indigent,3 the absence of such advice is not deemed [270]*270a denial of due process or equal protection.4

The thread of Victor’s argument appears to be that the state had a duty to dispel Victor’s ignorance, and is therefore responsible for his failure to take a timely appeal. Had he requested counsel for an appeal, he would have had the same opportunity to appeal as a defendant with means to employ counsel. Victor wants us to assume (although he does not specifically allege) that he would have taken a timely appeal had he known how to go about it, and argues that since his tardiness was due to his poverty and ignorance, the state must afford him belatedly the same appeal of right (without a showing of merit) which it would have granted to any defendant who took an appeal within ninety days.

Victor had the assistance of counsel by the time he sought leave to take a belated appeal. His petition made the bald assertion that his appeal would raise substantial questions, but made no more palpable or specific claim that it had arguable merit. The Supreme Court of Indiana could, without any question, properly decide that no merit had been shown. And even if the state must bear responsibility for the lateness of the appeal, we deem it proper to require a defendant, who has the assistance of counsel, to show that his appeal has arguable merit.

A frivolous appeal is utterly useless. If the appeal would have been frivolous if timely, defendant has lost nothing by failure to appeal within time, or by refusal of a belated appeal.

Victor, in his federal petition, has made no allegations concerning merit in an appeal which add anything to his petition in the state court. In our opinion he has not shown that the denial of a belated appeal has impaired any federal right,5 and we affirm.

If we were to reach the question whether the state was responsible for the lateness of the appeal, we would find more difficulty. We comment upon it because of the possibility that Victor, on a new petition, may succeed in showing that his appeal would have arguable merit.

One of the oft-cited decisions in this field is Pate v. Holman in the fifth circuit.6Judge Wisdom wrote7 “State action is shown when a responsible official in the State’s system of justice * * * fails to take proper steps toward appointment of counsel for a convicted defendant when he has knowledge of the defendant’s indigency and desire for appellate counsel. When an accused person retains counsel on the original trial, the State may rely on the presumption that the accused’s lawyer will protect his client’s rights on appeal.”8 Our case does not quite fit the quoted statement. The court and prosecutor knew of Victor’s indigency, and that appointed trial counsel was no longer available to him during the period within which he could take an appeal. But there is no claim that the court or prosecution knew of his desire for appellate counsel if in fact he had any wish to appeal.9

It seems to be conceded that as a matter of Indiana practice Victor’s trial counsel had no obligation to discuss with him the advisability or means of [271]*271taking an appeal. Hence the state can scarcely rely on an assumption that he did so. Several recent decisions have dealt with this type of problem where defendant had been represented by counsel who failed to give appropriate advice, and defendant did not have the necessary knowledge from any other source.

The decision most favorable to Victor seems to be Wynn v. Page in the tenth circuit.10 The district court had held an evidentiary hearing, and had found that Wynn did knowingly forego an appeal, with full understanding of his constitutional rights. The court of appeals, however, reversed, being convinced that Wynn “was not afforded the assistance of counsel concerning his right of appeal and the exercise thereof, that he did not knowingly forego his right to appeal his conviction, and that he did not fully understand his constitutional rights in the matter.”

Wynn had retained his own counsel for the trial, but counsel did not see him after the sentencing and did not advise him concerning an appeal nor the filing of a pauper’s oath. The time for appeal was only ten days.

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Bluebook (online)
394 F.2d 268, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-muncie-victor-v-ward-lane-warden-of-indiana-state-prison-ca7-1968.