Opinion by
*111 Raymond P. Wilson — now serving a life sentence after conviction of a felony murder 1 — filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County a habeas corpus petition which that court dismissed without a hearing.
On this appeal, at the outset, Wilson claims that he was entitled to a hearing on his petition and an opportunity to present allegedly material facts in support thereof and that the court’s refusal of his petition without a hearing constitutes error. In a habeas corpus proceeding, where no material or substantial questions of fact are involved and where the questions presented are questions of law, no hearing for the taking of testimony is necessary:
Commonwealth ex rel. Davis v. Banmiller,
In his petition, Wilson raises, in substance, four questions: (a) that a Commonwealth witness at Wilson’s trial has repudiated his testimony; (b) that at trial the district attorney made a prejudicial misstatement to the jury; (c) that certain hearsay evidence was admitted at the trial; (d) that certain evidence received at the trial — United States currency — was obtained through an unreasonable search and seizure and, therefore, under
Mapp v. Ohio,
We accept as an established fact Wilson’s averment that the Commonwealth witness Nixon has now repudiated his trial testimony. At trial Nixon testified as to certain admissions, allegedly, made to him by Wilson concerning the murder while Wilson and Nixon were cellmates in a Las Vegas jail. In corroboration of this testimony, the court admitted into evidence certain consonant statements, allegedly, made by Nixon to federal investigators as well as evidence that Nixon displayed to a federal agent a $400 money order which, allegedly, Wilson had procured from Mrs. Ellsworth, wife of one of Wilson’s co-conspirators, and which was given to Nixon to secure bail so that, on his release, Nixon could go to Florida and arrange an alibi defense for Wilson in connection with the crime for which Wilson was then held. Wilson now contends that “the trial court permitted the admission [into evidence] of deliberately fabricated testimony” of Nixon. As background for the evaluation of this charge, we refer to that which we said in Commonwealth v. Wilson, supra (pp. 604, 605) : “The trial judge stated: ‘If the guilt or innocence of [Wilson] were to be determined alone upon the uncorroborated testimony of [Nixon] I should be directing you [the jury] to return a verdict of not guilty.’ It is hard to envisage a more fair, outspoken and favorable comment for the defense than this expression of the trial judge’s opinion concerning Nixon’s testimony. Furthermore, the trial court told the jury that Nixon was a ‘convicted felon, presently serving a sentence in a Georgia Prison,’ that the examination ‘has brought out a number of offenses for which he was convicted and the *113 number of escapes from prisons and penitentiaries. All in all, it is the story of one whose life has been badly misspent.’ Nixon’s testimony was characterized by the trial judge as ‘tainted, corrupt and entitled to little weight’ and the jury was warned to scrutinize such testimony ‘with the greatest care.’ ” In addition, the trial judge warned the jury that acceptance of Nixon’s testimony “ ‘ would depend on what corroborative evidence the jury might find.’ ”
From an examination of the trial record, it is clear beyond question that the trial court portrayed Nixon to the jury in the worst possible light and that the jury was informed of Nixon’s bad character, his testimonial unreliability and past misdeeds. Under such circumstances, Wilson’s rights, in connection with Nixon’s testimony, were fully protected. Even without Nixon’s evidence, Wilson’s guilt was thoroughly established by other evidence.
In
Commonwealth v. Palarino,
Moreover, a contention that perjured testimony was presented at trial is not a subject of habeas corpus:
Commonwealth ex rel. Leeper v.
Russell,
Wilson next contends he was denied due process by reason of a false statement made by the district attorney in his opening statement to the jury to the effect that Wilson “allegedly conspired with three co-defendants, [Ellsworth], [DeMoss] and [Thomas], to rob and murder Lulubel Rossman, on the false theory the alleged conspiracy emanated through an arrest of defendants Wilson and Ellsworth in Oklahoma by Thomas and DeMoss, who were then Tulsa police officers.” 2 In his opening remarks, the district attorney stated that he would show that “Mr. Thomas and Mr. DeMoss had apprehended Mr. Wilson and Mr. Ellsworth and sent them both to jail for robbery in Oklahoma”. The facts as presented did not so prove. As the evidence developed, it appeared that DeMoss and Thomas had arrested Wilson as a result of which Wilson was convicted and sentenced to a two year term for burglary but that, when Ellsworth was arrested and convicted of burglary in Oklahoma, only DeMoss could have been aware of that fact since by that time Thomas had left the Tulsa police force. The district attorney corrected this misstatement, he did not repeat it and, in further assurance that the jury was not misled, the following excerpt from the record is to be noted: “The Court :... You [the jury] will recall that the Commonwealth in *115 its opening address told you that it would offer evidence to prove that [Wilson] has suffered a conviction for robbery. The Commonwealth later corrected that to mean burglary and not robbery. The Commonwealth has offered evidence of the conviction of [Wilson] for burglary in the second degree. It has produced the testimony of the former county attorney of Payne County ... to the effect that he prosecuted the case, that the arresting officers were [DeMoss] and [Thomas], that [Wilson] was the man now on trial and that he was convicted of the crime of robbery and that he was sentenced for a term of two years. Mr. Blanc [District Attorney] : If your Honor please, you used the term robbery. You made the same mistake I did. The Court: I mean burglary. You are hereby instructed that this conviction cannot and must not be considered by you as bearing on the question of [Wilson’s] guilt.”
The jury could not have been misled by the district attorney’s opening statement. The evidence proved that Wilson had been arrested by two of Ms alleged co-conspirators and that, as a result of that arrest, he was convicted and received a jail sentence and the so-called “misstatement” was at least substantially true as to Wilson, Thomas and DeMoss. Wilson can hardly complain that it was not true as to Ellsworth. We find no merit in this contention. 3
Wilson next urges that the trial court committed fundamental error in permitting the reception into evi
*116
dence of certain hearsay evidence relating to an admonition by Wilson’s alleged co-conspirator, Thomas, to the murder victim not to leave her room on the day of the murder. In
Commonwealth v. Wilson,
supra, pp. 597, 601, we fully considered this argument and we concluded then and we again conclude that such testimony had been properly admitted as a well-established exception to the hearsay rule. In any event, such contention is not properly before us on habeas corpus since it is repetitious of that which was raised in previous proceedings in this matter:
Commonwealth ex rel. Dickerson v. Rundle,
Lastly, in reliance on Mapp v. Ohio, supra, Wilson contends that the admission into evidence at his trial of certain $100 bills in U. S. currency and their serial numbers, seized from his person and hotel room in Las Vegas without a search warrant, constituted a violation of his constitutional rights.
After conviction and judgment of sentence, Wilson appealed to this Court. Both at trial and on appeal, Wilson raised, inter alia, the question of the admissibility into evidence of testimony as to the concatenation through serial numbers of certain U. S. currency, some of which was found on his person and in his hotel room, but he did not raise any question as to the legality of the search and seizure which led to the finding and the production of such currency. Wilson’s judgment of sentence became final long prior to the decision of the U. S. Supreme Court in Mapp. It is our present duty to determine whether Mapp must be applied retrospectively to the case at bar.
Whether the Mapp rule is to be applied retrospectively and, if so, to what extent, the majority opinion in Mapp does not disclose. In large measure, therefore, in determining the impact of Mapp we must consider its basic purpose.
The Court could have held that Mapp’s rule of exclusion of evidence obtained through an unreasonable *117 search and seizure would apply only prospectively, even as to Miss Mapp, especially since, as Mr. Justice Harlan in dissent noted, the rule of exclusion was not the principal issue decided by the state court, nor was it “tendered by [Miss Mapp’s] Jurisdictional Statement” nor briefed or argued by Miss Mapp’s counsel before the Supreme Court. However, since it did apply the rule of exclusion to Miss Mapp’s trial, to that extent the Court did apply Mapp retrospectively.
Having applied the rule to Miss Mapp, it would seem only essentially fair and logical that the rule be applied retrospectively in two other situations: (a) to
all
cases where the allegedly unconstitutional search and seizure took place
prior
to
Mapp
but the motion to suppress the evidence was not made or the trial did not take place until
after Mapp (Ker v. California,
A third situation — illustrated by the case at bar— is where the conviction and judgment of sentence became final
prior
to
Mapp
and
after Mapp
the conviction and judgment of sentence are collaterally attacked through habeas corpus in a state court.
5
In
*118
considering
Mapp’s
applicability to this situation, it is essential that we bear in mind what the U. S. Supreme Court said in 1949 in
Wolf v.
Colorado,
In analyzing the applicability of
Mapp
to this third situation, we must understand the basic purpose behind the mandate of the Court in
Mapp.
In
Elkins v. U.S.,
In
Weeks v. U. S.,
It seems clear beyond any question that, in Mapp, the Court, “took the bull by the horns” and concluded that the exclusionary rule offered the only practical and effective method for the enforcement of the Fourth *120 Amendment right, other state methods and remedies by way of sanction having failed to afford that measure of protection, intended by the Constitution, to the individual whose rights under the Fourth Amendment had been breached. In our view, had the sanction afforded by the states effectively vindicated the constitutional right, the Mapp rule would have been unnecessary. 7
This rule of exclusion is essentially a rule of evidence, even though of constitutional dimensions. In excluding illegally obtained evidence, the purpose is not to exclude such evidence because it is testimonially untrustworthy or lacking in reliability but to discourage police officials from conduct in violation of the Constitution. As Chief Justice Weintraub said in State v. Smith, supra, 181 A. 2d pp. 762, 763: “Nor is it a decisive difference [in solving the problem of the retroactive application of decisional law in criminal matters] that Mapp deals with a constitutional guaranty rather than a principle of lesser stature. . . . We are not dealing with a denial of a right which bears upon the truth of a conviction, as for example, the right to counsel or to appellate review, [citing cases]. Rather the subject is evidence, the probative force of which is constant whether it is seized with or without warrant. The heroin was heroin, and defendant’s connection with it was the same, with or without official compliance with the law of search and seizure. In short, the fairness of the trial itself and the truth of the verdict are not involved. The constitutional injury lies elsewhere. . . .” “This purpose of the new rule to deter police, *121 which seems from the Mapp opinion to be its main purpose, is not meaningfully served by the general application of the rule to past trials. The purpose of deterrence is a particularly prospective purpose. The only police conduct which can now be deterred is future conduct. It is unlikely that sudden reexamination of a great number of old trials would increase the future obedience of state police to constitutional rules:” Bender, The Retroactive Effect of an Overruling Constitutional Decision: 8 Mapp v. Ohio, 110 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 650, 661.
The federal courts do not agree as to the extent to which
Mapp
is retrospective. In
Gaitan v. U.S.,
In our opinion,
Mapp
was never intended to apply in retrospection so as to command the reversal of judgments of sentence and convictions which
now
offend the
Mapp
rule but which became final
prior to Mapp.
Bearing in mind the basic purpose of
Mapp
— the deterrence of future unlawful police conduct — and that the rule of exclusion is not aimed at any trial unfairness but at official lawlessness, we take the position that
Mapp
should not be applied to a situation such as herein presented and that it was not the intent of the Supreme Court that
Mapp
apply retrospectively to convictions and judgments of sentence which became final
prior
to
Mapp.
The Superior Court of this Commonwealth has taken the same position:
Commonwealth ex rel. Stoner v. Myers,
Since, in our opinion, Mapp is inapplicable to the instant situation, we need not pass upon the reasonable nature of the search and seizure herein. In fact, if we were to do so, we would have to remand the matter to the court below because neither Commonwealth nor defense counsel had an opportunity at trial to fully develop this phase of the matter.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Sec:
Commonwealth v. Wilson,
This is Wilson’s version of the false statement.
The following excerpt from Jim the Penman’s Trial (Wig-more, Evidence, 3rd Ed., Vol. VI, §1807 (1)) illustrates the issue. There, the prisoner protests the truth of an allegation in the prosecutor’s opening statement: “‘But, my Lord, the evidence may not be true.’ The Chief Baron [Pollock]. ‘But we must hear it before we can judge whether it be true or false; and before we can receive the evidence we must hear the [counsel’s] narrative of the whole transaction.’ ”
“Final” in the sense tliat the time for perfecting an appeal to the state appellate court had not expired or that an appeal had been taken but not determined or that the time for seeking a review by the U. S. Supreme Court had not expired or that a review by that Court was pending.
Or in a federal court, under the federal practice by a motion for relief under 28 U.S.C.A. §2255.
In supporting its application of the exclusionary rule against federal and not state police officials, the Oourt distinguished between federal and state police officials on the ground that the local public opinion could be more effectively exerted against oppressive conduct by the latter than by the former.
As expressed in
People v. Eastman,
As expressed in State v. Smith, supra, p. 763: “If this be so [that the exclusionary rule of Mapp is a deterrent against future official lawlessness], Mapp should apply only to subsequent searches, since what has happened is beyond deterrence. True, retroactive application would make the holding of Mapp all the more emphatic, but the State says such emphasis, being unnecessary, would be punitive to society and a windfall to the guilty.”
