At the trial in a state court in which petitioner was convicted
of murder, two confessions which he claimed had been obtained by
coercion were admitted in evidence over his objection. In
determining that the confessions were "voluntary," both the trial
court and the State Supreme Court, which affirmed the conviction,
gave consideration to the question whether or not the confessions
were reliable. Petitioner applied to a Federal District Court for a
writ of habeas corpus, claiming that his conviction violated the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. On the basis of the
record in the state trial court and that court's finding that the
confessions were "voluntary," the District Court denied the writ,
and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: The admissibility of the confessions was not
determined in accordance with standards satisfying the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; the judgment is reversed, and
the case is remanded to the Court of Appeals to be held in order to
give the State an opportunity to retry petitioner, in the light of
this opinion, within a reasonable time. In default thereof,
petitioner is to be discharged. Pp.
365 U. S.
534-549.
271 F.2d 364, reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case has a long history. It must be told with some
particularity in order to unravel issues ensnarled in protracted
litigation in both state and federal courts, turning essentially on
the admissibility of confessions.
Page 365 U. S. 535
The Trial. -- Petitioner was found guilty of murder by
a jury in the Superior Court, New Haven County, Connecticut. The
undisputed evidence leading to the conviction may be briefly told.
On January 9, 1954, New Haven, Connecticut, police arrested
petitioner on charges of committing attempted robbery and other
crimes on that day at a local hotel. At the time of his arrest,
petitioner had in his possession a revolver. Subsequent ballistic
tests tended to show that this weapon, which had been reported
stolen from the home of petitioner's nephew, was used in a fatal
shooting during a liquor store robbery in West Haven, Connecticut,
on November 21, 1953, the same day its disappearance was
discovered.
Petitioner was lodged in the New Haven County Jail pending trial
on the charges that prompted his arrest. On January 30, 1954, he
was transported without court order from the jail to the office of
the State's Attorney for questioning in connection with the West
Haven killing. The interrogation commenced at approximately 2 p.m.
of that day, and continued throughout the afternoon and evening.
During the interrogation, petitioner was allowed to smoke, was
brought a sandwich and coffee, and was at no time subjected to
violence or threat of violence.
After petitioner had been intermittently questioned without
success by a team of at least three police officers from 2 p.m. to
8 p.m., New Haven Assistant Chief of Police Eagan was called in to
conduct the investigation. When petitioner persisted in his denial
that he had done the shooting, Chief Eagan pretended, in
petitioner's hearing, to place a telephone call to police officers,
directing them to stand in readiness to bring in petitioner's wife
for questioning. After the passage of approximately one hour,
during which petitioner remained silent. Chief Eagan indicated that
he was about to have petitioner's wife taken into custody. At this
point, petitioner
Page 365 U. S. 536
announced his willingness to confess, and did confess in a
statement which was taken down in shorthand by an official court
reporter.
The following morning, the Coroner of New Haven County issued an
order that petitioner be held incommunicado at the jail. When a
lawyer associated with counsel whom petitioner had previously
retained to defend him on the attempted robbery charge called at
the jail to see petitioner, he was turned away on the authority of
the Coroner's order. Petitioner was then transported to the County
Court House for interrogation by the Coroner, who had been informed
of his confession of the previous night. There, he was put on oath
to tell the truth, but warned that he might refuse to say anything
further and advised that he might obtain the assistance of counsel.
Petitioner again confessed to the shooting in a statement recorded
by the same official court reporter.
Petitioner's defense at the trial was directed toward
discrediting the confessions as the product of coercion. In
accordance with Connecticut practice,
see, e.g., State v.
Willis, 71 Conn. 293, 41 A. 820;
State v.
Guastamachio, 137 Conn. 179, 75 A.2d 429, the trial judge
heard the evidence bearing on admissibility of the confessions
without the jury present. At this hearing, petitioner testified
that, shortly after the commencement of the interrogation, he asked
to see a lawyer but was never permitted to do so. He also
testified, with reference to Chief Eagen's pretense of bringing
petitioner's wife in for questioning, that this move took the form
of a threat to do so unless he confessed, and that, in making this
threat, Chief Eagan told him that he would be "less than a man" if
he failed to confess, and thereby caused her to be taken into
custody. According to petitioner, his wife suffered from arthritis,
and he confessed to spare her being transported to the scene of the
interrogation.
Page 365 U. S. 537
The State met petitioner's account with the testimony of Chief
Eagan. He testified that petitioner made no request to see a lawyer
during his presence in the room. However, it will be recalled that
Chief Eagan did not arrive until the questioning had run a course
of six hours, and that petitioner claimed to have requested counsel
during that period. Chief Eagan also denied that he had framed his
remarks about bringing petitioner's wife in for questioning as a
threat, or that he had suggested that petitioner would be "less
than a man," etc.
On the basis of the evidence summarized, the trial judge
concluded that the confessions were voluntary, and allowed them to
go to the jury for consideration of the weight to be given them
under all the circumstances that led to them. Conviction of
petitioner for murder followed.
Review by the Connecticut Supreme Court. -- On appeal,
the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut, finding no error in the
trial judge's admission of the confessions, affirmed the
conviction,
State v. Rogers, 143 Conn. 167, 120 A.2d
409.
First Federal Habeas Corpus Proceeding. -- In August of
1956, after satisfying the rule of
Darr v. Burford,
339 U. S. 200,
petitioner sought a federal writ of habeas corpus, basically on the
ground that, since the confessions were secured under circumstances
rendering them constitutionally inadmissible, he was denied due
process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment. The United States
District Court for the District of Connecticut held a hearing based
on the evidence offered by the parties. This evidence included
excerpts from the record of the state proceedings, as well as
testimony of petitioner and various state officials. Neither
petitioner nor respondent submitted the entire transcript of the
state proceedings, and the district judge did not call for it.
Petitioner again testified that before he confessed he had
requested an opportunity
Page 365 U. S. 538
to confer with his lawyer. His testimony was flatly contradicted
by three police officers called by the State's Attorney, none of
whom had testified at the trial.
On the testimony before him, the district judge made findings
which differed from those of the state trial judge in several
important respects. He accepted petitioner's testimony that, during
the police interrogation, he had asked to see his lawyer before he
yielded to Chief Eagan's efforts to have him confess. He also found
that the confession before the Coroner was the product of fear that
repudiation of the earlier confession would lead the police to take
his wife and foster children into custody. Accordingly, he
concluded that "The confessions were the result of pressure
overcoming Rogers' powers of resistance, and were not voluntary on
his part,"
United States ex rel. Rogers v. Cummings, 154
F. Supp. 663, 665. He therefore set aside the judgment of
conviction.
First Court of Appeals Review. -- On appeal, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit vacated the District
Court's judgment, finding that it was error to hold a hearing
de novo on issues of basic evidentiary fact that had been
considered and adjudicated by the state courts. Relying on
Brown v. Allen, 344 U. S. 443, the
Court of Appeals concluded that the district judge should have
called for the entire state record before reaching his decision. It
held
"that, in the case now before us, the nature of the issues
presented and proper regard for the delicate balance of
federal-state relationships required the District Judge to obtain
and examine the State proceedings. . . . Only on an adequate state
record can the District Court determine if a vital flaw exists
which warrants correction by extrinsic evidence."
United States ex rel. Rogers v. Richmond, 252 F.2d 807,
810, 811.
Page 365 U. S. 539
The Court of Appeals remanded the case to the District Court
with the following instructions:
"Unless the judge below shall find in the record thus before him
material which he deems to constitute 'vital flaws' and 'unusual
circumstances' within the meaning of
Brown v. Allen, we
hold that he should make the necessary constitutional
determinations exclusively on the basis of the historical facts as
found by the State trial court."
252 F.2d at 811.
Certiorari Proceeding. -- The petitioner sought
certiorari here, and we denied the petition with this per curiam
opinion:
"The petition for writ of certiorari is denied. We read the
opinion of the Court of Appeals as holding that, while the District
Judge may, unless he finds a vital flaw in the State Court
proceedings, accept the determination in such proceedings, he need
not deem such determination binding, and may take testimony.
See Brown v. Allen, 344 U. S. 443,
344 U. S.
506 et seq."
Rogers v. Richmond, 357 U. S. 220.
Second Federal Habeas Corpus Proceeding. -- On remand,
the district judge had before him the entire transcript of the
state proceedings and on the basis of it dismissed the petition.
United States ex rel. Rogers v. Richmond, 178 F. Supp. 69.
While he adhered to his belief in petitioner's testimony in the
first habeas corpus hearing, he now considered himself obliged to
accept the state court's "Findings," rather than his own, on all
points of historical fact "unless some vital flaw or unusual
circumstance exists or some other basis appears for consideration
of testimony outside the record." 178 F. Supp. at 71-72. The
district judge found no such "flaw" or "circumstance" to permit
retrial of the issue of the voluntariness of the confessions. He
thus stated his position:
"The issue of whether request for counsel was made and the issue
of voluntary character of the confessions
Page 365 U. S. 540
were fully and conscientiously tried by an experienced judge.
Subsequent disagreement with his weighing of essentially similar
evidence is not, in itself, sufficient under the limitations now
imposed in the interest of proper balance in our dual court system,
to permit consideration of the matter heard at the trial of the
issue
de novo here."
178 F. Supp. at 73.
On this basis, the district judge could not find that the
confessions were the product of coercion.
Second Court of Appeals Review. -- The Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit affirmed this judgment, one judge
dissenting.
United States ex rel. Rogers v. Richmond, 271
F.2d 364. The court held that the district judge was correct in
restricting himself to the state court's "findings" regarding
petitioner's request to see his lawyer before confessing, and
agreed with him that the facts in the record did not justify the
conclusion that petitioner's confessions were not voluntary.
Because issues concerning the appropriate procedure for dealing
with petitions for federal habeas corpus in relation to state
convictions were urged, we brought the case here. 361 U.S. 959.
A critical analysis of the Connecticut proceedings leads to
disposition of the case on a more immediate issue. For it compels
the conclusion that the trial judge ,in admitting the confessions
as "voluntary," and the Supreme Court of Errors, in affirming the
conviction into which the confessions entered, failed to apply the
standard demanded by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment for determining the admissibility of a confession.
Our decisions under that Amendment have made clear that
convictions following the admission into evidence of confessions
which are involuntary,
i.e., the product of coercion,
either physical or psychological, cannot stand. This is so not
because such confessions are unlikely to be
Page 365 U. S. 541
true, but because the methods used to extract them offend an
underlying principle in the enforcement of our criminal law: that
ours is an accusatorial, and not an inquisitorial, system -- a
system in which the State must establish guilt by evidence
independently and freely secured, and may not, by coercion, prove
its charge against an accused out of his own mouth.
See
Chambers v. State of Florida, 309 U.
S. 227;
Lisenba v. California, 314 U.
S. 219,
314 U. S. 236;
Rochin v. California, 342 U. S. 165,
342 U. S.
172-174;
Spano v. New York, 360 U.
S. 315,
360 U. S.
320-321;
Blackburn v. Alabama, 361 U.
S. 199,
361 U. S.
206-207.
And see Watts v. Indiana, 338 U. S.
49,
338 U. S. 54-55.
To be sure, confessions cruelly extorted may be and have been, to
an unascertained extent, found to be untrustworthy. But the
constitutional principle of excluding confessions that are not
voluntary does not rest on this consideration. Indeed, in many of
the cases in which the command of the Due Process Clause has
compelled us to reverse state convictions involving the use of
confessions obtained by impermissible methods, independent
corroborating evidence left little doubt of the truth of what the
defendant had confessed. Despite such verification, confessions
were found to be the product of constitutionally impermissible
methods in their inducement. Since a defendant had been subjected
to pressures to which, under our accusatorial system, an accused
should not be subjected, we were constrained to find that the
procedures leading to his conviction had failed to afford him that
due process of law which the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees.
In the present case, while the trial judge ruled that each of
petitioner's confessions was "freely and voluntarily made, and
accordingly was admissible in evidence," he reached that conclusion
on the basis of considerations that undermine its validity. He
found that the pretense of bringing petitioner's wife in for
questioning "had no tendency to produce a confession that was not
in accord
Page 365 U. S. 542
with the truth." Again, in his charge to the jury, he thus
enunciated the reasoning which had guided him in admitting the
confessions for its consideration:
"No confession or admission of an accused is admissible in
evidence unless made freely and voluntarily, and not under the
influence of promises or threats. The fact that a confession was
procured by the employment of some artifice or deception does not
exclude the confession if it was not calculated, that is to say, if
the artifice or deception was not calculated, to procure an untrue
statement. The motive of a person in confessing is of no importance
provided the particular confession does not result from threats,
fear or promises made by persons in actual or seeming authority.
The object of evidence is to get at the truth, and a trick or
device which has no tendency to produce a confession except one in
accordance with the truth does not render the confession
inadmissible. . . . The rules which surround the use of a
confession are designed and put into operation because of the
desire expressed in the law that the confession, if used, be
probably a true confession."
The same view -- that the probable reliability of a confession
is a circumstance of weight in determining its voluntariness --
entered the opinion of the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut
in sustaining the trial judge's admission of the confession:
"If we concede that this [petitioner's claims of illegal removal
from jail and incommunicado detention] was all true, and that such
conduct was unlawful, it does not, standing alone, render the
defendant's confessions inadmissible. The question is whether,
under these and other circumstances of the case, that conduct
induced the defendant to confess falsely that he
Page 365 U. S. 543
had committed the crime being investigated. Unless it did, it
cannot be said that its illegality vitiated his confessions."
143 Conn. at 173, 120 A.2d at 412.
And again:
"Proper court authorization should have been secured before the
defendant was removed from the jail. There is nothing about his
illegal removal, however, to demonstrate that he was thereby forced
to make an untrue statement. The same can be said concerning the
refusal to admit counsel to see the defendant on the morning of
January 31 before he was brought before the coroner."
143 Conn. at 173-174, 120 A.2d at 412.
Concerning the feigned phone call that petitioner's wife be
brought in to headquarters, the Supreme Court concluded:
"Here again, the question for the court to decide was whether
this conduct induced the defendant to make an involuntary, and
hence untrue, statement."
143 Conn. at 174, 120 A.2d at 412.
From a fair reading of these expressions, we cannot but conclude
that the question whether Rogers' confessions were admissible into
evidence was answered by reference to a legal standard which took
into account the circumstance of probable truth or falsity.
[
Footnote 1] And this is not
a
Page 365 U. S. 544
permissible standard under the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The attention of the trial judge should have
been focused, for purposes of the Federal Constitution, on the
question whether the behavior of the State's law enforcement
officials was such as to overbear petitioner's will to resist and
bring about confessions not freely self-determined -- a question to
be answered with complete disregard of whether or not petitioner in
fact spoke the truth. The employment instead, by the trial judge
and the Supreme Court of Errors, of a standard infected by the
inclusion of references to probable reliability resulted in a
constitutionally invalid conviction, pursuant to which Rogers is
now detained "in violation of the Constitution." [
Footnote 2] A defendant has the right to
be
Page 365 U. S. 545
tried according to the substantive and procedural due process
requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment. This means that a vital
confession, such as is involved in this case, may go to the jury
only if it is subjected to screening in accordance with correct
constitutional standards. To the extent that, in the trial of
Rogers, evidence was allowed to go to the jury on the
basis of standards that departed from constitutional requirements
-- to that extent, he was unconstitutionally tried, and the
conviction was vitiated by error of constitutional dimension.
[
Footnote 3]
It is not for this Court, any more than for a Federal District
Court, in habeas corpus proceedings, to make an independent
appraisal of the legal significance of facts gleaned from the
record after such a conviction. We are barred from speculating --
it would be an irrational process -- about the weight attributed to
the impermissible consideration of truth and falsity which,
entering into the Connecticut trial court's deliberations
concerning the admissibility of the confessions, may well have
distorted, by putting in improper perspective, even its findings of
historical fact. Any consideration of this "reliability" element
was constitutionally precluded precisely because the force which it
carried with the trial judge cannot be known.
As a matter of abstract logic, it is arguable that Rogers may
not have been deprived of a constitutional right, nor held in
custody in violation of the Constitution, within 28 U.S.C. §
2241(c)(3), solely because the Connecticut trial court applied an
impermissible constitutional standard
Page 365 U. S. 546
in admitting his confession -- that Rogers was not so deprived,
or so held, unless "in fact" his confession was coerced, a "fact"
to be ascertained from the state record on direct review here, or
de novo by a federal district judge in habeas corpus
proceedings. Such a view ignores both the volatile and amorphous
character of "fact" as fact is found by courts, and the
distributive functions of the dual judicial system in our
federalism for the finding of fact and the application of law to
fact. In coerced confession cases coming directly to this Court
from the highest court of a State in which review may be had, we
look for "fact" to the undisputed, the uncontested evidence of
record.
See Watts v. Indiana, 338 U. S.
49,
338 U. S. 50-52.
This is all that we may look to, in the absence of detailed state
court findings of historical fact, because this Court cannot sit as
a trial tribunal to hear and assess the credibility of witnesses.
Of course, so-called facts and their constitutional significance
may be so blended that they cannot be severed in consideration.
And, in any event, there must be a foundation in fact for the legal
result.
See Thompson v. City of Louisville, 362 U.
S. 199. With due regard to these considerations, it
would be manifestly unfair, and afford niggardly protection for
federal constitutional rights, were we to sustain a state
conviction in which the trial judge or trial jury -- whichever is
charged by state law with the duty of finding fact pertinent to a
claim of coercion -- passes upon that claim under an erroneous
standard of constitutional law. [
Footnote 4] In such a case, to look
Page 365 U. S. 547
to the wholly undisputed evidence, in the event conflicting
evidence is presented, would deprive the state criminal defendant
of the benefit of whatever credit his testimony might have been
given by the state judge or the state jury, had the judge or jury
employed a proper legal standard. Nor, in a case where specific
findings are made concerning the allegedly coercive circumstances,
can those findings be fairly looked to for the "facts," since
findings of fact may often be (to what extent, in a particular
case, cannot be known) influenced by what the finder is looking
for. Historical facts "found" in the perspective framed by an
erroneous legal standard cannot plausibly be expected to furnish
the basis for correct conclusions if and merely because a correct
standard is later applied to them.
Of course, where the issue of coercion is raised not on direct
review in this Court, but by petition for habeas corpus in a
Federal District Court, one alternative method of proceeding
impossible on direct review is available. The District Court might
conceivably hold a hearing
de novo on the issue of
coercion. But such a procedure would neither adequately protect the
federal rights of state criminal defendants nor duly take account
of the large leeway which must be left to the States in their
administration of their own criminal justice. A state defendant
should have the opportunity to have all issues which may be
determinative of his guilt tried by a state judge or a state jury
under appropriate state procedures
Page 365 U. S. 548
which conform to the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Where he has not had that opportunity, he should not be required to
establish in a Federal District Court, before a federal district
judge who must consider the issue of the voluntariness of the
confession in a certain abstraction from the whole, living complex
of a criminal trial, and perhaps many years after the occurrence of
the events surrounding the confession, facts establishing coercion.
On the other hand, the State, too, has a weighty interest in having
valid federal constitutional criteria applied in the administration
of its criminal law by its own courts and juries. To require a
federal judge exercising habeas corpus jurisdiction to attempt to
combine within himself the proper functions of judge and jury in a
state trial -- to ask him to approximate the sympathies of the
defendant's peers or to make the rulings which the state trial
judge might make, within the exercise of his discretion concerning
the admission of evidence at the borderline of constitutional
permissibility -- is potentially to prejudice state defendants
claiming federal rights and to preempt functions that belong to
state machinery in the administration of state criminal law.
In view, therefore, of the constitutionally inadequate test
applied by the Connecticut courts for determining whether the
confessions were voluntarily given, we need not, on this record,
consider whether the circumstances of the interrogation and the
manner in which it was pressed barred admissibility of the
confessions as a matter of federal law. [
Footnote 5] In the case before us, the state trial
court
Page 365 U. S. 549
misconstrued the applicable law of the Constitution and was
sustained in doing so by Connecticut's Supreme Court. It was error
for the court below to affirm the District Court's denial of
petitioner's application for habeas corpus. The case is remanded to
the Court of Appeals to be held in order to give the State
opportunity to retry petitioner, in light of this opinion, within a
reasonable time. In default thereof, the petitioner is to be
discharged.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
We find support for this conclusion in a line of Connecticut
cases, some of which are cited by the Supreme Court of Errors in
Rogers.
See State v. Willis, 71 Conn. 293, 307-312, 41 A.
820, 824-826;
State v. Cross, 72 Conn. 722, 727, 46 A.
148, 150;
State v. DiBattista, 110 Conn. 549, 563, 148 A.
664, 669;
State v. Palko, 121 Conn. 669, 680, 186 A. 857,
662;
State v. Tomassi, 137 Conn. 113, 127-128, 75 A.2d 67,
74;
State v. Guastamachio, 137 Conn. 179, 182, 75 A.2d
429, 431;
State v. Lorain, 141 Conn. 694, 700, 109 A.2d
504, 507.
But see State v. Wakefield, 88 Conn. 164, 90 A.
230;
State v. Castelli, 92 Conn. 58, 101 A. 476;
State
v. Zukauskas, 132 Conn. 450, 45 A.2d 289;
State v.
Buteau, 136 Conn. 113, 68 A.2d 681;
State v. Malm,
142 Conn. 113, 111 A.2d 685, containing no reference to a
"truth-falsity" test. Connecticut case law regarding the
admissibility of confessions allegedly secured under circumstances
which render them involuntary, or by means of promises,
"artifices," "deception" or illegal police practices not amounting
to coercion, is not free from uncertainty. We need not now endeavor
to ascertain the extent to which, or the circumstances under which,
Connecticut courts generally look to reliability as the criterion,
alone or in conjunction with other criteria, of admissibility. If
petitioner in the present case has been convicted through the use
of a constitutionally impermissible standard, it is indifferent
that Connecticut law, in its operation in other cases, may be
unimpeachable. What that law does reveal of relevance here is that
conceptions of probable truth or probable falsity have had and
appear still to have a place in the reasoning of Connecticut judges
in classes of cases having similarities to Rogers and relied on
therein. Without meaning to consider the validity of such
reasoning, under the Fourteenth Amendment, in any applications but
the one now before us, we do derive from its currency in a
continuing line of Connecticut decisions confirmation of our
conclusion that the language of the trial judge and of the Supreme
Court of Errors in the
Rogers case is not the product of
mere verbal inadvertence or unreflective phraseology, but an
accurate embodiment of the mode of reasoning which led to holding
that petitioner's confessions were admissible as "voluntary."
[
Footnote 2]
28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(3).
[
Footnote 3]
Determination of the admissibility of confessions is, of course,
a matter of local procedure. But whether the question of
admissibility is left to the jury or is determinable by the trial
judge, it must be determined according to constitutional standards
satisfying the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. If
the question of admissibility is left to the jury, they must not be
misdirected by wrong constitutional standards; if the question is
decided by the trial judge, he must not misdirect himself.
[
Footnote 4]
A different question was implicitly presented in
Stroble v.
California, 343 U. S. 181. In
that case, the trial judge permitted the confessions to go to the
jury under instructions which told it to disregard them if it found
that they were not voluntarily made, and which adequately defined
the "voluntariness" required by due process.
See Lyons v.
Oklahoma, 322 U. S. 596,
322 U. S. 601.
Thus, there was no flaw in the verdict as rendered. An erroneous
legal standard for determining the admissibility of allegedly
coerced confessions was interjected into the proceeding only at the
level of the Supreme Court of California. Had the State Supreme
Court, under similar circumstances reversed the conviction, not on
the basis of local law, but solely by reason of a misinterpretation
of this Court's principles governing coerced confessions, and had
the case been brought here for review on certiorari, the jury's
verdict would have had to be reinstated. In any event, the question
presented in
Stroble was not faced squarely, and, in
illuminating isolation, in that case.
Compare Lee v.
Mississippi, 332 U. S. 742,
with Stroble.
[
Footnote 5]
We do not deal in this case with a situation in which the record
-- taking all of petitioner's evidence, and the inferences
reasonably to be drawn from it, in the light most favorable to him
-- nevertheless fails to make out a claim of coercion. Since the
issue of voluntariness might fairly have gone either way on the
whole of the testimony, petitioner has clearly been prejudiced by
the application of an erroneous standard to his federal claim by
the state trial judge in allowing the confessions to go to the
jury.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK joins,
dissenting.
Although the matter is not free from doubt, I accept the Court's
conclusion that both state courts gave some weight to the probable
truth of the confessions in determining that they were voluntary.
* But I cannot
accept the proposition that the petitioner is entitled to his
release by way of federal habeas corpus merely because of the state
courts' failure properly to verbalize the correct Fourteenth
Amendment test of admissibility.
Cf. Stroble v.
California, 343 U. S. 181.
The writ can be extended to Rogers only if he is "in custody in
violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United
States." 28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(3).
See Johnson v.
Zerbst, 304 U. S. 458,
304 U. S.
465-468;
Hawk v. Olson, 326 U.
S. 271,
326 U. S.
274-276. In the context of the present case, this means
that the writ should be granted if, and
Page 365 U. S. 550
only if, a coerced confession was in fact admitted at the trial.
See Leyra v. Denno, 347 U. S. 556. I
think, as did the District Court, that, in deciding that question,
the appropriate inquiry for the habeas corpus court is not what
test of admissibility the State applied or purported to apply, but
whether a confession was admitted which was in fact involuntary
under Fourteenth Amendment standards.
I would, therefore, remand the case to the District Court for a
plenary hearing to determine this question. Where, as here, the
state trial court's determination of admissibility was at least
partly affected by the impermissible factor of probable
reliability, I think there can be no question of the federal
court's duty to hold such a hearing. While the state court's
failure to enunciate the correct standard was not itself an error
of constitutional dimensions, it did make impossible the federal
court's unquestioning reliance on the trial court's findings of
fact. Even the most narrow view of what was said in
Brown v.
Allen, 344 U. S. 443,
would require a plenary hearing in these circumstances.
* In Connecticut, the jury plays no part in determining the
voluntariness of a confession. Connecticut follows the orthodox
rule of leaving the determination of admissibility exclusively to
the trial judge.
State v. McCarthy, 133 Conn. 171, 177, 49
A.2d 594, 597;
State v. Guastamachio, 137 Conn. 179, 182,
75 A.2d 429, 431;
State v. Lorain, 141 Conn. 694, 699, 109
A.2d 504, 507.
Compare Stein v. New York, 346 U.
S. 156. If a confession is admitted, the jury is left to
weigh its truthfulness as it weighs other evidence. There is no
claim in this case of any error in the instructions to the
jury.