The Writ of Habeas Corpus
The Writ of Habeas Corpus
The Writ of Habeas Corpus
Volume 26
Article 3
Issue 1 Fall 1964
July 1964
Recommended Citation
Gorham Swanberg, The Writ of Habeas Corpus, 26 Mont. L. Rev. (1964).
Available at: https://scholarship.law.umt.edu/mlr/vol26/iss1/3
This Note is brought to you for free and open access by The Scholarly Forum @ Montana Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Law
Review by an authorized editor of The Scholarly Forum @ Montana Law.
Swanberg: The Writ of Habeas Corpus
NOTES
THE WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
In 1915, the Supreme Court of the United States in what has come to
be considered a breakthrough decision discarded the restrictions on
habeas corpus review that had previously existed. The Court held that it
would look beyond the question of whether the state court had jurisdic-
tion over the defendant, to determine whether the state court had given
the defendant "due process of law" under the fourteenth amendment.
In so doing, it stated:
But this does not mean that that decision [of the state court]
may be ignored or disregarded. To do this, as we have already
pointed out, would be not merely to disregard comity, but to
ignore the essential question before us, which is not the guilt or
the innocence of the prisoner, or the truth of any particular fact
asserted by him, but whether the State, taking into view the
entire course of its procedure, has deprived him of due process
of law. This familiar phrase does not mean that the operations
of the state government shall be conducted without error or fault
in any particular case, nor that the Federal courts may substi-
tute their judgment for that of the state court's, or exercise
any general review over their proceedings, but only that the fun-
damental rights of the prisoner shall not be taken from him arbi-
trarily or without the right to be heard according to the usual
course of law in such cases.'
Thirty-nine years later, the Supreme Court reversed a decision of the
New York Court of Appeals by holding that a confession of the defend-
ant was, as a matter of fact, coerced. The Court stated: "The question
for our decision is therefore whether the present confessions were so
coerced. The question can only be answered by reviewing the circum-
'2
stances surrounding the confessions."
The difference in approach taken by the Supreme Court in these two
cases is fundamental. In the former, the Court looked only to the procedural
aspect of whether the state allowed the defendant a fair opportunity to
present his claim. In the latter, it redetermined the facts which had al-
ready been determined on the merits by the court system of New York,
the federal district court, and the federal circuit court. The Supreme
Court reversed them all.
It is the purpose of this paper to discuss in detail the reasons for
this fundamental change in the Court's attitude, the nature of the change,
the problems it has led to, and those that it will possibly lead to in the
future.
Prior to the Civil War, there was no authority in federal judges to
3
entertain petitions of habeas corpus alleging detention under state law.
However, in 1867, an act was passed vesting federal courts with this
power, but it was repealed the following year and no cases came before
5
the Supreme Court under it. 4 The act was not re-established until 1885.6
7
The first case arising under the new statute was Ex parte Royall
which enunciated the rule that the writ would not lie until the petitioner
had exhausted all his state remedies.8 On the rationale that, in the interest
of comity, the state ought to be allowed to pass on the federal questions
first, the rule was later extended to hold that if the state did pass on the
federal question the proper procedure was to appeal to the United States
Supreme Court, rather than to ask for a writ of habeas corpus.9 A corol-
lary to this rule was established in 1891 to the effect that the writ of
habeas corpus could not be used to relitigate an issue already decided in
the state courts. 1° The reasoning was grounded in the belief that federal
district courts should not serve the function of an appellate court for
state findings of fact, nor should the writ of habeas corpus serve the
purpose of a writ of error. Thus until 1915,.the writ of habeas corpus
would lie only to correct jurisdictional errors. In that year the decision
of Frank v. Mangum11 was handed down.
Many writers have contended that the Moore case discredits Frank
v. Mangum.19 The case is definitely ambiguous and this is an easily justi-
fied position. However, it is important to remember that in the Mangum
case,20 the contention of the petitioner was argued and evidence taken,
while in the later case, the contention of mob domination was rejected by
looking only at the record. It is very difficult to visualize the effects of
mob domination being reflected in the record, with the result that looking
only to the record does not seem to meet the "corrective process" test re-
21
quired by the Mangum case.
The problem of the adequacy of the state record has been adjudicated
many times and has provided the federal courts with many of their most
difficult problems. By 1952 however, it was well established that a writ
of habeas corpus would lie if the petitioner's allegations were such that
they would not show in the record. The position was well stated in
Waley v. Johnston: "The issue here [whether the defendant had been
coerced into pleading guilty] was appropriately raised by the habeas
corpus petition. The facts relied on are de hors the record and their effect
22
on the judgment was not open to consideration and review on appeal.
A later per curiam decision stated a more general rule:
This then, was the state of the law prior to 1952. Before turning to
the recent expansion of the above rules, certain collateral matters should
be disposed of. A major issue before the Court concerned the scope to
be given to the "exhaustion of state remedies" doctrine as enunciated by
Ex parte Royjall. 4 The controversy centered around the question of
whether it was necessary to go directly to the Supreme Court from an
adverse state court decision and if so, what effect should be given to a
19
See, e.g., Hart, The Supreme Court 1958 Term. Forward: The Time Chart of the
Justices, 73 HARv. L. REV. 84 (1959). This position is also elaborated on by the
Supreme Court in Fay v. Noia, 372 U.S. 391, at 421 n. 30 (1963).
°Supra note 11.
'For an exposition of this view, see Bator, Finality in Criminal Law and Federal
Habeas Corpus for State Prisoners, 76 HARV. L. REV. 441, 488 (1963); Fay v. Noia,
supra note 19, at 448 (Harlan, J., dissenting.)
2316 U.S. 101, 104 (1942).
3Ex parte Hawk, 321 U.S. 114, 118 (1944).
https://scholarship.law.umt.edu/mlr/vol26/iss1/3
2-Supra note 7. 4
Swanberg: The Writ of Habeas Corpus
1964] NOTES
denial of certiorari. In 1950, the Supreme Court held that a person had
not exhausted his state remedies until he had applied for a writ of certi-
orari from the Supreme Court and was barred from aid in the federal
courts if he did not so apply.2 5 The Court acknowledged the conflict in
interest between state and federal courts concerning the recognized right
of federal courts to determine federal constitutional issues, stating:
The Court then denied the writ because the petitioner had not asked
the Supreme Court to review the state court conviction by a writ of certi-
orari prior to asking the federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus.
The Court expresslyo refused to decide what weight should be given to a
denial of certiorari, stating only that the denial should not be res judicata.
However, two Justices in a concurring opinion and Frankfurter in a dis-
27
senting opinion, stated that the denial should be given no weight.
In 1953, the Supreme Court handed down the now famous case of
Brown v. Allen 25 involving three petitions for habeas corpus from the state
of North Carolina. Two of the appeals were factual, involving the ques-
tion of jury discrimination against the Negro defendants. The third ap-
peal involved the legal question concerning the failure to perfect an ap-
peal within the required time limit, the appeal having been filed one day
late. Eventually all the convictions were affirmed but not until the
Supreme Court had broken much new ground. The significance lies in
the almost casual acceptance of the rule that the Supreme Court should
decide the cases on the merits even though this had already been done
by the Supreme Court of North Carolina. The Court was not concerned
with whether the state had provided the petitioners with an adequate
"corrective process" but rather whether the state court had correctly
decided the factual issues involved. It is difficult to find the test the
Court sets up within the opinion itself,29 but it has generally been inter-
preted to lay out the rule that a federal district judge may grant a new
hearing on the merits of the petitioner's claim, even though the state court
has litigated the issue on the merits adversely to the petitioner, whenever
there are "unusual circumstances ' 3 0 or "a vital flaw . . . [is] found in the
process of ascertaining such facts in the state court .... 31
Concerning the other major issues in the trial, the Court held that if
the petitioner violated the procedural time limit for filing an appeal he
was thereafter barred from receiving a writ of habeas corpus. The Court
stated:
The writ of habeas corpus in federal courts is not authorized
for state prisoners at the discretion of the federal courts. 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. To allow habeas corpus in such circumstances would
subvert the entire system of state criminal justice and destroy
32
state energy in the detection and punishment of crime.
33
This latter position was reaffirmed in a rather 1eculiar 1959 case.
The defendant having been convicted of murder in a highly publicized
trial, asked for a new trial on the ground the adverse publicity had de-
prived him of a fair trial. The motion was overruled because the defend-
ant had escaped from jail and was still at large. The Supreme Court of
Indiana affirmed. Habeas corpus was denied on the ground that there
was an adequate state ground for the conviction which barred looking
into the constitutional issue. The United States Supreme Court granted
certiorari and reversed, sending the case back to the circuit court for a de-
termination on the merits of the constitutional claim. 34 The problem in the
case concerned the ground on which the Indiana court had based its
decision. The circuit court had decided that the Indiana court had based
its decision35 on the procedural aspect of the case, and that the escape
barred adjudication of the constitutional issue.3 6 The Supreme Court
disagreed stating: "On the contrary, the opinion to us is more reasonably
to be read as resting the judgment on the holding that the petitioner's
constitutional claim is without merit. ' 37 Having decided that the state
court based its decision on the constitutional rather than the procedural
aspect of the case, the Court found no difficulty in deciding it was error
for the federal courts not to relitigate the constitutional claim. There
were four dissenting Justices who thought the Indiana court had rested
the decision on the procedural issue. They pointed to the fact that the
first seven pages of the Indiana opinion were devoted to it while only
the latter two pages discussed the constitutional question. The dissent
also pointed to the transition sentence between the procedural and con-
stitutional portions of the case which reads: "Our decision on the point
under examination makes it unnecessary for us to consider the other con-
tentions of the appellant; however, because of the finality of the sentence
in the case we have reviewed the evidence to satisfy ourselves that there
38
is no miscarriage of justice in this case."1
Regardless, however, of how the Indiana court meant to decide the
case, the rule of the Dowd case is clear: an adequate, independent state
procedural basis for conviction will bar federal interference.
This then is how the law stood until March 18, 1963, when the
Supreme Court handed down two cases which drastically changed the
law of habeas corpus. 9 The first of these cases, and probably the most
significant, sets out certain situations in which a federal district judge
must hold an evidentiary hearing. The second, Fay v. Noia, holds that
state procedures cannot act as a bar to the granting of a writ of habeas
corpus.
On remand, the federal district judge did not grant a hearing stating
that "he was satisfied from the state court records before him that the
decision of the state courts holding the challenged confession to have been
freely and voluntarily given by petitioner was correct . "42 The district
In the petition for habeas corpus, petitioner alleged that he had new
evidence that had not been brought out at trial. Two questions are then
ultimately presented by the case: (1) Did the defendant have any new
evidence, and; (2) If so, must the federal courts grant an evidentiary
hearing to determine its validity. The Court answered both questions in
the affirmative and remanded the case for a determination on the merits
of the petitioner's claim.
Petitioner in the Sain case was a nineteen-year-old dope addict with a
mentality barely above that of a moron. To relieve his withdrawal symp-
toms, the police, after his arrest, allowed a doctor to administer a shot of
hyoscine and phenobarbital. Hyoscinc is more commonly called scopola-
mine and known to most people as "truth serum." Petitioner contended
that the court, in determining the voluntariness of his confession, was not
told that hyoscine was a truth serum, and further that it was not common
or proper to administer this combination to an addict suffering with-
drawal symptoms. The prosecution conceded there was no direct mention
made of the identity of hyoseine and scopolamine but thought the omis-
sion harmless since the effect of hyoscine was described by three medi-
cal expert witnesses at the trial. Further the police medical doctor testi-
fied that it was common practice for him to administer the mixture to
those suffering withdrawal pains and that he had never seen it have the
effect petitioner contended it had on him. The state denied that the effect
of the drug was correctly stated by petitioner.
The Court held this was a sufficient dispute of fact not passed on by
the Illinois Supreme Court to warrant a plenary hearing to determine
the truth of the allegations. The Court then laid down the following
test :
Where the facts are in dispute, the federal court in habeas corpus
must hold an evidentiary hearing if the habeas applicant did not
receive a full and fair evidentiary hearing in the state court,
either at the time of the trial or in a collateral proceeding. In
other words a federal evidentiary hearing is required unless the
state-court trier of fact has after a full hearing reliably found
the relevant facts. 45 (Emphasis added.)
In discussing this test it is important to note that the rule is manda-
tory and not discretionary with the federal judge. The Court further
states: "In all other cases where the material facts are in dispute, the
holding of such a hearing is in the discretion of the district judge. '46
The second aspect of the Court's holding is perhaps more novel than
what has been stated above. This concerns the legal aspects of the rules
laid down by the state court and held controlling by them. The Court
states:
Reconstruction [of the state court's findings] is not possible
if it is unclear whether the state finder applied correct constitu-
tional standards in disposing of the claim. Under such circum-
stances the District Court cannot ascertain whether the state
court found the law or the facts adversely to the petitioner's con-
tentions. Since the decision . . . may rest upon an error of law
rather than an adverse determination of the facts, a hearing is
compelled to ascertain the facts. 49 (Emphasis added.)
When the facts and law are so blended that the two concepts cannot
be separated and it is not clear on what the state court based its decision,
the Supreme Court has this to say:
If any combination of the facts alleged would prove a violation
of constitutional rights and the issue of law on those facts pre-
sents a difficult or novel problem for decision, any hypothesis
as to the relevant factual determinations of the state trier in-
volves the purest speculation. . . . Under these circumstances it
is impossible for the federal court to reconstruct the facts, and a
hearing must be held.50 (Emphasis added.)
In other words, there is no presumption raised that the judge decided
the law correctly. In fact the opposite conclusion is reached; namely, the
federal district court is instructed to raise the presumption that the state
supreme court did not know the law and hence decided the petitioner's
claim incorrectly.
48Ibid.
191d. at 314.
'OId. at 315.
Published by The Scholarly Forum @ Montana Law, 1964 9
Montana Law Review, Vol. 26 [1964], Iss. 1, Art. 3
MONTANA LAW REVIEW [Vol. 26,
We hold: (1) Federal courts have power under the federal habeas
statute to grant relief despite the applicant's failure to have pur-
sued a state remedy not available to him at the time he applies;
the doctrine under which state procedural defaults are held to
constitute an adequate and independent state law ground barring
direct Supreme Court review is not to be extended to limit the
power granted the federal courts under the federal habeas
5
statute. 5
"Reitz, Federal Habeas Corpus: Post Conviction Remedy for State Prisoners, 108 U.
PA. L. REV. 461, 464 (1960).
https://scholarship.law.umt.edu/mlr/vol26/iss1/3
"Bator, Finality in Criminal Law, supra note 21. 12
Swanberg: The Writ of Habeas Corpus
19641 NOTES
He heard the witnesses and being convinced that the police offi-
cers were not telling the truth, made finding that Gonzales'
claim of coercion was supported by the evidence, and that the
alleged beating did in fact occur and cause the confession. He
held that Gonzales was illegally detained and must be granted
a new trial or released. 66
Gonzales was never tried again because the state had insufficient
evidence for conviction without the confession. Judge Pope cites the
incident with approval indicating that the district judge had indeed
found the meritorious habeas applicant. Yet how can he be so sure?
The state trial court chose to take the word of several policemen over
that of the defendant. The jury was convinced beyond a reasonable
doubt. Yet the federal district judge chose to take the word of the de-
fendant over that of the police.
The role of the Supreme Court in this field should only be to deter-
mine if the processes used by the state courts were reasonably calculated
to determine the truth of the matter. The Supreme Court should not
attempt to substitute its interpretation of the facts for those of the state
court. As Justice Jackson stated in concurring in Brown v. Allen
common law writ which tests only the jurisdiction of the authority im-
posing the restraint.70 It is, by its very nature, ineffective to handle
questions of due process. 7' The other is the writ of error coram nobis.
Although it has occasionally been used as a means of vindicating a peti-
tioner's constitutional rights in state court,7 2 the common law scope of the
writ was such that it would not issue to test constitutional issues.'. "
While both habeas corpus 7 4 and coram nobis have been somewhat
expanded in light of the recent trend in the Supreme Court of the United
States, there is much left to be done. 5 As long as it is left undone, the job
of testing constitutional issues in post-conviction procedures must go to
the federal courts by default. The two recent Supreme Court habeas
corpus cases are good illustrations. In Townsend v. Sain,7' petitioner was
not allowed a hearing on his claim of newly discovered evidence because
the issue of coercion was res judicata. This was so even though peti-
tioner was utilizing one of the most modern post-conviction remedy pro-
cedures in the county.77 Fay v. Noia7 8 provides a second example. Noia
was denied post-conviction relief because his "failure to pursue the usual
and accepted appellate procedure to gain a review does not entitle him
'' °
later to utilize . . . coram nobis. 7
The importance that the Supreme Court attaches to the need for
post-conviction remedies can be gathered from noting that at least four
of the six times habeas corpus will issue, 0 according to the test laid down
in the Sain case, 8 ' would be eliminated by adequate post-conviction remedy
procedures. The 1953 Conference of Chief Justices, while attacking the
enlargement of federal habeas corpus, recognized that little could be
done to restrict the scope of federal habeas corpus until state procedures
were corrected. The Conference adopted unanimously that part of a re-
port of a committee on habeas corpus calling for sweeping state re-
2
forms. If such procedures tend to lengthen litigation and prolong
finality, there seem to be necessary evils inherent in the problem of pro-
tecting constitutional rights. As Judge Irving R. Kaufman stated:
8 s3
"Finality is a good thing but justice is even better.
The fourth and final reason seen by this writer for the expansion
of the writ of habeas corpus concerns the respective merits of the federal
and state court systems as seen by the United States Supreme Court.
This is illustrated by a recent Supreme Court case."4 The case turned on
whether a litigant who had filed his case in federal court could return
to federal court for a determination of federal questions after he had
been sent to a state court for determination of state-law issues.8 5 The
Supreme Court recognized that the constitutional issue involved will
often be decided by how the facts are found and then continued: "Lima-
iting the litigant to review here [from a state court's determination of the
facts] would deny him the benefit of a federal trial court's role in con-
structing a record and making fact findings."'8 6 (Emphasis added.) In
concurring in the result, Mr. Justice Douglas is even more explicit. He
states: "Today we put federal jurisdiction in jeopardy. As the Court
says there are many advantages in a federally constructed record. More-
over, federal judges appointed for life are more likely to enforce the con-
87
stitutional rights of unpopular minorities than elected state judges."
The trend demonstrated by the recent Supreme Court cases has re-
sulted in many problems and much opposition. Perhaps the biggest prob-
lem has been the increasing number of habeas corpus applications that
the federal courts must pass on. Since 1940, the number of petitions
filed has increased steadily from 12788 to 1,232 in 1962.89 Between 1946
and 1952, 3,702 petitions were applied for but only sixty-seven were
granted.90 With an already overworked judiciary9 and every reason to
believe that the number of habeas corpus applications will increase,
there is cause for concern. However, even more striking, perhaps, is the
8Report of the Conference of Chief Justices, Aug. 14, 1954, printed in H. IR. Rep.
No. 1293, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. 7 (1958).
83The Supreme Court and its Critics, Atlantic, Dec. 1963, p. 47.
8'England v. State Bd. of Medical Examiners, 84 S.Ct. 461 (1964).
"The Court held that the litigant could return to federal court, but later litigants would
have to expressly state that they wished to return.
mSupra note 84, at 465.
111d. at 471.
"Speck, Statistics on Federal Habeas Corpus, 10 O1Io ST. L.J. 337 (1949). Also
shown are the following years and number of petitions: 1943, 269 petitions filed;
1948, 543 petitions filed; and, 1952, 541 petitions filed.
8Fay v. Noia, supra note 51, n.2 (Clark, J., dissenting). Also given are the following
years: 1960, 872 petitions filed, and 1961, 906 petitions filed.
-Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 498 (1953).
91
An interesting study of this problem has been made by Professor Hart, The Time
Chart of the Justices, supra note 19, at 85-94. In the article the author finds that
each Supreme Court Justice has available 1728 hours of working time to cope with
this load. The October, 1957, term saw for the first time the number of cases reach
1765 and thus pass the number of working hours. This allows one hour per case per
justice or a total of nine hours to hear oral arguments, discuss, research and write
opinions.
https://scholarship.law.umt.edu/mlr/vol26/iss1/3 16
1964] Swanberg: The NOTES
Writ of Habeas Corpus
"2Brown v. Allen, supra note 90, at 537 n.10 (Jackson, J., concurring).
"3Fay v. Noia, supra note 51, at 852 n.1 (Clark, J., dissenting).
"Supra note 90, at 536.
5
O Brown v. Allen, supra note 90, at 498. Mr. Justice Frankfurter in concurring quoted
from Habeas Corpus in the Federal Courts Brought by State Prisoners, AD. OFFICE
OF THE U.S. CoURTs 4 (Dec. 16, 1952).
"6Habeas Corpus and Post Conviction Review, 33 F.R.D. 363, 411 (1963).
-1334 U.S. 266 (1947).
Published by The Scholarly Forum @ Montana Law, 1964 17
Montana Law Review, Vol.
MONTANA LAW 26 [1964], Iss. 1, Art. 3
REVIEW [Vol. 26,
judge. A hearing now must be held. A few hours are wasted in the hear-
ing and the prisoner returns to jail. He has gained a few hours outside
the prison, added a bit of variety to his life with the added enticement
that some judge might take his word over that of the police. At least
he has had some fun. Further, this is done at no risk to himself. Even
if he is occasionally caught perjuring himself, this is insignificant to the
convict serving a long term.
A second major problem that has developed is the delay in federal
and state courts. Some of the cases already discussed show this problem.
Petitioner in the Sain case' 0 3 was convicted in 1955. In 1957, the Supreme
Court denied certiorari to the state court.10 4 It then took five more years
to reach the U. S. Supreme Court which sent the case back for a hearing
on the merits. Petitioner in Rogers v. Richmond' ° 5 was convicted in 1954.
It took seven years to prosecute the writ of habeas corpus to the Supreme
Court. Again the Supreme Court only decided that the wrong standard
had been used in determining the admissibility of a confession. Perhaps,
however, the worst abuse in this respect is found in the Noia case.' 0 6 The
three defendants were convicted in 1942 and it was not until 1955 that
Caminito was finally released. 01' At this point Noia started the proceed-
ings that resulted in the 1963 decision. By 1963 Noia had been in jail
for twenty-one years.
There are several points to be noted as a result of these cases. For
the innocent prisoner, it is a long time to spend in prison for a crime he
did not commit. For the guilty, it allows evidence for a retrial to dis-
appear. If Mr. Noia is guilty, conviction on retrial twenty-one years after
the commission of the crime is highly unlikely. And this is a very com-
mon situation. Rogers v. Richmond is an illuminating example.' 08 Con-
necticut had used to determine the admissibility of a confession a test
based on the probable truth or falsity of the confession (a test also used
by Montana). In determining this to be an incorrect standard, the Court
stated:
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. 0 9
The test to be applied is "[W] hether 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
103
Supra note 100.
'Townsend v. Illinois, 355 U.S. 850 (1957).
105365 U.S. 534 (1961).
'-Supra note 51.
i°7U.S, ex rel. Caminito v. Murphy, 222 F.2d 698 (1955).
1
O'Supra note 105.
1
1 Id.
Published by The Scholarly Forum @ Montana Law, 1964
at 541. 19
Montana Law Review, Vol. 26 [1964], Iss. 1, Art. 3
MONTANA LAW REVIEW [Vol. 26,
However, it should be noted that some of the delay may well have
been eliminated by the Sain case."' Allowing a writ of habeas corpus to
issue without the necessity of first asking the Supreme Court for a writ
of certiorari will aid some. More important however, is the requirement
that federal district courts must hold a hearing. Although this requirement
is very likely to clog lower federal court calendars, it has the advantage
of requiring the court to decide the allegation on the merits at a much
1 12
earlier point in the proceedings, and thus avoid continued litigation.
The third and final problem caused by the expansion of federal
habeas curpus jurisdiction to be discussed is the increasing dominance of
the role played by federal courts with the corresponding eclipse of that
sphere left to the states.
The idea of two distinct court systems, one judging state matters
and the other federal matters, is unique to this country. The theory has
always been that each is the final arbiter in its own field. However,
with the recent expansion of the fourteenth amendment, there has been
a steady encroachment by the federal judiciary into what had earlier been
considered as within the sole province of state courts. In criminal mat-
ters, it has reached the point where one can say with some validity, that
state courts are merely inferior federal courts. It has reached the stage
where one federal judge can overrule the combined decision of all the
state courts that tried the matter. 1 3
It is often said that since federal judges can only release a prisoner
0
: 1d. at 544.
I'Supra note 100.
2
"11 This benefit could be largely lost if the Supreme Court refused to accept the district
court's interpretation of the facts. See e.g., Leyra v. Denno, 347 U.S. 556 (1954).
"'In a recent Montana case, a federal district judge released the defendant after his
conviction and affirmance by state courts. Application of Tomich, 221 F. Supp. 500
(D. Mont. 1963).
https://scholarship.law.umt.edu/mlr/vol26/iss1/3 20
Swanberg: The Writ of Habeas Corpus
1964] NOTES
when his constitutional rights have been violated, that federal courts
ought to be given the final decision. Yet such an answer is much too
superficial to be of much aid. The problem is more complicated. In
actuality, it is rare in a criminal case that a state court does not decide
a constitutional question and seldom that the federal question does not in
turn embrace state law which is clearly constitutional. 114 This close
interrelation of state and federal questions leads to many complex prob-
lems in civil as well as in criminal cases. To answer these problems and
make federalism work in the criminal law field requires close co-opera-
tion between state and federal jurisdictions. Yet it is all too common for
state courts to react to the recent trend as did Chief Justice Weygandt
of the Ohio Supreme Court when he stated: "Our penitentiary has as
many curbstone lawyers as any other state penitentiary, but we at least
have a consistent record in Ohio that we have never allowed one of these
'
writs of habeas corpus. "11
ME.g., Fay v. Noia, supra note 51; Darr v. Burford, 339 U.S. 200 (1950).
5
Reitz, supra note 63, at 472.
"'AMapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961) is an excellent example. Anyone who reads this
case and is familiar with the earlier cases concerning the fourteenth amendment and
the exclusionary rule cannot help but be struck by the fact that had Ohio been more
willing to conform to the present trend, society would not now be facing the possible
retroactive release of all prisoners who were convicted in violation of the fourteenth
amendment. For a discussion of this problem, see, Collateral Attack of Pre-Mapp v.
Ohio Convictions Based on Illegally Obtained Evidence in State Courts, 16 RUTGERS
L. REV. 587 (1962).
"'For a summary of what has been done see Beitz, supra note 63, at 466-472.
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Montana Law Review, Vol. 26 [1964], Iss. 1, Art. 3
MONTANA LAW REVIEW [Vol. 26,
come a time when the interests of society in an orderly state court sys-
tem outweight the interests of those who would abuse that system. There
must come a time when the interests of society in keeping criminals off
the street overcomes that criminal's right to abuse the law of the state's
appellate procedure under the guise of a constitutional right.
Mr. Justice Cardoza once stated: "The criminal is to go free because
the constable blundered. ' 118 This is not quite so true today. Often the
question should be: "Should the criminal go free because the Supreme
Court changed its position?" It is no longer completely accurate to say
that the police officer violated the Constitution in his action. All that
can often be said is that the police officer failed to predict what the
Supreme Court would hold ten years later. Has there really been a vio-
lation of a constitutional right when a state court interprets the case law
correctly, thereby upholding a conviction, and later the Supreme Court
overrules or severely limits the cases relied on? The average life of a
Supreme Court decision is twenty-three years." 9 Darr v. Burford120 was
overruled only thirteen years after it was handed down. Wolf v. Colo-
rado 121 lasted only twelve years. 122 Will the writ of habeas corpus now
lie for legitimate convictions under these overruled cases? The problem
here is much too fundamental to be answered by concluding there is an
overriding federal policy. The Constitution is a living document meant
to be expanded. But this expansion ought to be consistent with estab-
lished procedure and people should be able to rely on what the Supreme
Court has said.
CONCLUSION
lsPeople v. Defore, 224 N.Y. 13, 150 N.E. 585, 587 (1924).
"'Douglas, Stare Decisis, 49 OOLUM. L. REv. 735, 757 (1949).
,"Darr v. Burford, supra note 114.
'338 U.S. 25 (1949).
-It was overruled by Mapp v. Ohio, supra note 116.
"Bator, Finality in Criminal Law and Federal Habeas Corpus for State Prisoners, 76
HARV. L. REv. 441 (1963), and accompanying text.
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Swanberg: The Writ of Habeas Corpus
1964] NOTES
'24 1t ought to be remembered at thi point that most substantive changes in criminal
law on the constitutional level are made by direct appeal to the Supreme Court.
Thus, any change in habeas corpus procedures will not in any way affect the ways
in which normal law is made and changed.
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