After being convicted of murder following a bench trial and sentenced to sixty years in prison, and after exhausting his state remedies, Angelo Rivera brought this action for federal habeas corpus, and having been turned down by the district judge appeals. There is only one issue, whether the refusal to allow into evidence at Rivera’s murder trial the confession of his co-defendant (who was tried separately), which exculpated Rivera, denied Rivera due process of law.
Early one morning the body of Zelia Simmons was found in an alley in Chicago. She had been beaten to death. A trail of blood led to the residence of Richard Norman. The police arrested him, and he confessed that night. The confession, which stated that he alone had beaten her, was placed in evidence against him at his trial, and he was convicted and sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison. Jeffrey Meger had been with Norman, Zelia Simmons, and Angelo Rivera, the appellant in this case, in a basement room of Norman’s building, where the beating took place. Meger testified that he saw Rivera hit Simmons with a hammer. This testimony was consistent with a statement that Meger had given the police almost a week after the murder. The earliest statements that Meg-er had given had not, it is true, implicated Rivera, but he explained that this was because Rivera had threatened him and it was only after Rivera had been taken into custody that he dared to point the finger at him. Meger’s testimony was the only evidence that Rivera had participated in the murder. Rivera tried to introduce Norman’s confession at his trial, because it exculpated him, but this was refused on the ground that under Illinois law the availability of the out-of-court declarant (Norman) for cross-examination is a
sine qua non
of the admission of hearsay evidence. Norman was unavailable because he intended, if called as a witness in Rivera’s trial, to plead his right not to be forced to incriminate himself.
United States v. Garcia,
Without the confession, it was Rivera’s word against Meger’s. The confession thus was vital evidence. The Supreme Court held in
Chambers v. Mississippi,
At argument the state gave a different reason for excluding Norman’s confession from the Rivera trial—that it was contradicted by Meger’s testimony and therefore was unreliable. There is no “therefore.” Rivera’s whole purpose in wanting to place the confession in evidence was to challenge the reliability of Meger’s testimony. It begs the question to assume that Meger’s testimony was reliable, implying that any contrary evidence would be unreliable. ■ The state gave another silly reason: the confession had been made to the police rather than to a close friend, as in Chambers. The Supreme Court does not sit to decide cases that will control only cases having identical facts. The confession was reliable enough to be used to put Norman away for the rest of his life, and no reason is suggested why, if only it had been made to a close friend—but not otherwise—it would be reliable evidence of Rivera’s innocence as well. The state even intimates—short-sightedly and opportunistically, as it seems to us—that the confession was unreliable because involuntary, Norman having been under the influence of drugs and alcohol when he was interrogated. If his confession was involuntary, Norman is entitled to a new trial at which the confession would be inadmissible. We are certain the state did not mean to concede as much.
The real difference, so far as analysis of hearsay is concerned, between the use of the confession in these two cases, Norman’s and Rivera’s, is, as already suggested, that in Norman’s case it was used to inculpate him and hence it was a statement against penal interest, an established (albeit relatively recently established) exception to the hearsay rule (see Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(3) and Note of Advisory Committee thereto;
Donnelly v. United States,
We attach no significance to the fact that, by disclaiming accomplices, Norman necessarily placed himself at the scene of the crime—an incriminating thing to do, granted, but the
incremental
incriminating
*283
effect of the comment about accomplices was nil, given that Norman had already admitted his guilt. But although it was not against Norman’s penal interest in a strict sense, the failure to inculpate another person in the brutal beating was hardly calculated to incite sympathy for Norman. His incentive, one might think, was to inculpate as many other persons as possible and minimize his own involvement. Even the exculpatory part of the confession, therefore, was against the declarant’s penal interest in a loose but perhaps adequate sense. Cf.
id.
at 252-53;
United States v. Thomas,
United States v. Garris,
We have said in previous cases and will continue saying until the lesson sinks in that the issues in habeas corpus as in other civil cases are framed by the parties, so that if the state waives its best arguments it must live with the consequences.
Wilson v. O’Leary,
Reveesed With Directions.
