Petitioner-appellant Bill Williams appeals from the judgment of the district court dismissing his habeas petition.
I.
Williams was convicted in 1977 on charges of rape, sodomy, and incest. The victims were his nine and ten year old daughters and the offenses apparently took place over a period of some two or three years. On direct appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court, petitioner raised a number of issues but only one was addressed by the Court which reversed the conviction and remanded for a new trial because the trial judge had merely handed the jury instructions to the foreman instead of reading them in open court.
Williams v. State,
On September 16, 1980 petitioner filed a post-conviction petition pursuant to Post-Conviction Remedy Rule 1, Indiana Rules of Procedure. 1 A hearing was held December 30, 1980 and March 6, 1981, with petitioner represented by the Public Defender, and the petition was denied on March 11, 1981. The judge found that seven of the fourteen issues raised (the only issues that are even arguably meritorious) had been waived for failure to raise them on direct appeal, that there was no basis for relief on three issues, and that petitioner had failed to meet his burden of proof on the remaining four. The record does not indicate an appeal of this determination, although petitioner filed a Motion to Correct Errors, and properly initiated an appeal by filing with the clerk of the trial court a praecipe designating the record on appeal (see Indiana Rules of Appellate Procedure, Rule 2); there is no indication that the appeal was perfected by filing the record on appeal with the Indiana Supreme Court within ninety days of the denial of the Motion to Correct Errors (see Indiana Rules of Appellate Procedure, Rule 3). In his habeas petition Williams asserted that he was denied appeal by the Indiana Public Defender, but this is inconsistent with his letters to the public defender “withdrawing” from their representation. Petitioner also asserted that he didn’t appeal the denial of the post-conviction petition because he had already raised the same *1441 issues on direct appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court after his first conviction. 2 On June 29, 1981 petitioner filed the pro se habeas petition, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, that is the subject of this appeal. 3 The district court dismissed the petition for failure to exhaust state remedies, and denied a certificate of probable cause. This court granted the certificate of probable cause, and appointed counsel for the appeal.
II.
The exhaustion requirement of § 2254(b) refers only to remedies still available at the time of the federal habeas petition.
Engle v. Isaac,
The district court did not explain which of Williams’ many habeas claims were unexhausted. The brief filed by counsel appointed for the appeal is also unhelpful in sorting out these claims. Although the brief was filed prior to
Rose v. Lundy,
there should have been a clear statement as to which claims were exhausted and hence ripe for district court consideration under Ware v.
Gagnon,
Although it is a little hard to categorize the claims in the discursive pro se post-conviction and habeas petitions, it appears *1442 that the issues raised (including, interestingly enough, the claim that because there was no search or arrest warrant for the children, their testimony should be suppressed) are substantially the same. The only new item in the habeas petition is the allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel on the direct appeal. This is an issue appropriately raised for the first time on post-conviction, yet only the incompetence of the attorney who represented petitioner at trial was argued in the post-conviction petition. We must consider, then, whether petitioner has nevertheless exhausted state remedies as to the competence of appellate counsel. Because petitioner could well have raised this issue in his post-conviction petition, he is now precluded from raising it on a second post-conviction petition. We therefore conclude that further recourse to the state courts would be futile. Petitioner has exhausted all currently available state remedies.
III.
The remaining question is whether, by failing to present the issue on post-conviction, or appeal the denial of the post-conviction petition that he did file, petitioner has waived his claim concerning ineffective assistance of counsel on the direct appeal for purposes of a federal habeas petition. In
United States ex rel. Spurlark v. Wolff,
Petitioner’s initial default was the failure to raise the effectiveness of appellate counsel on the post-conviction petition, and he offers no “cause” for this omission. He is thus asking a federal court to consider a matter that he chose never to present to the state court. Perhaps this was a “deliberate by-pass” of the state court, see
Fay v. Noia,
This case presents a rather different situation than that in
Gray v. Greer,
Petitioner Williams also might have obtained relief had he chosen to appeal the denial of his postconviction petition.
4
It appears that the Indiana Supreme Court is willing to consider the effectiveness of counsel for the direct appeal for the first time on the appeal of a post-conviction petition. See, e.g.,
Greer v. State,
We thus conclude that Williams has failed to establish cause for his failure to raise his competency of appellate counsel issue either in the post-conviction petition or via an appeal of the denial of that petition. In the absence of the “cause” prong of the
Wainwright v. Sykes
waiver test, we need not consider whether Williams was prejudiced by the omission.
Engle v. Isaac,
The judgment of the district court dismissing the petition is accordingly Affirmed, although on the basis of waiver rather than failure to exhaust state remedies.
Notes
. This was actually the third post-conviction petition filed. The first, filed June 18, 1979, was withdrawn upon petitioner’s own motion without prejudice to his right to re-file. The second, filed May 7, 1980, was stricken by the court because of the pendency of the direct appeal.
. What petitioner raised in his first appeal is irrelevant. The judgment of the Indiana Supreme Court reversed the conviction, and Williams was retried; he remains in custody only as a result of the second conviction. The evi-dentiary issues raised on the first appeal may well be similar to those petitioner wants to raise now, but they are the proper subject of this habeas petition only insofar as the evidence was used against him in the second trial.
. A prior § 2254 petition was filed July 19, 1979. It was dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies; petitioner’s conviction- upon retrial had not yet been appealed to the Indiana Supreme Court.
. Petitioner’s explanation, supra n. 2, that he failed to appeal the post-conviction denial because he had already raised the issues on the appeal of his first conviction is inapplicable to the question of the effectiveness of counsel for the direct appeal of his second conviction.
. We emphasize that we do not require a formalistic appeal of every adverse ruling on a post-conviction petition. If it is clear that review would be futile, then state remedies are exhausted for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). See, e.g.,
Mattes v. Gagnon,
