Hаbeas corpus. We agree with the district court that petitioner Helmick was not denied due process becаuse three arresting sheriff’s deputies, one of whom testified as a witness for the prosecution, drove the jurors to the sсene of the crime, after being designated by the trial judge as bailiffs for that purpose. The facts in this ease relevant to the matter differ materially from those in Turner v. Louisiana,
Here, as the record discloses, the association bеtween the deputies and the jurors was casual and short lived, for the deputies simply were chauffeurs on a trip which lаsted no more than forty-five minutes; conversely in
Turner
the contact was not “a brief encounter but a continuous and intimate association throughout a three day trial — an association which gave these witnesses an opportunity, as Simmons put it, to renew old friendships and make new acquaintances among the members of the jury.”
As Turner makes clear, the Court declared no per se rule that mere contact or association between a witness for the prosecution and a member or members of the jury constitutes the trial unfair in the constitutional sense; more must aрpear to affect the validity of a conviction. In Turner, the “more” was present in the form of the great likelihood thаt, because of the association, the jury gave undue credence to material witnesses and undue weight to their testimony; here, even if the assumption is indulged that the jurors favored this deputy, nevertheless his testimony was not harmful; nor do other fаcts or cir *323 cumstances appear to create an aura of probable prejudice. 1
We must disagree with appellant’s contention that “due process requires that a court in passing on thе question of voluntariness of a confession, make express findings of fact concerning all, not just some, disputed issues of fact bearing on the voluntariness of the statement.” Jackson v. Denno,
In the instant case, the state court record, introduced as an exhibit in the district court, discloses that the trial judge followed the Massachusetts procedure. And the record also shows that, at the conclusion of the in camera hearing, at which both Helmick аnd the State were freely permitted to adduce proof on the issue of voluntariness, the judge orally announcеd “It will be the ruling of the Court that the alleged confession was voluntarily made after the defendant had been effectivеly warned of his constitutional rights to remain silent. * * *” This express declaration by necessary implication demonstrates “with unmistakable clarity” [Sims v. Georgia,
supra,
In this condition of the record thе district court might have dispensed altogether with an evidentiary hearing and accepted as valid the state judge’s сonclusion. 2 Nevertheless, the district court conducted an entirely new hearing and independently found all issues against рetitioner. Thus, even if the trial judge’s determination had lacked specificity, the defect was rendered immaterial. 3
The judgment denying the writ is affirmed.
Notes
. At thе habeas corpus bearing in the district court, the witness-deputy testified that no mention of the case was made at аny time, although one of the jurors did ask him for information about a traffic law which he was unable to give. True, neither of the twо non-testifying deputies was called, but we are not prepared to speculate that either may have cоmmitted some gross impropriety while carrying out the trial court’s order. See Bowles v. Texas,
. The failure of the trial judge to give any instruction on burden of proof on the issue of voluntariness of the confession or to give a detailed instruction setting out factors constituting volun-tariness raises no federal question. The trial judge’s determination fully protected Helmick’s constitutional rights. Jackson v. Denno, supra.
. We read Jackson v. Denno not as a denial of jurisdiction of a federal habеas corpus court to hear and determine the issue of voluntariness of a confession, but simply as a recognition of a general policy that the matter should be decided in the state court.
