Applicants for habeas corpus relief often present an array of claims, some of which yield broader redress than others. The king of habeas remedies is an order for unconditional release with prejudice to re-prosecution. If the fact of the petitioner’s prosecution (or any reprosecution upon the vacation of his conviction) would violate the Constitution, that relief will follow. A paradigmatic example of this phenomenon is when jeopardy has attached and the evidence adduced at trial is found, upon collateral review, to be constitutionally insufficient to sustain the conviction.
See Burks v. United States,
A lesser (though still potent) habeas remedy is the vacation of the conviction and conditional release; this remedy requires the State to retry the petitioner, this time in a manner consistent with the Constitution, or else to release him.
See, e.g., Dugas v. Coplan,
The background facts may be summarized succinctly. In 1992, a Massachusetts jury convicted the petitioner, Robert Fox-worth, on a charge of second-degree murder. The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed his conviction in an unpublished opinion and the Supreme Judicial Court denied further review.
The petitioner then repaired to the federal district court. His habeas petition, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, raised three properly exhausted claims: (i) a claim that the admission at trial of a nontestifying codefen-dant’s incriminatory statement violated his Sixth Amendment rights,
see Bruton v. United States,
The district court found that a Bruton error had compromised the verdict. It dispatched the petition with this bottom line: “Because petitioner is entitled to relief on the basis of his Bruton claim, it is unnecessary to consider his additional claims concerning eyewitness identification and sufficiency of the evidence.” The court then granted the petitioner’s habeas corpus application and directed the Commonwealth “to retry [the] petitioner within sixty days or release him from custody.”
The Commonwealth filed a timely notice of appeal, and the district court stayed its order pending resolution of this appeal. The petitioner moved to dismiss *3 the appeal on the ground that the district court’s order, which decided only the Bru-ton claim and left the other two claims open for future disposition, was not final and appealable. In this regard, the petitioner noted that the district court did not expressly direct the entry of a final judgment as to fewer than all of the claims asserted. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b).
Although the petitioner has now withdrawn his motion to dismiss, we nevertheless test the jurisdictional hypothesis.
See Charlesbank Equity Fund II v. Blinds to Go, Inc.,
This determination does no more than mark the launch of our odyssey: the question remains whether we need to address the implicit disposition of the due process and insufficiency claims. In part, this question is easily answered; in the present posture, the petitioner may be able to defend the granting of his habeas petition on the alternative ground that the admission of the eyewitness identification violated due process.
See Beauchamp v. Murphy,
The insufficiency claim is cut from different cloth — and that claim presents something of a conundrum. Ordinarily, such a claim — which inherently calls for broader relief than was granted by the district court — would require'a cross-appeal.
See Young v. Herring,
Even without a cross-appeal, interests of fairness and judicial economy counsel in favor of taking some action at this juncture. It would make little sense for us to pass upon the propriety of the ordered relief — a retrial — when broader relief, if granted, would obviate any need for doing so. Here, moreover, the .district court has not explained why a decision on the merits of the insufficiency claim was “unnecessary.” If it meant that the grant *4 of a new trial gave the petitioner complete relief, we disagree; no habeas petitioner would willingly accept half a loaf (a retrial) if he were entitled to a full loaf (unconditional release). All in all, it would seem that the proper course is to remand the matter so that the district court can consider the insufficiency claim in the first instance.
We are fortified in this conclusion by the Commonwealth’s prayer for relief in its opening brief, which — although suggesting that this be done later — acknowledges the need to remand the cause to the district court for a decision on the remaining grounds of the petition. The need for a remand being patent, we think that it is both fairer and more prudent to remand for further proceedings now rather than wait until the conclusion of this appeal (as the Commonwealth proposes). We explain briefly.
If the district court reverses the conviction on insufficiency grounds, a retrial may prove unnecessary.
See Burks,
To be sure, the courts have differed as to whether this course represents a policy choice or a matter of constitutional command.
Compare, e.g., United States v. Bobo,
Let us be perfectly clear. Although we do not hold that the Double Jeopardy Clause
compels
the review of a properly preserved insufficiency claim before the petitioner is retried,
see, e.g., Vogel,
For the reasons elucidated above, this matter is remanded for further proceedings on the insufficiency claim. The district court is encouraged to consider the due process claim as well. When it has concluded its further proceedings, the court should enter a single omnibus judgment encompassing both its existing ruling on the Bruton claim and its new ruling(s). The petitioner is, of course, free to abandon any of his remaining claims at any time.
There is one final point. The petitioner recently has moved for admission to bail.
*5
We shall not entertain the request, but it may be renewed before the district court on remand. Given his favorable prospects for at least partial success and the length of time that his habeas petition has been pending, we think that the district court should give the request prompt and serious consideration, subject, of course, to the traditional mix of factors involved in such decisions,
see, e.g., Hilton v. Braunskill,
So Ordered.
Notes
. That question is not free from doubt. At least two of our sister circuits have applied Rule 54(b) in the habeas corpus context.
See Clisby v. Jones,
