This appeal is taken from an order of the District Court for the District of Colorado, entered in a habeas corpus proceeding, declaring appellee’s state court conviction to be “null and void.”
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The order was entered after a full evidentiary hearing
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and a determination that appellee’s conviction had been premised upon the introduction in the Colorado state court of evidence obtained by an illegal search and seizure and that appellee had exhausted his state remedies. Peters v. Dillon, D.Colo.,
Appellee was convicted of larceny on May 16, 1961, after trial to a state court jury. No motion to suppress evidence was made before or during the trial nor was any issue of the illegal search made, by objection or otherwise, during the *339 course of the trial. A motion for new trial was filed and was pending at the time Mapp was decided. Appellee had not then been sentenced. On August 2, 1961, an amended motion for new trial was filed which requested, as an alternative for new trial, that a special hearing be held to determine whether the subject evidence had been illegally seized. The motion was denied. On September 8 a further motion was presented to the trial court requesting that the ease be reopened for the purpose of taking testimony probing the competency and admissibility of the evidence. This motion was denied and appellee was subsequently sentenced.
The Colorado Supreme Court affirmed the judgment upon the merits, Peters v. People,
“We conclude that the decision * * * [in Mapp v. Ohio] went no farther than to exclude in the state courts the use of evidence obtained by way of an unreasonable search and seizure as forbidden by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It does not exclude all evidence which might be obtained as an incident to a lawful arrest, nor does it preclude the admission of all evidence which may have been obtained without the sanction of a search warrant. The evidence before the court clearly indicated a permissive search 3 and there is nothing whatever in the record to indicate ‘an unreasonable search and seizure’ within the coverage of Mapp v. Ohio, supra.”376 P.2d at 175 .
In seeking a rehearing the appellee again reiterated his claim that:
“Defendant merely seeks an opportunity for a hearing on the issues presented by his ‘motion to Suppress.’ Defendant admits that the record does not specifically reflect an unreasonable seizure; the Defendant was never given the opportunity to present such evidence. (See Defendant’s Opening Brief, p. 79 and Reply Brief, pp. 15-17.) The Trial Court ruled on the substantive merits of the Defendant’s motion without allowing evidence to be offered in support of the motion (f. 1U31). We would assert that the record taken as a whole shows that Defendant was not within 100 miles of Denver when his office was raided (the day after his home was searched) by police officers; Exhibits A, P and 0, taken from the office without benefit of a warrant or any conceivable permission of the absent Defendant (ff. 588-598).” (Emphasis in original.)
The motion for rehearing was denied on June 19, 1963, and the present application for a writ of habeas corpus was filed on August 29, 1963.
We have no hesitancy in rejecting appellant’s contention that appellee’s initial failure to move to suppress or to object to the admission of the subject evidence covers the state judgment with finality or with a factual question of waiver. Federal cognizance of the denial of a constitutional right remains open in habeas corpus unless adequate state procedures are deliberately bypassed.
Henry v. State of Mississippi,
The question of retrospective application of the exclusionary rule of Mapp has received much attention in both federal
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and state
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courts, as well as by legal writers.
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But in the case at bar -we are not concerned with the problems of total retrospectivity for here only .appellee’s actual trial predated the decision in Mapp and the judgment was not final at the trial level when the Colorado courts were first approached with the constitutional aspects of the case. Our case is thus distinguishable from the situation considered by this court in Gaitan, supra, wherein we held the dictate of Elkins v. United States, supra, not applicable to a judgment clothed with three years of finality and indicated that we found “nothing in Elkins, Rios,
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or Mapp which says whether those decisions should be applied retroactively or prospectively,”
It would be difficult to justify any other rule. See Bender, supra, at 673-678. That the rule is not less narrow is obvious from the opinions in Ker v. State of California,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The order provides:
“It Is Therefore
“Ordered that petitioner’s conviction be, and the same hereby is, declared illegal and therefore null and void. The State of Colorado may rearrest and retry petitioner if it secs fit to do so.”
. See Townsend v. Sain,
. The record before this court does not show upon what basis this affirmative statement is made. As we have indi-eated, the appellant makes no such present claim in behalf of the state.
. E.g., Gaitan v. United States, 10 Cir.,
.; E.g., State v. DelVecchio,
. E.g., Bender, supra; Traynor, Mapp v. Ohio at Large in the Fifty States, 1962 Duke L.J. 319; Morris, The End of an Experiment in Federalism — A Note on Mapp v. Ohio, 36 Wash.L.Rev. 407; Note, 16 Rutgers L.Rev. 587.
. Rios v. United States,
. See cases cited in notes 4 and 5, supra, and cases cited by the trial court,
