Petitioner, George McLaughlin, brought a federal habeas corpus application in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. The district court,
I
McLaughlin was found guilty in 1965 of murder in the first degree and unlawfully carrying a firearm. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts affirmed the conviction.
Commonwealth v. McLaughlin,
II
Petitioner first claims that the jury instructions failed properly to define the elements of the crime charged and unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof. Petitioner did not object to the challenged instructions at trial. He also failed to raise his claim on. direct appeal. He first presented his objection in his second motion for new trial which was denied by the trial court and the denial affirmed by a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court.
The district court noted that under
Wainwright v. Sykes, supra,
petitioner’s failure to object at trial barred presentation of his claim in a federal habeas corpus application. In
Wainwright
the Supreme Court held that failure to object as required by a state’s contemporaneous objection rule constitutes an adequate and independent state ground which bars consideration of the claim in a federal habeas corpus petition unless petitioner shows ‘cause and prejudice.’ Massachusetts possesses a “contemporaneous objection” rule. A defendant normally cannot challenge an allegedly defective charge unless he has objected to the specific instruction at trial.
Commonwealth v. Fluker,
Section 33E is a special provision dealing with capital cases. The part of the section at issue here reads:
After the entry of the appeal in a capital case and until the filing of the rescript by the supreme judicial court motions for a new trial shall be presented to that court and shall be dealt with by the full court, which may itself hear and determine such motions or remit the same to the trial judge for hearing and determination. If any motion is filed in the superior court after rescript, no appeal shall lie from the decision of that court upon such motion unless the appeal is allowed by a single justice of the supreme judicial court on the ground that it presents a new and substantial question which ought to be determined by the full court.
Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 78, § 33E (emphasis added).
In making the determination called for by this section, the single justice does not make a decision directly on the merits of any claim. He examines the claims to decide whether there exists a “new and substantial question which ought to be determined by the full court.” Massachusetts courts have referred to this provision as a “gatekeeper” provision,
Leaster v. Commonwealth,
Petitioner argues that he nonetheless escapes
Wainwright’s
strictures because he can prove ‘cause and prejudice’ for not objecting. In his brief to this court petitioner forcefully argues the existence of ‘prejudice.’ Yet we can nowhere find any valid ‘cause’ for his not having objected. The issues he raises in this portion of his petition present no radically new constitutional claim; the basic legal principles were well established at the time of trial.
See, e.g., Speiser v. Randall,
Ill
The district court found that all the remaining grounds of the petition were origi *10 nally presented in petitioner’s 1971 application and by 1973 had been exhausted. Thus, the court further noted, by 1974, when petitioner amended his petition and excluded these grounds, they were all available to be presented. Petitioner’s decision not to present these grounds in 1974, but presenting them now, it held, constituted an “abuse of the writ.”
Petitioner does not attack the factual findings of the district court. In fact, in his reply memorandum to the motion to dismiss he concedes that his remaining grounds were presented in 1971. Petitioner’s only contention here is that he was not given an opportunity to contest the suggestion that he abused the writ; he adds that if he had the opportunity he could have shown that there was no “abuse.”
Rule 9(b) of the rules governing § 2254 cases in the United States District Court reads:
A second or successive petition may be dismissed if the jiidge finds that it fails to allege new or different grounds for relief and the prior determination was on the merits or, if new and different grounds are alleged, the judge finds that the failure of the petitioner to assert those grounds in a prior petition constituted an abuse of the writ.
28 U.S.C.A. following § 2254 (emphasis added). “Abuse of the writ” is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded by the government.
Sanders v. United States,
It appears to us that petitioner had an adequate opportunity to explain. The government amended its answer to plead “abuse of. writ” as an affirmative defense; petitioner (represented by counsel) was then on notice as to the need to explain; and petitioner was subsequently given time to brief issues not argued originally. He did not address the issue in his supplementary brief; he presented to the district court no excuse for not having done so (nor does he now on appeal); he did not ask the district court for a further opportunity to explain. In fact, his “explanations” contained in his brief on appeal simply suggest that he lacks a sufficient defense to a claim of “abuse.”
The merits of the “abuse” claims are primarily for the district court.
See Sanders
v.
United States,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
