OPINION OF THE COURT
In this habeas corpus case, a state prisoner alleges that the trial court committed constitutional error in its jury charge on presumption of malice and the burden of proof on insanity. After finding exhaustion of state remedies, the district court denied relief on the merits of the insanity issue and held there wаs a procedural default on the malice claim. 1 We conclude that the malice instruction issue was never fairly presented to the state courts. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the district court and direct dismissal of the habeas petition so that the malice claim may be pursued in state forums.
Petitioner was convicted on two counts of second-degree murder in a Pennsylvania state court in 1972. He was sentenced to two consecutive terms of 10 to 20 years each. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed on direct appeal, the only issue being the propriety of the consecutive sentences.
Commonwealth
v.
Hill,
In 1977, petitioner initiated a pro se proceeding in the state trial court under the Post Conviction Hearing Act, Pa.Stat.Ann. tit. 19, §§ 1180-1 to 1180-14 (Purd.Supp. 1982) (current version at 42 Pa.Con.Stat. Ann. §§ 9541-9551 (Purd.1982)). Counsel other than trial counsel was appointed, and a hearing conducted. Petitioner raised five contentions:
1. the change in Pennsylvania law placing the burden of proving sanity on the prosecution should be applied retroactively to his case;
2. & 3. the trial court erred in admitting certain opinions by the state’s psychiatric expert;
4. admission of a police officer’s testimony was error; and
5. the state had failed to prove the petitioner was legally sаne.
All of these contentions were rejected by the trial court, and the case was next reviewed and affirmed by a special panel of the Pennsylvania Superior Court. The state supreme court granted allocatur.
In his brief in the supreme court, petitioner listed as the “Statement of Question Involved” the following: “Is a criminal defendant, having raised the issue of insanity upon trial for murder, entitled to reversal of his conviction based upon erroneous jury instruction as to the burden of proof with respect to insanity where no objection thereto was raised at trial?”
The argument was divided into three parts. Point I was that the trial judge had erred in instructing the jury that a defendant had the burden of proving insanity, a doctrine in effect at the time of trial but changed thereafter.
2
The second point was
*234
that the United States Constitution mandated the then-current Pennsylvania rule that the state was required to prove sanity beyond a reasonable dоubt once the defendant produced evidence of insanity. In the course of this argument, petitioner cited
New York v. Patterson,
Petitioner began his argument on point II by asserting that Mullaney established a federal constitutional ban on shifting the burden of proof on insanity to a defendant. In discussing Patterson, petitioner noted that “Pennsylvania, unlike New York, incorporates malice as an element оf the crime of Murder,” and quoted from two state court cases defining malice. Following that, petitioner wrote:
“Insanity, no less than self-defense, NEGATES THE ELEMENT OF MALICE. If a jury has reasonable doubt as to an accused’s sanity, it perforce has reasonable doubt as to the existence of an essential element of the crime of murdеr. It follows, therefore, that in jurisdictions, such as Pennsylvania, where malice constitutes an element of the crime charged, an accused’s sanity, once placed in issue, must be established by the prosecution beyond a reasonable doubt.” (emphasis in original).
Point III of the brief argued that petitioner should not be found to have waived his right to retroactive application of the new Pennsylvania rule on proof of insanity because he did not object at trial. Petitioner contended that fundamental fairness “condemns a finding of waiver grounded upon failure to assert a nonexistent right.”
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, being evenly divided, affirmed the denial of post-conviction relief.
Commonwealth v. Hill,
Petitioner then sought habeas corpus relief in the district court, contending that the jury charge on the burden of proof for insanity violated the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. In the “Petitioner’s Brief in Opposition to Commonwealth’s Answer,” he also raised, for the first time, the contention that the state trial court had given an erroneous instruction on malice.
The brief cited the following portion of the charge: “He who uses a deadly weapon without a sufficient cause or provocation
must be presumed
to do it wickedly or from a bad heart.” (emphasis added). As with the insanity defense instruction, the charge on malice was in accord with Pennsylvania law at the time,
see Commonwealth v. O’Neal,
The district court dismissed the petition. The court recognized that “when a procedural default at trial has barred an inmate from obtaining adjudication of his claim in the state appellate courts, federal habeas relief is not available absent a showing of ‘cause’ and ‘actual prejudice.’
Wainwright v. Sykes,
The district court then stated that “[petitioner's other claim in this federal habeas action relates to the trial court’s instruction on the element of malice.”
On appeal to this court,
4
petitioner argues, in addition to other contentions, that the instruction on malice made “use of a gun conclusive proof of the distinct element of malice aforethought without independent satisfaction of the Commonwealth’s burden on the issue.” Petitioner contends the charge is contrary to
Sandstrom v. Montana,
It is well settled that ordinarily a state prisoner seeking habeas corpus relief in the federal courts must first exhaust available state judicial remedies. That doctrine has been incorporated into the federal habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2254(b) and (c), and has its foundation in federal-state comity concerns.
See Duckworth v. Serrano,
In
Picard v. Conner,
In
Zicarelli v. Gray,
The same shortcoming is present in the case at hand. We have carefully reviewed the record of the postconviction proceedings in the state cоurts. The petitioner clearly and unmistakably pressed his claim that, judged by then-applicable Pennsylvania standards, the charge on burden of proof with respect to insanity was erroneous. Petitioner also forcefully contended that his lawyer at trial had not objected to that portion of the charge because counsel believed it constituted basic and fundamental error, which at that time did not require specific objection.
See Commonwealth v. Williams,
The only reference to malice in the state supreme court brief was also in connection with the insanity charge. At no time in the petitioner’s briefs in the trial court or in the state supreme court is there any contention that the charge on malice, independent of the insanity issue, raised an unconstitutional presumption in violation of the Patterson-Mullaney-Winship line of cases. Indeed, that argument makes its first appearance in the petitioner’s brief in the district court. Even thеre, although its existence as a separate claim begins to emerge, the umbilical cord to the insanity defense claim is still visible.
It is in the district court’s opinion that the malice point finally stands on its own two feet, and not until the petitioner’s brief is filed in this court is the name of Sand-strom pronounced. Thus, only the federal courts have been squarely presented with the contention that the malice instruction, standing alone and without reference to the insanity charge, violated due process.
The facts were before the state courts, the Patterson, Mullaney, and Winship cases were cited there, but the focus was not on malice; it was on insanity. The two points have much in common and it is understаndable how one can lie in the shadow of the other without being observed. But they are indeed separate issues, and we cannot say that the state courts were given a fair and adequate opportunity to pass on the malice claim.
It could be argued that the matter should not be referrеd back to the state courts because the same ground of failure to preserve the issue for appeal might preclude consideration of the malice issue as it did the insanity point. Exhaustion is not required when under the circumstances it would be unavailing.
Humphrey v. Cady,
As noted earlier, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s denial of post-conviction relief was by an equally divided vote. Three of the justices would have entertained petitioner’s insanity claim because the failure to object to the charge had to be considered in light of the practice at the time of trial, which was to review basic and fundamental error even in the absence of objection. Twо other justices defined the issue as one of issue preservation. Another concurred in the denial of relief without stating reasons. The seventh member of the court resigned before the Hill case was decided.
Moreover, the court had been unable to reach agreement on the preservation issue in a previоus case,
see Commonwealth v. Ernst,
In
Hernandez,
the appellant sought post-conviction relief on the ground that there had been a violation of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s
McCutchen
rule, which established certain prerequisites for the waiver of constitutional rights by juveniles.
See Commonwealth v. McCutchen,
In this unique setting, we cannot say that the state courts will not еntertain the petitioner’s malice claim. The denial of relief on the insanity issue was by a court which could not muster a majority because of a vacancy on its bench. The court is now at full strength and may decide at this point to reconsider the matter. In the interest of comity we are obliged to аt least furnish the opportunity.
Under
Rose v. Lundy,
Notes
. The district court’s opinion is reported at
. Two years after petitioner’s trial, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held in
Commonwealth v. Demmitt,
. In Re Winship held that the due process clause requires the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged. In Mullaney, the state was barred from requiring the defendant to prove that he acted in the heat of passion in order to negate an inference of malice and thus reduce a charge of murder to manslaughter. In Patterson, the Court upheld a New York law that placed the burden of proving “extreme emotional disturbance” on the defendant in order to reduce a homicide to manslaughter. Hankersen gave retroactive application to the Mullaney rule.
. We note that petitioner was ably represented by counsel appointed by the court for purposes of this appeal.
. In
Sandstrom,
the Supreme Court found the jury charge that “[t]he law presumes that a person intends the ordinary consequences of his voluntary acts” to be unconstitutional because the “jury may have interpreted the ... instruction as constituting a burden-shifting presumption like that in
Mullaney,
or a conclusive presumption.”
