Appellant is the superintendent of the Washington State Penitentiary, and the appeal is from an order of the district court granting a writ of habeas corpus at the instance of appellee Browder, a prisoner. We reverse.
Browder was convicted in the Washington state court on six counts of forgery on October 6, 1961. The record in the state trial shows that Browder passed six forged checks, one to a jewelry store on November 27,1960, one to a tavern on November 30, one to an automobile towing company on December 1, and three to the same tavern on December 1. All of these checks were signed with the name “Byron D. Hunt.” Hunt testified that these were his “personalized” checks, that he lost his check book on or about November 22, 1960, that he had not authorized anyone to write his name on the checks or to draw on his account, that he did not know Browder, and that he had not authorized Browder to sign Hunt’s name on Hunt's checks. Browder took the stand. He testified that early in November he became acquainted with Hunt, went with Hunt to the latter’s apartment, and that the two there engaged in a prolonged drinking bout. He said that Hunt offered him a job. He also said that Hunt got so drunk that he could not write his own name, and that Hunt authorized him to write Hunt’s name on Hunt’s checks and cash them. He claimed that he was authorized to cash Hunt’s checks up to a total of $300. He took Hunt’s check book with him when he left Hunt’s apartment. He said that Hunt’s name, signed on each of the *347 six checks was in his (Browder’s) handwriting.
In the course of instructing the jury, the trial court gave the following instruction: (No. 7%)
“You are instructed that the adoption of another name or an assumed name is permissible if the purpose involved is an honest one. The burden is upon the defendant to show that he adopted the name for an honest purpose, or that he had used it for any length of time, or for a purpose other than to perpetrate the crime of forgery as charged in this case.”
The court also instructed:
“You are instructed that if you find that Byron D. Hunt gave the defendant authority to sign his name to the checks referred to in the amended information, then defendant is not guilty of forgery.”
The court had previously instructed the jury as to each of the six counts separately, regarding the necessary elements of the offense. Each such instruction was prefaced: “ * * * you must be convinced by legal and competent evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that * * After stating the elements of the offense, the instruction continued, in each case, by saying: “If you find from the evidence admitted in this case that the state has proved beyond a reasonable doubt the foregoing elements of the crime charged” then the jury should convict, but that if the evidence “fails to establish beyond a reasonable doubt one or more of the foregoing elements,” then the jury should acquit.
It also instructed, near the end of its charge, and after giving instruction No. 7%:
“You are instructed that the law presumes a defendant to be innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This presumption is not a mere matter of form, but it is a substantial part of the law of the land, and it continues throughout the entire trial and until you have found that this presumption has been overcome by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Browder’s counsel excepted to instruc-No. 7Yz in the following language:
“Defendant excepts to Court’s Instruction No. 7% on the ground that it constitutes a comment upon the evidence and assumes the existence of a fact which is in dispute, the question of whether or not the defendant ever adopted the name of another. We feel this will be highly prejudicial to the jury and is therefore improper.”
On appeal to the Washington Supreme Court, Browder contended that instruction No. 7% unlawfully shifted the burden of proof to him. As to this, the Supreme Court of Washington said:
“The exception to the instruction did not direct the trial court’s attention to any contention that there was an improper statement of the burden of proof; neither was such claim made at any time during the trial or on the motion for a new trial. Under such circumstances, we cannot consider the defendant’s as-signmeht of error seeking to raise that issue. Miller v. Staton (1961),58 Wash.2d 879 ,365 P.2d 333 ; Owens v. Anderson (1961),58 Wash. 2d 448 ,364 P.2d 14 ; State v. Cogswell (1959),54 Wash.2d 240 ,339 P.2d 465 ; Patterson v. Krogh (1957),51 Wash.2d 73 ,316 P.2d 103 .; Peerless Food Products Co. v. Barrows (1957),49 Wash.2d 879 ,307 P.2d 882 ; and State v. Lyskoski (1955),47 Wash.2d 102 ,287 P.2d 114 .” (State v. Browder, 1963,61 Wash.2d 300 , 301-302,378 P.2d 295 , 296-297)
The district court held that the instruction “was in fact erroneous and did transfer the burden of proving innocence upon the petitioner, in violation of his constitutional right of due process.” It ordered that unless Browder be given a new trial by the state within ninety days, he should be discharged.
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We think that the court was in error. The state urges that Browder failed to exhaust his state remedies, citing our decision in Chavez v. Dickson, 9 Cir., 1960,
“State remedies will not be deemed to have been exhausted within the meaning of 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254 if the failure to obtain a final state adjudication was due to inexcusable nonconformity with state procedural requisites. No reason was offered in the district court or in this court as to why appellants should be excused for their failure to make timely objection in the state trial court to the questioned remarks of the prosecution and trial judge.”
We there cited: Brown v. Allen,
We do think, however, that there has been either “an inexcusable nonconformity with the state procedural requisites” (Chavez v. Dickson, supra) or a waiver of the point by failing to take proper objection to the instruction, and that on either basis the district court should have denied the writ without reaching the merits of Browder’s constitutional claim.
In Henry v. State of Mississippi,
For many years, the Supreme Court has been steadily enlarging the scope of the guarantee of the right to counsel contained in the Sixth Amendment, and always on the grounds so eloquently stated in Powell v. State of
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Alabama, 1932,
“The right to be heard would be, in many cases, of little avail if it did not comprehend the right to be heard by counsel. Even the intelligent and educated layman has small and sometimes no skill in the science of law. If charged with crime, he is incapable, generally, of determining for himself whether the indictment is good or bad. He is unfamiliar with the rules of evidence. Left without the aid of counsel he may be put on trial without a proper charge, and convicted upon incompetent evidence or evidence irrelevant to the issue or otherwise inadmissible. He lacks both the skill and knowledge adequately to prepare his defense, even though he have a perfect one. He requires the guiding hand of counsel at every step in the proceedings against him. Without it, though he be not guilty, he faces the danger of conviction because he does not know how to establish his innocence. If that be true of men of intelligence, how much more true is it of the ignorant and illiterate, or those of feeble intellect. If in any case, civil or criminal, a state or federal court were arbitrarily to refuse to hear a party by counsel, employed by and appearing for him, it reasonably may not be doubted that such a refusal would be a denial of a hearing and, therefore, of due process in the constitutional sense.”
See also Gideon v. Wainwright, 1963,
We think that this is a clear case for the application of the waiver doctrine mentioned in footnote 3 to Henry v. State of Mississippi, supra. Here, “the state rule is a reasonable one and clearly announced to defendant and counsel.” We find nothing in Henry that would require that the district court hold a hearing and receive evidence on the question of waiver in a case such as this. We hold that Browder’s point was effectively waived.
We add that, if we are in error as to this, the federal constitutional question raised is so clearly without merit as to border on the frivolous. This court does not yet sit, and we hope it will never have to sit, as an appellate court to review all of the errors that may be claimed to have been committed in the course of state criminal trials. We have repeatedly held that a defendant is not entitled to an eri'or-free trial, and that the writ of habeas corpus is not a substitute for an appeal. (See e. g. McGee v. Eyman, 9 Cir., 1962,
The Supreme Court has sustained an instruction which told the jury, in a.murder case, that proof of defendant’s possession of property of the man killed raised a presumption of guilt, and -required the defendant “to account for it, to show that, as far as he was concerned, that possession was innocent and was honest.” (Wilson v. United States, 1896,
The order is reversed and the trial court is directed to dismiss the proceeding and remand Browder to the custody of appellant.
