Rеtained counsel for Perez failed to perfect an appeal of Perez’s state court conviction after promising to do so аnd falsely stating in open court at the time judgment was rendered that an appeal had already been filed. Based on this dereliction, Perez sought habeas corpus. Our original decision denied relief because we were bound by
Fitzgerald v. Estelle,
Thereafter, the Supreme Court, in
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
Because a state criminal trial is immanently state action, the court reasoned that the conduct of retained counsel involves state action and held that a conviction obtained in a trial in which the defendant’s counsel, whether retained or appointed, is ineffective violates the Sixth Amendment. “Thus, the Sixth Amendment does more than rеquire the States to appoint counsel for indigent defendants. The right to counsel prevents the States from conducting trials at which persons who face incarceration must defend themselves without
adequate
legal assistance,”
We are left then with the question whether the failure of Perez’s retained counsel to file a timely notice of appeal
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likеwise constitutes a violation of the Sixth Amendment. Many years ago the Supreme Court held that the right to appeal from a criminal judgment is not guaranteed by the Constitution.
McKane v. Durston,
The district court, after conducting an evidentiary hearing, found
[The] active course of conduct on the part of the private counsel, can only be characterized, at the very least, as a wilful disregard for the responsibility placed upon him by the system, which served only to insure the deprivation of petitioner’s appellate rights. Such unconscionable actions languish to the level of conduct of counsel “so grossly deficient as to render the proceedings fundamentally unfair.”
Perez v. Wainwright,
The state argues, however, that under the circumstances here presented, an out-of-time appeal shоuld be granted only in isolated instances, such as when the petitioner can show that an issue of arguable merit will be raised in state court. No such showing is required. Despite the constant
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iteration of minority views that doubt concerning guilt should be a predicate to habeas corpus relief,
4
the Supreme Court has not accepted that view.
See, e. g., Rose v. Mitchell,
The State seeks to distinguish
Cuyler v. Sullivan
from the failure of Perez’s lawyer to appeal because Sullivan received ineffective assistance at the trial level. It argues that proceedings on appeal are different and that ineffective assistance at that level does not constitute fundamental unfairness. This poses a false hypothesis and draws a distinction not found here. No appellate court ever obtained jurisdiction of Perez’s case, for no аppeal was taken. His counsel’s wrongful conduct occurred entirely in the trial court. We need not, therefore, consider the standards that would apply to the quality of representation before an appellate court.
See, e. g., Mendiola v. Estelle,
Finally, the state retreats to an attempt to differentiate between the trial and the lodging of an appeal because the state initiates the criminal trial and thus embroils the defendant, but the initiativе to appeal is on the defendant. The issue is not where the initiative lies, for the defendant must raise any defenses at trial and counsel’s failure to raise a particular defense may well make him ineffective. The question rather is whether the conduct of the criminal proceeding, cоnsidered as a whole, was fundamentally unfair. Here it was. The appeal is the vehicle by which violations of the right to a fair trial, conducted in aсcordance with law, may be remedied. Therefore, the failure to file a timely appeal as promised, without more, constitutes a violаtion of the Sixth Amendment and Perez must be accorded an out-of-time appeal.
For these reasons, the petition for rehearing is DENIED.
Notes
. After its decision in
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
.
Coleman v. State,
. Each federal circuit court, even before the
Cuyler
proclamation of equality, has, under varying circumstances, recognized a denial of due process to defendants whose right to appeal is lost through wrongdoings or neglect of counsel.
See, e. g., Boyd v. Cowan,
Various state courts have also found ineffective assistance when the right to appeal has been lost through an error by privately-retained сounsel.
See, e. g., Finnie v. State,
.
See, e. g. Rose v. Mitchell,
