North Carolina appeals an order of the district court granting a writ of habeas corpus to David B. Foster who had been convicted of first degree felony murder, i. e. homicide in the course of a robbery of a store, and whose conviction had been affirmed on appeal.
State v. Foster,
We affirm but express our contrary views with respect to sentencing should Foster be tried anew and convicted.
I.
Foster testified at his trial in his own defense. Purportedly in accordance with state law which permits crоss examination with respect to prior arrests and specific acts of misconduct, 1 the prosecutor posed a series of questions in which he asked Foster if he had beеn convicted of four charges of larceny from stores, robbery of an individual, possession of marijuana, receipt of stolen goods, resisting arrest and larceny from two other stores. When Foster denied all of the convictions except two, the prosecutor read Foster’s address and birthdate from a sheaf of official looking papers thаt he held while interrogating Foster about the prior convictions. 2 Although in the direct appeal the North Carolina Supreme Court found that the prosecutor was proceeding in good faith, the fact is that Foster was convicted of possession of marijuana and resisting arrest only, and all of the other charges against him had been dismissed prior to the interrogation.
We agree with the district court that the repeated assertions that Foster had been convicted of other crimes, particularly larceny and robbery, when those аssertions were untrue, in a trial on the charge of homicide in the course of a robbery, destroyed the fairness of Foster’s trial and denied him due process of law. The attack оn the defendant’s veracity played a critical role in the trial. The government’s case rested primarily on the testimony of a co-defendant Martin, who was charged with secоnd degree murder in exchange for his testimony, and the prosecution pitted Martin’s testimony against Foster’s. The instant case is indistinguishable from
Watkins v. Foster,
We do not think it improper for the district court to have granted the writ without holding an evidentiary hearing. The entire record of the state ease wаs before the district court. It is of course true that the state Supreme Court had found that the prosecutor did not evince bad faith in his examination of Foster.
II.
Upon his conviction for first degree felony murder, Foster wаs sentenced to life imprisonment, one of the mandatory alternative sentences authorized by the laws of North Carolina. N.C.G.S. § 14-17. At the time that he was sentenced, Foster was 19 years оld. North Carolina had in effect a youthful offenders statute, applicable to persons under the age of twenty one, which gave a sentencing judge a discretionary sentencing possibility where in his opinion the youthful offender did not require long incarceration and could soon return to supervised freedom. N.C.G.S. §§ 148 — 19.10 et seq. 3 The statute was first enacted in 1972. By its terms, it did not specifiсally exclude defendants convicted of any one or more particular crimes.
When Foster was sentenced, his counsel asked that he be sentenced under the youthful offеnder act. It is a matter of some dispute what sentence the trial judge intended to impose. He sentenced Foster to confinement for life, but stated that “as the court understands it this life sentencé will be served as a committed youthful offender . .’’In his appeal Foster sought, among other relief, to obtain a declaratory judgment that he must be released within 4 years. The state in its brief opposed a declaratory judgment as unnecessary. Its position was that the judgment did not show that Foster had been sentenced as a youthful offender but if it had, releаse after 4 years would occur by operation of law and therefore a declaratory judgment was unnecessary. The state suggested that a remand to clarify any ambiguity in the judgment was all that was required.
In any event, before Foster’s appeal was decided, the Supreme Court of North Carolina decided
State v. Niccum,
The district court was of the view that, since the North Carolina statute did not specifically exclude youthful offenders convicted of first degree murder from its terms, application of the holding in Niceum to Foster was a prohibited ex post facto judicial modification of the criminal law. As a consequence, the district court ruled that, if Foster were retried and convicted, he could not be sentenced to punishment more severe than incarceration for 4 years.
We disagree. It is true that the North Carolina statute did not specifiсally exclude youthful offenders convicted of first degree murder from its terms. But the possible punishments for first degree murder were certain prior to the enactment of the youthful offendеrs statute, and the North Carolina Supreme Court ruled in
Niccum
that the latter did not supplement the former so as to give the sentencing judge a choice of sentences. The North Carolinа General Assembly has consistently mandated death or life imprisonment for first degree murder, and age constitutes a “mitigating circumstance” militating in favor of the life term, G.S. 15A-2000(f)(7),
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
State v. Mack,
. Although purpоrtedly in accordance with a state rule of evidence permitting impeachment by interrogation concerning prior arrests and specific acts of misconduct, the рrosecutor’s questions all asserted convictions: “You have been convicted of larceny from several stores . . . ?” “You robbed Robert Owens?”, “Received stolen goods . . ?” “Resisted arrest . ?” and “Stole two more times ?’’
. The feature of the new statute most pertinent here is that the youthful offender must be paroled in not more than 4 years.
