Thе sole issue before us is whether a district court’s decision granting or denying bail to a prisoner petitioning for habeas corpus relief pending review of the petition is appealable.
In a prior unpublished opinion in this case, this panel ruled that a district court’s bail order for a state prisoner whose habe-as corpus petition is pending before the district court is not appealable,
There is a significant split in the circuits on the issue presented in this case. The Second, Third, Seventh, Eighth and District of Columbiа Circuits have ruled that bail orders pending a review of habeas corpus petitions are appealable.
United States v. Smith,
The circuits which have held that thе bail orders are appealable have reasoned that bail determinations, even in a post-conviction relief proceеding, are appealable interlocutory orders under the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Co.,
To come within the “small class” of decisions excepted from the final judgment rule by Cohen, the order must conclusively dеtermine the disputed question, resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action, and be effectively unrеviewable on appeal from a final judgment.
See Henry v. City of Detroit Manpower Dept.,
In
Stack v. Boyle,
The cases holding that habeas corpus bail decisions are not appealable have summаrily stated that those decisions are not final judgments and do not fall within the collateral order exception.
See, e.g., Land,
Interestingly, the courts which have rejected the appealability of the bail decision under the collateral order doctrine have considered the propriety of habeas bail decisions by treating them as petitions for mandamus.
See Land, supra; Woodcock, supra; see also Jago v. United States Dist. Ct. for the N.D. Ohio,
We join the circuits which hold that habeas corpus bаil decisions are appealable. The bail order is severable from the merits, it conclusively determines the disputed question, and is effectively unreviewable on appeal from a prior judgment. Although there is some merit to the argument that these bail decisions are often inextricably entwined with the merits of the habeas petitions, “[a] person’s right to liberty pending disposition of his case on the merits is (somewhat) distinct from the merits.”
Cherek,
Moreover, in
Jago v. United States Dist. Ct. for the N.D. Ohio,
involving a state’s appeal of the district court’s grant of bail to the petitioner pending retrial in state court aftеr a habeas decision on the merits, we recognized situations where district courts grant bail pending a habeas corpus decision on the merits.
The decisions we join today do not distinguish the right to an appeal based on the fact that the petitioner is in state or in federal prison custody nor do we try to distinguish if the appeal is brought by the federal or state government.
See Smith, supra
(appeal by federal prisoner);
Martin v. Solem, supra
(appeal by state government);
Guerra v. Meese, supra
(appeal by federal government);
Cherek, supra
(appeal by federal prisoner);
Iuteri v. Nardoza, supra
(appeal by state government);
Gamble v. Jones, supra
(appeal by state prisoner). Contrary to some suggestions, we believe there is no reason to make suсh a distinction. The analysis under
Cohen
and
Stack v. Boyle
applies to both state and federal habeas situations because although state habeas petitioners must аssert a constitutional error in their confinement, bail determinations pending habeas review are separate from the merits of the petition whether it asserts a constitutional or nonconstitutional error.
See Cherek,
We do not believe that this decision will result in a tidal wave of appeаls for this court. Even those courts which have ruled that habeas bail decisions are not appeal-able have effectively allowed their appeal by treating them as petitions for mandamus; therefore, we fail to see how this decision will contribute to a swollen docket. Morеover, as a practical matter, the motions for bail will be denied in most of the habeas proceedings. Thus, few government appeals will bе lodged. In order to receive bail pending a decision on the merits, prisoners must be able to show not only a substantial claim of law based on the facts surrounding the petition but also the existence of “some circumstance making [the motion for bail] exceptional and deserving of special treatment in the interests of justice.”
Aronson v. May,
While we find that the petitioner may appeal the denial of bail in this case, he has failed to meet the standard required for bail. Finding no substantial claim that the petitioner is confined in viоlation of the constitution, we need not reach the issue of whether some exceptional circumstances are present which deserve special treatment in the interests of justice.
We vacate our earlier decision and affirm the district court’s denial of bail pending its review of the habeas petition.
