State v. Meeks

635 S.W.2d 14, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 456
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 8, 1982
DocketNos. 62958, 63016
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 635 S.W.2d 14 (State v. Meeks) 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
State v. Meeks, 635 S.W.2d 14, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 456 (Mo. 1982).

Opinions

MORGAN, Judge.

This is an appeal of two consolidated cases: (1) a direct appeal from a conviction of robbery first degree with a sentence of 25 years, to be served consecutively with a 15 year sentence imposed in another cause; and (2) an appeal from a partial denial, after hearing, of appellant’s Rule 27.26 motion which attacked the competence and effectiveness of appellant’s trial counsel.

For purposes of this opinion, there need not be a factual recitation underlying appellant’s robbery first degree conviction as it shall suffice to say that appellant was convicted in May of 1978. His trial counsel filed a timely motion for new trial but did not appeal from denial thereof although requested to do so by appellant.

On September 29, 1980, appellant filed a Rule 27.26 motion on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel at the trial level in that counsel failed to perfect an appeal, and additionally failed to call witnesses who could have exonerated him. Appellant requested a change of judge which was granted, with the Honorable Richard J. Brown assigned to hear the matter.

When informed that appellant had on numerous occasions either escaped custody or attempted to escape custody, both in Missouri and other jurisdictions, and after conferring with the Chief Judge of the 22nd Circuit, Judge Brown requested and was granted by this Court a transfer to the 19th Judicial Circuit in Cole County for the purpose of hearing this motion. As Judge Brown stated in his Findings of Fact after the evidentiary hearing: “This [the transfer] was done for security purposes only, [16]*16considering the Petitioner’s [appellant’s] past record of escapes and attempted escapes. Petitioner’s attorney stated his opposition to such transfer, and wrote a memorandum of law on the subject, but did not formally file any action opposing said transfer.”

On March 20, 1981, in response to appellant’s allegation and the state’s stipulation, Judge Brown vacated appellant’s sentence, granted allocution, and then resentenced him to the same twenty five year term without attending to the remainder of the Rule 27.26 motion. Appellant thereafter filed a Notice of Appeal of his armed robbery conviction with this Court in order to preserve, as he asserts, his right to appeal. Later, in April of the same year, Judge Brown filed his Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law pertaining to and denying the remainder of appellant’s Rule 27.26 motion. Appellant filed a Notice of Appeal of the denial of his remaining allegations within his Rule 27.26 motion with this court in late April. Both appeals have one common issue, that being the validity of this Court’s order transferring Judge Brown to the 19th Judicial Circuit. We hold the appeal reference the armed robbery conviction in abeyance and address the Rule 27.26 motion.

Initially, we must address appellant’s threshold question: Was this Court’s order, transferring Judge Brown to the 19th Judicial Circuit in Cole County (site of the Missouri State Prison in which appellant was and is currently confined) a valid exercise of authority? Appellant is of the belief that Judge Brown, a judge of the 22nd Circuit transferred to the 19th Circuit, who by this Court’s order was given “the same powers and responsibilities as a judge of the court or district to which transferred,” was without jurisdiction to try the Rule 27.26 motion. Appellant claims that beyond jurisdiction, the venue was improper because the motion must be heard in the circuit in which movant-appellant was convicted. He therefore concludes, in a rather ingenious argument, that the Court’s order transferring Judge Brown was in effect a Special Rule of Court that had not been published for six months as required by Art. V, Sec. 51 of the Missouri Constitution, and was thereby void and without lawful authority.

While the Court applauds the resourcefulness of appellant’s allegation, it will be rejected. Rule 27.26(a) merely dictates that a post-conviction Rule 27.26 motion be filed with the court which imposed the sentence, and does not provide further. Case law2 has made clear that jurisdiction lies in the court that imposed sentence — the 22nd Circuit in the cause before us. The Order of this Court transferring Judge Brown, a judge of the 22nd Circuit, stated that he was empowered to hear appellant’s motion “in whole or in part in the courthouse in the City of St. Louis or the courthouse in Cole County at the discretion of the judge.” This language makes it obvious that the Court did not remove this cause from the hands of the judges of the 22nd Circuit; instead, it merely extended their judicial authority to include the right to hold a hearing in a courtroom outside the City of St. Louis. Appellant’s motion was heard by a judge of the 22nd Circuit, and as such, the jurisdiction was proper.

Having determined that jurisdiction properly rested with the trial court, we consider appellant’s contention that venue was improper. This contention is premised upon the language in the Committee Notes-1980 to Rule 27.26, which states that the [17]*17motion be filed in the court which imposed sentence, “where the records are and most of the witnesses would ordinarily be located.” Appellant states that certain subpoenaed witnesses did not attend the hearing who, had it taken place in St. Louis, would have attended. Appellant further argues that other unnamed witnesses could not be located from the penitentiary, yet if appellant had been brought to St. Louis, said witnesses could have been located by telephone.

We recognize that the underlying purposes of our Rule 27.26 procedures includes the geographic convenience of possible witnesses. Nevertheless, we are of the opinion that the filing requirement was founded more accurately upon the sentencing court’s retention of the records of the trial in question. We hold that the procedure which contemplates a Rule 27.26 motion being filed in the sentencing court was not designed solely to protect any individual rights or interests of the movant, but to satisfy a matter of convenience and proximity to court records. As such, no substantive rights were involved and Art. V, § 5, Mo.Const., is inapplicable.

In any event, we have not been presented with evidence of any prejudice suffered by appellant resulting from the hearing being held in Cole County. We note that the absent witnesses were members of appellant’s family; that counsel for appellant had seen these witnesses but the night before the hearing; and that said witnesses had been served with subpoenas.

Before this Court, appellant’s counsel presented the argument that he did not compel the witnesses’ attendance because he viewed the entire hearing (in Cole County) as invalid — yet if the hearing is viewed as valid, he was denied the means by which to prove his allegations since his witnesses were not present. It is mere speculation on appellant’s part to believe the witnesses would have been in attendance had the hearing been held in St. Louis as appellant could do no more to command their attendance there than in Cole County. Appellant, therefore, was not judicially denied his right of oral examination of witnesses, in contradiction of Art. V, § 5, Mo.Const.

Reference his claim that he needed to be in St. Louis to “telephone around” to locate additional witnesses, appellant did not explain to the Court why parties could be contacted by phone in St. Louis though not from the Missouri State Penitentiary. Implicit in this allegation is the cost factor of long distance calls from Cole County to St. Louis.

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Related

State v. Meeks
659 S.W.2d 306 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
635 S.W.2d 14, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-meeks-mo-1982.