This case requires us to consider once again the constitutional standards by which the actions of counsel retained to defend the accused in a state court proceeding are to be measured when the lawyer has been shown to have been derelict in his duties. Antonio Perez brought this habeas corpus petition attacking a seven year sentence imposed after a jury verdict in a Florida court. The sole ground of error alleged is that retained counsel 1 failed to perfect his appeal, after promising Perez to do so and falsely stating in open court at the time of sentencing that a notice of appeal had already been filed.
After failing to secure habeas relief in the Florida District Court of Appeal, Perez filed a petition with the United States District Court, alleging that he had been denied the reasonably effective assistance of counsel, guaranteed by the sixth amendment, and that the proceeding was rendered fundamentally unfair by his lawyer’s failure to perfect an appeal, in violation of his right to due process under the fourteenth amendment. The district court, after finding that Perez had exhausted the available state remedies, held that Perez’s sixth amendment rights had not been violated because the state neither knew of counsel’s failure nor was involved in his dereliction; however, the court agreed that Perez had been denied due process of law under the fourteenth amendment, and granted habeas corpus on that basis.
The state has appealed from the order granting habeas corpus, contending that Perez did not exhaust available state remedies and that, under the law of this circuit, counsel’s failure to appeal his conviction did not render the proceedings fundamentally unfair. While we agree that Perez exhausted the available state remedies, and that he was not entitled to the protection of the sixth amendment, we are precedent- *161 bound to reverse the grant of habeas corpus.
The court’s finding that Perez exhausted available state remedies is manifestly correct. The state pointed out that the Supreme Court of Florida has not had an opportunity to review its 1967 decision in which it rejected incompetence of retained counsel as a valid basis for post-conviction relief.
Cappetta v. Wainwright,
Fla.1967,
In an en banc decision, the circuit examined the relationship between claims based on counsel’s dereliction brought under the fourteenth amendment as a result of its direct guarantee of due process and those that invoke it because it also incorporates sixth amendment protection.
Fitzgerald v. Estelle,
5 Cir. en banc 1974,
When the “incorporated sixth” is invoked, there must be state involvement to constitute a denial of the right to counsel:
To find state involvement in retained counsel’s conduct which is adjudged to be less than reasonably effective, yet not so grossly deficient as to render the proceedings fundamentally unfair, it must be shown that some responsible state official connected with the criminal proceeding who could have remedied the conduct failed in his duty to accord justice to the accused. That the trial judge and the prosecutor have such a capacity and duty is unquestionable. Therefore, if the trial judge or the prosecutor can be shown to have actually known that a particular defendant is receiving incompetent representation and takes no remedial action, the state action requirement is satisfied. If they directly participate in the incompetency, it is even more so. Furthermore, if the incompetency of a retained attorney’s representation is so apparent that a reasonably attentive official of the state should have been aware of and could have corrected it then again the state action requirement is satisfied.
Id.
at 1337.
See also United States v. Childs,
5 Cir. 1978,
*162
In at least one case decided since
Fitzgerald
this circuit has granted relief because state trial officials had actual or constructive notice of the private counsel’s incompetence. In
Cantrell v. Alabama,
5 Cir. 1977,
In contrast, panels of this court have been unable to find sufficient state involvement in other situations. In
Malone v. Alabama,
5 Cir. 1975,
Perez contends that state trial officials knew or should have been aware of the incompetence of his lawyer when the attorney asserted at sentencing that a notice of appeal had already been filed when in fact the notice had not been, and never was, prepared. If a notice of appeal had been filed prior to sentencing, it would not have preserved Perez’s rights under Florida law as it was interpreted at the time of trial.
State ex rel. Faircloth v. Cross,
Fla.1970,
It is apparent that the state was not so clearly apprised of the incompetence of Perez’s lawyer as were the state officials in
Cantrell.
On the other hand, the lawyer’s statement that an appeal had already been filed, made at a time when such a notice of appeal clearly was ineffective under the Florida rules, was more of a clue that something might be amiss than the events in
Malone, Kallie
and
Edwards.
Yet we cannot say that the warning was so clear or the possibility of dereliction so evident as to find the district court’s determination erroneous. Something more is required to constitute state action than the failure of a state official to pick up and follow a scent that might uncover the fault of a privately retained lawyer.
See Fitzgerald, supra,
After rejecting Perez’s incorporated-sixth-amendment challenge, the district court examined his claim under the fourteenth amendment; as discussed above, the test set forth in Fitzgerald, is whether the action, albeit unknown to state officials, rendered the trial “fundamentally unfair.” Id. at 1336.
On three other occasions we have interpreted the direct fourteenth amendment
Fitzgerald
test with respect to claims that counsel’s failure to appeal a state court
*163
conviction constituted a taint of fundamental unfairness. In
Postel v. Beto,
5 Cir. 1975,
In the present case, counsel made a false statement in open court when he said that a notice of appeal had already been filed. This was a violation of his duty to the court, but it was no more a violation of his duty to the defendant and created no greater flaw in the trial than did the failure of retained counsel to do what had been promised in Malone and Kallie.
We are therefore unable to agree with the district court that these decisions should be distinguished on the basis that Perez’s lawyer’s statement in open court that an appeal had already been filed was “an active course of conduct” that could “only be characterized, at the very least, as a wilful disregard for the responsibility placed upon him by the system.” The lawyer wilfully disregarded his professional responsibility in all of these cases; the only factual difference here was that counsel misled the court as well as his client.
What is or is not “fundamental unfairness” cannot of course be identified by litmus. Ultimately the characterization is visceral and emotional. Indeed the very term “fundamentally unfair” has pejorative overtones. Were we approaching the issue for the first time, we would hold, as did the district judge, that, when a lawyer, by definition a member of a learned profession and a member of the bar of the court, does not perform his promise to his client that an appeal will be taken, fairness requires that the deceived defendant be granted an out-of-time appeal. The appeal might be fruitless but it would at least be heard.
Our sentiments are repressed by our duty to adhere to the prior decisions that we cannot distinguish. Those decisions also command the course the district court should have taken.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court granting a writ of habeas corpus, is REVERSED.
REVERSED.
Notes
. ' Perez was originally represented by the public defender. However, his family retained private counsel, who represented Perez at trial. The public defender has represented Perez in this federal collateral proceeding.
.
See also Williams v. Wainwright, 5
Cir. 1971,
. The lawyer’s assertion in court after sentencing was equally ineffective to perfect an appeal, as a written notice of appeal is required in Florida. Florida Appellate Rule 6.4.
