State v. Summers

444 N.E.2d 1041, 3 Ohio App. 3d 234, 3 Ohio B. 265, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 10060
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1981
DocketC-800899 and C-800900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 444 N.E.2d 1041 (State v. Summers) 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. Summers, 444 N.E.2d 1041, 3 Ohio App. 3d 234, 3 Ohio B. 265, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 10060 (Ohio Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

Black, J.

The question in this appeal is whether a judgment and sentence will be reversed when the defendant’s written plea of no contest was entered on the trial court’s record, but it is impossible to produce a transcript of the proceeding at which the no contest plea was offered and accepted because the stenographic notes had beep lost or stolen through no fault of the court, the prosecution or the defense. We answer the question in the negative.

The defendant was charged in two separate indictments with breaking and entering and with aggravated burglary. After he withdrew his pleas of not guilty and entered written pleas of no contest on October 27, 1980, he was sentenced to consecutive terms of imprisonment." He then appealed both sentences, but he discovered while attempting to certify a transcript of the hearing at which his pleas were accepted, that the stenographic notes of the hearing had been lost or stolen and could not, after diligent search, be found. Subsequently, affidavits about the hearing both by defendant’s trial counsel and by the trial judge were filed in this court on, respectively, June 11 and June 15, 1981. Because neither affidavit had been certified to this court as part of the record on appeal pursuant to App. R. 9, counsel have prepared and filed, at the suggestion of this court, an Agreed Stipulation As To Supplemental Record under App. R. 9(E), in order to correct the foregoing omission by expressly incorporating as part of the agreed record on appeal the affidavits of the trial judge and defense counsel. 1

Defendant’s single assignment of error in each appeal is identical to that in the other appeal and is phrased as follows:

*235 “Appellant has been denied his due process rights to an effective appeal because of the unavailability of the transcript of the proceedings before the trial court, the inadequacies of the recollection of the trial court in trying to comply with Rule 9(C) of the Appellate Rules, and the resulting record which does not affirmatively show even substantial compliance with Criminal Rule 11(C).”

Although this somewhat diffuse assignment of error is postulated solely in terms of a Fourteenth Amendment due process deficiency, the defendant’s argument makes clear that at least two grounds of error allegedly prejudicial to the defendant are asserted: first, the due process argument, and second, the failure of the record, as supplemented, to demonstrate compliance with Crim. R. 11(C).

With respect to the due process argument, the defendant cites Boykin v. Alabama (1969), 395 U.S. 238, as authority for the proposition that a voluntary and intelligent waiver of constitutional rights will not be presumed from a silent record. This argument overlooks, however, the fact that the records in the instant appeals are not silent, because each contains the defendant’s no contest plea in a form that expressly sets forth his understanding of the nature and effect of his plea and includes waiver of his constitutional rights. 2 These written pleas further contain the following certification by defense counsel:

“I have explained to the Defendant prior to his/her signing this plea, the charge(s) in the indictment, the penalties therefore, and his/her constitutional rights in this case. I represent that in my opinion, the Defendant is competent to change his/her plea and now does so knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily.”

We conclude that, with respect to the due process argument, the record does not require us to “* * * presume a waiver of these * * * important federal rights from a silent record,” Boykin v. Alabama, supra, at 243, but demonstrates a suffi- *236 dent constitutional basis for acceptance of the no contest pleas. State v. Hoyle (Apr. 13, 1977), Hamilton App. No. C-76201, unreported.

The second ground of error is that the record as supplemented fails to demonstrate compliance with Crim. R. 11(C). We conceive of this as separate from the first argument and not disposed of by our answer to the first argument, because Crim. R. 11(C) exceeds the letter of the federal law by requiring that the trial court shall first address the defendant personally to make certain determinations about the voluntariness of the plea and to inform the defendant of his statutory and constitutional rights in specific detail. So far as we are aware, the federal requirement of express volun-tariness is nonspecific as to method, while the Ohio requirement is specific. It would be possible to meet the federal test without following the Ohio procedure. State v. Billups (1979), 57 Ohio St. 2d 31, 37 [11 O.O.3d 150]. The question, then, is whether the defendant can demonstrate from the record sub judice that the trial court failed to comply with the Ohio procedure. 3 We believe he cannot.

The record sub judice discloses that a written plea of no contest was signed by defendant (and his counsel) and accepted by the court but fails to contain the personal exchange between the court and the defendant at the plea hearing. The absence of a transcript of the hearing is not the fault of the court, the prosecution or the defense. Defense counsel has no recollection of the proceedings sufficient to prepare a narrative statement of the plea hearing, and he is unable to point specifically to any deficiency in the court’s performance. The court has no better recollection of the event, but asserts that full compliance with the rule is its standard operating procedure. Under these circumstances, the long-established presumption in favor of regularity fills the void. As stated in In re Sublett (1959), 169 Ohio St. 19, 20, “all reasonable presumptions consistent with the record will be indulged in favor of the validity of the judgment or decision under review and of the regularity and legality of the proceeding below.” See, also, Palmer v. Yarrington (1853), 1 Ohio St. 253, 261, and State v. Ray (1956), 102 Ohio App. 395 [2 O.O.2d 415].

In Yarbrough v. Maxwell (1963), 174 Ohio St. 287 [22 O.O.2d 341], the court denied a writ of habeas corpus to a petitioner who could not demonstrate the irregularity of the proceedings below when his plea was changed from not guilty to guilty, other than through his own unsupported, uncorroborated statements. In Coleman v. McGettrick (1965), 2 Ohio St. 2d 177 [31 O.O.2d 326], the failure of the appellate court to state on the record its reasons for denying him bail did not overcome the presumption of regularity and the petition for a writ of habeas corpus was denied.

We believe that in the absence of any *237 demonstration whatsoever on the record that the trial court failed to comply substantially with Crim. R.

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Bluebook (online)
444 N.E.2d 1041, 3 Ohio App. 3d 234, 3 Ohio B. 265, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 10060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-summers-ohioctapp-1981.