1. The conclusion of the Supreme Court of Kansas -- that the
record of criminal proceedings in a state court showing that the
defendant was represented throughout by counsel and revealing on
its face no irregularity in the trial is sufficient refutation of
his unsupported charge in a petition for habeas corpus that he was
denied the right to summon witnesses and to testify for himself --
is accepted in this case. P.
316 U. S.
256.
2. Upon review of a judgment of a state supreme court denying a
petition for a writ of habeas corpus which alleged that the
petitioner, having been convicted of crime and incarcerated in a
penitentiary, had endeavored to appeal from his conviction within
the time allowed by state law, but without success because the
prison officials, following prison rules, had suppressed his appeal
documents, but where it did not appear that the truth of these
allegations had been inquired into before dismissal of the petition
--
held that the case should be sent back to the state
court for further proceedings. P.
316 U. S.
256.
153 Kan. 777, 113 P.2d 1048, reversed.
Certiorari, 314 U.S. 588, to review a judgment of the Supreme
Court of Kansas dismissing a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1933, the petitioner Cochran was convicted by a jury in a
Kansas state court upon a charge of passing a $12.60 check with
knowledge that it was forged. His motion for a new trial was
overruled. Upon a finding that Cochran
Page 316 U. S. 256
had previously been convicted of two other felonies, the court
sentenced him to life imprisonment as an habitual criminal pursuant
to a Kansas statute. Kan.Gen.Stat. (Corrick, 1935) 21-107a. Two
days later, he was sent to the state penitentiary, where he has
since been confined.
In January, 1941, Cochran acting in his own behalf, filed an
original application for habeas corpus in the Supreme Court of
Kansas. His application sets out the allegations, among others,
that the trial judge had denied him the right to summon witnesses
and to testify on his own behalf, and that officials of the state
penitentiary, enforcing prison rules there in effect, had
suppressed appeal documents he had prepared, thereby making it
impossible for him to perfect an appeal during the two-year period
allowed by Kansas statute. The State filed a return containing a
certified copy of the information on which Cochran was tried,
journal entries of the trial, an order overruling Cochran's motion
for a new trial, and the judgment and sentence.
The Kansas Supreme Court denied the writ, stating that "the
records of courts are not set aside upon the unsupported statements
of a defeated litigant."
Cochran v. Amrine, 153 Kan. 777,
113 P.2d 1048, 1049. We accept the court's conclusion that the
record, showing that Cochran was represented by counsel throughout,
and revealing on its face no irregularities in the trial, is
sufficient refutation of his unsupported charge that he was denied
the right to summon witnesses and testify for himself.
But the allegations that prison officials frustrated Cochran's
efforts to perfect an appeal are a different matter. Since these
allegations relate to a period subsequent to Cochran's commitment,
and since that is the latest event referred to in the record, the
record itself affords no refutation. Nor are these allegations
denied in any other part of the State's answer. Moreover, the
opinion of the court itself recognizes that these allegations had
"some basis,"
Page 316 U. S. 257
pointing out that, "under rules . . . prevailing at the
penitentiary" for some time following Cochran's commitment, he was
prevented from sending out a petition for habeas corpus, and that
it was not until October, 1935 (after the time for appeal had
expired), that such a petition was actually filed. On the other
hand, nothing in the opinion indicates that the court denied the
application on the ground that it had canvassed the allegations and
supporting affidavits of Cochran and three others pertaining to
suppression of appeal and had concluded that they were untrue.
Cochran's application for habeas corpus does not bear the name
of counsel. Not a lawyer, he apparently prepared it himself. On the
issue of denial of opportunity to perfect an appeal, he alleged
that the "record shows that the duly authorized officers and prison
officials exercised unlawful authority by suppressing your
petitioners appeal documents," etc. In its brief and argument
before us, the State has contended that the word "record" can refer
only to the trial record set out in its return to Cochran's
application. Since that record does not show the alleged
suppression, it is urged that Cochran's application was properly
denied, because wholly unsupported. As we have pointed out, the
record of the trial court proceedings, relating as it did to a
period ending with Cochran's commitment, could prove nothing with
respect to independent subsequent events. Hence, to place the
construction urged by the State on the word "record," as used by
Cochran, would not merely impute to him a technical precision which
his application as a whole contradicts; it would render the
application entirely meaningless.
The State properly concedes that, if the alleged facts
pertaining to suppression of Cochran's appeal
"were disclosed as being true before the Supreme Court of
Kansas, there would be no question but that there was a violation
of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. "
Page 316 U. S. 258
And, in Kansas, habeas corpus is recognized as affording a
remedy for a person held in prison in violation of a right
guaranteed by the Federal Constitution.
316
U.S. 255at|>* However inept Cochran's choice of words, he
has set out allegations supported by affidavits and nowhere denied
that Kansas refused him privileges of appeal which it afforded to
others. Since no determination of the verity of these allegations
appears to have been made, the cause must be remanded for further
proceedings.
Reversed.
|
316
U.S. 255at|
*
See, e.g., In re Jarvis, 66 Kan. 329, 31 P. 576.
Cf. Smith v. O'Grady, 312 U. S. 329.