Bator 1963
Bator 1963
Bator 1963
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VOLUME 76 JANUARY 1963 NUMBER 3
44I
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442 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 443
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444 HARVARDLAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
A. Finality,in CriminalLitigation
The federal writ of habeas corpus has its roots in the common
law.6 Its function, in the great phrase, is to test "the legality of the
'Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443 (i953), made the principle explicit. In part II
of this article I survey the question whether the pre-i953 law supports the decision
in Brown.
5 This question has recently been the subject of debate among Professors Henry
M. Hart and Curtis R. Reitz and Mr. Justice William J. Brennan. See Hart, Fore-
word: The Time Chart of the Justices, The Supreme Court, i958 Term, 73 HARV. L.
REV. 84 (I959) [hereinafter cited as Hart, Foreword]; Reitz, Federal Habeas Cor-
pus: Impact of an Abortive State Proceeding, 74 HARV.L. REV. I3I5 (I96I) [here-
inafter cited as Reitz, The Abortive State Proceeding]; Brennan, Federal Habeas
Corpus and State Prisoners: An Exercise in Federalism, 7 UTAH L. REV. 423 (ig6i).
Hopefully, some light will be shed on it in a case to be argued at the Supreme Court's
i962 Term, Fay v. United States ex rel. Noia, 3oo F.2d 345 (2d Cir.), cert. granted,
369 U.S. 869 (I962).
I
The Constitution it5elf (art, I, ? 9) guarantees against suspension of the
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1963] FINALITY IN CRIMINALLAW 445
diction if Congress should want explicitly to create it; at least Hamilton thought it
very clear that the Congress could provide for appeal from state courts to lower
federal courts with respect to questions of federal law. THE FEDERALIST No. 82,
at 5I5-i6 (Lodge ed. i888) (Hamilton).
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446 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
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Precisely the same point can be made about rulings of law. As-
suming that there "exists," in an ultimate sense, a "correct"
decision of a question of law, we can never be assured that any
particular tribunal has in the past made it: we can always con-
tinue to ask whether the right rule was applied, whether a new
rule should not have been fashioned.
Surely, then, it is naive and confusing to think of detention as
lawful only if the previous tribunal's proceedings were "correct"
in this ultimate sense. If any detention whatever is to be vali-
dated the concept of "lawfulness" must be defined in terms more
complicated than "actual" freedom from error; or, if you will,
the concept of "freedom from error" must eventually include a
notion that some complex of institutional processes is empowered
definitively to establish whether or not there was error, even
though in the very nature of things no such processes can give
us ultimate assurances:
[L]aw is not a simple concept . . . consisting as it does of rules
distributing authority to make decisions as well as rules that govern
the decisions to be made. There is a sense, therefore, in which a
prisoner is legally detained if he is held pursuant to the judgment
11 Jaffe, Judicial Review: Constitutional and Jurisdictional Fact, 7Q HARV. L.
REV. 953, 966 (1957).
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448 HARVARDLAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
(I953). And see H.L.A. HART, THE CONCEPTOF LAW I39 (I96I): "It is impossible
to provide by rule for the correction of the breach of every rule."
I should at this point make it explicit that my argument in no sense assumes or
requires any so-called relativization of "truth." Our fallibility in perceiving
phenomena or making judgments of value does not logically mean that the
phenomena had no existence or that values may not be "absolute"; the possi-
bility of error does not belie - indeed it assumes - the existence of truth. Simi-
larly, the fact that society allocates competences to make final decisions in no
sense deprives us, from the "outside" as it were, of the power to make judgments
about the correctness of any decision. As H.L.A. Hart has told us, the umpire is
not necessarily correct just because there is no recourse from his ruling. Id. at
I38-39. The general point is an elementary one in the literature of philosophy;
it has recently been made by Popper in his essay, On the Sources of Knowledge
and of Ignorance, Encounter, Sept. i962, p. 42.
13Jaffe, Judicial Review: Questionof Law, 69 HARV. L. REv. 239, 244 (955).
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i9631 FINALITY IN CRIMINALLAW 449
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450 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
to convict does not, in the absence of reason to doubt the trustworthiness of the
confessions, prove Leyra's innocence of the underlying crime.
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1963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 455
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 457
state has furnished no process, much less "due" process, for the
vindication of an alleged federal right. Similarly, if the state
furnishes process, but it is claimed to be meaningless process-
if the totality of state proceduresallegedly did not provide rational
conditions for inquiry into federal-law (or, indeed, state-law)
questions, it seems to me clear that the federal habeas jurisdic-
tion may appropriately examine the allegation.27 Thus, to revert
to my previous examples, if it is alleged on habeas corpus that
the trial judge was bribed or that a mob dominated the trial or
that the prisoner was tortured to plead guilty (or, to give another
instance, that there was knowing use of perjured testimony by
the prosecution), and the state provided no fair process, direct or
collateral, for the testing of these allegations themselves, the
habeas court should proceed to inquire into them and, if it finds
the allegations true, set aside the trial court's conclusions.
Notice that I have again assumed that the question at issue-
that is, the meaningfulness of the state's trial process -was not
itself made the subject of a meaningful inquiry by the state courts.
If a state appellate or collateral court determines on the basis of
a fair investigation that the judge was not bribed or the court not
dominated by a mob or the guilty plea not extorted by torture,
then federal collateral investigation of these questions might con-
stitute mere repetition of inquiry, and further institutional justi-
fication for such repetition would be called for.28
27 Compare the holding in Tot v. United States, 3I9 U.S. 463 (I943), that the
due process clause forbids the creation of evidentiary presumptions where there is
no rational connection between the fact proved and the fact presumed therefrom.
28 The point is made a tricky one by the fact that there are several categories
of claims of violations of federal right. Thus there are what might be called
double-level claims and single-level claims. Claims of violations of due process
because the state trial judge was bribed or dominated by a mob are "double-
level" not only in the sense that, if true, they invalidate all of the findings of the
trial court (including findings with respect to other federal constitutional rights,
e.g., admissibility of a confession), but also because the findings of the trial court
itself with respect to these very allegations should not be deemed conclusive: an
allegedly mob-dominated court's finding that it is not mob-dominated should
surely not immunize that question from subsequent inquiry; and, I submit, the due
process clause requires that the question of mob domination should be passed on
by at least one tribunal (state or federal) which is concededly free of that flaw.
On the other hand, the prisoner may claim that a confession offered by the
prosecution was coerced, or the jury discriminatorily selected. These questions
can be seen as "single-level." Nothing in the nature of these issues prevents the
state trial court from constituting an unbiased and rational tribunal with respect
to their decision, so that, in the absence of an allegation of some other procedural
flaw or absence of state remedy which prevented the fair and rational litigation
of these issues, we do not have here a failure of process. If, then, arguendo,
federal collateral inquiry is to be restricted to the category of cases exhibiting a
failure of state process, an allegation on habeas that the state violated the
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458 HARVARDLAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
One more example which seems to fit under this rubric should
be mentioned because of its cardinal importance. This is the case
where a prisoner alleges that the failure of the state to provide
counsel deprived him of a fair chance to make his defense. Many
commentatorsagree that it is the problem of assistance of counsel
which lies at the heart of the great issue of creating fair procedures
in the states' administration of criminal justice.29 Deprivation of
counsel in cases where the demands of fairness embodied in the
due process clause call for representationby counsel is, I submit,
precisely the kind of error which should deprive a state litiga-
tion of sanctity. It casts doubt on the meaningfulness of the
process provided by the state for the resolution of all the issues
in the case: we cannot say that any question in the case, state or
federal, has had a fair and full litigation, for purposes of finality,
if the defendant is found to require the assistance of counsel be-
cause in the circumstancesof the case he was incapable of making
an adequate defense himself.
Of course we must be careful. The question whether the de-
fendant was entitled to counsel (or, just as frequent, whether he
waived the right) is itself a federal question which, arguably, a
state has, for better or worse, decided, and for this determination
itself finality may be claimed. The difficultyis that, as in our other
examples, the very same failure of process which colors the rest
of the proceedings may, and often does, affect the determination
of whether there was failure of process: if it is found that fairness
required representation,a determinationthat it didn't so require
based on a litigation in which the very same flaw existed cannot
be conclusive, any more than a finding by the judge himself that
defendant's federal constitutional rights would always lead initially to this in-
quiry: viewing the state processes in totality, did the state at any time provide
meaningful process for the testing of the question whether there was such a viola-
tion? If the underlying substantive issue was litigated at trial and does not bear
on the integrity of the trial court's decision of the issue itself (e.g., admissibility
of a confession or jury discrimination), habeas would not lie. If the issue was not
fairly litigated at trial, either because the question was simply unavailable at the
time (e.g., a later discovery of prosecution perjury, or a coerced guilty plea) or
because the issue is of a type invalidating the trial court's own decision of it (e.g.,
mob domination, or bribery of the judge), but the state provided a concededly
unflawed tribunal to test it on appeal or collateral attack, habeas again would not
lie. But if the state provides no process at all (as where there is no state post-
conviction remedy to test the question whether there was prosecution perjury), or
provides only meaningless process (as where the allegation of mob domination is
not canvassed by any state tribunal concededly free of such domination), habeas
would be available.
29 See, e.g., Schaefer, Federalism and State Criminal Procedure, 70 HARV. L.
REV. I, 8 (I956).
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the defendant claims, occurred just over the state line in New Hampshire. If the
issue of where the act took place is fairly and fully litigated before the Vermont
court, its decision of that question should probably not be subject to collateral
attack.
35 See RESTATEMENT, JUDGMENTS ? IO (I942):
(I) Where a court has jurisdiction over the parties and determines that it
has jurisdiction over the subject matter, the parties cannot collaterally attack
the judgment on the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction over the
subject matter, unless the policy underlying the doctrine of res judicata is out-
weighed by the policy against permitting the court to act beyond its jurisdic-
tion.
(2) Among the factors appropriate to be considered in determinra tbt
collateral attack should be permitted are that
(a) the lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter was clear;
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(e) the policy against the court's acting beyond its jurisdiction is strong.
36 See p. 469 and note 65 infra.
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habeas corpus is not the appropriate remedy." Smith v. United States, 187 F.2d
192, I97 (D.C. *Cir. 1950), cert. denied, 34I U.S. 927 (I95I). See also Note, 6i
HARV. L. REv. 657, 668 (I948):
[T]he availability of habeas corpus is determined by whether the particular
question of unfairness has previously been litigated in the light of all informa-
tion presently available. . . . Wherever all evidence of alleged unfairness was
fully litigated before a competent tribunal, subsequent collateral attack by
means of habeas corpus is not ordinarily permissible. Such complete litigation
of the alleged unfairness is itself the fairness to which the defendant was entitled.
44 I72 F.2d 339 (2d Cir. I949), cert. denied, 339 U.S. 924 (I950).
45 I72 F.2d at 34I. Judge Hand then proceeded to state as alternative grounds of
decision that the prisoner had not exhausted his state remedies, and that the Supreme
Court had denied certiorari after the state postconviction proceeding. The latter
ground would not be considered proper today in view of the holding of Brown v.
Allen, 344 U.S. 443 (I953), that denial of certiorari by the Supreme Court is not
to be taken as an expression of views on the merits.
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1963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 465
44) in order to prevent the Supreme Court from passing on the constitutionality of
reconstruction legislation in McCardle's case. See Ex parte McCardle, 74 U.S. (7
Wall.) 506 (I869), upholding the validity of and honoring the ouster of jurisdiction.
The Court continued, however, to consider original habeas petitions from prisoners
under the act of I789. Ex parte Yerger, 75 U.S. (8 Wall.) 85 (I869). The Court's
power to hear appeals in the case of state prisoners was restored by the Act of
March 3, i885, ch. 353, 23 Stat. 437.
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it merely stated that the courts of the United States "shall have
power to issue writs of ... habeas corpus . ." 50 It is thus
not surprisingthat we soon find the SupremeCourt accepting the
black-letter principle of the common law that the writ was simply
not available at all to one convicted of crime by a court of com-
petent jurisdiction.5' Ex parte Watkins 52 is the great case. The
Court there refused, on habeas, to reach the merits of the allega-
tion that the prisoner was convicted pursuant to an indictment
which failed to state a crime against the United States:
A judgment,in its nature,concludesthe subject on which it is
rendered,and pronouncesthe law of the case. The judgmentof a
Courtof recordwhosejurisdictionis final, is as conclusiveon all
the world as the judgmentof this Courtwould be. . It puts
an end to inquiry concerningthe fact, by deciding it. . . An im-
prisonmentunder a judgmentcannot be unlawful,unless that
judgmentbe an absolutenullity; and it is not a nullity if the
Courthas generaljurisdictionof the subject,althoughit shouldbe
erroneous.53
The principle is clear: substantive error on the part of a court
of competent jurisdiction does not render a detention "illegal" for
purposes of habeas corpus, because, to use Chief Justice Mar-
shall's striking phrase, "the law trusts that court with the whole
subject." 54 But limitations on this principlebegan later to appear.
50Act of Sept. 24, I789, ch. 20, ? I4, i Stat. 8i. The limitation added was
that the writ "shall in no case extend to prisoners in gaol, unless they are in custody,
under or by colour of the authority of the United States .. ."
51 The principle that a person convicted by a court of general criminal jurisdic-
tion is not entitled to habeas corpus derives from the Habeas Corpus Act of i679,
3I Car. 2, C. 2, which expressly excepted "persons convict or in Execution by legal
process." It has been suggested that this act did not purport to deny habeas to
convicted persons but, rather, left their rights to be worked out through the pre-
existing common law writ, and that the contrary view derives from a curious mis-
reading of the act by early legislatures and judges due to a misplaced parenthe-
sis. See Brief of Professor Paul A. Freund for Respondent, pp. 30-32, United States
v. Hayman, 342 U.S. 205 ( I952 ).
52 28 U.S. (3 Pet.) I93 (I830). Watkinswas preceded by Ex parte Kearney, 20
U.S. (7 Wheat.) 38 (I822), where the petitioner had been judged guilty of contempt
for failure to answer questions on the witness stand. On habeas the Court refused
to reexamine the contention that the refusal was privileged under the fifth amend-
ment, since the writ is not "a proper remedy, where a party was committed for a
contempt by a Court of competent jurisdiction." Id. at 44-45. Oddly enough, the
Court did not refer to the famous Bushell's Case, Vaughan 135, 124 Eng. Rep.
ioo6 (C.P. I670) (which was cited at argument), where the Common Pleas, on
habeas corpus, discharged a juryman who had been imprisoned for contempt at the
Old Bailey on the ground that he returned an improper verdict.
53 28 U.S. (3 Pet.) at 202.
54 Id. at 206.
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but reserved the question of "how far this case may be regarded as law for the
guidance of this court." On the merits, the Court upheld the constitutionality of
the provisions of the Civil Rights Acts under which the indictments were brought.
61 Ex parte Parks, 93 U.S. I8 (I876). See also Ex parte Yarbrough, II0 U.S.
65I (I884), where the Court, following Watkins and Parks, refused on habeas
to inquire whether the acts alleged in the indictment (conspiracy to prevent
Negroes from voting) constituted an offense under the Civil Rights Act, but did,
in accordance with Siebold, pass on and uphold the constitutionality of the act.
The anomalous result of the rules of Yarbrough and Siebold was, of course, that
on habeas the Court had jurisdiction to pass only on the abstract constitutional
issue in the case; presumably it had to assume that the acts charged in the
indictment were in fact forbidden by the statute, even if it thought that they
plainly were not so forbidden. One may question the wisdom of so shaping a juris-
diction that the Court is prevented from passing on possibly dispositive nonconstitu-
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the other questions of fact and law in the case. Similarly it is hard
to see the sense in the rule which made the availability of habeas
turn on whether the error related to the sentence rather than the
judgment of conviction itself, and even the usefulness of that
principle was undermined as soon as the Court expanded it to
pass not only on the validity of the sentence as such but to reach
questions such as the need for indictment (as in Wilson and
Bain).67
Yet I suggest that it would be a mistake to throw up one's
hands and to see the history as reflectingmerely a steady softening
and expansion of the concept of "jurisdiction" so as to allow
collateral attack on an open-ended basis wherever the courts
deemed it appropriate. Certain guideposts must be kept in mind:
i. The Court never abandoned, in this period, paying at least
lipservice to the principle that the legality of detention may not
be tested simply in terms of whether error occurred in previous
proceedings. It carefully adhered to the concept of institutional
competence as bearing on and involved in the problem of the law-
fulness of a detention. The essential touchstone continued to be
that the writ of habeas corpus was not to be used as a writ of
error, and that decisions of competent tribunals as to issues of fact
or law bearing on conviction should be final.68
2. The strict jurisdictional test in fact continued to govern
except in two categories of cases: where the allegation was that
the conviction was had under an unconstitutional statute, and
where the Court viewed the problem in terms of the illegality of
the sentence rather than that of the judgment. Now I do not
claim that these categories are easily justified today; but viewed
in a historical context they are not completely unintelligible. In
an era when the law was not "made" but "found," unconstitu-
tional statutes were thought of as "void," as nonexistent, in a
rather literal way: they created no law at all. It was an easy step
in this intellectual climate to come to the conclusion that a judg-
ment under such a statute, too, has a nonexistent quality, as if
there were no competence in the premises at all. Again, it is pos-
sible that the sanctity of a "judgment" of conviction was not
ascribed to the sentence because it was felt that the judge's
sentencing function is not "judicial" in the same sense as his
decision of the issues bearing on the substantive outcome of the
67 See note 56 supra. It is also hard to see a principled distinction between
Lange and Bigelow, both ultimately involving questions of double jeopardy.
See notes 55 and 62 supra.
68See, e.g., Harlan v. McGourin, 218 U.S. 442 (1910).
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('953).
76The influence of the fact that there was no possibility of appeal and thus
no supervision of the lower courts in their decisions on important issues of
federal law was made plain in Mr. Justice Bradley's opinion in Ex parte Siebold,
first holding that on habeas the Court will examine the constitutionality of the
statute creating the offense:
A conviction under [an unconstitutional statute] . . . cannot be a legal
cause of imprisonment. It is true, if no writ of error lies, the judgment may
be final, in the sense that there may be no means of reversing it. But
personal liberty is of so great moment in the eye of the law that the
judgment of an inferior court affecting it is not deemed so conclusive but
that . . . the question of the court's authority to try and imprison the
party may be reviewed on habeas corpus by a superior court or judge
having authority to award the writ.
IOOU.S. at 376-77. (Emphasis added.)
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Finally, some cases decided during this period seem to hold ex-
plicitly that the act of I867 did not empower the federal courts
on habeas corpus to redetermine the merits of federal questions
- even constitutional questions - which did not go to the juris-
diction of the committingcourt. In re Wood 98 is the earliest99
and leading case. Wood, a Negro, was convicted by a New York
court of murder, and his conviction affirmed by the Court of
Appeals.'00 After his conviction he allegedly discovered that the
grand jury which returned his indictment and the petit jury which
tried him were drawn from lists from which Negroes were system-
atically excluded. This flaw was made the subject of a motion
for new trial, which was denied, and Wood then sought habeas
in the federal court. Dismissal of the writ was affirmed by the
Supreme Court. Mr. Justice Harlan pointed out that there was
no contention that the New York statute regulating the selection
of juries was unconstitutional. As to the practice of discrimination
in jury selections, he affirmed the established principle that it
violates the Constitution.'0' But whether such discrimination
existed here "was a question which the trial court was entirely
competent to decide, and its determinationcould not be reviewed
. . . upon a writ of habeas corpus, without making that writ serve
the purposes of a writ of error. No such authority is given to the
Circuit Courts . . . by the statutes defining . . . their jurisdic-
tion." State courts often decide questions which "involve the
construction of" the Constitution and the "determinationof rights
asserted under it." "But that does not justify an interferencewith
its proceedings . . . upon a writ of habeas corpus . . . either dur-
bringing the case to the Court on writ of error. See also McElvaine v. Brush,
I42 U.S. I55 (I89I) (upholding on habeas constitutionality of state statute provid-
ing for the solitary confinement of a prisoner pending execution of sentence of
death; no mention of need for exhaustion of or availability of state remedies).
98 I40 U.S. 278 (I89I).
9 The ruling in Wood was foreshadowed by Ex parte Crouch, I12 U.S. 178
(i884). There is, however, some obscurity about the jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court in that case. The decision was certainly not one under the old act of I789,
since the detention was pursuant to state, not federal, law. The Court implied that
the petition lay under the act of I867; but it seemed to overlook the fact that its
appellate jurisdiction under that act was still under suspension.
100 I23 N.Y. 632 (I890). It is unclear whether the appeal was decided before
or after the denial of the motion for new trial.
'o' The Court quoted from the opinions in Neal v. Delaware, I03 U.S. 370
(i88o), and Virginia v. Rives, I00 US. 313 (i879), to the effect that the fourteenth
amendment guarantees an accused selection of grand and petit jurors without
racial discrimination. I40 U.S. at 284-85.
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ing or after the trial in the state court." 102 And the Court con-
tinued:
If the questionof the exclusionof citizensof the Africanracefrom
the lists of grand and petit jurors had been made during the
trial . . . and erroneouslydecided against the appellant, such error
in decisionwouldnot have madethe judgmentof convictionvoid,
or his detention under it illegal. . . . Nor would that error, of
itself, have authorized the Circuit Court . . . upon writ of habeas
corpus, to review the decision or disturb the custody . . . . The
remedy . . . was to sue out a writ of errorfrom this court . .. .103
Wood was followed by opinions denying the competence of the
court on habeas to decide the questions of inadequacy of counsel
and discrimination in selection of jurors in In re Jugiro,104 the
latter question in Andrews v. Swartz,'05 and the question of
alleged federal constitutional flaw in the indictment in Bergemann
v. Backer.'06 Similarly, the Court declined to pass on habeas on
the question of the constitutionality of Wisconsin procedure with
respect to jury verdicts on the ground that the allegation was of
"error committed in the exercise of jurisdiction, and one which
does not present a jurisdictional defect, remediable by the
writ . . . 107
102
I40 U.S. at 285-86. It may be argued that the result in Wood rests on the
fact that the petitioner failed to secure a decision of his federal claim in the state
courts and it was consequently forfeited for purposes of habeas. But the language of
the opinion is plainly and wholly inconsistent with the notion that habeas would
have been proper to test the federal issue had the state courts decided it: the entire
thrust of the opinion is that the issue is not cognizable on habeas at all.
103 Id. at 287. The Court also had to meet the allegation that the state had
failed to give the prisoner a meaningful opportunity to raise his constitutional claim
in the state courts. As to this, the Court disagreed with the petitioner's reading of
New York law (id. at 287-89), and added as an independent ground that, under
Royall, the prisoner should have tested this question (that is, the availability of
state corrective process) in the state courts. Id. at 289-90. The Court's disposition
of this point would certainly be considered questionable today in view of the fact
that Wood was not represented by counsel.
104 I40 U.S. 29I (I89I):
The alleged assignment . . of one as his counsel who . . had not been
admitted or qualified to practice . . . ; the misdescription in the indictment
. . ., and the exclusion from the list of grand and petit jurors of citizens
. . . of the same race with appellant, were all matters occurring in the course
of the proceedings and trial in a court of competent jurisdiction, proceeding
under [constitutional] statutes . . . . The errors, if any ... did not affect
its jurisdiction . . . and cannot be reached by habeas corpus.
Id. at 296-97.
105 I56 U.S. 272 (I895). This case seems to ignore the possible appropriate-
ness of testing a "nonjurisdictional" federal question on the merits if the totality
of state process fails to provide a defendant with a meaningful opportunity to do
so in the state system.
106 I57 U.S. 655 (I895).
107 In re Eckart, i66 U.S. 48I, 483 (I897). The Court relied on cases involving
federal prisoners such as In re Belt and Ex parte Bigelow.
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But he saw that the question whether "a trial is in fact dominated
110 If I understand him correctly, Professor Reitz is in agreement with my
view of the situation at this time. See Reitz, The Abortive State Proceeding, 74
HARV.L. REV. 1315, 1327 (I96I). I have found only two cases whose holdings
may be thought to shade these principles. In re Converse, I37 U.S. 624 (I891),
seemingly passes on the merits of a state prisoner's nonjurisdictional due process
allegations; the opinion does not discuss the problem of habeas jurisdiction at all.
The opinion in Felts v. Murphy, 20I U.S. 123 (I906), denying habeas to a state
prisoner, is a confusing and ambiguous mixture of the points that the state court
did not lack jurisdiction and that there was no denial of due process.
i 237 U.S. 309 (I9I5).
112
Frank v. State, I4i Ga. 243, 280, 80 S.E. ioi6, I034 (1914).
113
237 U.S. at 335.
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by a mob" is, after all, a question, and that decision of that ques-
tion against the petitioner by a competent and unbiased tribunal
through fair process may, on collateral inquiry, itself be deemed
the process that is "due." It is, in other words, relevant to the
question of the unlawfulness of a detention for purposes of habeas
corpus whether the state has supplied "corrective process" for
the very purpose of determining the federal question raised.114
Here the prisoner's allegations were considered by the Georgia
supreme court under conditions which were concededly free from
any suggestion of mob domination, and found by that court, on
independent inquiry, to be groundless.1"5 It need not be held,
continued the Court, that the Georgia court's decision was, tech-
nically, res judicata; 116 but
this does not mean that that decision may be ignored or disre-
garded. To do this . . . would be not merely to disregard comity,
but to ignore the essential question before us, which is not the guilt
or 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 ....117
114
[I]f the State, supplying no corrective process, carries into execution a
judgment of death or imprisonment based upon a verdict . . . produced by
mob domination, the State deprives the accused of his life or liberty without
due process of law.
But the State may supply such corrective process as to it seems proper.
[bid. See also id. at 327-28, 332-33.
115 Id. at 333.
118Id. at 335-36. The Court pointed out that the doctrine of exhaustion of
state remedies is intelligible only upon such a basis:
It follows as a logical consequence [of the exhaustion principle] that where, as
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cedurally by the fact that the new habeas corpus procedure created by the act of
I867 for the first time plainly authorized the federal courts to inquire dehors the
state-court record; previously the prisoner had to show on the face of the record
that the committing court lacked jurisdiction. See Frank v. Mangum, 237 U.S. at
329-3Q. As the Court stated in Frank, these procedural changes "substitute for the
bare legal review that seems to have been the limit of judicial authority . . . a
more searching investigation, in which the applicant is put upon his oath to set
forth the truth of the matter respecting the causes of his detention, and the court,
upon determining the actual facts, is to 'dispose of the party as law and justice
require."' Id. at 330-3I. The adequacy of a state's corrective process will, of
course, often raise questions not determinable on the face of the state record; such
an inquiry was thus first made possible by the new act. The expansive procedure
authorized by the statute may in turn also explain the widened substantive scope
the Court was ascribing to the writ.
121 Mr. Justice Holmes' dissent in the Frank case seems to me striking pre-
dominantly because of his refusal to come to grips with the issue posed by Mr.
Justice Pitney. He stated that the "single question . . . is whether a petition
alleging that the trial took place in the midst of a mob savagely and manifestly
intent on a single result, is shown on its face unwarranted . . . ." and declared that
it is the "duty" of the Court on habeas to declare "lynch law as little valid where
practiced by a regularly drawn jury as when administered by one elected by a
mob intent on death." 237 U.S. at 349, 350. And he argued:
Whatever disagreement there may be as to the scope of the phrase "due
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488 HARVARDLAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
Moore) and McReynolds, were the only members of the Frank court still sitting
when Moore was decided.
127 Hicks v. State, I43 Ark. I58, 220 S.W. 308, cert. denied, 254 U.S. 630
(I920). For a detailed analysis of the facts and proceedings in Moore v. Dempsey,
see the two articles on the case by Waterman and Overton, The Aftermath of
Moore v. Dempsey and Federal Habeas Corpus Statutes and Moore v. Dempsey,
both published originally in I933 and both reprinted at 6 ARK. L. REV. I (I95I).
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was precluded from examining the merits of the contention on appeal. See Water-
man & Overton, supra note I27, at I4.
129 The state court continued: "The trials were had according to law, the jury
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494 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
the effect that failure to provide counsel ousted the trial court of "jurisdiction."
142
I do not mean to indicate that I would automatically disregard a previous
adjudication that a prisoner has waived his right to counsel merely because in that
adjudication itself the prisoner had no counsel: any such doctrine would really
undermine the very possibility of waiver. The problem of circularity must, it
seems to me, be solved by varying the scope of review. If the original record
makes a rather clear showing that waiver was intelligently based on fair choice,
and no reason is suggested why that record ought to be suspect, I would see no
reason why the court on habeas should proceed to a de novo inquiry: it could take
the facts as found in the original court. But if the record itself indicates great doubt
whether waiver could fairly be implied, I would think it unfair to take the matter
as concluded by a proceeding where the defendant did not have counsel. I see, in
other words, no escape from the need to make some judgment about the merits.
See pp. 458-59 and note 30 supra.
1433I2 U.S. 275 (I94I).
14 3I6 U.S. IOI (I942).
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vide a fair forum for the litigation of any question whatever, much
less the issue of coercion itself. It is thus not surprising that the
Court held that such an allegation must be litigated in postconvic-
tion collateral proceedings if it is ever to be litigated. The basis
of the decisions was made clear in Waley, which finally dispensed
with the fiction of "jurisdiction" as applicable to this kind of case:
The issue here was appropriately raised by the habeas corpus
petition. The facts relied on are dehors the record and their effect
on the judgment was not open to consideration and review on
appeal. In such circumstances the use of the writ in the federal
courts to test the constitutional validity of a conviction for crime
is not restricted to those cases where the judgment of conviction
is void for want of jurisdiction of the trial court to render it. It
extends also to those exceptional cases where the conviction has
been in disregard of the constitutional rights of the accused, and
where the writ is the only effective means of preservinghis rights.145
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496 LAWREVIEW
IIARVARD [Vol. 76:441
federal district court before resorting to this Court by petition for
habeas corpus.'47
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINALLAW 497
note I49 supra. The Court never explained what circumstances would be sufficiently
extraordinary to justify collateral inquiry even after the question has been decided
by the state courts and review declined or afforded by the Supreme Court; nothing
suggests that the Court was not referring to questions of jurisdiction traditionally
subject to relitigation on collateral attack.
"I Some of the language in Mr. Justice Reed's opaque opinion in Darr v.
Burford, 339 U.S. 200 (1950), suggests that he assumed that this was the function
of the writ.
In Wade v. Mayo, 334 U.S. 672 (1948), the Court held habeas available to test
the question whether the defendant had been denied the assistance of counsel at
trial in violation of the Constitution, and this in spite of the fact that the question
was litigated in a state habeas proceeding in which the defendant was in fact
represented. The Court's opinion makes clear, however, that at the time the state
habeas petition was denied it was wholly unclear whether the decision was grounded
on the merits of the federal question or on a holding that state habeas was un-
available in view of the defendant's failure to appeal from his conviction. (The
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 50I
"seen fit" to "give to the lower federal courts power to inquire into
federal claims, by way of habeas corpus," and that it would be
"inadmissible to deny the use of the writ merely because a State
court has passed on a federal constitutional issue." 169 But these
are mere statements of conclusion; they ignore completely that
such a purpose cannot be derived automatically from either the
language or history of the I867 act, and that the act was not so
understood in the first eighty years of its history; they ignore,
too, the explicit ruling in In re Wood 170 that at least the question
of jury discrimination in violation of the Constitution is not a
question open on collateral attack if opportunity to litigate it was
afforded in the state system and on direct"review.
Oddly enough, much of the discussion in the two majority opin-
ions in Brown deals not with the question why a state's adjudica-
tion of the law should be disregarded, but why the state's ad-
judication of the facts should not necessarily be disregarded. Mr.
Justice Reed states that no new hearing as to the facts is necessary
if the district court is satisfied that the state process has given
fair consideration and what procedurally may be deemed fairness, may
have misconceived a federal constitutional right.
Id. at 5o8.
169 Id. at 508-09, 5I3. Mr. Justice Frankfurter asserts that the rule (as he
states it in Brown) is less liberal than the English practice; under the federal
statute (28 U.S.C. ? 2244 (1958) ) a judge may take into account previous
refusals to issue the writ, whereas in England the prisoner may, in the famous
phrase, "go from judge to judge" repeatedly, any one decision to discharge being
final. 344 U.S. at 509. Professor Pollak, too, sees the federal writ as narrow
compared to the "extraordinary liberality" of the English practice. Pollak, Pro-
posals To Curtail Federal Habeas Corpus for State Prisoners: Collateral Attack on
the Great Writ, 66 YALE L.J. 50, 65 (I956). But this ignores the crucial fact that,
though it is true that in England if a prisoner has a claim cognizable on habeas
corpus, he may then make repeated applications, the category of such cognizable
claims is extremely narrow compared to our law as defined in Brown v. Allen.
It is thus misleading to speak of the English practice as more liberal than ours
in the context of the rule of Brown v. Allen. (In fact, the right under English
law to go from judge to judge was itself later somewhat curtailed by the judgment
in In re Hastings (No. 2)', [I959] i Q.B. 358 (1958), and substantially restricted
by the Administration of Justice Act, I960, 8 & 9 Eliz. 2, c. 65, ? I4(2).)
170 I40 U.S. 278 (I89I); see pp. 481-82 supra.
Mr. Justice Frankfurter's opinion in Brown is particularly surprising in light
of his own dissent, two years before, in Jennings v. Illinois, 342 U.S. I04, 112
(I95I). There the Justice had argued that a writ of certiorari to the Supreme
Court of Illinois should be dismissed for want of a properly presented federal
question:
It is true that petitioners allege they were convicted on the basis of
coerced confessions . . . in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. But so
far as appears from the record, these issues were fully litigated and determined
at the trials. Until the cases came to this Court, no showing was made, or
sought to be made, that circumstances were such as to warrant a new and
independent inquiry into those determinations as a matter of federal right.
Id. at II5.
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Pollak, supra note I69, at 66 ("The articulate premises of the attack on the
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complaints are in any event beside the mark since very few pris-
oners are actually released by the federal courts.'78 But the very
unanimity of the resentmentamong state law-enforcementofficials
and judges,179 many of them, surely, as conscientious in their
adherence to the Constitution and as intellectually honest as their
critics, counsels, not against the jurisdiction, but against its in-
discriminate expansion without principled justification. Note
further that it was not state officials but the Judicial Conference
of the United States, headed by Chief Justice Warren, which in
I955 adopted a report of a committee consisting of Circuit
Judges Parker, Phillips and Stephens and District Judges Hooper,
Vaught and Wyzanski, which stated that the expansion of the
habeas jurisdiction has
greatly interferedwith the procedureof the State courts,delay-
ing in many cases the proper enforcementof their judgments.
Whereadequateprocedureis providedby State law for the han-
dling of such matters,it is clearthat the remedyshouldbe sought
in the State courts with any review only by the Supreme
Court
and recommended, inter alia, statutory preclusion of the writ
where a federal question was "raisedand determined"in the state-
court system.180
habeas corpus writ are grounded in the supposed first principles of judicial
finality and of the sound management of a federal union. Just below the surface,
however, lurks the less plainly articulated but perhaps more deeply felt belief
that the Supreme Court has grievously erred in the sequence of great cases
which utilized habeas corpus to probe trial records for fundamental error.").
178 See Brennan, Federal Habeas Corpus and State Prisoners: An Exercise
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But this does not meet the issue. Of course federal law is higher
than state law. But that does not automatically tell us that it
is better for federal judges to pronounce it than state judges,
much less that once a state judge has done so on a fair and
rational investigation, this should be disregarded and done over
again by a federal judge. Nothing about the substantive superior-
ity of federal law tells us why, in Leyra v. Denno,'82the admissi-
bility of a confession should have been redeterminedby a federal
court after the question was exhaustively canvassed pursuant to
the applicable federal law by the state courts in as conscientious
a manner as possible and opportunity had on a full and adequate
record to secure review in the United States Supreme Court.
The problem of federalism created by Brown v. Allen should
not be seen in terms of the possible irritation of state judges at
Sess. (I955)) received the unanimous support of the Judicial Conference of the
United States, the Conference of Chief Justices, the Association of Attorneys
General, and the section of judicial administration of the ABA; it was also
supported by the Justice Department. See id. at 7. See also Clark, J., concurring
in United States ex rel. Caminito v. Murphy, 222 F.2d 698, 706 (2d Cir. I955):
I doubt the utility for dignified or effective law enforcement of review and
overturn by any federal judge of the reasoned conclusions reached by a
whole hierarchy of state tribunals. . . . [0] ur sphere of superintendence
should not extend to state police activities; there the state courts should have
the burden, subject only to certiorari by the Supreme Court in the few
cases where needed. Consequently the pending legislation to that end .
seems wise policy.
The bill was passed by the House in both the 84th and 85th 'Congresses (see 102
CONG. REC. 940 (1956); I04 CONG. REC. 4675 (I958)), but died both times in
the Senate. I might say that I do not mean to intimate approval of this particu-
lar bill; in fact it was so drafted that it would probably have created more
problems than it solved. The point is only that the wide support the bill gained
is expressive of the very real and profound concern which the present habeas
jurisdiction arouses.
181344 U.S. at 5IO.
182
347 U.S. 556 (I954); see pp. 449-50 supra.
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189 U.S. CONST. art. III. See HART & WECHSLER, THE FEDERAL COURTS AND
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5I4 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
201365 U.S. 534 (ig6i). For an admirable comment on this case see The
Supreme Court, I960 Term, 75 HARV.L. REV. 40, I73 (1I96I). The analysis of
the case made in the text was first prompted by suggestions in Mr. Richard
Posner's paper cited in note I74 supra.
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is the aim, should it not hold for civil litigants with federal ques-
tions in their cases which the Supreme Court has chosen not to
review, and similarly for state criminal defendants who have
been fined rather than jailed? Further, what about the claims
for equality of treatment of federal prisoners (or, indeed, federal
litigants) whose petitions for certiorari have been denied? For
if the rationale of Brown v. Allen is that one has a right to test
federal constitutional questions in at least one federal constitu-
tional court, then prisoners convicted by federal courts would
plainly not be permitted on collateral attack to relitigate issues
previously determinedby the committing courts 206 (thus making
the category of questions cognizable on collateral attack turn
on whether one is held pursuant to state or federal law). Yet
these federal prisoners, too, could claim that they are badly
treated compared to those who have had their cases reviewed
by the Supreme Court.
Finally, do these possible anomalies not raise still a further
question? Was it institutionally sound for the Court to assume
such a forward role in the complicated and sensitive task of
making "as prudent use as we can . . . of the important national
resources represented by the federal courts"? 207 Is the creation
of a replica for certiorari in the case of state prisoners derivable
federal question, deciding in favor of Goss and declaring the mittimus in the
hands of the sheriff to be null and void. I take it that the implication of the
decision is that every federal constitutional question involving "rights, privileges
and immunities" which has been fully adjudicated by state courts in civil or
criminal proceedings may be redetermined by a federal district court on collateral
attack under the Civil Rights Act and the federal-question jurisdiction.
206 The Supreme Court has not passed on the question whether Brown v.
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of Chief Justices, June I953, printed in Hearings 92-93. The report and its appendix
recommended many improvements in state criminal procedure, both in trial
courts and in postconviction proceedings, see id. at 93, I03-08, which were
unanimously approved by the 'Conference.
214
Reitz, Federal Habeas Corpus, io8 U. PA. L. REV. 46I (I960).
215 Both Mr. Justice Brennan and Justice Schaefer have argued that federal
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 523
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526 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
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i963] FINALITY IN CRIMINAL LAW 527
chance, in the fear that justice has miscarried. But has it mis-
carried if he has had one meaningful go-around and the district
judge can be morally assured that he was guilty? I acknowledge
that the purpose of the rule of automatic reversal is to deter
uncivilized police behavior and to keep the courts' own processes
unsullied; but the claims for deterrence do not strike me as so
inexorable that we must honor them in cases where our funda-
mental purpose, in fact our justification for inquiry, is, after all,
to do our best by the defendant; nor can I take too seriously the
idea that the integrity of the legal process will be sullied if a
court in effect finds that for purposes of the extraordinaryhabeas
jurisdiction the admission of the confession - previously tested
by fair process - was harmless error.220
I continue to resist, in sum, the notion that the inquiry on
habeas should be mere repetition, an exact replica, of what has
gone before. I do not see that as institutionally justified. If we
wish to have an ultimate recourse, if we want to grant the federal
courts a roving extraordinarycommission to undo injustice, then,
it sems to me, all the factors which bear on justice should be
put on the scales. If Brown v. Allen is to remain the law, it
should be modified to make clear that where a federal constitu-
220
The approach I suggest might have a further value -it might be a start
to the solution of a problem of collateral attack which I have not discussed at
all and which needs separate and rounded treatment in an independent article.
This is the baffling problem of the case where there has been a change or
reversal in constitutional doctrine between the time of conviction and the time
when habeas is sought. If a man was convicted, under the regime of Wolf v.
Colorado, with the aid of evidence illegally obtained from him, is his detention
"unlawful" for purposes of habeas corpus now that Wolf has been overruled?
If Betts v. Brady dies, will state prisoners who under the doctrine of that case
were not entitled to counsel be deemed to be illegally detained? Surely it would
be wholly impossible to administer a doctrine which extended Brown v. Allen
by telling the states not only that it is their duty under the due process clause
to decide every federal question "right" but that it is their further duty to
decide it "right" in accordance not only with today's law but that of tomorrow
too. On the other hand, a rigid rule that collateral attack is never proper
where there has been a change in the applicable federal constitutional doctrine
will often offend our sense of justice. May we not find an acceptable accommoda-
tion by according the district judge a large discretion to determine whether
justice in the individual case would be served by release? This would involve
not only an assessment of the guilt or innocence of the prisoner but also
the question whether the new constitutional doctrine has as its principal purpose
the safeguarding of the innocent or rather a different social purpose: i.e., deter-
rence of unlawful police conduct.
The "retroactive" nature of the ruling in Mapp v. Ohio has been discussed
recently in two admirable articles: Traynor, Mapp v. Ohio at Large in the
Fifty States, [i962] DUKE L.J. 3I9; Bender, The Retroactive Effect of an
Overruling Constitutional Decision: Mapp v. Ohio, I IO U. PA. L. REV. 650
(I962).
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528 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 76:44I
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