We consider in this case a claim that the State of Indiana denied an indigent criminal defendant a free transcript of the trial record for use in appealing his conviction and refused to appoint counsel to assist him in his appeal, thereby violating his rights under the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Arthur James Lewis was convicted of second-degree murder for killing a sheriff who was trying to prevent him from escaping from jail. On September 26, 1968, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. He had until January 22, 1969, to file a notice of appeal. On November 18 he moved for a transcript and for appointment of counsel on appeal. The same day he escaped from prison. He was not returned to the prison until May 31, 1969. His motion for a transcript and appointment of counsel had been denied, because of his fugitive status, ón November 27, 1968. No notice of appeal was ever filed.
In 1970 Lewis filed a petition for postcon-viction relief in the Indiana courts, asking for a belated appeal of his conviction. The
*509
petition was denied; the Supreme Court of Indiana affirmed the denial
sub nom. Lewis v. State,
Under Indiana law a fugitive is not permitted to perfect an appeal from his conviction until he is returned to custody, so that if he is not returned until the deadline for perfecting the appeal has passed he cannot appeal at all. See, e.g.,
Irvin v. State,
It is true that in
Ruetz v. Lash,
Ruetz
may no longer be good law even if one accepts the proposition, fundamental to
Ruetz,
that it is unreasonable for the state to deny an appeal to anyone who has not waived his right to appeal; for the court in
Ruetz
used the very narrow definition of waiver (“deliberate bypass”) that the Supreme Court had adopted in
Fay v. Noia,
Ruetz is in any event factually distinguishable, because Ruetz was returned to custody before his motion that was a prerequisite to appeal was acted on by the state court. This created a question (though in light of Estelle v. Dorrough perhaps not a serious question) of the strength of the state’s interest in denying him an appeal. We thought that Lewis, unlike Ruetz, had not been returned to custody before his time to appeal had run. But now he has filed with us a supplemental memorandum that alleges that he was returned to custody in Los Angeles, California on January 1, 1969, so that on January 22, the last day on which he could have filed an appeal from his conviction, he was sitting in a jail in Los Angeles; he was not a fugitive from justice as everyone had thought. The state has not replied to the supplemental *510 memorandum, so for purposes of this appeal we shall accept as true the facts alleged in it, though we think it odd that it should have taken Lewis 13 years to remember where he was on the crucial day. At all events Lewis argues that these facts bring him squarely within the rule of Ruetz, because he was returned to custody before the time to appeal ran out, just as Ruetz had been.
If this is a distinct claim from the claim he presented in his state postconviction proceeding, then he has failed to exhaust his state remedies and, under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Rose v. Lundy,
-- U.S. -,
The denial of the petition for habeas corpus is
Affirmed.
