People ex rel. Bowers v. Fay

171 F. Supp. 558, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3260
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 22, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 F. Supp. 558 (People ex rel. Bowers v. Fay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Bowers v. Fay, 171 F. Supp. 558, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3260 (S.D.N.Y. 1958).

Opinion

WEINFELD, District Judge.

Petitioner has applied to this Court for a writ of habeas corpus. He is currently serving a fifteen-year-to-life prison term in Green Haven Prison in New York State, having been sentenced as a fourth offender under the New York Multiple Offender Law1 pursuant to a judgment of conviction entered in the Kings County Court. Petitioner was twenty-three years old at the time he was sentenced. He challenges here two of the prior convictions on which his sentence was based; both were entered in the State of Pennsylvania on petitioner’s plea of guilty. He contends that he was not accorded due process of law because he was not informed of his right to counsel and that this deprived him of adequate representation.

In presenting his petition for relief petitioner appeared pro se. He reviewed at length his efforts to secure relief in the New York and Pennsylvania courts. When these and other efforts failed he presented the pending applicasion. This Court concluded, as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254, that the petitioner had exhausted all remedies available to him in Pennsylvania and New York and accordingly the matter was properly before this Court. People ex rel. Bowers v. Fay, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 157 F.Supp. 701.

In order to determine whether petitioner has indeed been deprived of due process and in view of the incomplete record of the Pennsylvania proceedings the Court set the matter down for hearing,2 issued a writ ad testificandum for petitioner’s appearance at the hearing and appointed counsel to represent him. Counsel have been most diligent in carrying out their assignment. They interviewed petitioner in prison and journeyed to Philadelphia to investigate the circumstances under which his pleas of guilty were entered.

Petitioner was the only witness who testified at the hearing. Now forty years old he has spent the greater part of his life — indeed the last twenty-four years — in prison for nonviolent offenses mostly involving petty sums. He was born in the deep South and came to Philadelphia with his family at an early age. When he was twelve years old his schooling ended. He never went further than the fifth grade. Until he was fourteen he continued to live with his family; thereafter he lived alone, eking out an existence selling papers, shining shoes and working in factories.

The first judgment of conviction which petitioner attacks was entered in the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace of the County of • Philadelphia when he was just a few months past sixteen. According to his testimony he was work[560]*560ing in a shoe shine and cleaning establishment when a friend, about his own age, sought to borrow $7 from him. Petitioner refused to make the loan but accepted the friend’s offer to sell him a coat for $4. He had seen the friend wearing the coat on several earlier occasions and assumed that it had been given to him by his parents. On the evening of the day of the purchase a policeman came to the place where petitioner worked and questioned him. Petitioner readily admitted that he bought the coat. His indictment followed. The charge was receiving a stolen overcoat valued at 122.50.

When arraigned petitioner was neither advised of his right to counsel nor of the consequences of his plea. No one was appointed to represent him. The petitioner testified that at the arraignment someone other than the judge stated that he was charged with receiving stolen goods and asked whether he was guilty or not guilty. Petitioner answered guilty. The entire proceeding took less than two minutes and later that day sentence was imposed. Petitioner further testified that neither at the time of arraignment and plea nor at sentencing did the judge or any other person advise him as to his right to counsel; that on neither occasion was he represented by counsel and at no time did anyone offer or suggest the appointment of counsel.

The circumstances surrounding the entry of the plea of guilty to the second challenged judgment of conviction followed the same pattern. Petitioner was not advised of his right to counsel; he was not offered counsel; he was not represented by counsel. The second plea was entered when the petitioner was twenty years of age. At this time he had already experienced prison life, having been sentenced to two years in the State Industrial School on his prior conviction. This time the charge was enticing a female child for the purpose of sexual intercourse. The facts relating to this charge establish that petitioner met one Lulu Hawthorne in April 1937 and saw her regularly thereafter several times a week. Both were minors. When petitioner asked Lulu’s parents for permission to marry her he was told to wait. Unwilling to wait, Lulu and the petitioner ran away. Later, on the promise of Lulu’s mother that the requested consent would be forthcoming, they came back but again were refused. Thereupon they ran away a second time. Petitioner fixes this occurrence sometime about the second or third week of January 1938. This time, after living together for a week, Lulu and the petitioner separated and petitioner was subsequently arrested. The indictment charges that he “did unlawfully take * * * inveigle and entice” Lulu.

That the petitioner was an ignorant, uneducated and immature youth on the occasion of both pleas does not admit of doubt. In the first instance he was just past sixteen and in the second just past twenty. It is also beyond question that he was without knowledge of the essential elements of the respective criminal charges against him. The charges to which he pleaded guilty are serious ones. Each carried a substantial prison term. His testimony about each charge, if credited, would suggest that he had a reasonable and plausible defense which he was entitled to present.3 Petitioner appeared alone without counsel at the time of his plea. He was not advised of his right to counsel and none was assigned to represent him. His testimony on this subject is corroborated by a stipulation to the effect that if an attorney, who through the years has served and who is still serving as public defender in the court where the pleas were entered, were called as witness he would testify that it was not the practice during the period in question to “advise defendants of their right to counsel or of the consequences of a plea of guilty”.

The mere denial of or lack of representation by counsel does not, where the charges are of a noncapital nature, [561]*561void a state court conviction.4 In such a situation it must be shown that the lack of adequate counsel denied the defendant “the fair hearing secured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in a state prosecution”.5 The question to be decided is whether in the circumstances of each case the lack of counsel deprived the defendant of a fair opportunity to advance a defense based upon the facts surrounding each charge. As to the first charge it is clear that an essential element of the crime of receiving stolen property was knowledge that the property was in fact stolen.6 Petitioner’s testimony that he believed the friend from whom he bought the coat owned it and that the friend had received it from his parents is not contradicted. This, of course, does not mean that the Court is bound to accept it.

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171 F. Supp. 558, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-bowers-v-fay-nysd-1958.