Respondent was convicted of burglary and grand larceny in an
Arkansas state court and sentenced by the jury to the maximum
sentence permissible under the state recidivist statute. On appeal,
the Arkansas Supreme Court reversed, holding that evidence of
certain prior felony convictions was inadmissible for the purpose
of enhancing respondent's sentence, and revised the sentence to the
permissible minimum. Respondent then brought a habeas corpus
petition in Federal District Court, alleging that his sentencing
after trial had been unconstitutional, and was not remedied by the
Arkansas Supreme Court's revision of it. The District Court
dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction, but the Court of
Appeals reversed, holding that respondent had been denied due
process of law by the failure to permit him to be resentenced by a
jury, and that resentencing was required because the recidivist
statute had been amended since respondent's trial and, if the
amendment applied to him, would now provide a lower minimum
sentence.
Held: Where the claim that respondent is entitled to be
resentenced by reason of the amended recidivist statute apparently
has not been presented to the state courts, a federal court, in the
absence of any reason to believe that state judicial remedies would
now be unavailable, is required to stay its hand to give the State
the initial opportunity to pass upon and correct alleged violations
of federal rights. The requirement of 28 U.S.C. §§
2254(b) and (c) that state remedies first be pursued is
particularly appropriate where, as here, the federal constitutional
claim arises from the alleged deprivation by state courts of rights
created under state law.
Certiorari granted; 599 F.2d 842, reversed and remanded.
PER CURIAM.
The respondent was convicted by a jury in an Arkansas court of
burglary and grand larceny. In accordance with the recidivist
statute then in effect in Arkansas, the members of the jury were
instructed that, if they found that the respondent
Page 448 U. S. 445
had been convicted of three prior felony offenses, they could
fix his sentence at not less than 21 and not more than 311/, years
for both burglary and grand larceny. Evidence was admitted of seven
prior felony convictions from Missouri and of six from Arkansas.
The jury found that the petitioner had been convicted of three
prior felonies, and set his punishment at 31 1/2 years for each of
the two offenses of which they had found him guilty. The trial
judge ordered that the terms were to be served consecutively.
On appeal, the Arkansas Supreme Court reversed, concluding that
the evidence of the Missouri convictions was inadmissible for the
purpose of enhancing the respondent's sentence because it did not
appear that he had had the assistance of counsel at the trial of
those cases.
Klimas v. State, 259 Ark. 301, 303-304,
534 S.W.2d
202, 204, citing
Burgett v. Texas, 389 U.
S. 109 (1967). The court directed that the respondent be
retried unless the State agreed to a reduction of his sentence to
three years, the minimum sentence that he could have received for
the burglary and larceny offenses. 259 Ark. at 30, 534 S.W.2d at
207. On rehearing, the court revised the sentence to 42 years,
comprised of the two minimum terms of 21 years authorized for the
offenses in the case of a defendant having three past convictions.
The court reasoned that, since the jury had been required to
consider the six Arkansas convictions whose validity the respondent
had not disputed at trial, it could not have fixed the punishment
at less than 21 years for each offense. [
Footnote 1]
Page 448 U. S. 446
The respondent then sought a writ of habeas corpus in a Federal
District Court, alleging that his sentencing after trial had been
unconstitutional, and was not remedied by the Arkansas Supreme
Court's revision of it to 42 years. The District Court dismissed
the suit for want of jurisdiction, but the Court of Appeals
reversed, concluding that the respondent had been denied due
process of law by the State's failure to permit him to be
resentenced by a jury, in accord with what it understood to be
state statutory law. 599 F.2d 842 (CA8 1979). The Court of Appeals
acknowledged that the omission of discretionary resentencing by a
jury would not have prejudiced the respondent if, as the Arkansas
Supreme Court had concluded, he had received the most lenient
sentence authorized by law for the offenses of which he had been
convicted.
Cf. Hicks v. Oklahoma, 447 U.
S. 343 (1980). [
Footnote
2] But the Court of Appeals believed that resentencing was
required in this case because the habitual offender statute had
been amended since the respondent's trial, and, if applied to him,
the amended statute would provide a lower minimum
Page 448 U. S. 447
sentence. [
Footnote 3]
Accordingly, while the court expressed uncertainty whether the
amendment applied to the respondent, it nonetheless ordered that
the District Court issue the writ unless he was resentenced by a
jury.
The claim that the respondent is entitled to be resentenced by
reason of the amended recidivist statute apparently has not been
presented to the state courts. In these circumstances, in the
absence of any reason to believe that state judicial remedies would
now be unavailable, a federal court is required to stay its hand
"to give the State the initial
opportunity to pass upon and
correct' alleged violations of . . . federal rights."
Wilwording v. Swenson, 404 U. S. 249,
404 U. S. 250
(1971), quoting Fay v. Noia, 372 U.
S. 391, 372 U. S. 438
(1963). See Picard v. Connor, 404 U.
S. 270, 404 U. S.
277-278 (1971). The requirement that state remedies
first be pursued, codified in the federal habeas corpus statute, 28
U.S.C. §§ 2254(b) and (c), is particularly appropriate
where, as here, the federal constitutional claim arises from the
alleged deprivation by state courts of rights created under state
law. The Court of Appeals acknowledged that the construction of the
statute, plainly a matter for the state courts to decide, was, at
best, uncertain. Obviously, therefore, the state courts can in no
sense be said to have arbitrarily denied any right they were asked
to accord.
The petition for certiorari and the respondent's motion for
leave to proceed
in forma pauperis are granted, the
judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is
remanded to that court for proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL concurs in the judgment.
[
Footnote 1]
The respondent contends that the minimum sentence he could have
received was 21, not 42, years, since the trial judge was allegedly
authorized to direct that the burglary and larceny sentences run
concurrently. This was also the view of Judge Henley, dissenting
from the Court of Appeals' denial of en banc consideration of the
case. 603 F.2d 158, 159 (CA8 1979). Because the question was not
decided either by the Arkansas Supreme Court or by the federal
courts in this case, we do not now consider it.
[
Footnote 2]
In
Hicks v. Oklahoma, this Court held that the right of
a criminal defendant under state law to have his punishment fixed
in the discretion of the trial jury gave him
"a substantial and legitimate expectation that he will be
deprived of his liberty only to the extent determined by the jury
in the exercise of its statutory discretion,
cf. Greenholtz v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates, 442 U. S. 1, and that liberty
interest is one that the Fourteenth Amendment preserves against
arbitrary deprivation by the State.
See Vitek v. Jones,
445 U. S.
480,
445 U. S. 488-489, citing
Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U. S. 539;
Greenholtz v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates, supra; Morrissey v. Brewer,
408 U. S.
471."
447 U.S. at
447 U. S. 346.
The jury in
Hicks had fixed the petitioner's punishment at
40 years, in accord with the mandatory terms of the State's
habitual offender statute then in effect. On appeal, the mandatory
provision was determined to be invalid, but the appellate court
nonetheless affirmed the 40-year sentence because it was within the
range of punishments that a correctly instructed jury could have
imposed in any event. This Court concluded that the deprivation of
a discretionary jury sentence that could well have been less than
40 years had denied the petitioner due process of law.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 3]
The revised statute by its terms applies only to offenses
committed after January 1, 1976.
See Ark.Stat.Ann.
§§ 41-102(1) and (3) (1977). The respondent was convicted
and sentenced in the trial court in 1975, and the case was reheard
by the Arkansas Supreme Court in March, 1976, when the court
modified his sentence, presumably in accord with the state law then
governing the case.