1. Where, on direct review of his conviction, a state prisoner's
claim of federal constitutional right has been decided adversely to
him by the state supreme court and an application to this Court for
certiorari has been denied, he has satisfied the requirement of 28
U.S.C. § 2254 that state remedies be exhausted before a
federal court may grant an application for habeas corpus. Pp.
344 U. S.
446-450.
(a) It is not necessary in such circumstances that he pursue in
the state courts a collateral remedy based on the same evidence and
issues. Pp.
344 U. S.
447-450.
(b) Section 2254 is not to be construed as requiring repetitious
applications to state courts for relief. P.
344 U. S. 448,
n. 3.
2. A denial of certiorari by this Court (with no statement of
reasons therefor) to review a decision of a state supreme court
affirming a conviction in a criminal prosecution should be given no
weight by a federal court in passing upon the same petitioner's
application for a writ of habeas corpus . (Opinion of MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER, stating the position of a majority of the Court on
this point.) Pp.
344 U. S.
489-497.
3. On a state prisoner's application for habeas corpus on
federal constitutional grounds, the federal district court may take
into consideration the proceedings and adjudications in the state
trial and appellate courts. Pp.
344 U. S.
457-458.
(a) Where the state decision was based on an adequate state
ground, no further examination is required unless no state remedy
for the deprivation of federal constitutional rights ever existed.
P.
344 U. S.
458.
(b) Where there is material conflict of fact in the transcript
of evidence as to deprivation of constitutional rights, the
district court
Page 344 U. S. 444
may properly depend upon the state's resolution of the issue. P.
344 U. S.
458.
(c) In other circumstances, the state adjudication carries the
weight that federal practice gives to the conclusion of a court of
last resort of another jurisdiction on federal constitutional
issues, although
res judicata is not applicable. P.
344 U. S.
458.
4. Although in each of these cases the District Court
erroneously gave consideration to this Court's prior denial of
certiorari, it affirmatively appears from the record that the error
could not have affected the result, and such error may be and is
disregarded as harmless. Fed.Rules Crim.Proc., 52. Pp.
344 U. S.
458-460.
5. On the application of a state prisoner to a federal district
court for habeas corpus, when the records of the state trial and
appellate courts are before the district court, it is within the
discretion of the district court whether to take evidence and hear
argument on the federal constitutional issues, and the action of
the district court in not taking evidence or hearing argument in
the case here involved was not an abuse of that discretion. Pp.
344 U. S.
460-465.
6. In 28 U.S. C. §§ 2243 and 2244, the word
"entertain" means a federal district court's conclusion, after
examination of the habeas corpus application with such accompanying
papers as the court deems necessary, that a hearing on the merits,
legal or factual, is proper. Pp.
344 U. S.
460-461.
7. In No. 32, petitioner, a Negro, was not denied due process or
equal protection in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment by the
method of selecting grand and petit juries from lists limited by
state statute to taxpayers, though the lists had a higher
proportion of white than Negro citizens. Pp.
344 U. S.
466-474.
8. In No. 32, petitioner was not denied due process by the
admission in evidence against him of confessions not shown to have
been coerced. Pp.
344 U. S.
474-476.
9. In No. 22, petitioner, a Negro, did not show by clear
evidence that, in the selection of jurors which was actually made
in his case, there was discrimination based solely on race; and
petitioner's conviction cannot be set aside on that ground as
violative of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. The comparatively small number of names of Negroes in
the jury box was insufficient, in itself, to establish such
discrimination. Pp.
344 U. S.
477-482.
10. In No. 20, the State Supreme Court had refused review on the
merits of petitioners' conviction and death sentence (challenged on
federal constitutional grounds) because of petitioners' failure to
perfect their appeal within the 60-day limit applicable under
state
Page 344 U. S. 445
law, the appeal not having been perfected until the 61st day.
Held: a failure to use a state's available remedy, in the
absence of some interference or incapacity, bars federal habeas
corpus. Pp.
344 U. S.
482-487.
192 F.2d 477, 763, affirmed.
For Opinion of the Court,
see post, p.
344 U. S.
446.
For notation of MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring in the result,
see post, p.
344 U.S.
487.
For notation of position of MR. JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE
CLARK,
see post, p.
344
U.S. 487.
For opinion of MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER as to the legal
significance of this Court's denial of certiorari and the bearing
of proceedings in state courts on disposition of application for
writ of habeas corpus in a federal district court,
see
post, p.
344 U. S.
488.
For notation of position of MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS on the same two points,
see post, p.
344 U. S.
513.
For opinion of MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring in the result
announced by the Opinion of the Court,
see post, p.
344 U. S.
532.
For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK, joined by MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS,
see post, p.
344 U. S.
548.
For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, joined by MR.
JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS,
see post, p.
344 U. S.
554.
No.32. Petitioner, a state prisoner, applied to the Federal
District Court for habeas corpus, after his petition to this Court
for certiorari to review the State Supreme Court's affirmance of
his conviction had been denied. 341 U.S. 943. The District Court
dismissed the application. 98 F. Supp. 866. The Court of Appeals
affirmed. 192 F.2d 477. This Court granted certiorari. 343 U.S.
903. The case was argued at the October 1951 Term, but was restored
to the docket for reargument. 343 U.S. 973.
Judgment
affirmed, p.
344 U.S.
487.
No. 22. Petitioner, a state prisoner, applied to the Federal
District Court for habeas corpus, after his petition to this Court
for certiorari to review the State Supreme Court's affirmance of
his conviction had been denied. 340 U.S. 835. The District Court
dismissed
Page 344 U. S. 446
the application. 99 F. Supp. 92. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
192 F.2d 477. This Court granted certiorari. 342 U.S. 953. The case
was argued at the October 1951 Term, but was restored to the docket
for reargument. 343 U.S. 973.
Judgment affirmed, p.
487.
No. 20. Petitioners, state prisoners, applied to the Federal
District Court for habeas corpus after this Court had denied their
petition for certiorari to review the State Supreme Court's refusal
to consider on the merits an appeal from their conviction. 339 U.S.
954. The District Court dismissed the application.
99 F. Supp.
208. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 192 F.2d 763. This Court
granted certiorari. 342 U.S. 941. The case was argued at the
October 1951 Term, but was restored to the docket for reargument.
343 U.S. 973.
Judgment affirmed, p.
344 U.S. 487.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
Certiorari was granted to review judgments of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
Brown v. Allen,
343 U.S. 903;
Speller v. Allen, 342 U.S. 953;
Daniels
v. Allen, 342 U.S. 941. These cases
Page 344 U. S. 447
were argued last year. As the records raised serious federal
constitutional questions upon which the carrying out of death
sentences depended and procedural issues of importance in the
relations between states and the federal government upon which
there was disagreement in this Court, we decided to set the cases
for reargument. 343 U.S. 973. We have now heard the cases
again.
The judgments of affirmance were entered October 12, 1951, on
appeal from three judgments of the United States District Court for
the Eastern District of North Carolina, refusing writs of habeas
corpus sought by prisoners convicted in that state. We conclude
that all required procedure for state review of the convictions had
been exhausted by petitioners in each case before they sought the
writs of habeas corpus in the federal courts. In each case,
petitions for certiorari to this Court for direct review of the
state judgments rendered by the highest court of the state in the
face of the same federal issues now presented by habeas corpus had
been denied. [
Footnote 1]
It is not necessary in such circumstances for the prisoner to
ask the state for collateral relief, based on the same evidence and
issues already decided by direct review with another petition for
certiorari directed to this Court. [
Footnote 2] It is to be noted that an applicant is barred
unless he has "exhausted the remedies available in the courts of
the State . . . by any available procedure." The legislative
history shows that this paragraph,
in haec verba, was
presented to the Congress with the recommendation of
Page 344 U. S. 448
the Judicial Conference. The legislative history of § 2254
has no discussion of the considerations which moved congressional
enactment other than that contained in S.Rep.No. 1559.
But
see a similar clause § 2254 in H.R. 3214, 80th Cong., 1st
Sess.; H.R. 3214, 80th Cong., 2d Sess.; S.Rep.No. 1559, 80th Cong.,
2d Sess., p. 9; Report of the Judicial Conferences of Senior
Circuit Judges, 1947, pp. 17-20.
The second paragraph of § 2254 has been construed by
several courts of appeals. In
Ekberg v. McGee, 191 F.2d
625, the Ninth Circuit refused to consider that the statute meant
to deny a federal forum where state procedures were inexhaustible.
The Third Circuit in
Master v. Baldi, 198 F.2d 113, 116,
held that the exhaustion of one of several available alternative
state remedies with this Court's denial of certiorari therefrom is
all that is necessary. In
Bacom v. Sullivan, 181 F.2d 177,
and
Bacom v. Sullivan, 194 F.2d 166, the Fifth Circuit
ruled that, when a federal question had been presented to the state
courts by at least one post-conviction procedure, certiorari on the
same question having been once denied by this Court, there appeared
a unique and extraordinary circumstance justifying federal
examination under
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.
S. 200. [
Footnote
3]
Page 344 U. S. 449
When, in April 1948, Judge Maris presented the Judicial
Conference draft of § 2254 to the Senate Judiciary
Subcommittee, the language of the revision of 28 U.S.C., on which
the hearings were being held, set out three bases for exercise of
federal jurisdiction over applications for habeas corpus from state
prisoners. Under the language of the bill as it then read, an
application might have been entertained where it appeared (1) that
the applicant had exhausted the remedies available in the courts of
the state, or (2) where there was no adequate remedy available in
such courts, or (3) where such courts had denied the applicant a
fair adjudication of the legality of his detention under the
Constitution and laws of the United States. In accepting the
recommendation of the Judicial Conference, the Congress eliminated
the third basis of jurisdiction. S.Rep.No. 1559, p. 9, shows the
reason for this as follows:
"The second purpose is to eliminate, as a ground of Federal
jurisdiction to review by habeas corpus judgments of State courts,
the proposition that the State court has denied a prisoner a 'fair
adjudication of the legality of his detention under the
Constitution and laws of the United States.' The Judicial
Conference believes that this would be an undesirable
Page 344 U. S. 450
ground for Federal jurisdiction in addition to exhaustion of
State remedies or lack of adequate remedy in the State courts
because it would permit proceedings in the Federal court on this
ground before the petitioner had exhausted his State remedies. This
ground would, of course, always be open to a petitioner to assert
in the Federal court after he had exhausted his State remedies or
if he had no adequate State remedy."
"The third purpose is to substitute detailed and specific
language for the phrase 'no adequate remedy available.' That phrase
is not sufficiently specific and precise, and its meaning should,
therefore, be spelled out in more detail in the section as is done
by the amendment."
If the substitution for "adequate remedy available" of the
present definition was intended by the Congress to eliminate the
right of a state prisoner to apply for relief by habeas corpus to
the lower federal courts, we do not think that the report would
have suggested that a remedy for denial of a "fair adjudication"
was in the federal court. The suggested elimination of district and
circuit courts does not square with the other statutory habeas
corpus provisions.
See 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241, 2242,
2251, 2252, 2253, 3d paragraph. We are unwilling to conclude
without a definite congressional direction that so radical a change
was intended.
In each of these cases, the District Court in determining the
propriety of its granting the writ, considered the effect of our
refusal of certiorari on the same questions upon direct review of
the judgments of the highest court of the state. As that question,
pretermitted in our ruling in
Darr v. Burford,
339 U. S. 200,
339 U. S.
214-217, a case where no certiorari was sought here from
state denial of collateral relief by habeas corpus from
imprisonment, had given rise to definite differences of opinion in
the federal
Page 344 U. S. 451
courts, a ruling here was necessary. [
Footnote 4] There is a similar difference in this
Court. [
Footnote 5] As other
issues command a majority that upholds the judgments of the Court
of Appeals, this opinion is that of the Court although it
represents the minority view on the effect of our denial
Page 344 U. S. 452
of certiorari. The position of the majority upon that point is
expressed by the opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter,
Daniels v.
Allen, 344 U. S. 443. A
summary review of habeas corpus practice in the federal courts in
relation to state criminal convictions will be found in
Hawk v.
Olson, 326 U. S. 271,
326 U. S. 274,
and
Darr v. Burford, 339 U. S. 200,
339 U. S. 203.
It is hoped the conclusions reached herein will result in the
improvement of the administration of justice and leave the
indispensable function of the Great Writ unimpaired in
usefulness.
II
. Effect of Former Proceedings
The effect to be given this Court's former refusal of certiorari
in these cases was presented to the District Court which heard the
applications for federal habeas corpus upon full records of the
state proceedings in the trial and appellate courts. In No. 32,
Brown v. Allen, the District Court, upon examination of
the application, the answer, and the exhibits, adopted, without
hearing argument or testimony, the findings of the sentencing judge
with respect to both the composition of the grand jury and the
voluntary character of the confession. These were the federal
constitutional issues involved in the state trial. The record which
the District Judge had before him embraced the record of the case
in the North Carolina courts and this Court, including all the
relevant portions of the transcript of proceedings in the
sentencing court. The District Court then dismissed the petition.
Sub nom. Brown v. Crawford, 98 F. Supp. 866.
In No. 22,
Speller v. Allen, the petition for habeas
corpus in the District Court raised again the same federal question
which had been passed upon by the trial and appellate
Page 344 U. S. 453
courts in North Carolina and which had been offered to this
Court on petition for certiorari, to-wit, the jury commissioners
had, "pursuant to a long and continuous practice, discriminated
against Negroes in the selection of juries, solely on account of
race and/or color." The District Court had before it the record
which had been filed in the Supreme Court of North Carolina on
appeal.
State v. Brown, 233 N.C. 202,
63 S.E.2d
99. Included in this record was the same transcript of
proceedings in the trial court which had been before the State
Supreme Court. In addition, the District Court took further
evidence by way of testimony and stipulation. The District Court,
upon examination of all the evidence and the stipulations, adopted
the findings of the sentencing judge with respect to the
composition of the trial jury. It added that petitioner "failed to
substantiate the charge that he did not have a trial according to
due process, . . ." The court then vacated the writ and held that,
while the petition could be dismissed "solely in the light of the
procedural history", there was the added alternative ground of
failure to substantiate the charge.
Sub nom. Speller v.
Crawford, 99 F. Supp. 92, 97.
In No. 20,
Daniels v. Allen, petitioners at the state
trial made a timely motion to quash the indictment and challenged
the array, alleging discrimination against Negroes in the selection
of both grand and petit jurors in contravention of the guarantees
of the Fourteenth Amendment. Timely objection was also made to
admission in evidence of what were alleged to be coerced
confessions. Petitioners contend that the admission of these
confessions violated their due process rights under the Fourteenth
Amendment. They also urge that the refusal of the Supreme Court of
North Carolina to examine the merits of the trial record in the
state courts because of their failure to serve a statement of the
case on appeal until one day beyond the period of limitation, is a
denial of equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. In
their
Page 344 U. S. 454
application to the District Court, petitioners repeated once
again those federal constitutional questions which had earlier been
presented to the sentencing court and the Supreme Court of North
Carolina, and which had also been repeated in their petition for
certiorari filed in this Court.
In examining the application, the District Court Judge studied
the records of the trial and appellate courts of North Carolina,
including a transcript of the proceedings in the sentencing court.
He concluded that the findings of the judge of the sentencing court
on the matter of whether the jury had been properly selected were
"supported by all the evidence," and that it was not shown that
there was a "purposeful and systematic exclusion of negroes solely
on account of race." He also found that the trial judge correctly
determined that the confessions were voluntary and that the
instruction concerning the confessions was adequate. In addition,
the District Judge heard all evidence offered by the prosecution or
defense.
The District Court Judge did advert to the circumstance that
this Court had denied a petition for certiorari on the same
questions, and he further observed that, to his mind, the
procedural history of the case did not make it appear that
petitioners were denied the substance of a fair trial. He added
that petitioners "failed to substantiate the charges made." 99 F.
Supp. at 216. The writ was vacated and the application dismissed.
On the procedural history, the District Court refused to entertain
the request.
Sub nom. Daniels v. Crawford, 99 F. Supp.
208.
The records of the former proceedings thus determined the action
of the United States District Court. The fact that further evidence
was heard in two of the cases was to assure the judge that the
prisoners were not held in custody in violation of the
Constitution. In dismissing these petitions for habeas corpus, the
District Court did not treat our denial of certiorari as
conclusive.
Page 344 U. S. 455
In the
Brown case, the last one decided, Judge Gilliam
based his decision on this finding of fact:
"12. The facts found by the trial Judge, in respect to the
composition of the grand jury, are supported by the evidence before
him, and these findings and the conclusion thereon are adopted as
findings in this respect, and the facts found by that Court in
respect to the question of admission of statements made by the
defendant are also supported by the evidence, and these findings
and the conclusions thereon are likewise adopted."
98 F. Supp. 866, 870. The court cited from
Stonebreaker v.
Smyth, 163 F.2d 498, 499, in support of the above statement
that this is the proper rule:
"'While action of the Virginia courts and the denial of
certiorari by the Supreme Court were not binding on the principle
of
res judicata, they were matters entitled to respectful
consideration by the court below, and, in the absence of some most
unusual situation, they were sufficient reason for that court to
deny a further writ of habeas corpus.'"
98 F. Supp. at 868.
In the
Speller case, the pith of his conclusion is
stated as follows:
"'The Court now concludes that the writ should be vacated and
the petition dismissed upon the procedural history and the record
in the State Courts, for the reason that habeas corpus proceeding
is not available to the petitioner for the purpose of raising the
identical question passed upon in those Courts.'"
99 F. Supp. 92, 95. To this was added the alternative ground of
agreement with the conclusions of the sentencing court.
See pp.
345 U. S.
452-453
supra.
Page 344 U. S. 456
In the
Daniels case, decided the same day, the District
Court left open the question of its power to reexamine, 99 F. Supp.
at 213, and concluded on the record that the State had afforded a
fair trial.
A.
Effect of Denial of Certiorari. -- In cases such as
these, a minority of this Court is of the opinion that there is no
reason why a district court should not give consideration to the
record of the prior certiorari in this Court and such weight to our
denial as the District Court feels the record justifies. This is
the view of the Court of Appeals. 192 F.2d 763, 768
et seq.;
Speller v. Allen, 192 F.2d 477. This is, we think, the
teaching of
Ex parte Hawk, 321 U.
S. 114,
321 U. S. 118,
and
White v. Ragen, 324 U. S. 760,
324 U. S. 764,
324 U. S. 765.
We have frequently said that the denial of certiorari "imports no
expression of opinion upon the merits of a case."
House v.
Mayo, 324 U. S. 42,
324 U. S. 48;
Hamilton Brown Shoe Co. v. Wolf Bros. & Co.,
240 U. S. 251,
240 U. S. 258.
Cf. Ex parte Abernathy, 320 U. S. 219.
When, on review of proceedings no
res judicata or
precedential effect follows, the result would be in accord with
that expression, that statement is satisfied. But denial of
certiorari marks final action on state criminal proceedings. In
fields other than habeas corpus, with its unique opportunity for
repetitious litigation, as demonstrated in
Dorsey v. Gill,
80 U.S.App.D.C. 9, 148 F.2d 857,
see 7 F.R.D. 313, the
denial would make the issues
res judicata. The minority
thinks that, where a record distinctly presenting a substantial
federal constitutional question disentangled from problems of
procedure is brought here by certiorari and denied, courts dealing
with the petitioner's future applications for habeas corpus on the
same issues presented in earlier applications for writs of
certiorari to this Court should have the power to take the denial
into consideration in determining their action. We indicated as
much in
House v. Mayo, supra, p.
324 U. S. 48,
and
Ex parte Hawk, supra,
Page 344 U. S. 457
p.
321 U. S. 117,
when we specifically approved a district court's refusal to
reexamine ordinarily the questions passed upon by our denial.
Permitting a district court to dismiss an application for habeas
corpus on the strength of the prior record should be a procedural
development to reduce abuse of the right to repeated hearings such
as were permitted during the period when there was no review of the
refusal of a habeas corpus application,
Salinger v.
Loisel, 265 U. S. 224.
See 61 Harv.L.Rev. 657, 670.
Compare the
protection given by statute against abuse of habeas corpus in
federal criminal proceedings, 28 U.S.C. § 2244. Since a
federal district court has power to intervene, there is a guard
against injustice through error.
Darr v. Burford, supra,
at
339 U. S. 214.
It should be noted that the minority does not urge that the denial
of certiorari here is
res judicata of the issues
presented. It is true, as is pointed out in the opinion of MR.
JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, the records of applications for certiorari to
review state criminal convictions, directly or collaterally,
through habeas corpus or otherwise, are not always clear and full.
Some records, however, are. It seems proper for a district court to
give to these refusals of certiorari on adequate records the
consideration the district court may conclude these refusals merit.
This would be a matter of practice to keep pace with the statutory
development of 1867 that expanded habeas corpus. We think it
inconsistent to allow a district court to dismiss an application on
its appraisal of the state trial record, as we understand those do
who oppose our suggestion (
see MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER's
opinion,
post, pp.
344 U. S.
500-501 and
344 U. S.
503-506), but to refuse to permit the district court to
consider relevant our denial of certiorari.
B.
Effect of State Court Adjudications. -- With the
above statement of the position of the minority on the weight to be
given our denial of certiorari, we turn to another question. The
fact that no weight is to be given
Page 344 U. S. 458
by the Federal District Court to our denial of certiorari should
not be taken as an indication that similar treatment is to be
accorded to the orders of the state courts. So far as weight to be
given the proceedings in the courts of the state is concerned, a
United States district court, with its familiarity with state
practice, is in a favorable position to recognize adequate state
grounds in denials of relief by state courts without opinion.
A
fortiori, where the state action was based on an adequate
state ground, no further, examination is required unless no state
remedy for the deprivation of federal constitutional rights ever
existed.
Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.
S. 103;
Ex parte Hawk, 321 U.
S. 114. Furthermore, where there is material conflict of
fact in the transcripts of evidence as to deprivation of
constitutional rights, the District Court may properly depend upon
the state's resolution of the issue.
Malinski v. New York,
324 U. S. 401,
324 U. S. 404.
In other circumstances, the state adjudication carries the weight
that federal practice gives to the conclusion of a court of last
resort of another jurisdiction on federal constitutional issues. It
is not
res judicata. [
Footnote 6]
Furthermore, in view of the consideration that was given by the
District Court to our denial of certiorari in these cases, should
we return them to that court for reexamination in the light of this
Court's ruling upon the effect to be given to the denial? We think
not. From the findings of fact and the judgments of the District
Court, we cannot see that such consideration as was given by that
court to our denials of certiorari could have had any effect on its
conclusions as to whether the respective defendants had been denied
federal constitutional protection. [
Footnote 7]
Page 344 U. S. 459
It is true, under the Court's ruling today, that the District
Court in each of the three cases erroneously gave consideration to
our denial of certiorari. It is also true that its rulings, set out
above, show that, without that consideration, it found from its
examination of the state records and new evidence presented that
the conduct of the respective state proceedings was in full accord
with due process. Such conclusions make immaterial the fact that
the trial court gave consideration to our denial of certiorari.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals recognized the power
of the District Court to reexamine federal constitutional issues
even after trial and review by a state and refusal of certiorari in
this Court.
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 214.
The intimation to the contrary in the
Speller case, 99 F.
Supp. at 95,
see p.
344 U. S. 453,
supra, must be read as the Court's opinion after the
hearing.
"In the review of judicial proceedings, the rule is settled
that, if the decision below is correct, it must be affirmed
although the lower court relied upon a wrong ground or gave a wrong
reason. [
Footnote 8]"
Certainly the consideration given by the District Court to our
former refusals of certiorari on the issues presented cannot affect
its determinations that there was no merit in any of the
applications for habeas corpus. 98 F. Supp. 868, 870; 99
F.Supp.
Page 344 U. S. 460
97, 99; 99 F. Supp. at 216. Where it is made to appear
affirmatively, as here, that the alleged error could not affect the
result, such errors may be disregarded even in the review of
criminal trials. [
Footnote 9]
Whether we affirm or reverse in these cases, therefore, does not
depend upon the trial court's consideration of our denial of
certiorari, but upon the soundness of its decisions upon the issues
of alleged violation of federal procedural requirements or of
petitioner's constitutional rights by the North Carolina
proceedings. We now take up those problems.
III
. Right to Plenary Hearing
Petitioner alleges a procedural error in No. 32,
Brown v.
Allen. As we stated in the preceding subdivision, the writ of
habeas corpus was refused on the entire record of the respective
state and federal courts. 98 F. Supp. 866. It is petitioner's
contention, however, that the District Court committed error when
it took no evidence and heard no argument on the federal
constitutional issues. He contends he is entitled to a plenary
trial of his federal constitutional issues in the District Court.
He argues that the Federal District Court, with jurisdiction of the
particular habeas corpus, must exercise its judicial power to hear
again the controversy notwithstanding prior determinations of
substantially identical federal issues by the highest state court,
either on direct review of the conviction or by post-conviction
remedy, habeas corpus,
coram nobis, delayed appeal, or
otherwise. [
Footnote 10]
Jurisdiction over applications for federal habeas corpus is
controlled by statute. [
Footnote
11] The Code directs a court entertaining
Page 344 U. S. 461
an application to award the writ. [
Footnote 12] But an application is not "entertained" by a
mere filing. Liberal as the courts are and should be as to practice
in setting out claimed violations of constitutional rights, the
applicant must meet the statutory test of alleging facts that
entitle him to relief. [
Footnote
13]
The word "entertain" presents difficulties. Its meaning may vary
according to its surroundings. [
Footnote 14] In § 2243 and § 2244, we think it
means a federal district court's conclusion, after examination of
the application with such accompanying papers as the court deems
necessary, that a hearing on the merits legal or factual is proper.
See Walker v. Johnston, 312 U. S. 275,
312 U. S. 283,
First and Second;
United States v. Baldi, 344 U.
S. 561,
344 U. S. 568.
Even after deciding to entertain the application, the District
Court may determine later from the return or otherwise that the
hearing is unnecessary.
It is clear by statutory enactment that a federal district court
is not required to entertain an application for habeas corpus if it
appears that
"the legality of such detention has been determined by a judge
or court of the
Page 344 U. S. 462
United States on a prior application for a writ of habeas corpus
[
Footnote 15]"
The Reviser's notes to this section in House Report No. 308,
80th Cong., 1st Sess., say that no material change in existing
practice is intended. Nothing else indicates that the purpose of
Congress was to restrict by the adoption of the Code of 1948 the
discretion of the District Court, if it had such discretion before,
to entertain petitions from state prisoners which raised the same
issues raised in the state courts. [
Footnote 16]
Furthermore, in enacting 28 U.S.C. § 2254, dealing with
persons in custody under state judgments, Congress made no
reference to the power of a federal district court over federal
habeas corpus for claimed wrongs previously passed upon by state
courts. [
Footnote 17]
See discussion at p.
344 U. S. 447,
supra. A federal judge, on a habeas corpus application, is
required to "summarily hear and determine the facts, and dispose of
the matter as law and justice require," 28 U.S.C. § 2243. This
has long been the law. R.S. § 761,
Page 344 U. S. 463
old 28 U.S.C. § 461. It was under this general rule that
this Court approved, in
Salinger v. Loisel, 265 U.
S. 224,
265 U. S. 231,
the procedure that a federal judge might refuse a writ where
application for one had been made to and refused by another federal
judge and the second judge is of the opinion that in the light of
the record a satisfactory conclusion has been reached. [
Footnote 18] That principle is also
applicable to state prisoners.
Darr v. Burford, supra,
339 U. S.
214-215.
Applications to district courts on grounds determined adversely
to the applicant by state courts should follow the same principle
-- a refusal of the writ without more, if the court is satisfied,
by the record, that the state process has given fair consideration
to the issues and the offered evidence, and has resulted in a
satisfactory conclusion. Where the record of the application
affords an adequate opportunity to weigh the sufficiency of the
allegations and the evidence, and no unusual circumstances calling
for a hearing are presented, a repetition of the trial is not
required.
See p.
344 U. S. 457,
supra. However, a trial may be had in the discretion of
the federal
Page 344 U. S. 464
court or judge hearing the new application. A way is left open
to redress violations of the Constitution.
See p.
344 U. S. 447,
supra. Moore v. Dempsey, 261 U. S.
86. Although they have the power, it is not necessary
for federal courts to hold hearings on the merits, facts or law a
second time when satisfied that federal constitutional rights have
been protected. [
Footnote
19] It is necessary to exercise jurisdiction to the extent of
determining by examination of the record whether or not a hearing
would serve the ends of justice.
Page 344 U. S. 465
Cf. 28 U.S.C. § 2244.
See note 15 supra. As the state and
federal courts have the same responsibilities to protect persons
from violation of their constitutional rights, we conclude that a
federal district court may decline, without a rehearing of the
facts, to award a writ of habeas corpus to a state prisoner where
the legality of such detention has been determined, on the facts
presented, by the highest state court with jurisdiction, whether
through affirmance of the judgment on appeal or denial of
post-conviction remedies.
See White v. Ragen, 324 U.
S. 760,
324 U. S.
764.
As will presently appear, this case involves no extraordinary
situation. Since the complete record was before the District Court,
there was no need for rehearing or taking of further evidence.
Treating the State's response to the application as a motion to
dismiss, the court properly granted that motion. Discharge from
conviction through habeas corpus is not an act of judicial
clemency, but a protection against illegal custody.
The need for argument is a matter of judicial discretion. All
issues were adequately presented. There was no abuse.
IV
. Disposition of Constitutional Issues
Next we direct our attention to the records which were before
the District Court in order to review that court's conclusions that
North Carolina accorded petitioners a fair adjudication of their
federal questions. Questions of discrimination and admission of
coerced confessions lie in the compass of the Due Process and Equal
Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Have petitioners
received hearings consonant with standards accepted by this Nation
as adequate to justify their convictions?
Hebert v.
Louisiana, 272 U. S. 312;
Adamson v. California, 332 U. S. 46.
Page 344 U. S. 466
First. We take up
Brown v. Allen, No. 32, a
case that turns more generally than the others on the
constitutional issues.
Petitioner, a Negro, was indicted on September 4, 1950, and
tried in the North Carolina courts on a charge of rape, and, having
been found guilty, he was sentenced to death on September 15, 1950.
In the sentencing court, petitioner made a timely motion to quash
the bill of indictment, alleging discrimination against Negroes in
the selection of grand jurors in contravention of the guarantees of
the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. After the
verdict, but before sentencing, petitioner, by a motion to set
aside the verdict, sought to expand his constitutional attack on
the selection of the grand jury to embrace the petit jury also. On
appeal, the State Supreme Court treated, as we do, petitioner's
motions as adequate to challenge the selection of both juries. 233
N.C. 202, 205-206,
63 S.E.2d
99. A second federal question was raised in the sentencing
court when petitioner opposed admission into evidence of a
confession which he alleged had been given involuntarily. Following
sentencing, petitioner took an appeal to the State Supreme Court,
and there presented for review the issues of jury discrimination
and admission of a coerced confession. On this appeal, that court
had before it both a brief on behalf of petitioner and a transcript
of all those portions of the sentencing court proceedings which
petitioner deemed relevant to a review of his federal questions.
[
Footnote 20] Dealing with
the federal constitutional questions on their merits, the State
Supreme Court
Page 344 U. S. 467
affirmed the conviction.
State v. Brown, 233 N.C. 202,
63 S.E.2d
99.
A. Petitioner's charge of discrimination against Negroes in the
selection of grand and petit jurors in violation of his
constitutional rights attacks the operation of a method used by
North Carolina in selecting juries in Forsyth County. The statutes
detailing the method of selection are cited below. [
Footnote 21] It is petitioner's contention
that no more than one or two Negroes at a time have ever served on
a Forsyth County grand jury, and that no more than five Negroes
have ever previously served on a petit jury panel in the county.
These contentions are the basis of the allegation that a system of
discrimination is being employed against the Negro residents of the
county. Petitioner offered no evidence to support his charge of
limitation against the jury service of Negroes except the fact that
fewer Negroes than whites, having regard for their proportion of
the population, appeared on the jury panels.
The 1940 Census shows the following figures in respect to the
population of Forsyth County.
Population Percent 21 Plus Percent
White 85,323 67.5 50,499 66.5
Negro 41,152 32.5 25,057 33.5
Total 126,475 100.0 75,556 100.0
According to the unchallenged testimony of the IBM Supervisor in
the office of the Tax Supervisor of Forsyth County, a list of names
is compiled from a tabulation of all the county property and poll
taxpayers who make returns and is thereafter tendered to the County
Commissioners for use in jury selection. All males
Page 344 U. S. 468
between 21 and 50 years of age are required to list themselves
for poll tax, as well as to list their property. Gen.Stat. of North
Carolina, Recompiled 1950, §§ 105-307, 105-341. In 1948,
Winston Township, the most heavily populated in Forsyth County, had
7,659 white males and 2,752 colored males who listed polls. In the
County of Forsyth outside Winston Township, 10,319 white males and
587 colored males listed polls. This indicates that Negroes number
approximately 16% of the listed taxpayers. No figures appear in the
record of the percentage of Negroes on the property tax lists.
In June, 1949, a list of approximately 40,000 names compiled
from all the tax lists was handed to the Commissioners by the
office of the Tax Supervisor. There is uncontradicted testimony by
the IBM Supervisor that the list of jurors was prepared without
regard to color, and that it constituted a complete compilation of
the names of all resident, adult, listed taxpayers of Forsyth
County. Both the grand and petit jury panels employed in this case
were drawn from that pool. All the names on that list and no others
(the list having been cut up into individual slips of uniform size
bearing only one person's name) were put into a jury box. The
selection from the jury box of names of persons subject to a
summons to serve as grand jurors in a term of court is made by lot,
as is the selection of panels of persons subject to summons for
duty on petit juries. As the drawings were made by a small child
and recorded in public, there is no claim or evidence of chicanery
in the drawings.
Grand jurors in Forsyth County are selected in January and July
for a six months' term.
See c. 206, 1937 Pub. Local Laws,
as amended by c. 264, 1947 Session Laws, as amended by c. 577, 1949
N.C. Session Laws. A panel of 60 names is drawn from the jury box
each December and June by a child in the presence of the County
Commissioners. At the June 5, 1950, meeting of the
Page 344 U. S. 469
Commissioners, 60 names were drawn. These 60 names constituted
the panel of persons subject to summons for service on the grand
jury which returned the indictment against petitioner. After such a
drawing, a jury order is immediately prepared and given to the
sheriff, who then summons all the parties he can find to appear for
drawings for grand or petit jury service, as the case may be. All
persons whose names were drawn were summoned if they could be
found. Although there is no evidence as to how many persons were
summoned by the sheriff, there is evidence to show that at least
four or five Negroes were summoned. The final drawing for grand
jury service is conducted in the court room in the presence of the
Superior Court Judge. When the July, 1950, grand jury was selected
from the panel of 60, the drawing was again made by a child. The
names of all the persons summoned by the sheriff were put into a
special section of the jury box, and the 18-man grand jury was then
drawn. The name of one of the four or five Negroes summoned was
drawn in the group of 18, and that Negro served on the grand jury.
The remaining names are used for the petit jury panel.
When they are needed, petit jury panels in Forsyth County are
drawn from the same jury box in groups of 44 persons. C. 206,
Public-Laws,
supra. After a drawing, the names are given
to a deputy sheriff who then summons those persons on the list whom
he can find. On the lists supplied to the deputies there are no
indications as to whether the persons named are Negro or white.
According to the statute, all summoned persons must report for jury
service. At the selection of the petit jurors for the trial of this
case, 8 of the 37 persons summoned on the panel were Negroes, as
were 3 of a special venire of 20. Challenges, peremptory or for
cause, eliminated all Negroes. No objections are made to the
legality of these challenges. Uncontradicted evidence by a state
witness
Page 344 U. S. 470
shows that, in the two years 1949 and 1950, the percentages of
Negroes drawn on grand jury panels in Forsyth County varied between
7% and 10% of all persons drawn. In 1950, the percentage of Negroes
drawn on petit jury panels varied between 9% and 17% of all persons
drawn.
Prior to 1947, the jury list was composed of those taxpayers who
had "paid all the taxes assessed against them for the preceding
year." N.C.Gen.Stat.1943, § 9-1;
cf. State v. Davis,
109 N.C. 780, 14 S.E. 55;
State v. Dixon, 131 N.C. 808, 42
S.E. 944. This requirement has now been removed, as is shown by
comparing the earlier statutes with the present wording of §
9-1 which was put into law in 1947. No change was made in the duty
of all males between 21 and 50 to list their polls for assessment,
nor of the requirement for the county to collect an annual poll
tax. Gen.Stat. 105-307, 105-336, 105-339 and 105-341;
cf. State
v. Brown, 233 N.C. 202, 205,
63 S.E.2d
99. The pool of eligible jurors was thus enlarged. This
enlargement and the practice of selecting jurors under the new
statute worked a radical change in the racial proportions of
drawings of jurors in Forsyth County. As is shown by the record in
this Court of
Brunson v. North Carolina, 333 U.S. 851,
tried in North Carolina in October, 1946, Forsyth County, with its
large Negro population, at that time had a jury pool of 10,622
white and 255 colored citizens. At that time, a sheriff, then in
office for 10 years, testified that he had summoned only about
twelve Negroes for jury service in that time. In 1949, the jury box
was purged. All those listing taxes and eligible were listed for
jury service, with the result in this case shown above.
Discriminations against a race by barring or limiting citizens
of that race from participation in jury service are odious to our
thought and our Constitution. This has long been accepted as the
law.
Brunson v. North Carolina, 333 U.S. 851;
Cassell
v. Texas, 339 U. S. 282,
339 U. S.
286-
Page 344 U. S. 471
287;
State v. Peoples, 131 N.C. 784, 42 S.E. 814. Such
discrimination is forbidden by statute, 18 U.S.C. § 243, and
has been treated as a denial of equal protection under the
Fourteenth Amendment to an accused, of the race against which such
discrimination is directed.
Neal v. Delaware, 103 U.
S. 370. The discrimination forbidden is racial
discrimination, however, directed to accomplish the result of
eliminating or limiting the service of the proscribed race by
statute or by practice.
Smith v. Texas, 311 U.
S. 128;
Patton v. Mississippi, 332 U.
S. 463. It was explained in 1880 by this Court, when
composed of justices familiar with the evils the Amendment sought
to remedy, as permitting a state to
"confine the selection (of jurors) to males, to freeholders, to
citizens, to persons within certain ages or to persons having
educational qualifications."
Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.
S. 303,
100 U. S. 310.
Cf. Franklin v. South Carolina, 218 U.
S. 161,
218 U. S.
167-168;
Fay v. New York, 332 U.
S. 261,
332 U. S.
268-272. While discriminations worked by consistent
exclusion have been rigorously dealt with,
Neal v.
Delaware, 103 U. S. 370;
Carter v. Texas, 177 U. S. 442;
Norris v. Alabama, 294 U. S. 587;
Pierre v. Louisiana, 306 U. S. 354;
Hill v. Texas, 316 U. S. 400;
Patton v. Mississippi, 332 U. S. 463,
variations in proportions of Negroes and whites on jury lists from
racial proportions in the population have not been considered
violative of the Constitution where they are explained and not long
continued.
Akins v. Texas, 325 U.
S. 398,
325 U. S. 403.
Of course, token summoning of Negroes for jury service does not
comply with equal protection,
Smith v. Texas, 311 U.
S. 128. Nor can a race be proscribed as incompetent for
service,
Hill v. Texas, 316 U. S. 400.
Responsible as this Court is under the Constitution to redress
the jury packing which Bentham properly characterized as a sinister
species of art, Bentham, Elements of the Art of Packing as Applied
to Special Juries, p. 6,
Page 344 U. S. 472
it should not condemn good faith efforts to secure competent
juries merely because of varying racial proportions.
The Supreme Court of North Carolina concluded that objection to
the lists based on the racial composition of the tax lists was
"far-fetched," and that it was not a racial discrimination when a
list which included only taxpayers was used.
State v.
Brown, 233 N.C. 202,
63 S.E.2d
99. [
Footnote 22]
Page 344 U. S. 473
We recognize the fact that these lists have a higher proportion
of white citizens than of colored, doubtless due to inequality of
educational and economic opportunities. While those who chose the
names for the jury lists might have included names other than
taxpayers, such action was not mandatory under state law.
State
v. Brown, 233 N.C. 202, 205,
63 S.E.2d
99. As only property and poll tax lists were used,
see
p.
344 U. S. 467,
supra, this case presents a jury selection as though
limited by statute to all property owners and voters. We assume
only reasonable tax levies were used. It is to be noted all males
between 21 and 50 must list both property, however modest in
amount, and polls,
see pp.
344 U. S.
467-468,
supra, so that, in that sense, there
is no exclusion on racial grounds. The name of every property owner
and every voter is in the jury box. We recognize, too, that we are
now reviewing a constitutional objection to a state court
conviction, and we may not act to alter practices of a state which
are short of a denial of equal protection or due process in the
selection of juries. [
Footnote
23] States should decide for themselves the quality of their
juries as best fits their situation, so long as the classifications
have relation to the efficiency of the jurors and are equally
administered.
Page 344 U. S. 474
Our duty to protect the federal constitutional rights of all
does not mean we must or should impose on states our conception of
the proper source of jury lists, so long as the source reasonably
reflects a cross-section of the population suitable in character
and intelligence for that civic duty. Short of an annual census or
required population registration, these tax lists offer the most
comprehensive source of available names. We do not think a use,
nondiscriminatory as to race, of the tax lists violates the
Fourteenth Amendment, nor can we conclude on the evidence adduced
that the results of the use require a conclusion of
unconstitutionality. Assuming that, before the
Brunson
case, 333 U.S. 851, there were unconstitutional exclusions of
Negroes in this North Carolina county, the present record does not
show such exclusions in this case. The evidence is to the contrary.
The District Court correctly determined this issue as to the grand
jury. As both the grand and petit juries in this case were drawn
from the same filling of the jury box, the reasoning of the
District Court is applicable to the petit jury here involved.
B. Petitioner contends further that his conviction was procured
in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal
Constitution because the trial judge permitted the jury to rely on
a confession claimed by petitioner to be coerced in determining his
guilt. At the trial, petitioner registered timely objection to use
by the state of his purported confessions. The objection having
been made, the trial judge immediately excused the jury and ordered
a preliminary examination to determine whether or not the
statements were voluntary. It was in this preliminary hearing, in
which the petitioner and two police officers testified, that the
admitted facts were first developed upon which petitioner rests
this phase of his case. After hearing the testimony, the trial
judge found that the petitioner's statements were freely and
voluntarily given, and declared them to be competent.
Page 344 U. S. 475
Upon recall of the jury, the state introduced the statements in
evidence, objections again being noted. Although the petitioner
chose not to take the stand in the trial of his cause, his counsel,
while cross-examining the officers who had taken the challenged
statements from the petitioner, developed again for the jury all
the facts upon which petitioner now relies.
A conviction by a trial court which has admitted coerced
confessions deprives a defendant of liberty without due process of
law.
Brown v. Mississippi, 297 U.
S. 278,
297 U. S. 280,
297 U. S.
286-287. When the facts admitted by the state show
coercion,
Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 327 U.
S. 274, a conviction will be set aside as violative of
due process.
Chambers v. Florida, 309 U.
S. 227. This is true even though the evidence apart from
the confessions might have been sufficient to sustain the jury's
verdict.
Malinski v. New York, 324 U.
S. 401;
see Lyons v. Oklahoma, 322 U.
S. 596,
322 U. S.
597.
Therefore, it does not matter in this case whether or not the
jury was acquainted with all the facts laid before the judge upon
which petitioner now relies, or whether the jury heard or did not
hear the petitioner testify. Neither does it matter that there
possibly is evidence in the record independent of the confessions
which could sustain the verdict. The mere admission of the
confessions by the trial judge constituted a use of them by the
state, and if the confessions were improperly obtained, such a use
constitutes a denial of due process of law as guaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment. In determining whether a confession has been
used by the state in violation of the constitutional rights of a
petitioner, a United States court appraises the alleged abuses by
the facts as shown at the hearing or admitted on the record.
Petitioner's contention that he had a constitutional right to
have his statements excluded from the record rests upon these
admitted facts. He is an illiterate.
Page 344 U. S. 476
He was held after arrest for five days before being charged with
the crime for which he was convicted. He was not given a
preliminary hearing until 18 days after his arrest. No counsel was
provided for him in the period of his detention. The alleged
confessions were taken prior to the preliminary hearing and
appointment of counsel. There is no record of physical coercion, or
of that less painful duress generated by prolonged questioning.
There is evidence that petitioner was told he could remain silent,
and that any statement he might make could be used against him. He
chose to speak, and he made that choice without a promise of reward
or immunity having been extended. He was never denied the right to
counsel of his choice, and was never without competent counsel from
the inception of judicial proceedings. If the delay in the
arraignment of petitioner was greater than that which might be
tolerated in a federal criminal proceeding, due process was not
violated. Under the leadership of this Court, a rule has been
adopted for federal courts that denies admission to confessions
obtained before prompt arraignment notwithstanding their voluntary
character.
McNabb v. United States, 318 U.
S. 332;
Upshaw v. United States, 335 U.
S. 410.
Cf. Allen v. United States, 91
U.S.App.D.C. 197, 202 F.2d 329. This experiment has been made in an
attempt to abolish the opportunities for coercion which prolonged
detention without a hearing is said to enhance. But the federal
rule does not arise from constitutional sources. The Court has
repeatedly refused to convert this rule of evidence for federal
courts into a constitutional limitation on the states.
Gallegos
v. Nebraska, 342 U. S. 55,
342 U. S. 63-65.
Mere detention and police examination in private of one in official
state custody do not render involuntary the statements or
confessions made by the person so detained. Petitioner's
constitutional rights were not infringed by the refusal of the
trial court to exclude his confessions as evidence.
Page 344 U. S. 477
Second. We examine the constitutional issues in No. 22,
Speller v. Allen.
Petitioner, a Negro, was indicted and in August, 1949, tried in
the Superior Court of Bertie County, North Carolina, upon a charge
of rape. He has been convicted and sentenced to death on this
charge three times, the first two convictions having been set aside
on appeal by the Supreme Court of North Carolina on the ground of
discriminatory selection of jurors.
State v. Speller, 229
N.C. 67, 47 S.E.2d 537; 230 N.C. 345, 53 S.E.2d 294. At this, his
third trial, August Term 1949, petitioner made a timely motion to
set aside the array of special veniremen called from Vance County,
alleging discrimination against Negroes "solely and wholly on
account of their race and/or color" in the selection of the
veniremen in contravention of the guarantees of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Federal Constitution. (Transcript of Record,
State v. Speller, August Term 1949, Bertie N.C. Superior
Court at 12, Item 91, Clerks Record, Supreme Court of the United
States.) Evidence was taken at length on this issue, although some
evidence deemed material by petitioner was excluded. In particular,
the trial judge, on the ground that it would be immaterial,
infra, p.
344 U. S. 480,
refused to permit petitioner to produce evidence as to all the
scrolls in the jury box for the purpose of showing the existence of
dots on the scrolls bearing the names of Negroes. The jury box was
produced in court, opened, and counsel for defendant permitted to
examine the scrolls. The trial judge made findings relating to the
manner of selecting the veniremen, determining that no
discrimination was practiced, and on these findings denied the
motion to set aside the array. Petitioner was thereafter convicted
for the third time, and sentenced to death.
On appeal, petitioner asserted that his conviction violated the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Page 344 U. S. 478
Amendment, assigning the denial of his motion to set aside the
array as error, and also assigning as error the trial court's
ruling on his request for permission to examine into all the
scrolls in the jury box. The Supreme Court of North Carolina had
before it on that appeal as part of the record a mimeographed,
narrative-style transcript of the entire proceedings below;
petitioner makes no objection to the absence of any relevant
evidence on that appeal, except that relating to all the scrolls
which had been excluded by the trial court. Upholding the rulings
of the trial court, the Supreme Court of North Carolina affirmed
the conviction, 231 N.C. 549,
57 S.E.2d
759.
Petitioner filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus in
the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of North
Carolina after we denied certiorari on direct review of the state
proceedings. The petition summarily recited the prior history of
the litigation, and raised again the same federal question which
had been passed upon by both North Carolina courts, and which had
been offered to this Court on petition for certiorari, racial
discrimination. The District Court heard all additional evidence
the petitioner offered. This was in its discretion.
Moore v.
Dempsey, 261 U. S. 86;
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 214,
cases which establish the power of federal district courts to
protect the constitutional rights of state prisoners after the
exhaustion of state remedies. It better enabled that court to
determine whether any violation of the Fourteenth Amendment
occurred.
Petitioner's charge of discrimination against Negroes in the
selection of petit jurors in violation of his constitutional rights
attacks the operation of the system used by the North Carolina
authorities to select juries in Vance County, from which county a
special venire was obtained to try petitioner. The charge rests on
petitioner's contentions (1) that no Negro within recent
Page 344 U. S. 479
years had served on a jury in Vance County before this case, (2)
that no Negro had been summoned to serve on a jury before this
case, and (3) that the jury box in this case was so heavily loaded
with names of white persons that the drawing could not fairly
reflect a cross-section of those persons in the community qualified
for jury service. Petitioner offered evidence to support each of
these three contentions.
The evidence establishes the correctness of contentions (1) and
(2). They are inapplicable to this case, however, under the
circumstances of the filling of this particular jury box. As is
pointed out in
Brown v. Allen, supra, at page
344 U. S. 470,
North Carolina, in 1947, enlarged its pool of citizens eligible for
jury service. General Statutes, North Carolina, § 9-1. In
Vance County, where the special venire for Speller's trial was
drawn, the names of substantial numbers of Negroes appeared
thereafter in the jury box. 145 Negroes out of a total of 2,126
names were in this jury box. As this venire was the first drawing
of jurors from the box after its purge in July, 1949, following the
new statute and
Brunson v. North Carolina, 333 U.S. 851,
decided here, March 15, 1948, the long history of alleged
discrimination against its Negro citizens by Vance County jury
commissioners is not decisive of discrimination in the present
case. Former errors cannot invalidate future trials. Our problem is
whether this venire was drawn from a jury box, invalidly filled as
to Speller because names were selected by discriminating against
Negroes "solely on account of race and/or color." It is this
particular box that is decisive,
cf. Cassel v. Texas,
339 U. S. 282,
339 U. S. 290
and
339 U. S. 295.
Past practice is evidence of past attitude of mind. That attitude
is shown to no longer control the action of officials by the
present fact of colored citizens' names in the jury box.
Page 344 U. S. 480
It is suggested that the record shows that the names of colored
persons in the jury box were marked with a dot or period on the
scroll. This could be used for unlawful disposition of such scrolls
when drawn. Such a scheme would be useless in the circumstances of
this case. The record shows that the defendant and his counsel were
present when the venire was drawn by a child, aged 5. All of the
names drawn were given to the sheriff, and summonses were issued.
As a matter of fact, the special venire contained the names of
seven Negroes. Four appeared. None sat as jurors. Therefore, the
assertion as to the dots, even if true, means no more than that
some unknown person desired to interfere with the fair drawing of
juries in Vance County. The trial court found against petitioner on
this question. The District Court pointed out its immateriality. 99
F. Supp. at 97.
This box was filled by names selected by the clerk of the jury
commissioners, and corrected by the commissioners. The names put in
were substantially those selected by the clerk, who chose them from
those on the tax lists who had "the most property." The clerk
testified no racial discrimination entered into his selection.
Since the effect of this possible objection to the selection of
jurors on an economic basis was not raised or developed at the
trial, on appeal to the State Supreme Court, on the former
certiorari to this Court, or in the petition or brief on the
present certiorari to this Court, it is not open to consideration
here. [
Footnote 24] Such an
important
Page 344 U. S. 481
national asset as state autonomy in local law enforcement must
not be eroded through indefinite charges of unconstitutional
actions.
As we have stated above in discussing the
Brown case,
at page
344 U. S. 473
et seq., supra, our conclusion that selection of
prospective jurors may be made from such tax lists as those
required under North Carolina statutes without violation of the
Federal Constitution, this point needs no further elaboration. The
fact that causes further consideration in this case of the
selection of prospective jurors is that the tax lists show 8,233
individual taxpayers in Vance County, of whom 3,136, or 38%, are
Negroes. In the jury box involved, selected from that list, there
were 2,126 names. Of that number 145 were Negroes, 7%. This
disparity between the races would not be accepted by this Court
solely on the evidence of the clerk of the commissioners that he
selected names of citizens of "good moral character and qualified
to serve as jurors, and who had paid their taxes." [
Footnote 25] It would not be assumed that,
in Vance County, there is not a much larger percentage of Negroes
with qualifications of jurymen. [
Footnote 26] The action of the commissioners' clerk,
however, in selecting those with "the most property," an economic
basis not attacked here, might well account for the few Negroes
appearing in the box. Evidence of discrimination based solely on
race on the selection actually made is lacking.
The trial and district courts, after hearing witnesses, found no
racial discrimination in the selection of the prospective jurors.
The conviction was upheld as nondiscriminatory
Page 344 U. S. 482
by the State Supreme Court, which had once acted to reverse a
conviction of this defendant by a jury deemed tainted with racial
discrimination,
State v. Speller, 229 N.C. 67, 68, 47
S.E.2d 537, and again to reverse a conviction when adequate time
for investigation of discrimination had not been given.
State
v. Speller, 230 N.C. 345, 53 S.E.2d 294. It would require a
conviction, by this Court, of violation of equal protection through
racial discrimination to set aside this trial. Our delicate and
serious responsibility of compelling state conformity to the
Constitution by overturning state criminal convictions should not
be exercised without clear evidence of violation.
Disregarding, as we think we should, the clerk's unchallenged
selections based on taxable property, there is no evidence of
racial discrimination. Negroes names now appear in the jury box. If
the requirement of comparative wealth is eliminated, and the
statutory standards employed, the number would increase to the
equality justified by their moral and educational qualification for
jury service as compared with the white race. We do not think the
small number, by comparison, of Negro names in this one jury box,
is, in itself, enough to establish racial discrimination.
Third. We have the problems presented by No. 20,
Daniels v. Allen. The two petitioners, Negroes, were
indicted and convicted in the North Carolina courts on a charge of
murder. Their trial in the Superior Court of Pitt County resulted
in a verdict of guilty, and each petitioner was thereafter
sentenced to death. There is no issue over guilt under the evidence
introduced. In addition to the objections stated above at page
344 U. S. 453
-- discrimination in jury lists, coerced confessions and refusal to
hear on the merits -- there is also objection here to the procedure
for determination of the voluntariness of the confessions.
Page 344 U. S. 483
As the failure to serve the statement of the case on appeal
seems to us decisive, we do not discuss in detail the other
constitutional issues tendered, and only point out that they were
resolved against the petitioners by the sentencing state court and
the Federal District Court after full hearing of the evidence
offered. It is also to be noted that the Supreme Court of North
Carolina refused certiorari to review the alleged invasions of
constitutional rights by the sentencing court and two efforts of
petitioners to secure an order permitting them to apply for
coram nobis. [
Footnote
27] The writ of
coram nobis is available in North
Carolina to test constitutional rights extraneous of the record.
In re Taylor, 230 N.C. 566, 53 S.E.2d 857. In the first
coram nobis case, the Court said, speaking of its refusal
of certiorari:
"Counsel for petitioners were advised, however, that petition
might be filed here for permission to apply to the Superior Court
of Pitt County, where the cause was tried, for a writ of error
coram nobis, through which, if allowed there, they might
be heard on the main features on which they asked for relief, which
included matters
dehors the record, and that appeal would
lie to the Supreme Court in the event of its unfavorable action.
S. v. Daniels, supra; In re Taylor (230 N.C.),
supra;
In re Taylor (229 N.C.),
supra."
"The defendants now file a petition for permission to apply to
the Superior Court for such a writ. Their petition does not make a
prima facie showing of substance which is necessary to
bring themselves within the purview of the writ. [
Footnote 28]"
231 N.C. 341, 56 S.E.2d 646, 647.
Page 344 U. S. 484
After the refusal of the first
coram nobis petition,
the Supreme Court of North Carolina dismissed petitioner's
attempted appeal on the record proper on the ground that no case on
appeal had been filed. 231 N.C. 509,
57 S.E.2d
653; Rule 17, 4 N.C.Gen.Stat., App.;
id., Vol. 1,
§ 1-282. Such action accords with well settled practice in
that state. "Rules requiring service to be made of case on appeal .
. . are mandatory." 231 N.C. 17, 24, 56 S.E.2d 2, 7. They are
applied alike to all appellants. [
Footnote 29] The first application for certiorari to this
Court raised federal constitutional objections to the judgments of
the Supreme Court of North Carolina on both direct and collateral
attack by certiorari and
coram nobis on the judgment of
the trial court. 339 U.S. 954.
The failure to perfect the appeal came in this way. Upon the
coming in of the verdict on June 6, 1949, the petitioners several
times moved for a new trial, in each motion reiterating one or the
other of the aforementioned federal questions. These motions were
denied, and the trial court pronounced its sentence. Petitioners
excepted to the judgments and noted appeals therefrom to the State
Supreme Court. In response to petitioners' notice, the trial judge
granted petitioners 60 days in which to make and serve a statement
of the case on appeal. When counsel failed to serve this statement
until 61 days had expired, the trial judge struck the appeal as out
of
Page 344 U. S. 485
time. This action precluded an appeal as of right to the State
Supreme Court.
This situation confronts us. North Carolina furnished a criminal
court for the trial of those charged with crime. Petitioners at all
times had counsel, chosen by themselves and recognized by North
Carolina as competent to conduct the defense. In that court, all
petitioners' objections and proposals whether of jury
discrimination, admission of confessions, instructions or otherwise
were heard and decided against petitioners. The state furnished an
adequate and easily complied-with method of appeal. This included a
means to serve the statement of the case on appeal in the absence
of the prosecutor from his office.
State v. Daniels, 231
N.C. 17, 24, 56 S.E.2d 2. Yet petitioners' appeal was not taken and
the State of North Carolina, although the full trial record and
statement on appeal were before it, refused to consider the appeal
on its merits. [
Footnote
30]
The writ of habeas corpus in federal courts is not authorized
for state prisoners at the discretion of the federal court. It is
only authorized when a state prisoner is in custody in violation of
the Constitution of the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 2241. That
fact is not to be tested by the use of habeas corpus in lieu of an
appeal. [
Footnote 31] To
allow habeas corpus in such circumstances would subvert the entire
system of state criminal justice and destroy state energy in the
detection and punishment of crime.
Of course, federal habeas corpus is allowed where time has
expired without appeal when the prisoner is detained without
opportunity to appeal because of lack of counsel,
Page 344 U. S. 486
incapacity, or some interference by officials. [
Footnote 32] Also, this Court will review
state habeas corpus proceedings even though no appeal was taken, if
the state treated habeas corpus as permissible. [
Footnote 33] Federal habeas corpus is
available following our refusal to review such state habeas corpus
proceedings. [
Footnote 34]
Failure to appeal is much like a failure to raise a known and
existing question of unconstitutional proceeding or action prior to
conviction or commitment. Such failure, of course, bars subsequent
objection to conviction on those grounds. [
Footnote 35]
North Carolina has applied its law in refusing this out-of-time
review. [
Footnote 36] This
Court applies its jurisdictional statute in the same manner.
Preston v. Texas, 343 U.S. 917;
cf. Paonessa v. New
York, 344 U.S. 860,
certiorari denied October 20,
1952, because "application therefor was not made within the time
provided by law." We cannot say that North Carolina's action in
refusing review after failure to perfect the case on appeal
violates the Federal Constitution. A period of limitation accords
with our conception of proper procedure.
Finally, federal courts may not grant habeas corpus for those
convicted by the state except pursuant to § 2254. �
32 and S. 487�
See note 17
supra. See also note 2 supra. We have interpreted § 2254 as
not requiring repetitious applications to state courts for
collateral relief, p.
32 and
S. 447|>447,
supra, but clearly the state's procedure
for relief must be employed in order to avoid the use of federal
habeas corpus as a matter of procedural routine to review state
criminal rulings. A failure to use a state's available remedy, in
the absence of some interference or incapacity, such as is referred
to just above at notes
32
and |
32 and S.
443fn33|>33, bars federal habeas corpus. The statute requires
that the applicant exhaust available state remedies. To show that
the time has passed for appeal is not enough to empower the Federal
District Court to issue the writ. The judgment must be
affirmed.
We have spoken in this opinion of the change of practice in
North Carolina in the selection of jurors. Our conclusions have
been reached without regard to earlier incidents not connected with
these juries or trials that suggest past discriminations. Since the
states are the real guardians of peace and order within their
boundaries, it is hoped that our consideration of these records
will tend to clarify the requirements of the Federal Constitution
in the selection of juries. Our Constitution requires that jurors
be selected without inclusion or exclusion because of race. There
must be neither limitation nor representation for color. By that
practice, harmony has an opportunity to maintain essential
discipline, without that objectionable domination which is so
inconsistent with our constitutional democracy.
The judgments are affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON concurs in this result for the reasons
stated in a separate opinion. [
See post, pp.
344 U. S. 532,
344 U. S.
548.]
MR. JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE CLARK adhere to their
position as stated in
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.
S. 200, at
339 U. S. 219.
They believe that the nature of the proceeding
Page 344 U. S. 488
upon a petition for certiorari is such that, when the reasons
for a denial of certiorari are not stated, the denial should be
disregarded in passing upon a subsequent application for relief,
except to note that this source of possible relief has been
exhausted.
They join in the judgment of the Court in these cases, and they
concur in the opinion of the Court except insofar as it may
contain, in Part II, Subdivision A (pp.
344 U. S.
456-457), or elsewhere, any indication that, although
the reasons for a denial of certiorari be not stated, those reasons
nevertheless may be inferred from the record. They also recognize
the propriety of the considerations to which MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER invites the attention of a federal court when
confronted with a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under the
circumstances stated.
* Together with No. 22,
Speller v. Allen, Warden,
argued April 29, 1952, reargued October 13, 1952, and No. 20,
Daniel et al. v. Allen, Warden, argued April 28-29, 1952,
reargued October 13, 1952, also on certiorari to the same
court.
[
Footnote 1]
Brown v. State of North Carolina, 341 U.S. 943;
Speller v. State of North Carolina, 340 U.S. 835;
Daniels v. State of North Carolina, 339 U.S. 954.
[
Footnote 2]
We reach this conclusion after consideration of the second
paragraph of 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
"An applicant shall not be deemed to have exhausted the remedies
available in the courts of the State, within the meaning of this
section, if he has the right under the law of the State to raise,
by any available procedure, the question presented."
[
Footnote 3]
Outside the cases, it has been strongly urged that the purpose
of subparagraph 2 was to eliminate the right of a federal district
court to entertain an application so long as any state remedy
remained available. In an article by Judge Parker, Chairman of the
Judicial Conference Committee which drafted the new Habeas Corpus
Act,
Limiting the Abuse of Habeas Corpus, 8 F.R.D. 171,
176 (1949), this construction of § 2254 is presented:
"The effect of this last provision is to eliminate, for all
practical purposes, the right to apply to the lower federal courts
for habeas corpus in all states in which successive applications
may be made for habeas corpus to the state courts; for, in all such
states, the applicant has the right, notwithstanding the denial of
prior applications, to apply again to the state courts for habeas
corpus and to have action upon such later application reviewed by
the Supreme Court of the United States on application for
certiorari."
We do not so construe § 2254. We do not believe Congress
intended to require repetitious applications to state courts.
§ 2254 originally read as follows:
"An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a
person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court or
authority of a State officer shall not be granted unless it appears
that the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the
courts of the State, or that there is no adequate remedy available
in such courts or that such courts have denied him a fair
adjudication of the legality of his detention under the
Constitution and laws of the United States."
§ 2254 of H.R. 3214, 80th Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 4]
The courts below have divided since the
Darr case on
the effect to be accorded a denial of certiorari by this Court.
NO SUBSTANTIVE EFFECT
Goodman v. Lainson, 182 F.2d 814
McGarty v. O'Brien, 188 F.2d 151
Soulia v. O'Brien, 188 F.2d 233
Odell v. Hudspeth, 189 F.2d 300
Ekberg v. McGee, 191 F.2d 625 (also reported at 9 Cir.,
194 F.2d 178)
Sampsell v. California, 191 F.2d 721
Melanson v. O'Brien, 191 F.2d 963
Bacom v. Sullivan, 194 F.2d 166
Almeida v. Baldi, 195 F.2d 815
Hawk v. Hann, D.C., 103 F.
Supp. 138
Ex parte Wells, 99 F.
Supp. 320
Fouquette v. Bernard, 198 F.2d 96
Master v. Baldi, 198 F.2d 113
Daverse v. Hohn, 198 F.2d 934
DISCRETIONARY EFFECT
Anderson v. Eidson, 191 F.2d 193
Holland v. Eidson, 90 F. Supp. 314
Pennsylvania ex rel. Gibbs v. Ashe, 93 F. Supp. 542
Soulia v. O'Brien, 94 F. Supp.
764
McGarty v. O'Brien, 96 F. Supp. 704
Goodwin v. Smyth, 181 F.2d 498
Adkins v. Smyth, 188 F.2d 452
Byars v. Swenson, 192 F.2d 739
Frazier v. Ellis, 196 F.2d 231
Lyle v. Eidson, 197 F.2d 327
Skinner v. Robinson, 105 F. Supp. 153
[
Footnote 5]
The participation of a district court through habeas corpus
proceedings in determining whether state prisoners have been
granted a fair trial is a sensitive area in our federated system.
Speller v. Crawford, 99 F. Supp. 92, 96;
Smith v.
Baldi, 192 F.2d 540, 543.
In September, 1952, at its fourth annual meeting, the Conference
of Chief Justices adopted a resolution questioning the habeas
corpus principles "enunciated in certain recent federal decisions."
The resolution expressed the consensus of the Chief Justices that
"a final judgment of a state's highest court [should] be subject to
review or reversal only by the Supreme Court of the United States."
Concern was noted that the hearing of the successive petitions by
federal district courts would tend toward a dilution of the sense
of judicial responsibility, a delay in the enforcement of criminal
justice, and an impairment of confidence in state judicial
institutions. 25 State Government, pp. 249-250.
[
Footnote 6]
As the burden of overturning the conviction rests on the
applicant, he should allege specifically, in cases where material,
the uncontradicted evidentiary facts appearing in the record upon
which is based his allegation of denial of constitutional
rights.
[
Footnote 7]
The applicable Rule 61 of the Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. is as
follows:
"No error in either the admission or the exclusion of evidence
and no error or defect in any ruling or order or in anything done
or omitted by the court or by any of the parties is ground for
granting a new trial or for setting aside a verdict or for
vacating, modifying or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order,
unless refusal to take such action appears to the court
inconsistent with substantial justice. The court at every stage of
the proceeding must disregard any error or defect in the proceeding
which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties."
[
Footnote 8]
Helvering v. Gowran, 302 U. S. 238,
302 U. S. 245.
See Riley Co. v. Commissioner, 311 U. S.
55,
311 U. S.
59.
[
Footnote 9]
Rule 52, Fed.Rules Crim.Proc.;
Berger v. United States,
295 U. S. 78,
295 U. S. 81-84.
See Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.
S. 750,
328 U. S. 763;
Bihn v. United States, 328 U. S. 633.
[
Footnote 10]
See note 15
infra.
[
Footnote 11]
28 U.S.C. § 2241(a).
[
Footnote 12]
28 U.S.C. § 2243:
"A court, justice or judge entertaining an application for a
writ of habeas corpus shall forthwith award the writ or issue an
order directing the respondent to show cause why the writ should
not be granted, unless it appears from the application that the
applicant or person detained is not entitled thereto. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Unless the application for the writ and the return present only
issues of law the person to whom the writ is directed shall be
required to produce at the hearing the body of the person
detained."
"
* * * *"
"The court shall summarily hear and determine the facts, and
dispose of the matter as law and justice require."
[
Footnote 13]
28 U.S.C. § 2242.
Darr v. Burford, supra, p.
339 U. S. 203.
See § 2243,
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
See Denholm & McKay Co. v. Commissioner, 132 F.2d
243, 247, and cases cited.
[
Footnote 15]
28 U.S.C. § 2244:
"No circuit or district judge shall be required to entertain an
application for a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the
detention of a person pursuant to a judgment of a court of the
United States, or of any State, if it appears that the legality of
such detention has been determined by a judge or court of the
United States on a prior application for a writ of habeas corpus
and the petition presents no new ground not theretofore presented
and determined, and the judge or court is satisfied that the ends
of justice will not be served by such inquiry.
See
S.Rep.No.1559, 80th Cong., 2d Sess., Amendment No. 45."
[
Footnote 16]
See H.R. 4232, 79th Cong., 1st Sess.; H.R. 3214, 80th
Cong., 1st Sess.; H.R. 3214, 80th Cong., 2d Sess.; Report of the
Judicial Conference of Senior Circuit Judges, 1947, pp. 17-20.
[
Footnote 17]
28 U.S.C. § 2254:
"An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a
person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall
not be granted unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted
the remedies available in the courts of the State, or that there is
either an absence of available State corrective process or the
existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to
protect the rights of the prisoner."
"An applicant shall not be deemed to have exhausted the remedies
available in the courts of the State, within the meaning of this
section, if he has the right under the law of the State to raise,
by any available procedure, the question presented."
[
Footnote 18]
The reason for the change in procedure was stated:
"But it does not follow that a refusal to discharge on one
application is without bearing or weight when a later application
is being considered. In early times, when a refusal to discharge
was not open to appellate review, courts and judges were accustomed
to exercise an independent judgment on each successive application,
regardless of the number. But when a right to an appellate review
was given, the reason for that practice ceased, and the practice
came to be materially changed -- just as, when a right to a
comprehensive review in criminal cases was given, the scope of
inquiry deemed admissible on habeas corpus came to be relatively
narrowed."
Id. at
265 U. S.
230-231.
[
Footnote 19]
When an application for habeas corpus by a state prisoner is
filed in a federal district court after the exhaustion of state
remedies, including a certiorari to this Court, it rests on a
record that was made in the applicant's effort to secure relief
through the state from imprisonment, allegedly in violation of
federal constitutional rights. The District Court, a court
convenient to the place of litigation, 28 U.S.C. § 2241(b),
after determining grounds for relief are stated in the petition,
"may require a showing of the record and action on prior
applications."
Darr v. Burford, supra, at
339 U. S. 215;
Salinger v. Loisel, 265 U. S. 224,
265 U. S. 232;
cf. Ex parte Elmer Davis, 318 U.
S. 412. Original records in state courts are returned by
this Court. (
E.g., see, in Daniels v. North Carolina, 339
U.S. 954, the order of THE CHIEF JUSTICE of the Supreme Court of
the United States, dated May 12, 1950, as the same remains upon the
files of this Court, directing, on the application of petitioner's
counsel, the return of the original record from the files of this
Court to the Supreme Court of North Carolina.) Copies of petitions
for certiorari are normally available to petitioners.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2250. Other sections strengthen the ability of the
court hearing the application fully to advise itself concerning
prior hearings of the same issues for the applicant. 28 U.S.C.
§ 2245, allows a certificate as to certain facts; § 2246
provides for depositions and affidavits. Section 2247 makes liberal
provision for the use of records of former proceedings in evidence.
See also §§ 2248-2254, inclusive. Of course, the
other usual methods of completing the record in civil cases, such
as subpoena
duces tecum and discovery, are generally
available to the applicant and respondent. If useful records of
prior litigation are difficult to secure or unobtainable, the
District Court may find it necessary or desirable to hold limited
hearings to supply them where the allegations of the application
for habeas corpus state adequate grounds for relief.
[
Footnote 20]
Rule 19 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of North Carolina
permits an appellant to bring up on appeal as much of the record as
is necessary "to an understanding of the exceptions relied on."
Petitioner does not contend that the record before the Supreme
Court of North Carolina was inadequate fully to support an
adjudication on his federal questions.
[
Footnote 21]
See Chapter 206, 1937 Public Local Laws, as amended by
Chapter 264, 1947 Session Laws, and as amended by Chapter 577, 1949
N.C. Session Laws. And Gen.Stats. of N.C.1943, c. 9, Arts. 1-4, as
amended.
[
Footnote 22]
In addition to North Carolina, the following states are among
those which also base the composition of jury lists on tax
lists:
Colo.Stat.Ann.1951, c. 95, § 10 (may use tax list);
Ga.Code Ann.1951, § 59.106 (jury commissioners "shall
select from the books of the tax receiver");
Kan.Gen.Stat.1949, c. 43 ("select from those assessed on the
assessment roll of the preceding year");
Ky.Rev.Stat.1948, § 29.070 (last returned tax
commissioner's book);
Md.Ann.Code 1939, Art. 51, § 6 (from a "complete list of
the male taxable inhabitants . . . whose names appear on the tax
books");
Mich.Stat.Ann.1938 and 1951, §§ 27.246, 27.247 (select
from "persons assessed on the assessment roll"; provides for
additional names);
Mont.Rev.Code 1947, Tit. 93, § 1402 ("select, from the last
assessment roll of the county");
McKinney's N.Y.Consol.Laws, Judiciary Law, § 502 (1948)
(own real property $150, or personal property $250, or married to
someone who does; jurors in counties outside of cities having a
population of one million or more). McKinney's N.Y.Laws, Judiciary
Law, § 596;
N.D.Rev.Code 1943, § 27-0906 ("The names on the assessors'
lists . . . for the preceding year shall be the basis for making"
an apportionment of the 200 names per county to the various cities
and towns within the county);
Okla.Stat.Ann., 1951, Tit. 38, § 18 (jury lists shall be
selected from the names on the tax rolls of the county);
Ore.Comp.Laws Ann., 1940, § 14-201 (make a jury list, "as
far as it may be able to ascertain the same from the latest tax
roll and/or registration books of the county");
Utah Code Ann.1943, § 48-0-17 ("select from the names of
the legal voters on the assessment roll . . .");
Remington's Wash.Rev.Stat.1932, § 94 (no person is
competent to serve as a juror unless he be (1) an elector and
taxpayer of the state);
Wyo.Comp.Stat.1945, § 12-101(4) (a person is competent if
he be (4) assessed on the last assessment roll of the county).
See also Morse, A Survey of the Grand Jury System, part
2, 10 Ore.L.Rev. 217, 227 (1931). The answers to the questionnaires
sent out by Mr. Morse indicated that in twenty-two states the names
for the grand jury lists were selected from county tax rolls or
assessment rolls.
[
Footnote 23]
Rules dealing with the selection of juries in federal courts, as
announced in
Thiel v. Southern Pacific Co., 328 U.
S. 217,
328 U. S. 221,
are not applicable in state court proceedings.
Fay v. New
York, 332 U. S. 261,
332 U. S.
287.
[
Footnote 24]
Evidence in state criminal proceedings to support objections on
federal constitutional grounds, known to state defendants and their
counsel, or easily ascertainable, cannot be withheld or neglected
at the state trial and used later to support habeas corpus. State
criminal proceedings would be unreasonably hampered.
Ex parte
Spencer, 228 U. S. 652,
228 U. S. 660;
In re Wood, 140 U. S. 278,
140 U. S. 285;
Crowe v. United States, 175 F.2d 799;
Price v.
Johnston, 334 U. S. 266,
334 U. S. 289,
and the dissent.
[
Footnote 25]
We understand his last basis of qualification was not required.
See Brown v. Allen, supra, page
344 U. S. 470,
and General Statutes of North Carolina, § 9-1 as amended
1947.
[
Footnote 26]
Moral character and intelligence sufficient to serve as jurors
is the statutory test. N.C.Gen.Stat., 1943, § 9-1. Even in
1930, only 18.5% over 10 years of age were illiterate. 1930 Census,
Vol. III, part 2, p. 359.
See Hill v. Texas, 316 U.
S. 400,
316 U. S.
404.
[
Footnote 27]
State v. Daniels, 231 N.C. 17, 56 S.E.2d 2; 231 N.C.
341, 56 S.E.2d 646; 232 N.C. 196,
59 S.E.2d
430.
[
Footnote 28]
Compare Taylor v. Alabama, 335 U.
S. 252.
[
Footnote 29]
State v. Watson, 208 N.C. 70, 71, 179 S.E. 455, 456, is
a capital case where the prisoner "failed to make out and serve
statement of case on appeal within the statutory period." He lost
his right to prosecute the appeal, and it was dismissed. The court
pointed out, however, that it was customary in capital cases to
examine the record to see that no error appeared on its face. In
State v. Morrow, 220 N.C. 441, 17 S.E.2d 507, the
identical procedure was followed. In
State v. Moore, 210
N.C. 686, 687, 188 S.E. 421, and
State v. Lampkin, 227
N.C. 620, 44 S.E.2d 30, also capital cases, writs of certiorari
were denied when the statement of the case on appeal had not been
filed within the statutory period.
[
Footnote 30]
State v. Daniels, 231 N.C. 17, 20(11), 56 S.E.2d 2;
Gen.Stat. of N.C.1943, § 1-587.
[
Footnote 31]
Sunal v. Large, 332 U. S. 174,
332 U. S. 180;
Eagles v. Samuels, 329 U. S. 304;
In re Yamashita, 327 U. S. 1,
327 U. S. 8;
Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U. S. 458,
304 U. S. 465;
Goto v. Lane, 265 U. S. 393.
[
Footnote 32]
Dowd v. Cook, 340 U. S. 206;
see De Meerleer v. Michigan, 329 U.
S. 663;
Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.
S. 458.
[
Footnote 33]
Hawk v. Olson, 326 U. S. 271,
326 U. S. 278;
Herndon v. Lowry, 301 U. S. 242,
301 U. S.
247.
[
Footnote 34]
Smith v. Baldi, 344 U. S. 561,
344 U. S.
569-570.
[
Footnote 35]
Darr v. Burford, supra, at
339 U. S. 203;
Ex parte Spencer, 228 U. S. 652,
228 U. S. 660.
See In re Wood, 140 U. S. 278.
[
Footnote 36]
See McKane v. Durston, 153 U.
S. 684,
153 U. S. 687,
where this Court said:
"An appeal from a judgment of conviction is not a matter of
absolute right, independently of constitutional or statutory
provisions allowing such appeal. A review by an appellate court of
the final judgment in a criminal case, however, grave the offense
of which the accused is convicted, was not at common law, and is
not now, a necessary element of due process of law. It is wholly
within the discretion of the state to allow or not to allow such a
review. A citation of authorities upon the point is
unnecessary."
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER*
The course of litigation in these cases and their relevant facts
are set out in MR. JUSTICE REED's opinion. This opinion is
restricted to the two general questions which must be considered
before the Court can pass on the specific situations presented by
these cases. The two general problems are these:
I. The legal significance of a denial of certiorari, in a case
required to be presented here under the doctrine of
Darr v.
Burford, 339 U. S. 200,
when an application for a writ of habeas corpus thereafter comes
before a district court.
II. The bearing that the proceedings in the state courts should
have on the disposition of such an application in a district
court.
Page 344 U. S. 489
I
Darr v. Burford sheds no light on the effect a district
court is to give our denial of certiorari in one of these cases.
That decision was expressly limited to ruling that, "ordinarily,"
the certiorari jurisdiction of this Court must be invoked in an
attempt to secure review of a State court's refusal of relief prior
to an application for habeas corpus in a district court.
Darr
v. Burford, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 201,
339 U. S. 214.
The fact that two members of the necessary majority in
Darr v.
Burford deemed it appropriate to disavow concurrence in any
"indication" in the Court's opinion that any effect is to be given
to the denial of certiorari emphasizes that no such ruling can be
attributed to
Darr v. Burford. It was the view of MR.
JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE CLARK
"that the nature of the proceeding is such that, when the
reasons for a denial of certiorari are not stated, the denial
should be disregarded in passing upon a subsequent application for
relief, except to note that this source of possible relief has been
exhausted."
Darr v. Burford, supra, at
339 U. S. 219.
Of course, when the reasons are given the decision to deny will
have the effect indicated by the reasons stated. But we know best
how puzzling it often would be to state why the Court denied
certiorari even when we are parties to the denial.
In the three cases now here from the Fourth Circuit, the Court
of Appeals relied heavily on our denial of certiorari in ruling
against applications for federal habeas corpus by State prisoners.
[
Footnote 2/1] Its opinion in
No.
Page 344 U. S. 490
20 relies on, and the per curiam decision in Nos. 22 and 32
quotes, an earlier decision by that court based on an express
assumption that if this Court had thought that the record showed a
denial of constitutional rights, certiorari
Page 344 U. S. 491
would have been granted.
Stonebreaker v. Smyth, 163
F.2d 498, 499.
If we were to sanction a rule directing the District Courts to
give any effect to a denial of certiorari, let alone the effect of
res judicata which is the practical result of the position
of the Fourth Circuit, we would be ignoring actualities recognized
ever since certiorari jurisdiction was conferred upon this Court
more than sixty years ago.
From its inception, certiorari jurisdiction has been treated for
what it is in view of the function that it was devised to serve. It
was designed to permit this Court to keep within manageable
proportions, having due regard to the conditions indispensable for
the wise adjudication of those cases which must be decided here,
the business that is allowed to come before us. By successive
measures, Congress enlarged the discretionary jurisdiction of the
Court until, by the Judiciary Act of 1925, supplemented by the
Court's own invention of the jurisdictional statement in relation
to the narrow scope of residual appeals, the Court became complete
master of its docket. The governing consideration was authority in
the Court to decline to review decisions which, right or wrong, do
not present questions of sufficient gravity. Whatever the source of
these questions, whether the common law, statutes or the
Constitution, other cases of obvious gravity are more than enough
to absorb the Court's time and thought.
Cf. Hamilton-Brown Shoe
Co. v. Wolf Brothers, 240 U. S. 251,
240 U. S.
258.
It is within the experience of every member of this Court that
we do not have to, and frequently do not, reach the merits of a
case to decide that it is not of sufficient importance to warrant
review here. Thirty years ago, the Court rather sharply reminded
the Bar not to draw strength for lower court opinions from the fact
that they were left unreviewed here.
"The denial of a writ of
Page 344 U. S. 492
certiorari imports no expression of opinion upon the merits of
the case, as the bar has been told many times."
United States v. Carver, 260 U.
S. 482,
260 U. S. 490. We
have repeatedly indicated that a denial of certiorari means only
that, for one reason or another which is seldom disclosed, and not
infrequently for conflicting reasons which may have nothing to do
with the merits and certainly may have nothing to do with any view
of the merits taken by a majority of the Court, there were not four
members of the Court who thought the case should be heard. Any
departure from this fundamental rule in the type of case we are
considering ought to be based on a showing that these denials of
certiorari, unlike all the other denials, are in fact the essential
equivalents of adjudication on the merits. The results of the
inquiry detailed in the
344
U.S. 443app|>Appendix show that the contrary is the fact.
[
Footnote 2/2] There is certainly
no more assurance that these petitions have been canvassed on their
merits than is true of cases within the ordinary domain of
certiorari jurisdiction. Indeed, there is less assurance that
petitions by State prisoners could be considered on their merits
than is the case with ordinary petitions for certiorari. To treat
denials of certiorari in cases in which applications for habeas
corpus are subsequently made in effect as adjudications here
presupposes, at the least, that such "determinations"
Page 344 U. S. 493
are based on records of litigation in which issues are more or
less carefully shaped by competent lawyers, as is, after all, true
of the ordinary flow of certiorari cases. Such an assumption is
shown to be wholly baseless by the study of the 126 certiorari
files on which this opinion is based. It is also an assumption that
falsifies the picture of the habeas corpus problems facing the
District Judge.
These petitions for certiorari are rarely drawn by lawyers; some
are almost unintelligible, and certainly do not present a clear
statement of issues necessary for our understanding, in view of the
pressure of the Court's work. [
Footnote
2/3] The certified records we have in the run of certiorari
cases to assist understanding are almost unknown in this field.
[
Footnote 2/4] Indeed, the number
of cases in which most of the papers necessary to prove what
happened in the State proceedings are not filed is striking.
Whether there has been an adjudication or simply a perfunctory
denial of a claim below is rarely ascertainable. Seldom do we have
enough on which to base a solid conclusion as to the adequacy of
the State adjudication. Even if we are told something about a trial
of the claims
Page 344 U. S. 494
the applicant asserts, we almost never have a transcript of
these proceedings to assist us in determining whether the trial was
adequate. [
Footnote 2/5] Equally
unsatisfactory as a means for evaluating the State proceedings is
the filing of opinions; in less than one-fourth of the cases is
more than a perfunctory order of the State courts filed. [
Footnote 2/6] We would have to have very
different records and to alter our consideration of these cases
radically if a denial could fairly be deemed to be an undisclosed
decision on the merits. In a few cases, the issues before the
District Court had not even been raised here. [
Footnote 2/7] In other cases, the emphasis put on
the issues here differed considerably from that put on them in the
District Courts. Alice could understand, but not I, how, under such
circumstances, a district judge could assume if he is so minded,
that we "decided" the question now presented to him.
Just as there is no ground for holding that our denial is in
effect
res judicata, so equally is there no basis for
leaving the District Judge free to decide whether we passed on the
merits. For there is more to the story. The District Judge
ordinarily knows painfully little of the painfully little we knew.
It is a rare case indeed in which the District Court has any
information concerning the certiorari proceeding. In over 90% of
the cases studied, there were neither papers filed nor allegations
made indicating in any way what issue the petition for certiorari
presented. [
Footnote 2/8] In even
fewer cases was there any indication that any papers from the State
proceedings had been before this Court. [
Footnote 2/9] It may be said that the District Court
Page 344 U. S. 495
can call for the papers that were here. It is seldom done.
[
Footnote 2/10] Moreover, in view
of the unlikelihood that such a record could reveal enough for a
sound judgment, such a requirement would be futile. But otherwise,
the District Judge can know only in a negligible number of cases
what little we had before us. To say that he is at liberty to
decide whether we passed on the merits of a case invites what must,
in almost all cases, be idle speculation. We would be inviting a
busy federal district judge to rest on our denial and cloak his
failure to exercise a judgment in formal compliance with a
statement that he can give meaning to something that almost always
must to him be meaningless.
It is inadmissible to act as though these cases proceeded
through the courts in an orderly fashion, leaving behind neat
records which can be traced effectively with promise of
enlightenment, once traced. Although it seems difficult to conceive
of many cases in which a district judge, presented with a full
record of the proceedings here, could give any relevant effect to
the denial of certiorari, the likelihood is negligible that such a
case will also be one of the very few in which he has enough
materials to know what was before us. To give him discretion to
interpret the denial of certiorari as a "determination" can so
rarely be rationally justified that it is either futile or
mischievous to allow such denial to weigh in the District Court's
disposition.
In
Darr v. Burford, it was decided, as a matter of
proper administration, that due regard for the relations between
State and federal authority makes it undesirable in the ordinary
case to permit an application to a federal district
Page 344 U. S. 496
court on a claim which has already been presented to the State
court before we have had an opportunity to review the State court
action here. To hold, however, that a denial of certiorari may be
deemed to be approval of the decision of the State court would be
something far beyond fashioning a rule for the administration of
judicial business. If district judges were authorized to deny an
application for habeas corpus merely because the issues may have
been considered by this Court in denying a petition for certiorari,
the duty, which has been entrusted to the Federal Courts since the
enlargement of the scope of habeas corpus jurisdiction by the Act
of 1867, to deal judicially with applications for writs of habeas
corpus by State convicts would be left to the unbounded, because
undefined, discretion of the District Judges throughout the land.
Judges dealing with the writ of habeas corpus, as with temporary
injunctions, must be left some discretion -- room for assessing
fact and balancing conflicting considerations of public interest --
if law is not to be a Procrustes bed. But discretion must be
judicial discretion. It must be subject to rational criteria, by
which particular situations may be adjudged. To allow applications
for habeas corpus to be denied merely because it is deemed, on no
reasonable or, at best, on the most fragile, foundations, that the
matter has already been adjudicated here is to afford no criterion,
but merely a shelter, for district judges to respond according to
the individual will.
We must not invite the exercise of judicial impressionism.
Discretion there may be, but "methodized by analogy, disciplined by
system." Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process, 139, 141
(1921). Discretion without a criterion for its exercise is
authorization of arbitrariness. The Nation's Supreme Court ought to
be able to do better than to tell the Federal Judges of the land,
in a field so vital as that of habeas corpus to vindicate
constitutional
Page 344 U. S. 497
rights, that they may do as they please -- that they are not to
be bound, nor to be guided, by considerations capable of rational
formulation.
This is not to impugn the conscientiousness of federal judges;
if left at large in disposing of applications for a writ of habeas
corpus, they would necessarily be thrown back upon their individual
judgments, and that would be the exercise not of law but of
arbitrariness.
The reasons why our denial of certiorari in the ordinary run of
cases can be any number of things other than a decision on the
merits are only multiplied by the circumstances of this class of
petitions. And so we conclude that in habeas corpus cases, as in
others, denial of certiorari cannot be interpreted as an
"expression of opinion on the merits."
Sunal v. Large,
332 U. S. 174,
332 U. S.
181.
II
The issue of the significance of the denial of certiorari raises
a sharp division in the Court. This is not so as to the bearing of
the proceedings in the State courts upon the disposition of the
application for a writ of habeas corpus in the Federal District
Courts. This opinion is designed to make explicit and detailed
matters that are also the concern of MR. JUSTICE REED's opinion.
The uncommon circumstances in which a district court should
entertain an application ought to be defined with greater
particularity, as should be the criteria for determining when a
hearing is proper. The views of the Court on these questions may
thus be drawn from the two opinions jointly.
I deem it appropriate to begin by making explicit some basic
considerations underlying the federal habeas corpus jurisdiction.
Experience may be summoned to support the belief that most claims
in these attempts to obtain review of State convictions are without
merit. Presumably they are adequately dealt with in the State
courts.
Page 344 U. S. 498
Again, no one can feel more strongly than I do that a casual,
unrestricted opening of the doors of the federal courts to these
claims not only would cast an undue burden upon those courts, but
would also disregard our duty to support and not weaken the sturdy
enforcement of their criminal laws by the States. That wholesale
opening of State prison doors by federal courts is, however, not at
all the real issue before us is best indicated by a survey recently
prepared in the Administrative Office of the United States Courts
for the Conference of Chief Justices: of all federal question
applications for habeas corpus, some not even relating to State
convictions, only 67 out of 3,702 applications were granted in the
last seven years. And "only a small number" of these 67
applications resulted in release from prison:
"a more detailed study over the last four years shows that, out
of 29 petitions granted, there were only 5 petitioners who were
released from state penitentiaries. [
Footnote 2/11]"
The meritorious claims are few, but our procedures must ensure
that those few claims are not stifled by undiscriminating
generalities. The complexities of our federalism and the workings
of a scheme of government involving the interplay of two
governments, one of which is subject to limitations enforceable by
the other, are not to be escaped by simple, rigid rules which, by
avoiding some abuses, generate others.
For surely it is an abuse to deal too casually and too lightly
with rights guaranteed by the Federal Constitution, even though
they involve limitations upon State power and may be invoked by
those morally unworthy. Under the guise of fashioning a procedural
rule, we are
Page 344 U. S. 499
not justified in wiping out the practical efficacy of a
jurisdiction conferred by Congress on the District Courts. Rules
which, in effect, treat all these cases indiscriminately as
frivolous do not fall far short of abolishing this head of
jurisdiction.
Congress could have left the enforcement of federal
constitutional rights governing the administration of criminal
justice in the States exclusively to the State courts. These
tribunals are under the same duty as the federal courts to respect
rights under the United States Constitution.
See
Federalist, No. 82;
Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U. S.
130;
Testa v. Katt, 330 U.
S. 386; Note, 60 Harv.L.Rev. 966. Indeed, the
jurisdiction given to the federal courts to issue writs of habeas
corpus by the First Judiciary Act, § 14, 1 Stat. 81, 82,
extended only to prisoners in custody under authority of the United
States. It was not until the Act of 1867 that the power to issue
the writ was extended to an applicant under sentence of a State
court. It is not for us to determine whether this power should have
been vested in the federal courts. As Mr. Justice Bradley, with his
usual acuteness, commented not long after the passage of that
Act,
"although it may appear unseemly that a prisoner, after
conviction in a state court, should be set at liberty by a single
judge on habeas corpus, there seems to be no escape from the
law."
Ex parte Bridges, 2 Woods 428, 432. His feeling has
been recently echoed in a proposal of the Judicial Conference of
Senior Circuit Judges that these cases be heard by three-judge
courts. [
Footnote 2/12]
See
Page 344 U. S. 500
Rep.Jud.Conf.1943, p. 23. But the wisdom of such a modification
in the law is for Congress to consider, particularly in view of the
effect of the expanding concept of due process upon enforcement by
the States of their criminal laws. It is for this Court to give
fair effect to the habeas corpus jurisdiction as enacted by
Congress. By giving the federal courts that jurisdiction, Congress
has imbedded into federal legislation the historic function of
habeas corpus adapted to reaching an enlarged area of claims.
See, e.g., Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.
S. 103;
Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.
S. 458.
In exercising the power thus bestowed, the District Judge must
take due account of the proceedings that are challenged by the
application for a writ. All that has gone before is not to be
ignored as irrelevant. But the prior State determination of a claim
under the United States Constitution cannot foreclose consideration
of such a claim, else the State court would have the final say
which the Congress, by the Act of 1867, provided it should not
have.
Cf. Ex parte Royall, 117 U.
S. 241,
117 U. S.
248-250. A State determination may help to define the
claim urged in the application for the writ and may bear on the
seriousness of the claim. That most claims are frivolous has an
important bearing upon the procedure to be followed by a district
judge. The prior State determination may guide his discretion in
deciding upon the appropriate course to be followed in disposing of
the application before him. The State record may serve to indicate
the necessity of further pleadings or of a quick hearing to clear
up an ambiguity, or the State record may show the claim to be
frivolous or not within the competence of a federal court because
solely dependent on State law.
It may be a matter of phrasing whether we say that the District
Judge summarily denies an application for a writ by accepting the
ruling of the State court or by making an independent judgment,
though he does so on
Page 344 U. S. 501
the basis of what the State record reveals. But since phrasing
mirrors thought, it is important that the phrasing not obscure the
true issue before a federal court. Our problem arises because
Congress has told the District Judge to act on those occasions,
however rare, when there are meritorious causes in which habeas
corpus is the ultimate and only relief and designed to be such.
Vague, undefined directions permitting the District Court to give
"consideration" to a prior State determination fall short of
appropriate guidance for bringing to the surface the meritorious
case. They may serve indiscriminately to preclude a hearing where
one should have been granted, and yet this basis for denial may be
so woven into the texture of the result that an improper deference
to a State court treatment of a constitutional issue cannot even be
corrected on review. If we are to give effect to the statute and at
the same time avoid improper intrusion into the State criminal
process by federal judges -- and there is no basis for thinking
there is such intrusion unless "men think dramatically, not
quantitatively," Holmes, Collected Legal Papers, p. 293 -- we must
direct them to probe the federal question while drawing on
available records of prior proceedings to guide them in doing
so.
Of course, experience cautions that the very nature and function
of the writ of habeas corpus precludes the formulation of
fool-proof standards which the 225 District Judges can
automatically apply. Here, as elsewhere in matters of judicial
administration, we must attribute to them the good sense and
sturdiness appropriate for men who wield the power of a federal
judge. Certainly we will not get these qualities if we fashion
rules assuming the contrary. But it is important, in order to
preclude individualized enforcement of the Constitution in
different parts of the Nation, to lay down as specifically as the
nature of the problem permits the standards or directions
Page 344 U. S. 502
that should govern the District Judges in the disposition of
applications for habeas corpus by prisoners under sentence of State
courts.
First. Just as in all other litigation, a
prima
facie case must be made out by the petitioner. The application
should be dismissed when it fails to state a federal question, or
fails to set forth facts which, if accepted at face value, would
entitle the applicant to relief.
Care will naturally be taken that the frequent lack of technical
competence of prisoners should not strangle consideration of a
valid constitutional claim that is bunglingly presented. District
judges have resorted to various procedures to that end. Thus, a
lawyer may be appointed, in the exercise of the inherent authority
of the District Court,
cf., e.g., Ex parte Peterson,
253 U. S. 300,
either as an
amicus or as counsel for the petitioner, to
examine the claim and to report, or the judge may dismiss the
petition without prejudice. [
Footnote
2/13]
Second. Failure to exhaust an available State remedy is
an obvious ground for denying the application. An attempt must have
been made in the State court to present the claim now asserted in
the District Court, in compliance with § 2254 of the Judicial
Code. Section 2254 does not, however, require repeated attempts to
invoke the same remedy, nor more than one attempt where there are
alternative remedies. Further,
Darr v. Burford requires
"ordinarily" an application for certiorari to the United States
Supreme Court from the State's denial of relief.
Cf. Frisbie v.
Collins, 342 U. S. 519,
342 U. S.
520-522.
Page 344 U. S. 503
Of course, nothing we have said suggests that the federal habeas
corpus jurisdiction can displace a State's procedural rule
requiring that certain errors be raised on appeal. Normally rights
under the Federal Constitution may be waived at the trial,
Adams v. United States ex rel. McCann, 317 U.
S. 269, and may likewise be waived by failure to assert
such errors on appeal.
Compare Frank v. Mangum,
237 U. S. 309,
237 U. S. 343.
When a State insists that a defendant be held to his choice of
trial strategy and not be allowed to try a different tack on State
habeas corpus, he may be deemed to have waived his claim, and thus
have no right to assert on federal habeas corpus. Such
considerations of orderly appellate procedure give rise to the
conventional statement that habeas corpus should not do service for
an appeal.
See Adams v. United States ex rel. McCann,
supra, at
317 U. S. 274.
Compare Sunal v. Large, 332 U. S. 174,
with Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U. S. 458,
304 U. S.
465-469. However, this does not touch one of those
extraordinary cases in which a substantial claim goes to the very
foundation of a proceeding, as in
Moore v. Dempsey,
261 U. S. 86.
Cf. 85 U. S. 18
Wall. 163;
Ex parte Royall, 117 U.
S. 241.
Third. If the record of the State proceedings is not
filed, the judge is required to decide, with due regard to
efficiency in judicial administration, whether it is more desirable
to call for the record or to hold a hearing. Ordinarily, where the
issues are complex, it will be simpler to call for the record,
certainly in the first instance. If the issues are simple, or if
the record is called for and is found inadequate to show how the
State court decided the relevant historical facts, the District
Court shall use appropriate procedures, including a hearing if
necessary, to decide the issues.
Such flexibility in the inquiry into the facts is necessary. A
printed record reflecting orderly procedure through the State
courts and showing clearly what has
Page 344 U. S. 504
happened in the State courts is rarely available in these cases.
[
Footnote 2/14] The effort and
expense of calling for a record and of having a transcript of the
proceedings prepared might be more burdensome than a short hearing,
especially where the questions of fact are simple and easily
settled. It seems an unnecessary deference to State proceedings to
say that the District Judge, regardless of the relative expense of
one procedure or the other, must always call for everything in the
State proceedings. To satisfy requirements of exhaustion, he will
want to know enough to know whether the claim presented to him was
presented in the State courts. But if the claim is either frivolous
or, at the other extreme, substantial, and if the facts are
undisputed, to call for the State record would probably avail
little. If the claim is frivolous, the judge should deny the
application without more. If the question is one on which he must
exercise his legal judgment under the habeas corpus statute,
[
Footnote 2/15] it may be
sufficient to have information, perhaps presented by the pleadings
of the applicant or of the State, as to the disposition of any
disputed questions of fact. It seems unduly rigid to require the
District Judge to call for the State record in every case.
Moreover, the kinds of State adjudications differ. In some
cases, the State court has held a hearing and rendered a decision
based on specific findings of fact; there may have been review by a
higher State court which had before it the pleadings, the
testimony, opinions and briefs on appeal. It certainly would make
only for burdensome and useless repetition of effort if the federal
courts were to rehear the facts in such cases. At the other pole is
the perfunctory memorandum order denying a badly drawn petition and
stating simply that the petitioner is not entitled
Page 344 U. S. 505
to relief. The District Judge cannot give the same weight to
this sort of adjudication as he does to the first; he has no basis
for exercising the judgment the statute requires him to
exercise.
These criteria for determining when it is proper to hold a
hearing seem to me appropriate in relating the habeas corpus
provisions to the realities of these cases. Section 2241 empowers
the District Courts to grant writs of habeas corpus to prisoners in
custody in violation of the Federal Constitution. Section 2243
commands the judge "entertaining" an application to award the writ
or issue an order to show cause "unless it appears from the
application that the applicant . . . is not entitled thereto." It
seems clear enough that the word "entertain" does not refer to
holding a hearing, and MR. JUSTICE REED's suggestion that it refers
to the District Court's conclusion that a hearing is "proper,"
[
Footnote 2/16] is unsatisfying.
[
Footnote 2/17] The proviso that
no writ or order need be issued if the application shows that the
applicant is not entitled thereto certainly permits "entertaining"
and nevertheless summarily dismissing for failure to state a claim,
failure to exhaust State remedies, or proof from the papers
themselves, including the record of the State proceedings, if
filed, that there is no claim. At the same time, the command that
the writ or an order be issued in some cases hardly requires a
hearing in every such case. As in any litigation, the pleadings may
show, either separately or taken together, that there is no claim.
It can hardly be contended that, by "entertaining" the application
to the extent of issuing the writ or an order, the
Page 344 U. S. 506
District Judge commits himself to holding a hearing, if the
return to the writ or the order to show cause shows unquestionably
that the applicant is not entitled to discharge. [
Footnote 2/18]
Fourth. When the record of the State court proceedings
is before the court, it may appear that the issue turns on basic
facts, and that the facts (in the sense of a recital of external
events and the credibility of their narrators) have been tried and
adjudicated against the applicant. Unless a vital flaw be found in
the process of ascertaining such facts in the State court, the
District Judge may accept their determination in the State
proceeding and deny the application. On the other hand, State
adjudication of questions of law cannot, under the habeas corpus
statute, be accepted as binding. It is precisely these questions
that the federal judge is commanded to decide. [
Footnote 2/19]
A State determination of the historical facts, the external
events that occurred, may have been made after hearing witnesses
perhaps no longer available or whose recollection later may have
been affected by the passage of time or by the fact that one
judicial determination has already been made. To be sure, these
considerations argue equally against hearing the claims at all long
after the facts took place. But Congress, by making habeas corpus
available, has determined that other considerations prevail. We are
left to devise appropriate rules, and the congressional
determination does not preclude rules recognizing the soundness of
giving great weight to testimony earlier heard, just as it does not
undermine the principle
Page 344 U. S. 507
that the burden of proving facts inconsistent with judicial
records in all proceedings of this kind is heavy.
Fifth. Where the ascertainment of the historical facts
does not dispose of the claim, but calls for interpretation of the
legal significance of such facts,
see Baumgartner v. United
States, 322 U. S. 665,
322 U. S.
670-671, the District Judge must exercise his own
judgment on this blend of facts and their legal values. Thus,
so-called mixed questions or the application of constitutional
principles to the facts as found leave the duty of adjudication
with the federal judge.
For instance, the question whether established primary facts
underlying a confession prove that the confession was coerced or
voluntary cannot rest on the State decision.
See, e.g., Haley
v. Ohio, 332 U. S. 596,
332 U. S. 601
(concurring opinion) and
Stroble v. California,
343 U. S. 181,
343 U. S. 190.
Again,
Powell v. Alabama, 287 U. S.
45, represents the settled rule that due process
requires a State court in capital cases to assign counsel to the
accused. Consequently, a finding in a State court of the historical
fact that the accused had not had counsel could be considered
binding by the District Judge, who would issue the writ regardless
of what conclusion the State court had reached as to the law on
representation by counsel in capital cases. If the conviction was
not for a capital offense, however,
Powell v. Alabama may
not apply, and the considerations adverted to in that opinion as to
the necessity of counsel in a particular case to ensure fundamental
fairness would be controlling. The District Judge would then look
to the State proceedings for whatever light they shed on the
historical facts such as the age and intelligence of the accused,
his familiarity with legal proceedings, and the kind of issues
against with he had to defend himself.
Cf. Johnson v.
Zerbst, 304 U. S. 458. But
it is for the federal judge to assess on the basis of such
historical facts the fundamental fairness
Page 344 U. S. 508
of a conviction without counsel in the circumstances. Although
there is no need for the federal judge, if he could, to shut his
eyes to the State consideration of such issues, no binding weight
is to be attached to the State determination. The congressional
requirement is greater. The State court cannot have the last say
when it, though on fair consideration and what procedurally may be
deemed fairness, may have misconceived a federal constitutional
right.
Sixth. A federal district judge may, under § 2244,
take into consideration a prior denial of relief by a federal
court, and, in that sense, § 2244 is, of course, applicable to
State prisoners. Section 2244 merely gave statutory form to the
practice established by
Salinger v. Loisel, 265 U.
S. 224. What was there decided and what § 2244 now
authorizes is that a federal judge, although he may, need not
inquire anew into a prior denial of a habeas corpus application in
a federal court if
"the petition presents no new ground not theretofore presented
and determined, and the judge or court is satisfied that the ends
of justice will not be served by such inquiry."
These standards, addressed as they are to the practical
situation facing the District Judge, recognize the discretion of
judges to give weight to whatever may be relevant in the State
proceedings, and yet preserve the full implication of the
requirement of Congress that the District Judge decide
constitutional questions presented by a State prisoner even after
his claims have been carefully considered by the State courts.
Congress has the power to distribute among the courts of the States
and of the United States jurisdiction to determine federal claims.
It has seen fit to give this Court power to review errors of
federal law in State determinations, and in addition to give to the
lower federal courts power to inquire into federal claims,
Page 344 U. S. 509
by way of habeas corpus. Such power is in the spirit of our
inherited law. It accords with, and is thoroughly regardful of,
"the liberty of the subject," from which flows the right in England
to go from judge to judge, any one of whose decisions to discharge
the prisoner is final. [
Footnote
2/20] Our rule is not so extreme as in England; § 2244
does place some limits on repeating applications to the Federal
Courts. But it would be in disregard of what Congress
Page 344 U. S. 510
has expressly required to deny State prisoners access to the
federal courts.
The reliable figures of the Administrative Office of the United
States Courts,
supra, p.
344 U. S. 498,
showing that, during the last four years, five State prisoners, all
told, were discharged by federal district courts, prove beyond
peradventure that it is a baseless fear, a bogey man, to worry lest
State convictions be upset by allowing district courts to entertain
applications for habeas corpus on behalf of prisoners under State
sentence. Insofar as this jurisdiction enables federal district
courts to entertain claims that State Supreme Courts have denied
rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution, it is not a
case of a lower court sitting in judgment on a higher court. It is
merely one aspect of respecting the Supremacy Clause of the
Constitution whereby federal law is higher than State law. It is
for the Congress to designate the member in the hierarchy of the
federal judiciary to express the higher law. The fact that Congress
has authorized district courts to be the organ of the higher law,
rather than a Court of Appeals, or exclusively this Court, does not
mean that it allows a lower court to overrule a higher court. It
merely expresses the choice of Congress how the superior authority
of federal law should be asserted.
I yield to no member of this Court in awareness of the enormity
of the difficulties of dealing with crime that is the concomitant
of our industrialized society. And I am deeply mindful of the fact
that the responsibility for this task largely rests with the
States. I would not for a
Page 344 U. S. 511
moment hamper them in the effective discharge of this
responsibility. Equally am I aware that misuse of legal procedures,
whereby the administration of criminal justice is too often
rendered leaden-footed, is one of the disturbing features about
American criminal justice. On the other hand, it must not be lost
sight of that there are also abuses by the law-enforcing agencies.
It does not lessen the mischief that it is due more often to lack
of professional competence and want of an austere employment of the
awful processes of criminal justice than to wilful misconduct. In
this connection, it is relevant to quote the observations of one of
the most esteemed of Attorneys General of the United States,
William D. Mitchell:
"Detection and punishment of crime must be effected by strictly
lawful methods. Nothing has a greater tendency to beget lawlessness
than lawless methods of law enforcement. The greater the
difficulties of detecting and punishing crime, the greater the
temptation to place a strained construction on statutes to supply
what may be thought to be more efficient means of enforcing law.
The statutory and constitutional rights of all persons must be
regarded, and their violation, inadvertent or otherwise, is to be
avoided."
(Department of Justice release, for April 8, 1929.)
Unfortunately, instances are not wanting in which even the
highest State courts have failed to recognize violations of these
precepts that offend the limitations which the Constitution of the
United States places upon enforcement by the States of their
criminal law.
See, e.g., De Meerleer v. Michigan,
329 U. S. 663, and
Marino v. Ragen, 332 U. S. 561. Can
it really be denied that in both these cases, which antedated
Darr v. Burford, the
Page 344 U. S. 512
United States District Courts sitting in Illinois and Michigan
would have been justified in granting the writ of habeas corpus had
application been made for it? The tag that an inferior court should
not override a superior court would not have been a fit objection
against the exercise of the jurisdiction with which the Congress
invested the District Courts.
The uniqueness of habeas corpus in the procedural armory of our
law cannot be too often emphasized. It differs from all other
remedies in that it is available to bring into question the
legality of a person's restraint and to require justification for
such detention. Of course, this does not mean that prison doors may
readily be opened. It does mean that explanation may be exacted why
they should remain closed. It is not the boasting of empty rhetoric
that has treated the writ of habeas corpus as the basic safeguard
of freedom in the Anglo-American world. "The great writ of habeas
corpus has been for centuries esteemed the best and only sufficient
defense of personal freedom." Chief Justice Chase, writing for the
Court in
Ex parte
Yerger, 8 Wall. 85,
75 U. S. 95. Its
history and function in our legal system and the unavailability of
the writ in totalitarian societies are naturally enough regarded as
one of the decisively differentiating factors between our democracy
and totalitarian governments.
The significance of the writ for the moral health of our kind of
society has been amply attested by all the great commentators,
historians and jurists, on our institutions. It has appropriately
been characterized by Hallam as "the principal bulwark of English
liberty." But the writ has potentialities for evil, as well as for
good. Abuse of the writ may undermine the orderly administration of
justice, and therefore weaken the forces of authority that are
essential for civilization.
The circumstances and conditions for bringing into action a
legal remedy having such potentialities obviously
Page 344 U. S. 513
cannot be defined with a particularity appropriate to legal
remedies of much more limited scope. To attempt rigid rules would
either give spuriously concrete form to wide-ranging purposes or
betray the purposes by strangulating rigidities. Equally unmindful,
however, of the purposes of the writ -- its history and its
functions -- would it be to advise the Federal district courts as
to their duty in regard to habeas corpus in terms so ambiguous as
in effect to leave their individual judgment unguided. This would
leave them free to misuse the writ by being either too lax or too
rigid in its employment. The fact that we cannot formulate rules
that are absolute or of a definiteness almost mechanically
applicable does not discharge us from the duty of trying to be as
accurate and specific as the nature of the subject permits.
It is inadmissible to deny the use of the writ merely because a
State court has passed on a Federal constitutional issue. The
discretion of the lower courts must be canalized within banks of
standards governing all Federal judges alike, so as to mean
essentially the same thing to all and to leave only the margin of
freedom of movement inevitably entailed by the nature of habeas
corpus and the indefinable variety of circumstances which bring it
into play.
* [For notation of position of MR. JUSTICE BURTON and MR.
JUSTICE CLARK on the same points,
see ante, p.
344 U.S. 487; for notation
of position of MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS on the
same points,
see post, p.
344 U. S. 513.
In addition to the three cases decided in the Opinion of the Court,
ante, p.
344 U. S. 443,
this opinion applies also to
United States ex re. Smith v.
Baldi, post, p.
344 U. S.
561.]
[
Footnote 2/1]
In No. 20,
Daniels v. Allen, after speaking of the
denial of certiorari, the District Judge felt it difficult to
believe
"that any impartial person would conclude, in the light of the
procedural history of this case, that it clearly appears that
petitioners were denied the substance of a fair trial."
He concluded the petitioners had had a fair trial, that the writ
should be vacated "because not available to petitioners on the
procedural history, and if so, the petitioners are not entitled to
discharge," since they did not substantiate their charges.
Daniels v. Crawford, 99 F. Supp.
208, 213, 216. The Court of Appeals stated that it was only
necessary to consider the proposition that petitioners were not
entitled to the writ in view of the procedural history of the case
and affirmed, saying that petitioners could not by habeas corpus
circumvent the results of their failure to comply with the State
procedural rules. Their allegation of peculiar hardship in only one
day's default in complying with State procedural rules was before
the Supreme Court in their application for certiorari,
"and proper respect for that court requires that we assume that,
if it had thought that such enforcement of the rules of court
amounted to a denial of a fair hearing to men condemned to death,
it would have granted certiorari either to the Supreme Court [of
the State] or the trial court, and would have reviewed the case.
The case falls squarely, we think, within what was said by the
Supreme Court in
Ex parte Hawk, 321 U. S.
114,
321 U. S. 118, . . ."
Daniels v. Allen, 192 F.2d 763, 768, 769.
In No 22,
Speller v. Allen, the District Court stated
that it "felt strongly disposed to deny the petition for writ of
habeas corpus solely on the procedural history," but decided to
hear evidence on the merits. After hearing evidence, the Court
dismissed,
"upon the procedural history and the record in the State Courts,
for the reason that habeas corpus proceeding is not available to
the petitioner for the purpose of raising the identical question
passed upon in those Courts."
Further, even if entitled to raise the same question, petitioner
did not substantiate his claims.
Speller v. Crawford, 99
F. Supp. 92, 95, 97. The Court of Appeals cited
Ex parte
Hawk and quoted from its opinion in
Stonebreaker v.
Smyth, 163 F.2d 498, 499, to the same effect as the language
in No. 20, that "proper respect" compels the conclusion that the
Supreme Court would have granted certiorari had it thought
petitioner's constitutional rights violated.
Speller v.
Allen, 192 F.2d 477, 478.
In No. 32,
Brown v. Allen, the District Court relied on
Stonebreaker v. Smyth and denied the writ, noting that
petitioner had apparently had a fair and impartial trial in the
State courts and that the Supreme Court had refused to review the
State court action.
Brown v. Crawford, 98 F. Supp. 866.
The Court of Appeals considered the case together with No. 22, and,
as stated above, affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/2]
An attempt to determine the factual context of a statistically
representative group of habeas corpus applications is summarized in
the
344
U.S. 443app|>Appendix; the study there reported reflects the
examination of the 126 Supreme Court files in cases in which
certiorari was denied to State prisoners during the October 1950
Term and habeas corpus applications subsequently made in federal
district courts, and examination of materials obtained in response
to questionnaires sent to the District Clerks concerning the
applications and the dispositions of those 126 cases in the
District Courts.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See 344
U.S. 443app|>Appendix,
344 U. S. 516.
As shown there, only 13 of 126 petitioners were drawn by lawyers;
others, of course, may have been drawn by lawyers either in or out
of prison who did not choose to sign the petition. But our
experience affirms the conclusion set forth in the survey based on
one test of the legal adequacy of the petitions, that, in a large
number of cases, the petitions must be combed through to find the
issues, certainly much more so than is true of the ordinary
petitions for certiorari.
[
Footnote 2/4]
See 344
U.S. 443app|>Appendix,
344 U. S. 516,
517, and
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1. The fact that we rarely do have
sufficient papers may account for our disputes, even in the cases
we grant, as to what has happened below.
See, e.g., Uveges v.
Pennsylvania, 335 U. S. 437. At
the very least, we would want to have the petitions and the orders
below, but even as to this minimum, as Table 1, Part 2 shows (Item
"a and c"), in only 53 of the 114 cases in which the issues were
raised after trial was this minimum available to us.
[
Footnote 2/5]
See 344
U.S. 443tab1|>Appendix, Table 1, Part 2.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See 344
U.S. 443tab1|>Appendix, Table 1, Part 1.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Appendix, 344 U.S.
344 U. S.
525-526.
[
Footnote 2/8]
See 344
U.S. 443tab2|>Appendix, Table 2.
[
Footnote 2/9]
See 344
U.S. 443tab1|>Appendix, Column 3 of Table 1.
[
Footnote 2/10]
In 2 cases of the 126 studied, an order was entered in this
Court returning original papers to the petitioner. Altogether,
among the 329 applications for review of State denials of relief to
State prisoners in the 1950 Term, 3 such orders were entered.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Habeas Corpus Cases in the Federal Courts brought by State
Prisoners, Administrative Office of the United States Courts 4
(Dec. 16, 1952).
See also Appendix, p. 526-
344 U. S. 527,
and especially page
344 U. S. 456,
n. 19, discussing the reluctance of the District Court to grant the
one application out of the 126 there surveyed which was
granted.
[
Footnote 2/12]
The proposal has now been abandoned.
See Rep.Jud.Conf.
1947, p. 17. A suggestion of Mr. Justice Bradley on the subject,
Ex parte Bridges, loc. cit. supra, is reflected in the
proposal of the Conference of the Chief Justices of the States that
the final judgment of a State's highest court in a criminal
proceeding "be subject to review or reversal only by the Supreme
Court of the United States." 25 State Government 249-250 (November
1952).
[
Footnote 2/13]
The
344
U.S. 443app|>Appendix shows a wide variety of procedures
used to accommodate judicial proceedings to the needs of
petitioners ill-equipped to state whatever claims they may have.
See Appendix, Table 4,
post, p.
344 U. S. 528,
and
post, p.
344 U. S. 527.
By any standard, the applications for habeas corpus are very often
woefully inadequate to apprise the judge of the claim.
See
Appendix,
post, pp.
344 U. S.
522-523.
[
Footnote 2/14]
See 344
U.S. 443tab1|>Appendix, Table 1.
[
Footnote 2/15]
See pp.
344 U. S.
500-501,
supra, and pp.
344 U. S.
507-508,
post.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Opinion of MR. JUSTICE REED,
supra, p.
344 U. S.
461.
[
Footnote 2/17]
MR. JUSTICE REED's citation of
Walker v. Johnston,
312 U. S. 275, to
indicate what might be a "proper" case in which to hold a hearing
is puzzling, for that case requires, in habeas corpus actions by
federal prisoners, that a hearing be held if the application and
the answer or return to the writ raise a question of fact.
[
Footnote 2/18]
The language of § 2243, "When the writ or order is returned
a day shall be set for hearing . . . ," hardly requires a hearing
in every case in which a writ is issued. Just as the District Judge
may deny an application without a hearing if the return shows that
applicant failed to exhaust the State remedy -- as he certainly may
do -- so may he dispose of the case without a hearing if the return
conclusively shows applicant's failure to state a claim.
[
Footnote 2/19]
See pp.
344 U. S.
507-508
post.
[
Footnote 2/20]
See Secretary of State for Home Affairs v. O'Brien,
(1923) A.C. 603, 610, where the House of Lords ruled that, despite
the fact that,
"in terms, the words (of § 3 of the Appellate Jurisdiction
Act of 1876, 39 & 40 Vict. 380) are wide enough to give an
appeal in such a matter as the present,"
the House of Lords has no jurisdiction to hear an appeal in a
habeas corpus case that went in favor of "the liberty of the
subject." It is worth noting that, by this decision, the House of
Lords applied and extended an earlier decision of the House of
Lords (
Cox v. Hakes (1890) 15 A.C. 506) in which so
powerful a group of judges as Lord Halsbury L.C. and Lords Watson
Bramwell, Herschell and Macnaghten joined. The tenor of that
decision is sufficiently indicated by the quotations that follow.
Lord Halsbury wrote:
"In days of technical pleading, no informality was allowed to
prevent the substantial question of the right of the subject to his
liberty being heard and determined. The right to an instant
determination as to the lawfulness of an existing imprisonment, and
the two-fold quality of such a determination that, if favourable to
liberty it was without appeal, and if unfavourable it might be
renewed until each jurisdiction had in turn been exhausted, have
from time to time been pointed out by Judges as securing in a
marked and exceptional manner the personal freedom of the subject.
It was not a proceeding in a suit, but was a summary application by
the person detained."
15 A.C. at 514-515.
And this is from the judgement of Lord Herschell:
"No Court was bound by the view taken by any other, or felt
itself obliged to follow the law laid down by it. Each Court
exercised its independent judgment upon the case, and determined
for itself whether the return to the writ established that the
detention of the applicant was in accordance with the law. A person
detained in custody might thus proceed from court to court until he
obtained his liberty. . . . I need not dwell upon the security
which was thus afforded against any unlawful imprisonment. It is
sufficient to say that no person could be detained in custody if
any one of the tribunals having power to issue the writ of habeas
corpus was of opinion that the custody was unlawful."
Id. at 527-528.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS.
We agree with MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER that our previous denial
of certiorari in a case should be given no legal significance when
an application for a writ of habeas corpus in that case comes
before a Federal District Court. We also agree in substance with
the views expressed in Part II of his opinion concerning the
bearing of the proceedings in the State courts upon the disposition
of an application for a writ of habeas corpus in the Federal
District Court.
Page 344 U. S. 514
|
344
U.S. 443app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER
With a view to formulating wise procedures for the exercise of
federal habeas corpus jurisdiction on applications by State
prisoners, a study was made of all federal district court
applications for habeas corpus by prisoners serving sentences in
State prisons whose prior applications for certiorari to the United
States Supreme Court from State court proceedings had been denied
during the October 1950 Term. [
Footnote
3/1] That Term, the first following the decision in
Darr v.
Burford, was chosen because of the greater likelihood that
habeas corpus actions initiated in the District Courts following a
denial of certiorari in that Term would be terminated than would be
true of cases in which certiorari had been denied last Term. The
petitions for certiorari in the October 1950 Term and the number of
subsequent applications for habeas corpus can fairly be said to be
typical.
A list of all such petitions for certiorari was compared with
lists of all habeas corpus applications in the Federal District
Courts from October, 1950, until May, 1952. [
Footnote 3/2] As a result, 126 different petitioners
[
Footnote 3/3] whose petitions
for
Page 344 U. S. 515
certiorari or other comparable relief [
Footnote 3/4] from State decisions were denied here were
found to have brought subsequent proceedings [
Footnote 3/5] in the Federal District Courts. Thereupon,
a questionnaire was sent out concerning each habeas corpus
application, and the answers to those questionnaires, together with
a study of Supreme Court files, form the basis for the survey.
The data are here set out in chronological sequence, and not
arranged with relation to the issues they affect. The information
concerning the Supreme Court proceedings is set out first, in Part
I, and in Part II that concerning the actions in the District
Courts.
Page 344 U. S. 516
I
.
Papers and Disposition in Supreme Court [
Footnote 3/6]
A.
The Petitions for Certiorari. [
Footnote 3/7]
In 97 of the 126 cases, only the original of the petition was
filed; in the other 29 cases, at least one copy of the petition was
filed, but in only two cases were there the minimum nine copies
required of the ordinary petitions for certiorari. One-half of the
petitions contained nine pages or less.
Of the 126 petitions, 13 were signed by lawyers. In a
classification of the other petitions according to the degree of
familiarity with law shown by the petitioners, 53 petitions were
found not even to meet a generous standard requiring only that the
petitioner intelligibly allege some facts and make some minimum
attempt to connect those facts to a legal principle, whether or not
the principle was valid or even arguable.
B.
Papers Filed in Support of the Petition for
Certiorari
Four of the petitioners whose papers are still on file here
[
Footnote 3/8] submitted over 300
pages of papers in support of the petition for certiorari. The
other 120 petitioners filed an average of under 30 pages of
supporting papers per case.
Full records, though in two cases not in due form, were filed by
the petitioners in eight cases, while excerpts from the records
both of the trial proceedings and of the State proceedings in which
petitioner assailed the validity
Page 344 U. S. 517
of the trial proceedings were filed in another 51 cases, as is
shown in
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1. No papers from the record below were
filed in 24 of 125 cases. Among the excerpts from the records
filed, in 26 cases a State court opinion [
Footnote 3/9] was filed from some proceeding in which
the same issues were presented. There was no citation to, or filing
of, an opinion or memorandum order in 46 of the cases. The first
column of
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1 [
Footnote 3/10] shows in detail what papers from the
records below were filed in the Supreme Court.
Page 344 U. S. 518
|
344
U.S. 443tab1|
TABLE 1. PAPERS FILED IN SUPREME COURT AND
COMPARISON
WITH PAPERS FILED IN DISTRICT COURT*
Part 1
bwm:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NUMBER OF CASES NUMBER OF CASES DATA ALLEGED TO BE
IN SUPREME COURT IN DISTRICT COURT* IN SUPREME COURT*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I.
Filing of Record Below.
Total cases for which data available. . . . . 125 100.0% 123
100.0% 122 100.0%
No part of Record Below filed . . . . . . . . 24 19.2 35 28.5
115 94.3
Record Below or Excerpts filed. . . . . . . . 101 80.8 88 71.5 7
5.7
Full Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 6 0
Excerpts from both trial and attack*. . . . 46 42 3
Excerpts from trial where no attack . . . . 5 59 3 51 0 3
------- -------- ---------
Excerpts from attack only . . . . . . . . . 36 20 4
Excerpts from trial only. . . . . . . . . . 6 17 0
II.
Filing of Opinion or Order Below.
Total Cases for which data available. . . . . 126 122 122
Opinion Below Filed . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 16 3
Opinion Below Cited . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 4 0
Excerpts from Opinion Below Filed . . . . . 1 30 1 21 0 3
------- -------- ---------
Order below, filed or quoted. . . . . . . . . 50 26 2
Mere reference or less to order below . . . . 46 75 3
Nothing alleged to show District Court what
was before the Supreme Court. . . . . . . . -- -- 114
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ewm:
*
See 344
U.S. 443fn3/10|>footnote 10,
supra, for explanation
of the terms used in the table. The statistics in the second and
third columns are discussed at p.
344 U. S. 522
et seq., post.
Page 344 U. S. 519
TABLE 1. PAPERS FILED IN SUPREME COURT AND
COMPARISON
WITH PAPERS FILED IN DISTRICT COURT*
Part 2
bwm:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NUMBER OF CASES NUMBER OF CASES DATA ALLEGED TO BE
IN SUPREME COURT IN DISTRICT COURT IN SUPREME COURT
--------------------------------------------------------------
TRIAL* ATTACK* TRIAL ATTACK TRIAL ATTACK
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
III.
Pleadings, Orders, and Transcripts.
Total Cases for which data available. . . . . 125 114 123 112
122 111
a. Orders or Opinions*. . . . . . . . . . . . 52 71 47 37 2
4
b. Transcript of proceedings* . . . . . . . . 18 4 14 3 1 1
c. Motions or Petitions*. . . . . . . . . . . 12 67 5 34 0 3
IV.
Pleadings, Orders, and Transcripts by Cases.
Total Cases for which data available. . . . . 125 114 123 112
122 111
a, b and c above. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3 4 2 0 0
a only. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 14 39 18 2
2
b only. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 0 7 1 1 1
c only. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 11 0 15 0 1
a and b . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1 3 0 0 0
a and c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 53 1 17 0 2
b and c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 0 0 0 0 0
Total, Some of Above Papers Filed . . . . 62 82 54 53 3 6
(49.6%) (72.0%) (43.9%) (47.3%) (2.5%) (5.4%)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ewm:
*
See 344
U.S. 443fn3/10|>footnote 10,
supra, for explanation
of the terms used in the table.
Page 344 U. S. 520
C.
Issues Presented
The issues raised by the petitioners varied from substantial
federal claims to questions purely of State law. In a sorting of
the petitions according to the claim that seemed the principal or
most substantial one, two or three claims were found to have been
most often asserted as the principal claim: the inadequacy of
counsel or representation by counsel not of petitioner's choosing
was claimed as the principal issue in 14 cases; in another 14, the
sentences imposed were attacked as illegal, excessive or
discriminatory; in 10 cases, a claim was made that the prosecuting
attorney knowingly used perjured evidence or suppressed evidence.
In general, errors in the preliminary proceedings were asserted as
the main claim in 8 cases, errors in the indictment or information
in 7, errors affecting the pleas in 14, concerning representation
by counsel in 31, affecting the trial including inadmissibility of
evidence, prejudice, and delay in 41, and errors surrounding the
sentence in 17. Miscellaneous claims such as denials of a right to
appeal or to a post-trial hearing and defects in extradition
proceedings totaled 8.
Perhaps of most significance to the central problem here was the
discrepancy between the claims made in the Supreme Court and those
made in the District Courts. This comparison will be made in Part
II, dealing with the issues presented in the District Courts.
[
Footnote 3/11]
D.
Responses Filed by the States, and Final Disposition in
the Supreme Court
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1,
supra, shows what papers
were filed by the petitioners, and not necessarily all the papers
before the Court. In 15 of the 126 cases, the Supreme Court, either
because of the seriousness of the allegations or the inadequacy of
the record as presented by the petitioner, called for a response by
the State. Fourteen responses were filed in accordance with these
requests. In addition,
Page 344 U. S. 521
the docket of the Supreme Court shows that responses were filed
by the State in another 7 cases. In 10 of the 21 responses in these
cases, additional parts of the record not already filed by the
petitioners thus came before the Court, but the additions do not
substantially change the picture presented in
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1. For example, Table 1, Part 1, shows
that, in 30 cases, the petitioner filed in the Supreme Court the
opinion below or excerpts or cited the opinion; the States filed
the opinion below with their responses in an additional 4 cases.
Like modifications in no instance exceeding 5 cases, would be made
in other of the items in
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1 if it included papers filed by the
State.
The disposition of these cases in the Supreme Court is in marked
contrast with the disposition of ordinary petitions for certiorari.
Petitions for certiorari by State prisoners from State denials of
relief and miscellaneous applications to this Court are almost
always filed
in forma pauperis, and constitute about 60%
of all petitions
in forma pauperis. Since, as this study
indicates, they are only rarely filed by lawyers and seldom
accompanied by adequate records, the decision whether to entertain
these cases is necessarily made upon less information and with
greater dispatch than with ordinary petitions for certiorari. A
rough index to the disposition of these cases as compared with
ordinary petitions for certiorari is afforded by published figures
showing the proportion of petitions granted. While 15.2% of the
ordinary petitions for certiorari are granted, only 4.2% of the
in forma petitions and no miscellaneous applications were
granted during the 1950 Term. [
Footnote 3/12]
On an assumption that the certiorari jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court ordinarily is not to be exercised merely
Page 344 U. S. 522
because a decision below may be wrong, an attempt was made to
indicate in terms of considerations affecting the certiorari
jurisdiction the sort of question presented. [
Footnote 3/13] Questions purely of State law
seemed to be the chief claim of 30 petitions. Questions probably
not of sufficient general importance to warrant the exercise of the
certiorari jurisdiction seemed the chief claims in another 61
cases, 44 because the issue was one primarily of fact and 17
because the issue raised no substantial issue not already decided
by the Supreme Court. Eighteen cases defied classification on this
basis. The remaining 17 cases presented questions of principle,
although the majority even of these probably did not present
questions of the gravity or general importance usually requisite in
other areas for granting certiorari.
II
. Papers and Disposition in District Court
Requests were sent by the Administrative office of the United
States Courts to the clerks in all districts in which there were
applications for habeas corpus subsequent to a denial of certiorari
in the October 1950 Term. In addition to a request for all docket
entries and orders or opinions, the clerks were requested to send
copies of all pertinent papers filed in the action by the applicant
or to answer a questionnaire concerning those papers. In the bulk
of the cases, the original papers or copies of them were forwarded
to the Administrative Office; these papers, together with the
answered questionnaires in the other cases, were the basis of the
following analysis.
A.
The Applications for Habeas Corpus
Three applications for habeas corpus had been withdrawn and were
unavailable; of the remaining 123, 17 were drawn by lawyers.
Thirty-four failed to meet the minimum standards for showing some
degree of familiarity
Page 344 U. S. 523
with law referred to in connection with the petitions for
certiorari. [
Footnote 3/14] Of
122 applications for which data were available, 101 were typed or
printed. The number of pages ran slightly less than in the
petitions for certiorari; [
Footnote
3/15] 67 applications for habeas corpus contained 9 pages or
less, while 56 contained 10 or more.
B.
Supporting Papers Filed: Reference to
Certiorari.
344
U.S. 443tab2|>Table 2 below shows to what degree the
applicant informed the District Court of the previous certiorari
proceedings, and demonstrates that, in about 10% of the cases,
there was not even a reference by the applicant to the fact that he
had petitioned for certiorari. Further, in the large majority of
cases, there was simply an allegation that a petition for
certiorari had been filed and denied. In less than 10% of the cases
did the applicant file any papers which would serve to indicate to
the District Court what questions were before the Supreme
Court.
|
344
U.S. 443tab2|
TABLE 2. FILING OF PETITION FOR CERTIORARI IN DISTRICT COURT
[Footnote 3/16]
Total Cases for which data available 123 100.0%
Petition for Certiorari filed:
Certified Petition . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Uncertified Petition . . . . . . . . . . 10
Excerpts from Petition . . . . . . . . . 1
---
Total, petition or excerpts filed. . . . . . . . . 12 9.8
Mere reference to denial of certiorari . . 98
No reference to certiorari proceedings . . 13
---
Total, no information as to contents of petition . 111 90.2
Page 344 U. S. 524
C.
Supporting Papers Filed: Reference to State
Proceedings
Somewhat fewer papers, on a percentage basis, were filed by
applicants in the District Courts than in the Supreme Court
concerning the record in the State courts. There seems no
explanation for this difference. [
Footnote 3/17] Of chief significance, however, was the
extent to which papers filed in the District Courts were alleged to
have been presented to the Supreme Court in the petition for
certiorari. It is clear that the District Courts may have learned
in oral argument or by other means whether the papers had been
filed previously in the Supreme Court, but since such information
was thought impossible to obtain, it was necessary to limit the
inquiry to allegations that the papers had also been before the
Supreme Court. The almost negligible number of cases in which the
papers filed were alleged also to have been before the Supreme
Court is striking. Even in cases conducted throughout by apparently
competent counsel, such allegations were often not made. The
failure to make these allegations may reflect either a fear of
counsel or applicants without counsel that a demonstration of the
presentation made to the Supreme
Page 344 U. S. 525
Court would prejudice their cases or perhaps a feeling that it
is unimportant to the District Judge that the papers had also been
before the Supreme Court. In any event, it has not been a practice,
apparently, to allege what papers were before the Supreme Court.
Columns 2 and 3 of
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1,
supra, set out information
exactly parallel to that contained in Column 1, which shows what
papers from the State proceedings were filed in the Supreme Court.
Column 2 shows the same information for the District Court, and
Column 3 shows how many of the papers before the Supreme Court and
then filed in the District Court were alleged to have been filed in
the Supreme Court. Comparison of Columns 1 and 3 shows to what
extent papers actually before the Supreme Court were alleged to
have been there. For example, in 30 cases, the Supreme Court had
some information concerning the opinion in the State proceedings.
The District Court was told, however, that the opinion had been
before the Supreme Court in only 3 of those 30 cases. Column 2
shows that altogether there were 21 cases in which the District
Courts had information concerning the opinion.
A synoptic view of the comparisons made in
344
U.S. 443tab1|>Table 1 can be had by comparing the line
indicating the number of cases in which the record or excerpts were
filed. Thus, in over 80% of the cases, the Supreme Court had some
part of the State court record, while in just over 70% of the
cases, the District Court had some part of the State court record.
In less than 60% of the cases was the District Court told by
allegation that the parts of the record before it had been in the
Supreme Court.
D.
Issues Raised
The issues raised were, of course, approximately the same as
those raised in the Supreme Court, with only insubstantial
Page 344 U. S. 526
variation from the figures given above [
Footnote 3/18] for the types of claims raised in the
Supreme Court. But of some significance was a comparison of the
claims in the Supreme Court with those made by the same petitioners
later in the District Courts. In the 125 cases for which data were
available, the chief claim made in the Supreme Court was also the
chief claim made in the District Court in 105 cases. That number,
of course, is subject to some subjective error because of possibly
differing interpretations of what the chief claim of an unclear and
unlawyerlike petition is. Perhaps more significant are summaries
made which show that the claim that was considered the chief claim
in the Supreme Court reappeared, but not necessarily as the chief
claim, in 107 of the District Court cases; conversely, in 117
cases, the chief claim before the District Court had been raised in
the Supreme Court petition. These data indicate only that it cannot
always be assumed that, even on the same record and in the same
course of proceedings, the emphasis on various claims raised will
be the same. Further, in some cases, the claims raised in the
District Courts may not have been made at all in the Supreme
Court.
E.
Disposition of the Cases in the District Courts
In only 1 case of the 126 was the writ of habeas corpus granted.
The District Court had originally denied the application for the
writ because of a reluctance to review an application already
passed on by the highest State court, but, after reversal on
appeal, [
Footnote 3/19] the writ
was
Page 344 U. S. 527
granted. In 120, the application for the writ has been denied,
and 5 are still pending, 1 on remand from appeal.
344
U.S. 443tab3|>Table 3 sets out the extent to which appeal to
the Court of Appeals has been sought or taken. It shows that there
have been decisions on appeal in 14 cases with reversals in 3. Of
those 3 cases reversed and remanded, one is pending, in one the
writ has been granted and in the third the application was
withdrawn.
|
344
U.S. 443tab3|
TABLE 3. APPEAL FROM DISTRICT COURT DECISIONS
Total Cases for which data available . . . . . . . . . 126
No. entries as to appeal on District Court docket. . . 66
Certificate of probable cause denied, or leave to
appeal
in forma pauperis denied. . . . . . . . . . .
29
Appeal dismissed; mandamus dismissed . . . . . . . . . 5
Appeal pending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Affirmed on appeal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Reversed and remanded on appeal. . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A variety of procedures were adopted in these cases by the
District Courts in dealing with the applications. Chief among the
orders entered other than to dismiss the applications without more
were orders to show cause or to answer, as
344
U.S. 443tab4|>Table 4 shows. In 23 cases, a lawyer was
appointed either as an
amicus or as counsel for the
applicant. In some cases, the writ of habeas corpus was issued to
bring the applicant before the Court.
344
U.S. 443tab3|>Table 4 shows which of the devices were used
and in what combinations.
Page 344 U. S. 528
|
344
U.S. 443tab4|
TABLE 4. PROCEEDINGS USED IN DISPOSING OF
APPLICATIONS
Total Cases for which data available . . . . . 123 100.0%
Applications disposed of without more. . . . . 56 45.6%
Orders to Show Cause or Answer:
Order to Show Cause. . . . . . . . . . . 37
Order to Show Cause; Counsel
appointed for applicant. . . . . . . . 4
Order to Answer. . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Order to Answer;
Amicus appointed. . . . 3
Writs of Habeas Corpus issued:
Writ issued. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Writ issued; Counsel appointed
for applicant. . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Writs and Orders:
Writ Issued; Order to Show Cause . . . . 1
Writ Issued; Order to Show Cause;
Counsel appointed for applicant. . . . 5
As
amicus, in combination with other
orders already listed above. . . . . . (3)
As counsel for applicant, in
connection with other orders
already listed above . . . . . . . . . (12)
As
amicus without other order. . . . . . 2
As counsel for applicant without
other order. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
A hearing of some kind was given in 44 cases of the 122 for
which data are available. [
Footnote
3/20] The other 22 cases not disposed of without more were
disposed of by withdrawal of the application (one case) or after
the answer, the report of the amicus, or both. Certain data
concerning the hearings are set out in
344
U.S. 443tab5|>Table 5. Table 5 shows what procedures were
used and how long the hearing lasted. It shows that the applicant
was present at 26
Page 344 U. S. 529
hearings, with counsel also in 17 of those cases. The applicant
was represented by counsel in 31 cases, but the applicant himself
was not present in 14 of those 31 cases. The length of the hearings
for which data were available was an hour or less in two-thirds of
the cases.
|
344
U.S. 443tab5|
TABLE 5. PRESENCE AT HEARING AND LENGTH OF HEARING
I. Total Cases in which hearings held . . . . . 44
Data unavailable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Applicant and counsel present. . . . . . . . 17
Applicant present without counsel. . . . . . 9
Applicant absent but represented by
counsel [
Footnote 3/21] . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . 14
Applicant absent and not represented by
counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
II. Total Cases for which data as to length of
hearing available [
Footnote
3/22] . . . . . . . . . 24
Length of hearing:
Fifteen minutes or less. . . . . . . . . . 2
Fifteen to thirty minutes. . . . . . . . . 8
Thirty minutes to one hour . . . . . . . . 6
---
Total, one hour or less. . . . . . . . . 16
===
Two hours. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Two and a half hours . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Three hours. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Four hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Three days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
---
Total, over one hour . . . . . . . . . . 8
===
Page 344 U. S. 530
The average time of disposition of applications for habeas
corpus in the District Courts was 59.4 days, [
Footnote 3/23] as compared with the disposition
time in the Supreme Court of 52.5 days. In the District Court,
however, only 56 applications were dismissed without more, while,
in the Supreme Court, all but 35, or 91 petitions for certiorari,
were disposed of without further action such as the filing of a
response by the State. For whatever significance it might have, the
important figure seemed to be that showing the number of cases in
which the District Court disposition time was greater than in the
Supreme Court; of the 122 cases for which figures are available, 45
took longer from the time of filing until denial of the application
for habeas corpus than they had in the Supreme Court. Of those 45,
only 4 had been dismissed without further pleadings or action of
some sort.
In 98 cases, the District Courts indicated their reasons for
denying the applications for habeas corpus. As will be seen from
344
U.S. 443tab6|>Table 6, the District Courts decided only
about half of the cases directly on the merits, either holding
against the applicant on the facts or on his constitutional claim.
In 45, or almost half, of the 98 cases, the application was denied
on various grounds bearing on the relation between the Federal and
State courts in these cases. Twenty-nine of these 45 denials were
based on the applicant's failure to exhaust the State remedy. Since
this reason was often not amplified, it is not possible
[To preserve text flow, p. 531, containing Table 6, appears at
end of Appendix.]
Page 344 U. S. 532
to classify these cases further.
But from those cases in which a more detailed statement of the
reason was made and from other information available in some cases,
it is possible to say that there were several views below as to
what the requirement of "exhaustion" implied. In some cases, the
applicant had not complied with formal requirements, such as those
prescribing the time of filing or the kind of papers to be filed
for an appeal to a higher State court. In others, the applicant had
fully invoked one remedy, but other State remedies were still
available, or the remedy already invoked was, under the State
procedural rules, available again. In some cases, of course, the
applicant failed to allege or show any real attempt to invoke a
State remedy. The other 16 of the 45 cases not decided directly on
the merits were disposed of as the result of varying degrees of
reliance on the State adjudication. As
344
U.S. 443tab6|>Table 6 shows, in some cases, the judges below
stated that the applicant had had his day in the State courts, and
the Federal courts will not ordinarily reexamine State denials of
relief to prisoners, while in others they felt that the claim had
been fairly considered in the State courts.
Page 344 U. S. 531
|
344
U.S. 443tab6|
TABLE 6. GROUNDS FOR DENIAL OF APPLICATIONS IN DISTRICT
COURTS
Total Cases in Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
Pending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Writ granted. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Total cases for which data available. . . . . 120
I.
Reasons Stated for Dismissal:
Reasons not going directly to the merits:
Issue fairly considered in State Court 7
Applicant had his day in State Court,
and Federal Courts will not
ordinarily reexamine . . . . . . . . . 9
Failure to exhaust state remedy. . . . . 29
---
Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Reasons going directly to the merits:
Want of a federal question . . . . . . . 21
Applicant not within invoked Federal
doctrine [
Footnote 3/24]. . .
. . . . . . . . . 8
Claim not supported by facts . . . . . . 17
Insufficient facts alleged in support of
claim. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
---
Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Miscellaneous:
Application withdrawn by applicant . . . 3
Lack of jurisdiction -- wrong District . 1
Same issue formerly considered in a
Federal Court. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
---
Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
No Reason Stated except that applicant
not entitled to writ, or lack of
jurisdiction to grant. . . . . . . . . . 22
II.
Probable Reasons where no reason stated.
Issue fairly considered in State Court . . 1
Want of a Federal question . . . . . . . . 18
Applicant not within invoked Federal
doctrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Claim not supported by the facts . . . . . 2
[
Footnote 3/1]
Included were cases filed earlier but continued into the October
1950 Term; cases filed in the October 1950 Term, but continued into
later terms were excluded.
[
Footnote 3/2]
In all this work, we have had the ready cooperation of the
Administrative Office of the United States Courts, more
particularly of Will Shafroth, Esq., Orin Thiel, Esq., and Joseph
Spaniol, Esq., and of the Clerks of the United States District
Courts. Nor should the important share that Donald T. Trautman,
Esq., had in carrying out this study go unmentioned.
[
Footnote 3/3]
Excluding eight petitioners who were codefendants with other
petitioners and who presented the same issues as those other
petitioners. In all, 134 petitioners appeared again in the District
Courts, but in only 126 separate cases. The words "case" and
"petitioner" will both be used in reference to the 126 cases; when
"petitioner" or "applicant" is used, it should be read as one or
more prisoners presenting the same claim arising out of the same
trial. For clarity, the prisoners will be referred to as
"petitioners" for certiorari in the Supreme Court and "applicants"
for habeas corpus in the District Courts.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Cases in which petitioners in the Supreme Court sought original
habeas corpus or mandamus or other relief have been included in
this study, unless federal district court relief had already been
invoked so that the habeas corpus application could not be
interpreted as reviewing a State court determination. Petitions for
certiorari or applications for other relief in the Supreme Court
were not included if dismissed on motion of the petitioners.
[
Footnote 3/5]
In cases where two or more petitions for certiorari were made by
a single petitioner during the October 1950 Term, that case was
analyzed which presented the issue or the course of proceedings
later presented in the District Court. Where several applications
for habeas corpus have been made in the District Courts, that
application nearest in time to the denial of certiorari was used,
unless (a) the first application was rejected for formal defects,
such as failure to allege exhaustion of State remedies or failure
to set out clearly the course of the proceedings, and the second
application corrected those defects; or (b) the second (or a later)
application, unlike the first, presented the issue or the course of
proceedings which the Supreme Court was asked to review. In a few
instances, the proceedings are so tangled that it was impossible to
apply these criteria; thus, although ordinarily a case was excluded
if State relief was sought after the denial of certiorari but
before the application in the Federal District Court for habeas
corpus, occasionally such a case was included if the issue or
course of proceedings was the same in the District Court as in the
Supreme Court.
[
Footnote 3/6]
Every file in the 126 cases surveyed was studied; the data in
the following sections are those revealed by the files. It
occasionally occurred that particular data were unavailable. For
that reason, wherever tables are presented, the total number of
cases for which the data were available is indicated at the top of
the table.
[
Footnote 3/7]
See 344
U.S. 443fn3/3|>footnote 3,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/8]
In two cases, at least some of the Supreme Court papers were
returned to the petitioner.
[
Footnote 3/9]
As there is no bright line between orders and opinions, any
other containing more than a perfunctory statement in general terms
that the relief sought was denied is classified as an opinion.
[
Footnote 3/10]
The table does not purport to show all the papers filed in the
Supreme Court, but only those filed by the petitioner, because such
figures give a better index of the lack of technical competence of
the petitioners and their inability, often, because of prison
confinement, to prepare all the papers. At p.
344 U. S. 521,
post, the insubstantial change effected in these figures
by the responses filed by the State is discussed.
The terms "trial proceedings" or "trial" are used to denote both
the trial in which petitioner was convicted and direct appeal from
the conviction. The terms "attacking proceedings" or "attack"
include all actions such as habeas corpus,
coram nobis,
and other post-conviction remedies in the State courts to obtain
relief from an invalid conviction. Delayed motions for new trial
have been treated for purposes of these tables as attacking
proceedings.
"Orders or Opinions" in Part 2 of the table includes, as to the
trial proceedings, the judgment of conviction, the sentence or
other conviction papers, as well as, for example, an order or
opinion on direct appeal. As to trial and attacking proceedings,
even the perfunctory order discussed in footnote 9 was
included.
"Transcript of proceedings" or "Transcript" is used to denote a
stenographic report of the testimony or hearings. Adequate excerpts
from such transcripts are included.
"Motions or Petitions" is used to denote any pleadings by either
party.
In 11 cases, there were no attacking proceedings. Hence, the
total number of Supreme Court cases in Part 2 of Table 1 is 114,
rather than 125.
[
Footnote 3/11]
See pp.
344 U. S.
525-526
post.
[
Footnote 3/12]
See Report of the Judicial Conference of the United
States 1951-Annual Report of the Director of the Administrative
Office of the United States Courts 1951, 78.
[
Footnote 3/13]
See Rules Sup.Ct. 38(5), 38 1/2.
[
Footnote 3/14]
See p.
344 U. S. 516,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/15]
See p.
344 U. S. 516,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/16]
These figures reflect only the information or papers filed by
the applicant, and not any information or papers filed by the State
or given the District Judge in oral argument. However, it can
fairly be asserted that, at least in those cases where the entire
files of the District Court were sent in response to the
questionnaires, the pleadings of the State only occasionally
referred to the denial of certiorari, and almost never gave any
information concerning the petition or the papers filed in the
Supreme Court.
[
Footnote 3/17]
In a few cases, the district clerks may not have given the
requested information in sufficient detail. However, in all cases
where any such deficiency was apparent, second requests for
information were sent out and answers received, so that only those
cases where the deficiency was not apparent would be in error. From
the excellence of the response in most cases to the questionnaires,
it seems unlikely that whatever error arises from cases in which
the deficiency of the answers was not apparent could account for
the discrepancies in the figures.
[
Footnote 3/18]
See p.
344 U. S. 520,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/19]
Anderson v. Eidson, 191 F.2d 989. A letter from the
office of the Jackson County Sheriff, Kansas City, Missouri, to Mr.
Will Shafroth, Chief of the Division of Procedural Studies and
Statistics, advises that the applicant was remanded to the custody
of the Sheriff and the case was dismissed by the Jackson County
prosecutor for lack of available witnesses on December 6, 1951,
about one and one half years after applicant had first raised the
claim in the State courts. He had presented his claim to two State
courts, the United States Supreme Court, the Federal District
Court, and the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, which
reversed a refusal below to grant a hearing and remanded. The
discharge of the prisoner occurred almost 20 years after his arrest
and conviction on a plea of guilty on several unrelated counts, one
of them capital.
[
Footnote 3/20]
In some cases, it was difficult to determine from the docket
entries whether a hearing had been held. A procedure was considered
a hearing if at least one party, the State or the applicant, had
appeared in court and argued points of law or fact to the Court, in
addition to all procedures resulting in docket entries stating that
a hearing had been held.
[
Footnote 3/21]
Including one case in which counsel was present but in which it
does not appear whether applicant was present.
[
Footnote 3/22]
In two of the cases in which there was no information as to the
length of the hearing, there is information concerning the length
of the transcript made by the court stenographer. In one, it was 20
pages; in the other 46. In five cases for which information was
available as to the length of the hearing, data were also given
showing the length of the transcript. One of the hearings lasting
one hour had a transcript of 36 pages. The hearing lasting three
hours has a transcript of 15 pages. One of the hearings lasting
four hours had a transcript of 28 pages, another one of 79 pages.
The hearing lasting three days had a transcript of 319 pages.
[
Footnote 3/23]
The time was computed from the day of filing of the application
for habeas corpus until its dismissal. It does not take into
account any appeal time. It is slightly inaccurate because most
cases are filed
in forma pauperis, so that a few days may
elapse between the time the Court receives the application and the
time it grants leave to file
in forma pauperis. In all
cases where the docket or other papers indicated the date such an
application was received, that date was used rather than the date
shown by the docket as the date on which the application was
filed.
[
Footnote 3/24]
That is, the claim is in an area in which Federal protection is
afforded,
e.g., representation by counsel, but the
applicant does not show that his case comes within the requirements
for protection,
e.g., ignorance and inability adequately
to defend himself.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring in the result.
Controversy as to the undiscriminating use of the writ of habeas
corpus by federal judges to set aside state court convictions is
traceable to three principal causes: (1) this Court's use of the
generality of the Fourteenth Amendment to subject state courts to
increasing federal control, especially in the criminal law field;
(2)
ad hoc determination of due process of law issues by
personal notions of justice, instead of by known rules of law; and
(3) the breakdown of procedural safeguards against abuse of the
writ.
1. In 1867, Congress authorized federal courts to issue writs of
habeas corpus to prisoners "in custody in violation
Page 344 U. S. 533
of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States."
[
Footnote 4/1] At that time, the
writ was not available here nor in England to challenge any
sentence imposed by a court of competent jurisdiction. [
Footnote 4/2] The historic purpose of the
writ has been to relieve detention by executive authorities without
judicial trial. [
Footnote 4/3] It
might have been expected that, if Congress intended a reversal of
this traditional concept of habeas corpus, it would have said so.
However, this one sentence in the Act eventually was construed as
authority for federal judges to entertain collateral attacks on
state court criminal judgments. [
Footnote 4/4] Whatever its justification, it created
potentialities for conflict certain to lead to the antagonisms we
have now, unless the power given to federal judges were responsibly
used according to lawyerly procedures and with genuine respect for
state court fact finding.
But, once established, this jurisdiction obviously would grow
with each expansion of the substantive grounds
Page 344 U. S. 534
for habeas corpus. The generalities of the Fourteenth Amendment
are so indeterminate as to what state actions are forbidden that
this Court has found it a ready instrument, in one field or
another, to magnify federal, and incidentally its own, authority
over the states. The expansion now has reached a point where any
state court conviction, disapproved by a majority of this Court,
thereby becomes unconstitutional and subject to nullification by
habeas corpus. [
Footnote 4/5]
This might not be so demoralizing if state judges could
anticipate, and so comply with, this Court's due process
requirements or ascertain any standards to which this Court will
adhere in prescribing them. But they cannot. Of course,
considerable uncertainty is inherent in decisional law which, in
changing times, purports to interpret implications of
constitutional provisions so cryptic and vagrant. How much
obscurity is inevitable will be a matter of opinion. However, in
considering a remedy for habeas corpus problems, it is prudent to
assume that the scope and reach of the Fourteenth Amendment will
continue to be unknown and unknowable, that what seems established
by one decision is apt to be unsettled by another, and that its
interpretation will be more or less swayed by contemporary
intellectual fashions and political currents.
We may look upon this unstable prospect complacently, but state
judges cannot. They are not only being gradually subordinated to
the federal judiciary but federal courts have declared that state
judicial and other officers are personally liable to federal
prosecution and to
Page 344 U. S. 535
civil suit by convicts if they fail to carry out this Court's
constitutional doctrines. [
Footnote
4/6]
2. Rightly or wrongly, the belief is widely held by the
practicing profession that this Court no longer respects impersonal
rules of law, but is guided in these matters by personal
impressions which from time to time may be shared by a majority of
Justices. Whatever has been intended, this Court also has generated
an impression in much of the judiciary that regard for precedents
and authorities is obsolete, that words no longer mean what they
have always meant to the profession, that the law knows no fixed
principles.
A manifestation of this is seen in the diminishing respect shown
for state court adjudications of fact. Of course, this Court never
has considered itself foreclosed by a state court's decision as to
the facts when that determination results in alleged denial of a
federal right. But captious use of this power was restrained by
observance of a rule, elementary in all appellate procedure, that
the findings of fact on a trial are to be accepted by an appellate
court in absence of clear showing of error. The
Page 344 U. S. 536
trial court, seeing the demeanor of witnesses, hearing the
parties, giving to each case far more time than an appellate court
can give, is in a better position to unravel disputes of fact than
is an appellate court on a printed transcript. Recent decisions
avow no candid alteration of these rules, but revision of state
fact finding has grown by emphasis, and respect for it has withered
by disregard. [
Footnote 4/7]
3. The fact that the substantive law of due process is and
probably must remain so vague and unsettled as to invite farfetched
or borderline petitions makes it important to adhere to procedures
which enable courts readily to distinguish a probable
constitutional grievance from a convict's mere gamble on persuading
some indulgent judge to let him out of jail. Instead, this Court
has sanctioned progressive trivialization of the writ until floods
of stale, frivolous and repetitious petitions inundate the docket
of the lower courts and swell our own. [
Footnote 4/8] Judged by our own disposition of habeas
corpus matters,
Page 344 U. S. 537
they have, as a class, become peculiarly undeserving. [
Footnote 4/9] It must prejudice the
occasional meritorious application to be buried in a flood of
worthless ones. He who must search a haystack for a needle is
likely to end up with the attitude that the needle is not worth the
search. Nor is it any answer to say that few of these petitions in
any court really result in the discharge of the petitioner.
[
Footnote 4/10] That is the
condemnation of the procedure which has encouraged frivolous cases.
In this multiplicity of worthless cases, states are compelled to
default or to defend the integrity of their judges and their
official records, sometimes concerning trials or pleas that were
closed many years ago. [
Footnote
4/11] State Attorneys General recently have come habitually to
ignore these proceedings, responding only when specially requested
and sometimes
Page 344 U. S. 538
not then. Some state courts have wearied of our repeated demands
upon them, and have declined to further elucidate grounds for their
decisions. [
Footnote 4/12] The
assembled
Page 344 U. S. 539
Chief Justices of the highest courts of the states have taken
the unusual step of condemning the present practice by resolution.
[
Footnote 4/13]
It cannot be denied that the trend of our decisions is to
abandon rules of pleading or procedure which would
Page 344 U. S. 540
protect the writ against abuse. Once upon a time, the writ could
not be substituted for appeal or other reviewing process, but
challenged only the legal competence or jurisdiction of the
committing court. [
Footnote 4/14]
We have so departed from this principle that the profession now
believes that the issues we actually consider on a federal
prisoner's habeas corpus are substantially the same as would be
considered on appeal. [
Footnote
4/15]
Conflict with state courts is the inevitable result of giving
the convict a virtual new trial before a federal court sitting
without a jury. Whenever decisions of one court are reviewed by
another, a percentage of them are reversed. That reflects a
difference in outlook normally found between personnel comprising
different courts. However, reversal by a higher court is not proof
that justice is thereby better done. There is no doubt that, if
there were a super-Supreme Court, a substantial proportion of our
reversals of state courts would also be reversed. We are not final
because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we
are final.
As to the pleading requirements in habeas corpus, what has
happened may best be learned by comparison of the meticulously
pleaded facts and circumstances relied upon by this Court's opinion
in
Moore v. Dempsey, 261 U. S. 86
(1923), and in
Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.
S. 103 (1935), with condonation of their absence in
Price v. Johnston, 334 U. S. 266
(1948). It really has become necessary to plead nothing more than
that the prisoner is in jail, wants to get out, and thinks it is
illegal to hold
Page 344 U. S. 541
him. [
Footnote 4/16] If he
fails, he may make the same plea over and over again. [
Footnote 4/17]
Since the Constitution and laws made pursuant to it are the
supreme law, and since the supremacy and uniformity of federal law
are attainable only by a centralized source of authority, denial by
a state of a claimed federal right must give some access to the
federal judicial system. But federal interference with state
administration of its criminal law should not be premature, and
should not occur where it is not needed. Therefore, we have ruled
that a state convict must exhaust all remedies which the state
affords for his alleged grievance before he can take it to any
federal court by habeas corpus.
The states all allow some appeal from a judgment of conviction
which permits review of any question of law, state or federal,
raised upon the record. No state is obliged to furnish multiple
remedies for the same grievance. Most states, and with good reason,
will not suffer a collateral attack such as habeas corpus to be
used as a substitute for or duplication of the appeal. A state
properly may deny habeas corpus to raise either state or federal
issues that were or could have been considered on appeal. Such
restriction by the state should be respected by federal courts.
Assuming that a federal question not reachable on appeal is
properly presented by habeas corpus and decided adversely by the
highest competent court of the state, should the prisoner then come
to this Court and ask us to review the record by certiorari or
should he go to the district court and institute a new federal
habeas corpus proceeding?
Darr v. Burford, 339 U.
S. 200, as
Page 344 U. S. 542
I understand it, held that, in these circumstances, the prisoner
must apply to this Court for certiorari before he can go to any
other federal court, because only by so doing could he exhaust his
state remedy. Whatever one may think of that result, it does not
seem logical to support it by asserting that this Court's
certiorari power is any part of a state's remedy. An authority
outside of the state imposes a duty upon the state to turn the case
over to it, in a proceeding which makes the state virtually a
defendant. To say that our command to certify the case to us is a
state remedy is to indulge in fiction, and the difficulty with
fictions is that those they are most apt to mislead are those who
proclaim them.
But now it is proposed to neutralize the artificiality of the
process and counterbalance the fiction that our certiorari is a
state remedy by holding that this step which the prisoner must take
means nothing to him or the state when it fails, as in most cases
it does.
The Court is not quite of one mind on the subject. Some say
denial means nothing, others say it means nothing much.
Realistically, the first position is untenable and the second is
unintelligible. How can we say that the prisoner must present his
case to us and at the same time say that what we do with it means
nothing to anybody. We might conceivably take either position but
not, rationally, both, for the two will not only burden our own
docket and harass the state authorities. but it makes a prisoner's
legitimate quest for federal justice an endurance contest.
True, neither those outside of the Court, nor on many occasions
those inside of it, know just what reasons led six Justices to
withhold consent to a certiorari. But all know that a majority,
larger than can be mustered for a good many decisions, has found
reason for not reviewing the case here. Because no one knows all
that a denial means, does it mean that it means nothing?
Page 344 U. S. 543
Perhaps the profession could accept denial as meaningless before
the custom was introduced of noting dissents from them. Lawyers and
lower judges will not readily believe that Justices of this Court
are taking the trouble to signal a meaningless division of opinion
about a meaningless act. [
Footnote
4/18] It is just one of the facts of life that today every
lower court does attach importance to denials and to presence or
absence of dissents from denials, as judicial opinions and lawyers'
arguments show.
The fatal sentence that in real life writes
finis to
many causes cannot, in legal theory, be a complete blank. I can see
order in the confusion as to its meaning only by distinguishing its
significance under the doctrine of
stare decisis from its
effect under the doctrine of
res judicata. I agree that,
as
stare decisis, denial of certiorari should be given no
significance whatever. It creates no precedent and approves no
statement of principle entitled to weight in any other case. But,
for the case in which certiorari is denied, its minimum meaning is
that this Court allows the judgment below to stand with whatever
consequences it may have upon the litigants involved under the
doctrine of
res judicata as applied either by state or
federal courts. A civil or criminal judgment usually becomes
res judicata in the sense that it is binding and
conclusive even if new facts are discovered and even if a new
theory of law were thought up, except for some provision for
granting a new trial, which usually is discretionary with the trial
court and limited in time.
It is sometimes said that
res judicata has no
application whatever in habeas corpus cases, and surely it does not
apply with all of its conventional severity. Habeas corpus differs
from the ordinary judgment in that, although an adjudication has
become final, the application
Page 344 U. S. 544
is renewable, at least if new evidence and material is
discovered or if, perhaps as the result of a new decision, a new
law becomes applicable to the case. This is quite proper so long as
its issues relate to jurisdiction. But call it
res
judicata or what one will, courts ought not to be obliged to
allow a convict to litigate again and again exactly the same
question on the same evidence. Nor is there any good reason why an
identical contention rejected by a higher court should be reviewed
on the same facts in a lower one.
The chief objection to giving this limited finality to our
denial of certiorari is that we pass upon these writs of habeas
corpus so casually or upon grounds so unrelated to their merits
that our decision should not have the weight of finality. No very
close personal consideration can be given by each Justice to such a
multiplicity of these petitions as we have had and, as a class,
they are so frivolous, so meaningless, and often so unintelligible
that this worthlessness of the class discredits each individual
application. If this deluge were reduced by observance of
procedural safeguards to manageable proportions so that it would be
possible to examine the cases with some care and to hear those that
show merit, I think this objection would largely disappear. The
fact is that superficial consideration of these cases is the
inevitable result of depreciation of the writ. The writ has no
enemies so deadly as those who sanction the abuse of it, whatever
their intent.
If a state is really obtaining conviction by laws or procedures
which violate the Federal Constitution, it is always a serious
wrong not only to a particular convict, but to federal law. It is
not probable that six Justices would pass up a case which
intelligibly presented this situation. But an examination of these
petitions will show that few of them, tested by any rational rules
of pleading, actually raise any question of law on which
Page 344 U. S. 545
the state court has differed from the understanding prevailing
in this Court. The point on which we are urged to overrule state
courts almost invariably is in their appraisal of facts. For
example, the jury, the trial judge, and one or more appellate
courts below have held that conflicting evidence proves a
confession was voluntary; the prisoner wants us to say the evidence
proves it was coerced. The court below found that the prisoner
waived counsel and voluntarily pleaded guilty; he wants us to find
that he did not. The jury and the trial judge below believed one
set of witnesses whose testimony showed his guilt; he wants us to
believe the other, and to hold that he has been convicted by
perjury. That is the type of factual issue upon which this Court
and other federal courts are asked to intervene and upset state
court convictions. There are plenty of good reasons why we should
rarely do that, and even better reasons why the district court
should not undertake to do it after we have declined to.
My conclusion is that whether or not this Court has denied
certiorari from a state court's judgment in a habeas corpus
proceeding, no lower federal court should entertain a petition
except on the following conditions: (1) that the petition raises a
jurisdictional question involving federal law on which the state
law allowed no access to its courts, either by habeas corpus or
appeal from the conviction and that he therefore has no state
remedy; or (2) that the petition shows that, although the law
allows a remedy, he was actually improperly obstructed from making
a record upon which the question could be presented, so that his
remedy by way of ultimate application to this Court for certiorari
has been frustrated. There may be circumstances so extraordinary
that I do not now think of them which would justify a departure
from this rule, but the run-of-the-mill case certainly does
not.
Page 344 U. S. 546
Whether one will agree with this general proposition will
depend, I suppose, on the latitude he thinks federal courts should
exercise in retrying
de novo state court criminal issues.
If the federal courts are to test a state court's decision by
hearing new evidence in a new proceeding, the pretense of
exhaustion of state remedies is a sham, for the state courts could
not have given a remedy on evidence which they had no chance to
hear. I cannot see why federal courts should hear evidence that was
not presented to the state court unless the prisoner has been
prevented from making a record of his grievance, with the result
that there is no record of it to bring here on certiorari. Such
circumstances would seem to call for an original remedy in the
district courts, which would be in a position to take evidence and
make the record on which we ultimately must pass if there develops
a conflict of law between a federal and state court.
If this Court were willing to adopt this doctrine of federal
self-restraint, it could settle some procedures, rules of pleading
and practices which would weed out the abuses and frivolous causes
and identify the worthy ones. I know the difficulty of formulating
practice rules and their pitfalls. Nor do I underestimate the
argument that the writ often is petitioned for by prisoners without
counsel, and that they should not be held to the artificialities in
pleading that we expect in lawyers. But I know of no way that we
can have equal justice under law except we have some law. I suggest
some general principles which, if adhered to, would reduce the
number of frivolous petitions, make decision upon them possible at
an earlier time, and alleviate some of the irritation that is
developing over ill-considered federal use of the writ to slap down
state courts.
First, habeas corpus shall not (in absence of state law to the
contrary) raise any question which was, or could have been, decided
by appeal or other procedure for review
Page 344 U. S. 547
of conviction. In the absence of showing to the contrary, habeas
corpus will be deemed to lie only for defects not disclosed on the
record, going to the power, legal competence or jurisdiction of the
committing state court.
Second, every petition to a federal court is required, and those
to a state court may be required by state law, to contain a plain
but full statement of the facts on which it is based. Unless it
states facts which, if proved, would warrant relief, the applicant
is not entitled as of right to a hearing. Technical forms or
artificialities of pleading will not be required.
Presumably, a federal court will not release a convict until he
proves facts which show invalidity of his conviction. If proof is
to be required, it is no hardship to require a simple statement of
what it will be. A petitioner should be given benefit of liberal
construction, of all usual privileges of amendment, and, if the
court finds a probably worthy case, appointment of counsel to aid
in amending the petition and presenting the case.
Third, petitions to federal courts are required, and those to
state courts may be required, to set forth every previous
application to any court for relief on any grounds. If the current
petition is made upon the same grounds as an earlier one, it should
state fully any evidence now available in its support that was not
offered before and explain failure to present it. On the
jurisdictional questions appropriate for habeas corpus, the
petitioner may not be barred from proof by newly discovered
evidence, but it is not asking too much that his petition disclose
that he has it and a basis for appraising its relevance and effect.
He should not be precluded from raising new grounds of
unconstitutionality in a later petition, especially in view of the
unsettled character of our constitutional doctrines of due process.
But the facts that make the new grounds applicable should appear.
If federal
Page 344 U. S. 548
relief is sought on the grounds that state law affords no
remedy, or his resort thereto has been obstructed and he has been
unable to present his case to a state court, the facts relied on
should be clearly and fully set forth.
Much probably may be said in criticism of my statement of these
principles, but nothing, I am convinced, against their historical
authenticity as part of the traditional law of habeas corpus or
against their application now to stop abuses so grave that they
foreshadow legislative restriction of the writ. They do not
foreclose worthy causes, but earmark them for the serious treatment
they deserve. They will not even wholly eliminate frivolous
petitions, but will discourage them by exposing their frivolity at
an earlier stage.
Society has no interest in maintaining an unconstitutional
conviction and every interest in preserving the writ of habeas
corpus to nullify them when they occur. But the Constitution does
not prevent the state courts from determining the facts in criminal
cases. It does not make it unconstitutional for them to have a
different opinion than a federal judge about the weight to be given
to evidence. My votes in the cases under review and on other
petitions and reviews will be guided as nearly as I can by the
principles set forth herein.
I concur in the result announced by MR. JUSTICE REED in these
three cases.
[
Footnote 4/1]
28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(3).
[
Footnote 4/2]
Ex parte Ferguson, 1 K.B. 176, 179 (1917);
Ex parte
Lees, El.Bl.&El. 828, 120 E.R. 718;
In re Dunn, 5
C.B. 215, 136 E.R. 859; Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, 31 Car. II, c.
2;
Ex parte
Watkins, 3 Pet. 193,
28 U. S.
202.
[
Footnote 4/3]
Darnel's Case, 3 How.St.Tr. 1 (1627). For this purpose,
the writ has not been conspicuously successful in the United
States. I have reviewed its failures, especially in wartimes, in
Wartime Security and Liberty under Law, 1 Buff.L.R. 103;
United
States ex rel. Knauff v. Shaughnessy, 338 U.
S. 537.
[
Footnote 4/4]
See the equivocal discussion of the question in
Frank v. Magnum, 237 U. S. 309,
237 U. S.
326-332, and the more explicit assumption of the
dissent,
id. at
237 U. S. 348.
An earlier case,
Ex parte Royall, 117 U.
S. 241, contained a dictum to the effect that
legislative jurisdiction -- the validity of the statute under which
conviction was had in the state court -- could be challenged on
habeas corpus in the federal courts. While this represents a
certain expansion of traditional notions of jurisdiction in the
judicial sense, it by no means supports the broad reach given to
federal habeas corpus by recent cases.
See also Moore v.
Dempsey, 261 U. S. 86;
Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U. S. 103.
[
Footnote 4/5]
An idea of the uncertainty and diversity of views in this field
may be gleaned from a comparison of
Rochin v. People of
California, 342 U. S. 165,
with Wolf v. Colorado, 338 U. S. 25,
and Adamson v. California, 332 U. S.
46.
[
Footnote 4/6]
This Court's decision in
Screws v. United States,
325 U. S. 91, as
the dissenters anticipated, has led a Federal Court of Appeals to
hold that federal law enforced in federal courts imposes personal
liability upon state judicial officers, though that court admits
that "The result is of fateful portent to the judiciary of the
several states."
Picking v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 151 F.2d
240, 250. Contrast to this the absolute immunity from suit enjoyed
by federal officials, even in administrative capacities.
Gregoire v. Biddle, 177 F.2d 579. While the
Screws decision held out promise of protection for state
officials by requiring that any denial of constitutional right must
be proved to be wilful in the sense of knowing and intentional,
that protection has since been withdrawn. Another Court of Appeals
upheld a conviction based on a charge that willfulness and intent
are "presumed and inferred from the result of the action." 189 F.2d
711, 714. This Court, against my written dissent calling attention
to its effect, refused review.
Koehler v. United States,
342 U. S. 852.
[
Footnote 4/7]
See, e.g., United States v. Oregon State Medical
Society, 343 U. S. 326, for
a recent example of the application of the presumption in favor of
a lower federal court's finding of fact.
Compare Watts v.
Indiana, 338 U. S. 49;
and Malinski v. New York, 324 U.
S. 401, with the above for illustrations of cases in
which this salutary presumption in favor of state court findings
was disregarded in fact if not in theory.
[
Footnote 4/8]
There were filed in federal district courts during 1941 one
hundred twenty-seven petitions for habeas corpus challenging state
convictions; in 1943 there were two hundred sixty-nine; in 1948
five hundred forty-three; in 1952 five hundred forty-one. Speck,
Statistics on Federal Habeas Corpus, 10 Ohio St.L.J. 337, shows
that, during the period from 1943 through 1945, there were a high
number of petitions filed by those convicts who had filed at least
one such petition in federal court before. In federal courts in New
Hampshire and South Dakota, the percentage of the total petitions
made up by repeaters was 50%. The percentages for the larger states
on which statistics were then available are as follows: California,
12%; Illinois, 19%; Massachusetts, 20%; , Missouri, 21%: New
Jersey, 17%; New York, 18%; Pennsylvania, 22%; Texas, 25%. These
figures show an unnecessary burden on the federal courts by
quantitative as well as dramatic tests.
[
Footnote 4/9]
See Speck,
supra, Table 3.
[
Footnote 4/10]
Statistics of the administrative Office of the United States
Courts for the period 1946-1952 show that, in 1946, 2.8% of the
petitioners were successful; in 1952, 1.8% were successful.
[
Footnote 4/11]
Pages full of numbers fail to indicate what the states must
contend with as vividly as the history of particular litigation.
The
Wells litigation in California is an object lesson in
conflict. Wells was sentenced to death by the California trial
court, and this judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of
California in an opinion which gave extended consideration to the
appellant's contentions.
People v. Wells, 33 Cal. 2d
330, 202 P.2d 53. This Court denied certiorari,
Wells v.
California, 338 U.S. 836. Wells, without seeking habeas corpus
in state court, then petitioned a federal district judge in
California for habeas corpus. That judge took the unusual step of
passing on the merits of the case in spite of the fact that state
remedies had not been exhausted and the prisoner had to be remitted
to the state courts. The district judge held on the merits that the
California courts had misapplied California law.
Ex parte
Wells, 90 F. Supp.
855. When the petitioner applied to the Supreme Court of
California for a writ of habeas corpus, as he was instructed to do
by the district judge, that court adhered to its prior view as to
what the law of California was.
Ex parte
Wells, 35 Cal. 2d
889, 221 P.2d 947. This Court again denied certiorari.
Wells v. California, 340 U.S. 937. Thereafter, the same
federal judge, although now conceding that he must take California
law from California courts, voided the conviction on a federal
ground not even mentioned in his earlier opinion.
Ex parte
Wells, 99 F.
Supp. 320. The opinions of the district judge show that he was
well aware of the difficulties presented by the procedure, but felt
he had no alternative in the light of this Court's decisions.
Indeed, he has contributed the lessons of his own experience in
this field in Goodman, Use and Abuse of the Writ of Habeas Corpus,
7 F.R.D. 313. Another caricature of the great writ in action is the
Adamson litigation in California. Adamson was sentenced to
death in the California trial court in 1944. The Supreme Court of
California affirmed the judgment of conviction in 1946.
People
v. Adamson, 27 Cal. 2d
478, 165 P.2d 3. This Court granted certiorari, heard the case
on the merits, and affirmed.
Adamson v. California,
332 U. S. 46. On
January 30, 1948, just one week before the date set for his
execution, Adamson petitioned the Supreme Court of California for
habeas corpus, and this petition was denied. This Court denied
application for a stay and denied certiorari to the Supreme Court
of California.
Adamson v. California, 333 U.S. 831. Later
on the same day that this Court denied certiorari, a judge of the
United States District Court for the Northern District of
California issued a stay of execution of the sentence. Then the
District Court denied the writ and denied a certificate of probable
cause to appeal. In
Ex parte Adamson, 167 F.2d 996, a
judge of the United States Court of Appeals denied an application
for a certificate of probable cause. This Court again denied
certiorari.
Ex parte Adamson, 334 U.S. 834. Even this was
not the end, however, for in 1949, we find Adamson appealing to the
Supreme Court of California from a denial of an application for a
writ of
coram nobis. That court then took occasion to
question the good faith of the proceedings.
34 Cal. 2d
320, 338, 210 P.2d 13. Certainly the use of the federal courts
as aids in such delaying tactics as are evidenced here does not
elevate the statute of the writ of habeas corpus. We have no
mythical abuse here, but a very real problem of harassment of the
state.
[
Footnote 4/12]
Dixon v. Duffy, 344 U. S. 143.
[
Footnote 4/13]
Conference of Chief Justices -- 1952, 25 State Government, No.
11, p. 249 (Nov. 1952):
"Whereas it appears that by reason of certain principles
enunciated in certain recent federal decisions, a person whose
conviction in a criminal proceeding in a State Court has thereafter
been affirmed by the highest court of that State, and whose
petition for a review of the State Court's proceedings has been
denied by the Supreme Court of the United States, may nevertheless
obtain from a Federal district judge or Court, under a writ of
habeas corpus, new, independent, and successive hearings based upon
a petition supported only by the oath of the petitioner and
containing only such statement of facts as were, or could have
been, presented in the original proceedings in the State
Courts;"
"And whereas the multiplicity of these procedures available in
the inferior Federal Courts to such convicted persons, and the
consequent inordinate delays in the enforcement of criminal justice
as the result of said Federal decisions will tend toward the
dilution of the judicial sense of responsibility, may create grave
and undesirable conflicts between Federal and State laws respecting
fair trial and due process, and must inevitably lead to the
impairment of the public confidence in our judicial
institutions;"
"Now therefore be it resolved that it is the considered view of
the Chief Justices of the States of the Union, in conference duly
assembled, that orderly Federal procedure under our dual system of
government should require that a final judgment of a State's
highest court be subject to review or reversal only by the Supreme
Court of the United States."
"Be it further resolved that the Chairman of the Conference of
Chief Justices be authorized, and he is hereby directed, to appoint
a special committee to give study to the grave questions and
potential complications likely to ensue if the power to review or
void state court judgments continues to be recognized as lying in
any courts of the Federal judicial system, save and except the
Supreme Court of the United States, and that said special committee
report its findings and recommendations at the next regular meeting
of the Conference."
[
Footnote 4/14]
Ex parte
Watkins, 3 Pet. 193,
28 U. S.
202.
[
Footnote 4/15]
Such was the view expressed by the Solicitor General of the
United States at the Bar of this Court during argument of
Martinez v. Neely, affirmed by an equally divided Court,
344 U.S. 916. His adversary agreed.
[
Footnote 4/16]
Price v. Johnston, supra.
[
Footnote 4/17]
In
Price v. Johnston, supra, the lower federal courts
were reversed for dismissing the convict's fourth petition.
See
also statistics as to repeaters in
344
U.S. 443fn4/8|>note 8,
supra.
[
Footnote 4/18]
When petitioner in
Brown v. Allen sought certiorari
here after his appeal to the state court failed, two Justices
dissented from the denial of certiorari.
Brown v. North
Carolina, 341 U.S. 943.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs,
dissenting.
The four petitioners in these cases are under sentences of death
imposed by North Carolina state courts. All are Negroes. Brown and
Speller were convicted of raping white women; the two Daniels, aged
17 when arrested, were convicted of murdering a white man. The
State Supreme Court affirmed and we denied certiorari in all
Page 344 U. S. 549
the cases. These are habeas corpus proceedings which challenge
the validity of the convictions.
I agree with the Court that the District Court had habeas corpus
jurisdiction in all the cases including power to release either or
all of the prisoners if held as a result of violation of
constitutional rights. This I understand to be a reaffirmance of
the principle embodied in
Moore v. Dempsey, 261 U. S.
86. I also agree that in the exercise of this
jurisdiction the District Court had power to hear and consider all
relevant facts bearing on the constitutional contentions asserted
in these cases. I disagree with the Court's conclusion that
petitioners failed to establish those contentions. The chief
constitutional claims throughout have been and are: (a) extorted
confessions were used to convict; (b) Negroes were deliberately
excluded from service as jurors on account of their race. For the
following reasons, I would reverse each of the judgments denying
habeas corpus.
First. In denying habeas corpus in all the cases, the
District Court felt constrained to give and did give weight to our
prior denials of certiorari. So did the Court of Appeals. I agree
with the Court that this was error, but disagree with its holding
that the error was harmless. It is true that, after considering our
denials of certiorari as a reason for refusing habeas corpus, the
district judge attempted to pass upon the constitutional questions
just as if we had not declined to review the convictions. But the
record shows the difficulty of his attempt to erase this fact from
his mind, and I am not willing to act on the assumption that he
succeeded in doing so. Both the jury and confession questions
raised in these death cases have entirely too much record support
to refuse relief on such a questionable assumption. I would
therefore reverse and remand all the cases for the district judge
to consider and appraise the issues free from his erroneous
Page 344 U. S. 550
belief that this Court decided them against petitioners by
denying certiorari.
Second. Brown v. Allen, No. 32. Brown's death sentence
for rape rests on an indictment returned by a Forsyth County grand
jury. We recently reversed five North Carolina convictions on the
ground that there had been a systematic racial exclusion of Negroes
from Forsyth County's juries for many years prior to 1947.
Brunson v. North Carolina, 333 U.S. 851 (1948). Upon a
review of the evidence in Brown's habeas corpus proceeding, this
Court holds that Forsyth County's discriminatory jury practice was
abandoned in 1949, when the old jury boxes were refilled. The
testimony on which the Court relies is that the names put in the
1949 box were taken indiscriminately from the list of county
taxpayers, 16% of whom were Negroes, 84% whites. Other evidence
relied on was that, since 1949, four to seven Negroes have been
included in each jury venire of 44 to 60. The concrete effect of
the new box in this case was stated by the North Carolina Supreme
Court to be this:
"One Negro woman served on the grand jury and at least one
prospective Negro juror was tendered to the defendant for the petit
jury, and was excused or rejected by his counsel."
State v. Brown, 233 N.C. 202, 205,
63 S.E.2d
99, 101.
The foregoing evidence does show a partial abandonment of the
old discriminatory jury practices -- since 1949, a small number of
Negroes have regularly been summoned for jury duty. But proof of a
lesser degree of discrimination now than before 1949 is
insufficient to show that impartial selection of jurors which the
Constitution requires. Negroes are about one-third of Forsyth
County's population. Consequently, the number of Negroes now called
for jury duty is still glaringly disproportionate to their
percentage of citizenship. It is not possible to attribute
Page 344 U. S. 551
either the pre-1949 or the post-1949 disproportions entirely to
accident. And the state has not produced evidence to show that the
partial continuation of the longstanding failure to use Negro
jurors is due to some cause other than racial discrimination.
Cf. Patton v. Mississippi, 332 U.
S. 463,
332 U. S. 466,
332 U. S.
468-469. Recognizing this difficulty, the Court
sanctions the continued disproportions because they were the result
of selecting jurors exclusively from the county tax list. But even
this questionable method of selection falls short of showing a
genuine abandonment of old discriminatory practices. Certainly
discriminatory results remained. I do not believe the Court should
permit this tax list technique to be treated as a complete
neutralizer of racial discrimination.
Third. Speller v. Allen, No. 22. The jury that tried
Speller was drawn from Vance County, North Carolina. Before this
trial, no Negro had served on a Vance County jury in recent years.
No Negro had even been summoned. That this was the result of
unconstitutional discrimination is made clear by the fact that
Negroes constitute 45% of the county's population, and 38% of its
taxpayers. The Court holds, however, that this discrimination was
completely cured by refilling the jury box with the names of 145
Negroes and 1,981 whites. Such a small number of Negro jurors is
difficult to explain except on the basis of racial discrimination.
The Court attempts to explain it by relying upon another
discrimination, one which can hardly be classified as most
appealing in a democratic society. What the Court apparently finds
is that Negroes were excluded from this new jury box not because
they were Negroes, but because they happened to own less property
than white people. In other words, the Court finds as a fact that
the discrimination, if any, was based not on race, but on wealth --
the jurors were selected from taxpayers with "the most property."
The Court
Page 344 U. S. 552
then even declines to pass on the constitutionality of this
property discrimination on the ground that petitioner's objections
were based on racial, not on property, discriminations. I cannot
agree to such a narrow restriction of petitioner's objections to
the jury that brought in the death verdict. Jury discriminations
here seem plain to me, and I would not bypass them.
Fourth. Daniels v. Allen, No. 20. Here also, evidence
establishes an unlawful exclusion of Negroes from juries because of
race. The State Supreme Court refused to review this evidence on
state procedural grounds. Absence of state court review on this
ground is now held to cut off review in federal habeas corpus
proceedings. But in the two preceding cases where the State Supreme
Court did review the evidence, this Court has also reviewed it. I
find it difficult to agree with the soundness of a philosophy which
prompts this Court to grant a second review where the state has
granted one, but to deny any review at all where the state has
granted none.
The following facts indicate the obviousness of discriminatory
Negro exclusion from jury service in Pitt County, where this case
was tried.
Negroes constituted about 47% of the population of the county
and about one-third of the taxpayers. But the jury box of 10,000
names included at most 185 Negroes. And up to and including the
Daniels' trial, no Negro had ever served on a grand jury in modern
times. Petitioners made objection in ample time to juries so
discriminatorily chosen.
The Court's conclusion not to consider and act on this manifest
racial discrimination rests on these facts: after petitioners'
death sentence, they were granted an appeal
in forma
pauperis to the State Supreme Court. June
6th, the
trial judge granted
60 days for their lawyers to make up
and serve their "statement of case on appeal." Preparation of this
statement (comparable to a bill of exceptions)
Page 344 U. S. 553
consumed valuable time because of difficulty in getting the
stenographic transcript. On completion, petitioners' counsel, on
Friday, August
5th, called the prosecuting attorney's
office to serve him, but found he was out of town. According to the
record, he and his family were away for the weekend at a beach.
They returned home Sunday, but he did not get back to his office
until Monday, August 8th. Had the statement been delivered at his
office by a sheriff on Friday the
60th day, apparently
there would have been compliance with North Carolina law. Instead,
it was receipted for at his office on the
61st day, two
days before his return from the beach. In the State Supreme Court,
the Attorney General moved to dismiss on the ground that the notice
was one day late. Although admittedly the court had discretionary
authority to hear the appeal, it dismissed the case. Petitioners
were thereby prevented from arguing the point of racial
discrimination, and consequently it has never been passed on by an
appellate court. This denial of state appellate review, plus the
obvious racial discrimination thus left uncorrected, should be
enough to make one of those "extraordinary situations" which the
Court says authorizes federal courts to protect the constitutional
rights of state prisoners.
Cf. Frisbie v. Collins,
342 U. S. 519,
342 U. S.
520-521.
The Court thinks that to review this question and grant
petitioners the protections guaranteed by the Constitution would
"subvert the entire system of state criminal justice and destroy
state energy in the detection and punishment of crime." I cannot
agree. State systems are not so feeble. And the object of habeas
corpus is to search records to prevent illegal imprisonments. To
hold it unavailable under the circumstances here is to degrade it.
I think
Moore v. Dempsey, 261 U. S.
86, forbids this. In that case, Negroes had been
convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury selected
under a practice of systematic exclusion of Negroes from juries.
The State
Page 344 U. S. 554
Supreme Court had refused to consider this discrimination on the
ground that the objection to it had come too late. This Court had
denied certiorari. Later, a federal district court summarily
dismissed a petition for habeas corpus alleging the foregoing and
other very serious acts of trial unfairness, all of which had been
urged upon this Court in the prior certiorari petition. This Court
nevertheless held that the District Court had committed error in
refusing to examine the facts alleged. I read
Moore v. Dempsey,
supra, as standing for the principle that it is never too late
for courts in habeas corpus proceedings to look straight through
procedural screens in order to prevent forfeiture of life or
liberty in flagrant defiance of the Constitution.
Cf. United
States v. Kennedy, 157 F.2d 811, 813. Perhaps there is no more
exalted judicial function. I am willing to agree that it should not
be exercised in cases like these except under special circumstances
or in extraordinary situations. But I cannot join in any opinion
that attempts to confine the Great Writ within rigid formalistic
boundaries.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS join, dissenting.
Nos. 22 and 32
The Court is holding today that a denial of certiorari in habeas
corpus cases is without substantive significance. The Court of
Appeals sustained denials of applications for writs of habeas
corpus chiefly because it treated our denial of a petition for
certiorari from the original conviction in each of these cases as a
review on the merits and a rejection of the constitutional claims
asserted by these petitioners. In short, while the only
significance of the denials of certiorari was a refusal to review,
the Court of Appeals, for all practical purposes, though disavowing
the full technical import of
res judicata, treated
substantively empty denials as though this Court had
Page 344 U. S. 555
examined and approved the holdings of the Supreme Court of North
Carolina that there was no purposeful discrimination against
Negroes in the selection of juries in these cases.
This Court could have reached the constitutional claims in
controversy had it seen fit to review the cases. It declined to do
so, and that is all that the orders in
Speller v. Allen,
340 U.S. 835, and
Brown v. State, 341 U.S. 943, signify.
Accordingly, the proceedings were left precisely as though the
petitions for certiorari had not been filed here and habeas corpus
had been brought initially in the District Court, as in
Frisbie
v. Collins, 342 U. S. 519. If
that had been the case, could it be held that the District Court
was foreclosed from going into the merits, and was barred from
determining whether these cases came within our decisions finding
systematic discrimination against Negroes in five North Carolina
trials?
Brunson v. North Carolina, 333 U.S. 851.
Suppose that the District Court in these circumstances had found
against Brown and Speller. What basis is there for assuming that on
appeal the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, with its
specialized local knowledge about such matters, would not have
decided in favor of the petitioners? And what basis in reason have
we for assuming, if the cases had come here with a powerful opinion
from Judge Parker, let us say, finding that there was systematic
discrimination, that this Court would have deemed it appropriate to
review so weighty a conclusion, or, if we had taken the case, that
we would have found the facts and their meaning to be different
from those which the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit found?
Such assumptions are unwarranted, especially in light of the
impressive showing by MR. JUSTICE Black that, in fact, there was
unconstitutional discrimination in the makeup of the juries in
these two cases where life is at stake.
Page 344 U. S. 556
I cannot protest too strongly against affirming a decision of
the Court of Appeals patently based on the ground that that court
was foreclosed on procedural grounds from considering the merits of
constitutional claims, when we now decide that the court was wrong
in believing that it was so foreclosed. The affirmance by this
Court of the District Court's denial of writs of habeas corpus in
these cases is all the more vulnerable in that this Court, without
guidance from the Court of Appeals, proceeds to consider the merits
of the constitutional claim. This Court concludes that there was
not a systematic discrimination in keeping Negroes off juries. If
this Court deemed it necessary to consider the merits, the merits
should equally have been open to the Court of Appeals. As I have
already indicated, that court is far better situated than we are to
assess the circumstances of jury selection in North Carolina and to
draw the appropriate inferences.
No. 20
In this case, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, 192
F.2d 477, also sustained the District Court in dismissing
applications for writs of habeas corpus based on the claim by the
two petitioners here that their convictions for murder in the North
Carolina court were vitiated by disregard of rights guaranteed by
the United States Constitution. But this case is unlike the
Brown and
Speller cases; here, the Court of
Appeals did not find itself foreclosed to consider the merits by
deeming itself bound by an adjudication of the merits in the
Supreme Court of North Carolina followed by a denial of a petition
for certiorari in this Court. [
Footnote
5/1] And the Court here does not sustain
Page 344 U. S. 557
the District Court's dismissal by contending that the North
Carolina Supreme Court had already adjudicated the merits, not does
this Court pass on the merits.
This Court sustains the lower courts on the ground that the
right of review on the merits was foreclosed because the
petitioners lost their right of review through failure to comply
with the requirements of North Carolina law for perfecting an
appeal in the Supreme Court of North Carolina.
State v.
Daniels, 231 N.C. 17, 56 S.E.2d 2;
id., 231 N.C. 341,
56 S.E.2d 646;
id., 232 N.C. 196,
59
S.E.2d 430.
We were given to understand on the argument that if petitioners'
lawyer had mailed his "statement of the case on appeal" on the 60th
day and the prosecutor's office had received it on the 61st day,
the law of North Carolina would clearly have been complied with,
but because he delivered it by hand on the 61st day, all
opportunities for appeal, both in the North Carolina courts and in
the federal courts, are cut off, although the North Carolina courts
had discretion to hear this appeal. For me, it is important to
emphasize the fact that North Carolina does not have a fixed period
for taking an appeal. The decisive question is whether a refusal to
exercise a discretion which the Legislature of North Carolina has
vested in its judges is an act so arbitrary and so cruel in its
operation, considering that life is at stake, that, in the
circumstances
Page 344 U. S. 558
of this case, it constitutes a denial of due process in its
rudimentary procedural aspect.
For here, we are not dealing with a frivolous or even a tenuous
claim of a denial of rights guaranteed under the United States
Constitution in the proceedings that led to a death sentence. It
suffices to quote what was said in dissent by Circuit Judge Soper,
one of the most experienced and hardheaded of federal judges:
"There is no attempt on the part of the State of North Carolina
in the pending appeal to show that there was not a gross violation
of the constitutional rights of the prisoners in the trial
court."
Daniels v. Allen, 192 F.2d 763, 770, 771.
And this statement was not questioned by the Court of
Appeals.
The basic reason for closing both the federal and State courts
to the petitioners on such serious claims and under these
circumstances is the jejune abstraction that habeas corpus cannot
be used for an appeal. Judge Soper dealt with the deceptiveness of
this formula by quoting what Judge Learned Hand had found to be the
truth in regard to this generality thirty years ago:
"We shall not discuss at length the occasions which will justify
resort to the writ, where the objection has been open on appeal.
After a somewhat extensive review of the authorities twenty-four
years ago, I concluded that the law was in great confusion, and the
decisions since then have scarcely tended to sharpen the lines. We
can find no more definite rule than that the writ is available not
only to determine points of jurisdiction,
stricti juris,
and constitutional questions, but whenever else resort to it is
necessary to prevent a complete miscarriage of justice."
Kulick v. Kennedy, 157 F.2d 811, 813.
Page 344 U. S. 559
The reasons for finding that we have here so complete a
miscarriage of justice are so powerfully stated by Judge Soper that
I cannot do better than to adopt them as my own:
"The [trial] court's strict application of the procedural rules
in a capital case in these two instances [of rulings by that court
preventing defendants' attorneys from raising the jury question]
can hardly be approved as a proper exercise of judicial discretion.
The defendants merely asked for rulings which would have enabled
them to obtain a review by the highest court of the state of the
trial court's action on a grave constitutional question; and the
relief could have been granted without interfering with the
enforcement of the criminal laws of the state. It can hardly be
doubted that the decision in each case lay within the discretion of
the judge, but, once it was taken, the Supreme Court of the state
deemed itself powerless to interfere. Thus, there is presented an
impasse which can be surmounted only by a proceeding like that
before this court. We have been told time and again that legalistic
requirements should be disregarded in examining applications for
the writ of habeas corpus and the rules have been relaxed in cases
when the trial court has acted under duress or perjured testimony
has been knowingly used by the prosecution, or a plea of guilty has
been obtained by trick, or the defendant has been inadequately
represented by counsel. [
Footnote
5/2]
Hawk v. Olsen, 326 U. S. 271;
Page 344 U. S. 560
Darr v. Bu[r]ford, 339 U. S. 200,
339 U. S.
203. It is difficult to see any material distinction in
practical effect between these circumstances and the plight of the
prisoners in the pending case who have been caught in the
technicalities of local procedure, and, in consequence, have been
denied their constitutional right."
192 F.2d at 773.
[
Footnote 5/1]
Although there was such a denial in this Court, no petition for
certiorari was sought from the latest of the three decisions by the
North Carolina Supreme Court prior to the initiation of the habeas
corpus proceedings now under review. It is not inappropriate to say
that the certiorari that was denied here affords a good
illustration of the reason for holding that no legal significance
attaches to such a denial. It would be beyond the wit of the wisest
panel of judges to determine on what ground, for what reason, the
petition was denied. The papers in the case do not afford a
rational foundation for saying that it was this ground, rather than
that. The conflicting bases for rejection not only may well have
influenced different members of the Court; it is not at all
unlikely that individual members of the Court did not feel it
necessary to determine which of two grounds was decisive.
[
Footnote 5/2]
This language is, of course, not to be read to mean that
constitutional rights may not be freely waived. Under appropriate
circumstances, conscious failure to appeal may constitute such
waiver; the very question here is whether there has been a failure
to appeal.