Rivett v. State

395 P.2d 264, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 244
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1964
Docket374
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 395 P.2d 264 (Rivett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rivett v. State, 395 P.2d 264, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 244 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

On August 9, 1962, John C. Rivett, as defendant in the superior court, pleaded guilty to charges of (1) being in possession of a concealable firearm as a convicted felon, (2) theft of two checks, and (3) two counts of forgery of these checks. Five days later he was given certain concurrent sentences requiring him to spend a total of five years in prison. He now attacks the sentences on a multitude of grounds, including charges of illegal search and seizure, involuntary confession, and confession rendered while under the effects of drugs. Additional details pertinent to the appeal are as follows:

Acting upon information that a person named John Rivett had stolen some checks and was about to leave Alaska by airplane from Ketchikan, two state police officers on August 1, 1962, proceeded to the Ketchikan Airport — actually a dock for float planes — ■ where the defendant was pointed out to *265 them. They identified themselves to the defendant as police officers and asked him his name. At first he claimed to he M. E. Brown and produced his airplane ticket issued to that name; but, upon being asked for further identification, he admitted that his name was Rivett.

Without placing the defendant under arrest, the officers told him that they would like to talk to him further and asked him to go to the state police office with them. He agreed to go and after a two-hour interview at the office he was placed under arrest for larceny and “booked” at the jail on that charge. One of the police officers then proceeded to the magistrate’s office and signed a complaint against the defendant for larceny.

After the police officers had taken the defendant to their office they called the airlines and requested that the defendant’s baggage be taken off the flight. Later in the day, and subsequent to the defendant’s arrest, the officers picked up the baggage' — a suitcase — and took it to their office, where they searched it and found a .38 revolver and a hypodermic needle. The defendant admitted that both articles belonged to him.

There was evidently a second complaint filed against the defendant, for on August 2, 1962, he was arraigned before the magistrate at Ketchikan on two separate complaints, one charging him with grand theft of two checks and the other of being a convicted felon in possession of a concealable .38 revolver. The defendant was advised of 'his rights by the magistrate and stated that he wanted advice of counsel, whereupon the magistrate adjourned court. The proceedings in the magistrate court were later dismissed in favor of action in the superior; court. \

It appears that defendant obtained one Floyd Davidson to act as his attorney, as that person visited the defendant at the jail on August 6 and on August 9 informed the superior court that he was representing the defendant. On this latter date the defendant appeared in the superior court with his i attorney, waived prosecution by indictment and consented that the proceedings against him be by information. An information charging the crimes mentioned in the first paragraph of this opinion was filed forthwith. The defendant waived the reading of the information and further time to plead and personally entered his plea of guilty to each of the four counts of the information. Four days later he was sentenced to five years of imprisonment on each of the forgery counts and one year on each of the two other counts, all sentences to run concurrently.

On April 2, 1963, the defendant moved in the superior court for permission to proceed in forma pauperis, with court appointed counsel, and for a writ of habeas corpus. The motion for a writ of habeas corpus was denied on April 11 and the defendant appealed to this court from the order denying him the writ. We remanded the case to the superior court with directions to grant the defendant a hearing “and otherwise proceed in accordance with the provisions of Criminal Rules 35(b) and 32(d).” 1 We also granted the defendant’s motion to pro *266 ceed in forma-'pauperis and directed the lowér court to appoint counsel to represent him.

In compliance with our directions, the superior court held a hearing for the defendant on August 16, 1963, and denied the motion for habeas corpus. The defendant was not personally present at the hearing but was represented by his court appointed attorney, E. E. Bailey. In its findings of fact the trial court stated that the search in question was conducted after the arrest and incident thereto, that no force or coercion was used to obtain a confession from the defendant or his plea of guilty; that the defendant was not denied the right to counsel; and that he was not under the effect of drugs while in jail. The court also found that there had been no trial on the charges contained in the information filed against the defendant, for the reason that he had waived prosecution by indict'ment and consented to prosecution by information and then entered a voluntary plea of guilty. On September 3, 1963, the defendant filed a motion with this court to appeal in forma pauperis. We granted the motion and appointed the same Mr. Bailey to represent the defendant on appeal.

The defendant claims that the trial court erred in finding that no force or coercion was used to get a confession from him and •alleges that “only by the exertion of improper influences”' were the police officers •able to get him “to admit adequate- facts on which they could and did predicate an arrest.” He does not state what those “im-' proper influences” may have been other than to say that the police officers took him from the airport to their office and questioned him for two hours and then placed him under arrest because of what he had revealed to them.

We have searched the record ourselves and failed to find therein any evidence of threats, force, duress or promises of immunity. The two officers who interrogated the defendant before the arrest were called as witnesses by the defendant at the habeas corpus proceedings in the superior court. They both testified that the defendant accompanied them voluntarily to their office and was questioned there quite informally and without the employment by them of any threats, force or promises.

In his motion to the superior court for a writ of habeas corpus the defendant does allege that he was abusively handled and coerced and asked leading questions by the police officers prior to his arrest and that he was thereafter, while in jail, “coaxed, coerced, promised favors and leniency, threatened, harrassed, brow beaten and intimidated all to the end, that PETITION *267 'ER [defendant] change his pleas from Not Guilty to Guilty.” Thesfe are very gener•al charges and easily made; but they are withbut factual / support in ' the record, They are specifically denied by persons who had contact with the defendant 'during his ‘incarceration. Significantly, too, the defendant made no complaint of any, abuse or mistreatment such as he urges here until more than seven months after his- eonviction. • ... . .

Under these circumstances 'w'e' cán-not say that the trial court erred in its finding that no force or coercion had been used to obtain a 'confession from- the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
395 P.2d 264, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivett-v-state-alaska-1964.