Commonwealth v. Howells
Commonwealth v. Howells
Opinion of the Court
Opinion
Order affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
Appellant pleaded guilty to murder in 1946 and was sentenced to life imprisonment. In November, 1966 he filed a petition under the Post Conviction Hearing Act in which he set forth numerous grounds for relief. Howells alleged, inter alia, that a confession had been coerced by virtue of the fact that he was only fourteen years of age in 1946 (with a mental age later found to be about ten or eleven), yet was not permitted even to call his mother from the police station until he had made a statement. Appellant also alleged that this confession motivated his guilty plea, and that in no event was his mental condition sufficient to justify the trial court’s acceptance of this plea. The court below dismissed appellant’s petition without holding an evidentiary hearing, and the majority today affirms that dismissal “per curiam.” Because I believe that Howells is entitled to an evidentiary hearing, I dissent.
Section 9 of the Post Conviction Hearing Act specifically requires that the court hold an evidentiary
I dissent.
Reference
- Status
- Published