State v. Strutton

575 N.E.2d 466, 62 Ohio App. 3d 248, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 4400
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 1988
DocketNo. 10902.
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 575 N.E.2d 466 (State v. Strutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Strutton, 575 N.E.2d 466, 62 Ohio App. 3d 248, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 4400 (Ohio Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

Fain, Judge.

Defendant-appellant, Willard Strutton, appeals from a judgment dismissing his petition for post-conviction relief, with prejudice. Strutton contends that in his petition for relief he alleged that his guilty plea was the product of ineffective assistance of counsel with sufficient particularity to entitle him to a hearing. We agree. Accordingly, the dismissal of Stratton’s petition for post-conviction relief will be reversed, and this cause will be remanded for a hearing on the merits.

*250 I

Strutton was charged with eight counts of rape, and four counts of gross sexual imposition (the latter four counts with a specification of violence), all of which allegedly involve a person not his spouse, less than thirteen years of age. Pursuant to a plea bargain, Strutton pled guilty to one count of rape and one count of gross sexual imposition with a violence specification. Strutton was sentenced to incarceration for five to twenty-five years for rape and two to ten years for gross sexual imposition, the sentences to run concurrently.

Strutton filed a motion to vacate his plea and sentence, pro se. Subsequently, Strutton’s appointed counsel obtained leave to file, and did file, an amended petition to vacate sentence.

In Strutton’s original petition, he alleged with some particularity that his original trial counsel failed to consider, as an evidentiary lead, a letter from the complainant’s mother in which the mother stated that the complainant had admitted that the charges against Strutton were false. In Strutton’s amended petition, this specific claim is replaced with a more general allegation that Strutton’s original trial counsel “was aware of certain statements made by a prosecution witness (the mother of the victim) which were not consistent with statements made to the prosecuting attorney, however * * * [Strutton’s original trial counsel] failed to investigate or properly pursue this matter. Instead, * * * [Strutton’s original trial counsel] coerced Petitioner to plead guilty to the charge.”

Furthermore, in both his original petition which he filed pro se and in his amended petition, Strutton alleged that after he pled guilty but before he was sentenced, he told his original trial counsel that he wanted to withdraw his plea, but that his original trial counsel became upset with him, refused to participate in any withdrawal of the plea, and also said that if Strutton insisted on seeking to withdraw his plea, trial counsel would withdraw as Strutton’s counsel. Strutton alleged, in both his original and amended petitions, that he believed he would be forced, as a result of his original trial counsel’s withdrawal, to proceed to trial without an attorney, and that his reluctance to do so was responsible for his acquiescence in his trial counsel’s insistence that he not seek to withdraw his plea.

The state moved to dismiss Strutton’s amended petition to vacate his sentence, and the trial court, without a hearing, granted the motion to dismiss, with prejudice. From the dismissal of his petition to vacate his sentence, Strutton appeals.

II

Strutton assigns the following errors:

*251 “First Assignment of Error
“The trial court erred in dismissing appellant’s petition without a hearing as appellant’s petition, with the supporting affidavits contained sufficient operative facts to demonstrate the lack of competent counsel and that appellant was prejudiced by counsel’s ineffectiveness.
“Second Assignment of Error
“The trial court erred in dismissing appellant’s petition without a hearing as appellant’s petition, with the supporting affidavits contained sufficient operative facts to demonstrate the lack of a voluntary, knowing and intelligent guilty plea.”

Essentially, Strutton argues that in his petition he has alleged that ineffective assistance of counsel produced his guilty plea, and his failure to move to withdraw that guilty plea, with sufficient particularity to entitle him to a hearing.

A hearing is not automatically required whenever a petition for post-conviction relief is filed. The test is whether there are substantive grounds for relief that would warrant a hearing based upon the petition, the supporting affidavits and the files and records in the case. State v. Jackson (1980), 64 Ohio St.2d 107, 110, 18 O.O.3d 348, 350, 413 N.E.2d 819, 822.

In his original petition, Strutton alleged that his original trial counsel failed to pursue the evidentiary lead represented by a letter that Strutton had supposedly received from the complainant’s mother, in which the mother had written that her daughter had admitted that the charges against Strutton were groundless. That is certainly an important enough evidentiary lead to raise a question whether Stratton’s original trial counsel met minimum standards of competence in failing to pursue that lead, assuming that Strutton succeeds,_ in a hearing, in establishing the facts that he has alleged.

Also troubling is Stratton’s allegation that fiis original trial counsel, upon being asked to file a motion to withdraw Stratton’s guilty plea, before sentencing, not only refused to do so, but threatened to withdraw as counsel if Strutton should decide to file his own motion, without informing Strutton that Strutton would have the right to secure appointed counsel for trial. If Strutton were to succeed in proving this allegation at a hearing it might well be supposed that, as Strutton alleges, he decided not to move to withdraw his plea only because he did not want to be put in the position of having to go to trial without an attorney to represent him.

Even though a motion to withdraw a guilty plea, filed before sentencing, “should be freely allowed,” the decision whether to grant the *252 motion is nevertheless confided to the discretion of the trial court, under Crim.R. 32.1. State v. Peterseim (1980), 68 Ohio App.2d 211, 22 O.O.3d 341, 428 N.E.2d 863. However, even if a defendant is not entitled to withdraw his plea of guilty as of right, and it cannot be concluded with certainty that he would be allowed to withdraw his plea if it had been made, a defendant is prejudicially denied effective assistance of counsel when his attorney fails to act on his request to withdraw his plea when the possibility that he would have been allowed to withdraw his plea is not insubstantial. Holtan v. Parratt (C.A.8, 1982), 683 F.2d 1163. In view of the fact that Strutton sought to make his motion before sentencing, when a motion to vacate a plea “should be freely allowed” (State v. Peterseim, supra, paragraph one of the syllabus), we cannot say that the possibility that he would have been allowed to withdraw his plea, had the motion been made, was insubstantial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
575 N.E.2d 466, 62 Ohio App. 3d 248, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 4400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-strutton-ohioctapp-1988.