Did Morris and Sanders (Petitioners) waive their claims of systematic discrimination in the selection of grand and petit jurors by failing to raise them prior to their filing of the instant consolidated federal habeas corpus case? 1
Sanders was convicted in 1964 of murder in the Bessemer division of Jefferson County, Alabama, but the death sentence he received then has been amended to life imprisonment as a reshit of Furman v. Georgia,
Pre
Davis,
the rule in this circuit had been that a jury discrimination claim barred by a state procedural timeliness rule could be presented initially on federal habeas corpus absent proof by the state of a Fay v. Noia,
Petitioners did not allege that their court-appointed attorneys were incompetent,
see
Jones v. Henderson,
supra-,
that the jury discrimination was covert and undiscoverable, or that any other form of “cause” for the omission existed,
see
Wells v. Wainwright,
*546 At oral argument, petitioners urged that their failure to allege, or seek to prove, cause was due to their reliance upon pre Davis cases. Such a reliance reflects a miscalculation of law, not fact. 6 Petitioners having failed timely to raise their jury discrimination claims, or to show cause why they were not timely raised, we affirm the district court’s finding of waiver.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The ease was originally filed as a class action seeking declaratory relief but was treated by the district court as two individual habeas petitions and consolidated. The petitioners do not challenge this treatment by the district court on this appeal.
.
See also
Billingsley v. Clayton,
. Although
Davis
involved only a grand jury issue, the Supreme Court extensively relied upon Shotwell Mfg. Co. v. United States,
. Two district courts in the fourth circuit have followed a different course.
See
Hairston v. Cox,
. An evidentiary hearing was originally set for April 16, 1973 but was continued until April 27, 1973 upon motion by the State of Alabama. Davis was decided on April 17, *546 1973. The hearing was again continued until May 23, 1973. Although the state presented affidavits of four blacks who had been on Morris’ petit jury and of two who had been on the grand jury at about the time of his indictment, neither party elected to present formal evidence and the hearing was ultimately cancelled.
. The record discloses that in his order of May 21, 1973 cancelling a scheduled evidentiary hearing because neither party wished to present evidence, the Magistrate expressly requested the parties to address themselves to the effect of Davis on the instant case.
