In 1960 George Harry Metropolis and Dale Allen Johnson were jointly tried and convicted of murder in a state court of Utah and each was thereafter sentenced to the Utah State Prison. At the date of trial each of the defendants was fifteen years of age. No direct appeal from these convictions was ever taken, though some years later the defendants did file with the Utah Supreme Court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which petition was denied as was thе petition for rehearing.
Nine years after their conviction the defendants, who will hereinafter be referred to by name or sometimes collectively as the petitioners, filed in the United States District Court of Utah, Central Division, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, naming as the defendant in that proceeding the Wardеn of the Utah State Prison, John Turner. This petition, filed pro se, was a rambling one, some forty-six pages in length, apparently prepared by a fellow inmate. Counsеl was thereafter appointed to represent the petitioners.
Upon hearing of the petition the only matter urged to the trial court was the proposition that under Bruton v. United States,
In Bruton v. United States, swpra,, the United States Supreme Court, in revеrsing Bruton’s conviction for armed postal robbery, held Bruton’s rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment had been violated because there was a substantial risk that the jury, despite instructions to the contrary, had looked to the incriminating extrajudicial statements made by Bru-ton’s codefendant. The facts of Bruton should be examined with a bit of particularity.
Bruton and one Evans were jointly tried and convicted of armed postal robbery. Neither testified upon their trial. Bruton made no admissions or confessions; Evans, however, did confess to the postal authorities that he and Bru-ton committed the robbery in question and upon trial Evans’ confession, including the portions which implicated Bru-ton, was received intо evidence. In line with Delli Paoli v. United States,
It is petitioners’ contention in this court that the
Bruton
rule was correctly applied by the trial court and that its judgment should therefore be affirmed. Counsel for the Warden сoncede that under Roberts v. Russell,
The reporter’s transcript of the testimony given at the state trial of the defendants in 1960 was by agreement received at the hearing on the habeas corpus petition. From the transcript we learn that, as was true in Bruton, neither Metropolis nor Johnson testified upon trial. However, unlike Bruton, Metropolis and Johnson both made full and complete confessions to the arresting authorities аnd upon trial the confession of each was offered and received into evidence, with a Delli Paoli-type instruction by the court that the confession was admissible only against the de-clarant. The confessions of Metropolis and Johnson were paralleling confessions in which the confessing defendant not only spelled out in prеcise detail what he himself did in connection with the homicide, but also described the role played by his codefendant. And the statements thus given by Metropolis and Johnson dovetailed in all important particulars.
It is the position of counsel that because of these significant factual differences, the instant case is either “outside” the rule of
Bruton,
citing United States ex rel. Catanzaro v. Mancusi,
Harrington v. United States, supra, decided subsequent to Bruton, merits comment. There, Harrington and three codefendants were jointly tried and convicted of murder in a state court of Cаlifornia. Harrington made a statement which, though it fell short of being a confession, nonetheless, among other incriminating things, did place him at the scene of the crimе. This was introduced in evidence as a part of the prosecution’s case against Harrington. Statements taken from Harrington’s three co-defendants, which in varying dеgrees incriminated Harrington, were also introduced in evidence. One of these three codefendants took the stand in his own defense and he was cross-examined by counsel for Harrington. The other two codefendants, however, did not take the stand.
In seeking a reversal of his conviction Harrington argued the applicability of the
Bruton
rule to his case. In rejecting this contention, the United States Supreme Court held that the violation of
Bruton,
namely, the lack of opportunity on the part of Harrington to cross-examine two of his codefendants whose statements to the police tended to incriminate him, was “on these special facts harmless error,” under Chapman v. California,
A case analogous to the instant one is United States ex rel. Catanzarо v. Man-cusi,
supra.
There, Catanzaro and several codefendants were jointly tried and convicted of murder in a state court of New York. A confession made by one of the codefendants which incriminated Catanzaro was introduced in the joint trial and Catanzaro argued that under
Bruton
his conviction should be reversed. In
Catanzaro,
as in our case, though not in
Bruton,
Catanzaro himself confessed and his confеssion was also received in evidence. Noting that Catan-zaro’s confession “interlocks with and supports” the confession of his code-fendant, the United Statеs Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, stated that in
Cat-anzaro
“no such ‘devastating’ risk attends the lack of confrontation as was thought to be involved in Bruton.”
See also
United States ex rel. Dukes v. Wal-lack,
In this court counsel for the petitioners as a part of his Bruton argument attempts to inject the issue as to the vol-untariness of the confessions made by the petitioners. We deem this particular matter not to be properly before us.
Judgment reversed.
