Strickland v. State

35 S.E.2d 463, 199 Ga. 792, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 4, 1945
Docket15201.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 35 S.E.2d 463 (Strickland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strickland v. State, 35 S.E.2d 463, 199 Ga. 792, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 380 (Ga. 1945).

Opinion

Candler, Justice.

The main question presented in this case is whether the court below erred in denying a motion by Leroy Strickland to withdraw his plea of guilty of murder and to vacate a judgment and sentence thereon of life imprisonment. The motion, in writing, was made during the same term of court at which ■ the plea was entered and judgment pronounced. However, the motion was not made before judgment was pronounced, and the movant, as a matter of right, could not withdraw his plea in accordance with the provisions of the Code, § 27-1404. The judgment having been pronounced before the motion made at the same term, in such circumstances it seems to be well settled that the right to withdraw a plea of guilty is within the soimd legal discre *796 tion of the trial judge. Sanders v. State, 59 Ga. App. 748 (2 S. E. 2d, 144), and cit. In Griffin v. State, 12 Ga. App. 615 (77 S. E. 1080), where a judgment refusing leave to withdraw a plea of guilty was reversed, the Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Pottle, construed the words, “judicial discretion,” and said: “An appeal to a judge’s discretion is an appeal to his judicial conscience. This discretion must be exercised, not in opposition to, but in accordance with, established rules of law. It is not an arbitrary power but one which must be exercised wisely and impartially. In its practical application in this State, judicial discretion is substantially synonymous with judicial power. . . The ruling so often made by the Supreme Court and this court that the discretion of a trial judge will not be controlled, unless manifestly abused, means simply that the reviewing court will not control his finding of facts upon conflicting evidence. If upon these facts an erroneous finding of law be rendered, the latter judgment will be set aside; but, if that judgment be sound as applied to his finding of facts, the reviewing court will not interfere. See Jackson v. State, 99 Ga. 209 (25 S. E. 177),-where a judgment refusing-leave to withdraw a plea of guilty was affirmed. It is really misleading to speak of the trial court’s action as an abuse of discretion. Men’s rights, both of person and of property, are regulated by fixed legal principles. In passing upon them, whether at law or in equit, the court must regard these principles. It has neither discretion nor power to do otherwise. If the judge fails to apply them in a given case, he has simply made an erroneous judgment, which can be corrected on review. Primarily a motion to withdraw a plea or set aside a judgment of conviction in a criminal case is addressed to the discretion of the presiding judge. He hears the reasons for the motion and the evidence in support thereof. If these reasons be good in law, and the evidence be undisputed, the matter is no longer one of discretion, but the motion prevails as a matter of legal right. . . The general rule is that in passing upon the facts whatever discretion the court has ought to be exercised liberally in favor of the prisoner. State v. Williams, 45 La. Ann. 1356 (14 South. 32).”

In the present case, it appears without dispute, that one Raulerson, who had been sheriff of the county where the case was pending and whose term of office expired about two weeks preceding *797 the plea was furnishing some assistance to the solicitor-general in the presentation of this case and other cases in which he had made an arrest or ah investigation at the January term, 1945, of the court; and that, on the same day and before the plea was entered, Eaulerson talked to Leroy Strickland at the jail and escorted him from the jail to the courtroom. There is some conflict between the evidence offered on the motion as to what Eaulerson and Strickland said to each other. Strickland, in his affidavit introduced in his behalf on the motion, stated in this connection, “that shortly before deponent entered his plea of guilty with recommendation, around 5 o’clock p.m. on the 15th day of January, 1945, ex-sheriff Eaulerson told deponent that he did not have a chance if he pleaded not guilty; that deponent became frightened, took what ex-sheriff Eaulerson had said that, if deponent did not plead guilty with recommendation, . . he would be convicted and electrocuted, and deponent in that frame of mind, being scared, under torture of fear, ignorant and [under] coercion, . . on the 15th day of January, 1945, entered his plea of guilty.” On the subject of the conversation with Strickland, ex-sheriff Eaulerson, in his affidavit introduced in evidence on behalf of the respondent, deposed: "“That when the court met and during court deponent went to the jail for the purpose of finding out what the said Leroy Strickland wanted to do, as the State had to get ready fox trial in the matter. Deponent said to Leroy Strickland, ‘We are about ready to dispose of your case, and I want to know what you want to do.’ I then asked Leroy Strickland whether he wanted to plead guilty or stand trial. Leroy Strickland said that Ealph Dawson, an attorney, was supposed to be there to represent him, and deponent then advised Leroy Strickland that no such attorney had been at court and that he wasn’t there. The said Leroy Strickland then asked deponent what he would get if he plead .guilty, and deponent replied that the judge would have to give him life imprisonment. The said Leroy Stickland then said, I’m ready to go over there and get it over with.’”

J. W. Crews, the sheriff who took office January 1, 1945, made an affidavit, which was introduced in evidence on behalf of the respondent on the motion and deposed: “From time to time when deponent went to feed the prisoners, Leroy would talk to deponent about the ease, and on one occasion said that he was sorry that he *798 had got into it, but that he had killed a man and there was not any use for him to fight the case. He said that he did not want a lawyer because it would not do him any good to fight the case. None of these statements as made by Leroy were in any way influenced by deponent, and as a matter of fact deponent did not discuss the case at length with Leroy, but . . Leroy would always mention it to deponent when he would go into the jail for feeding the prisoners. Leroy did ask deponent on one occasion, unsolicited in any way by deponent, what he would get if he plead guilty, and deponent told him he would get life.”

It was shown without dispute in the pleadings and evidence on the motion that Strickland at the time of the plea was 17 years of age and had only a third-grade education. Although the evidence for the movant is not very clear in establishing his allegation that up to January 15, 1945, or the date of the plea, he believed that he would have the services of an attorney at law to represent him, the affidavit of ex-sheriff Kaulerson and the statement of the respondent solicitor-general of the Waj^cross Judicial Circuit, which was introduced in evidence by agreement of counsel, both substantiate that contention. The statement of the solicitor-general is as follows: “About ten days before the January term of Brantley superior court, I had a conversation with Mr. Balph Lawson, who is solicitor-general of the Atlantic Circuit, in Georgia, and he stated to me that some parties, without naming them, had approached him about representing a Strickland boy in Brantley County, who was charged with murder.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E.2d 463, 199 Ga. 792, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-state-ga-1945.