Caldwell v. Paige
Caldwell v. Paige
Opinion of the Court
The issue on this appeal is whether the sentencing procedure following petitioner’s indictment was a trial by jury or in substance a plea of guilty.
This issue arose in the trial of a habeas corpus case filed in the Superior Court of Tattnall County by Frank Paige, the petitioner, against E. B. Caldwell, Warden of the Georgia State Prison, the respondent. The petition alleged in substance that Paige’s conviction in 1962 for rape and his sentence of death resulted in his unlawful detention because of systematic exclusion of Negroes from grand and petit juries. For prior appearance wherein this court affirmed the conviction, see Paige v. State, 219 Ga. 569 (134 SE2d 793).
On March 14, 1966, Paige was again sentenced, this time to life imprisonment.
Subsequently, on July 17, 1972, he filed this habeas corpus petition, challenging jury composition. Upon the hearing considerable oral and documentary evidence was presented.
However, before completion of the hearing it was agreed that the first question for decision was whether his 1966 sentencing procedure constituted a guilty plea or a jury trial; and that if it was the former, or otherwise constituted a waiver of non-jurisdictional defects, the remaining issue as to jury composition would be moot.
Accordingly, the habeas corpus judge, in his findings of fact and conclusions of law, held that what transpired as to petitioner’s sentencing was in fact a trial by jury and did not amount to the entry of a guilty plea. In doing so he ruled that petitioner should have an opportunity to prove his claim as to jury composition because it was not waived.
A certificate of immediate review was granted, authorizing this appeal by the respondent warden.
We have concluded that the habeas corpus judge erred in the ruling now under review.
At the outset we are not unmindful of the wording of petitioner’s plea and the verdict. On the reverse side of the indictment is the entry as to the plea. It recites that
Furthermore, we have not overlooked several portions of the transcript of the habeas corpus hearing wherein the petitioner responds affirmatively to counsel’s questions containing the word "trial” and the like.
Actually however, there were no attributes of a trial.
According to petitioner’s testimony, a jury had already been chosen and impaneled when he got there; no evidence was introduced while he was present; he did not hear any testimony at all; and nobody said anything while he was there.
The attorney then and now representing him testified at length. He explained the procedure then used in that court for consent verdicts, observing that it was no different from entering a guilty plea, except that the judge sometimes granted probation where there was a guilty plea. He stated that in accordance with the foregoing procedure the verdict in this case was written out by the district attorney, who asked one of the jurors to sign it, and that this was done. He also testified that no evidence was presented; that no argument to the jury was had; that no jury was selected other than the first twelve on the jury list; that no jury was stricken; and that no opening statements were made.
It is clear from the plea, verdict and testimony that the sentencing procedure employed here constituted a consent verdict of guilty. What occurred was in substance a plea of guilty, whereby the petitioner would receive a life sentence, as prearranged by the district attorney and petitioner’s counsel.
Petitioner could not have been prejudiced by a jury that did not have any judgment in the verdict it rendered, and that merely performed the ministerial function of one of its members signing the verdict with the recommendation.
It follows that the habeas corpus judge erred in rendering the findings of fact and conclusion of law.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.