The district court dismissed the ha-beas corpus petition of Texas prisoner Henry Harris on the merits as to every claim he advanced. On this appeal Harris urges essentially seven errors in his trial proceedings: (1) failure to afford him a preliminary hearing; (2) denial of a jury shuffle; 1 (3) impermissibly suggestive line-up; (4) his trial counsel’s erroneous stipulation to the validity of constitutionally invalid prior convictions; (5) systematic exclusion of blacks from the petit jury; (6) deprivation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel at certain preliminary stages of the proceedings and his right to effective assistance of counsel at his trial; and (7) a cumulative effect argument, i. e., even if each claim is insufficient standing alone, the cumulative weight of these straws break the “constitutional camel’s back.” Grounds (1) and (2) do not present constitutional deficits even if valid, therefore we affirm the district court’s dismissal of those claims. Since grounds (3), (4), (5) and (7) have not been presented squarely to the Texas courts, we vacate the district court’s dismissal on the merits as to these issues and remand with instructions to dismiss
them without prejudice for failure to exhaust state remedies. After consideration of issue (6), which has been exhausted, we affirm the district court’s dismissal on the merits.
Unfortunately, the procedural odyssey of this already lengthy case has not reached its ending. It started when Harris was convicted in Dallas, Texas for felony robbery and sentenced to seventy years imprisonment. His conviction was affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Harris v. Texas,
Preliminary Hearing and Jury Shuffle
The district court was correct in holding that the denial of Harris’ request for a preliminary hearing does not present a constitutional issue. • Even if Harris’ statement that he requested such a hearing is taken as true, it was not a procedure required by state law, Trussell v. State,
Similarly, the trial judge’s denial of Harris’ motion to remix the names of all jurors called for service at the term so as to alter the order in which they would be tendered to the parties in this case
4
apparently denied him an option available under Texas law, but this denial presents no question rising to constitutional dimensions. There was no allegation that the venire was selected on a racially discriminatory basis. Therefore, shuffling the order of names on the venire could do no more than replace one potential juror with another whose constitutional impartiality toward the defendant was presumably the same. Harris did not allege that the trial judge used racial criteria in overruling his motion. There is no constitutional right to have members of one’s own race on the petit jury, Apodaca v. Oregon,
Exhaustion of State Remedies— Procedure
In order to determine the proper disposition of Harris’ remaining claims, we must confront a threshold procedural issue: what is a district court’s duty under 28 U.S.C. Section 2254(b) when some issues raised in a habeas petition have been exhausted in the state courts and other issues have not been? Abstract principles of comity and this court’s announced policy against “piecemeal litigation”,
see
Hargrett v. Wainwright,
In the absence of any single clear rule in this circuit, we are free to dispose of the instant case in a manner which best reconciles the conflicting policy interests which it presents. The district judge here has reviewed and dismissed, on its merits, the fully exhausted claim that Harris was denied counsel at critical stages of the proceedings and that his appointed attorney rendered him ineffective assistance in his defense. Judicial economy outweights any comity inspired reason for us to vacate the decision of this claim on this appeal. However, we cannot affirm the federal ha-beas court’s decision on the merits of the remainder of the claims that have not yet been presented to the Texas courts.
The Non-Exhausted Claims
Lineup
— Since United States v. Wade,
Jury Exclusion
— Harris claims that the two blacks on his venire were “adroitly maneuvered off the panel by the prosecuting attorney” through questions relating to whether panel members were opposed to the imposition of capital punishment. He argues that these questions became the false predicate for excusal of the two blacks for cause. The state acknowledges that the only two black members of the venire did not ■serve but urges that the prosecutor used peremptory challenges to exclude them.
See
Swain v. Alabama,
Prior Convictions
— The claim that Harris’ trial counsel stipulated to the validity of constitutionally invalid prior convictions used by the jury in determining his punishment has never been presented to the Texas courts, either as a fact ground related to an ineffective counsel contention or as the basis of a claim for relief under Tucker v. United States,
Totality of Errors — The claim that all of Harris’ alleged constitutional errors when taken together resulted in a denial to him of due process likewise has never been presented to the Texas courts. We vacate the court’s final decision on this issue and remand for a dismissal without prejudice of this claim also.
Right to Counsel and Effective Assistance of Counsel
Harris alleges that he was denied counsel at the critical stages of the proceedings leading up to his trial. He also urges that he was denied effective assistance of counsel at the trial. He avers that his court-appointed attorney first conferred with him on March 3, 1967 just before his trial was to commence on March 6, and that this belated attention did not afford his attorney time to properly interview the alibi witnesses Harris had suggested. Additionally, Harris asserts that his counsel’s failure to call those witnesses at the trial of itself denied him effective assistance.
The records developed at trial and at the post-conviction evidentiary hearing in the Texas courts disclosed that Harris was advised of his rights by a magistrate, and that he never requested counsel at any of the pretrial proceedings. Additionally, these records fail to demonstrate, that Harris suffered any prejudice due to his pretrial lack of counsel. The prosecution’s case consisted mainly *1299 of eyewitness testimony identifying Harris as the robber. No incriminating statements or confessions were introduced against him at the trial.
Harris’ counsel was appointed approximately a month before trial, and associated another attorney to aid him in trying the ease. At the evidentiary hearing on the first state habeas petition, counsel testified that he did not have a chance to contact the witnesses whose names had been suggested by Harris as persons who could supply him with an alibi, and that he moved for a continuance on this basis. The trial judge refused formally to grant the motion but did agree to defer the trial an extra day to allow counsel to contact these persons. This record further shows that one of these witnesses, Thelma Shoemaker, advised counsel that she could not account for Harris’ whereabouts at the time of the robbery, and that Geraldine Reed, the other supposed alibi witness, declared she was not with Harris until hours after the time of the robbery.
Viewing these records in light of the presumptively correct standard established by 28 U.S.C. Section 2254(d), for the state adjudication that counsel was constitutionally effective, we have no hesitancy in affirming the portion of the judgment below relating to this claim. It certainly meets the test we distilled in United States v. Beasley,
It is clear that effective counsel includes a right to more than pro forma or perfunctory representation. Anders v. California,386 U.S. 738 ,87 S.Ct. 1396 ,18 L.Ed.2d 493 (1967); Powell v. Alabama,287 U.S. 45 ,53 S.Ct. 55 ,77 L.Ed. 158 (1932). However, effective counsel does not mean “errorless counsel” but rather “counsel likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance.” MacKenna v. Ellis,280 F.2d 592 , 599 (5th Cir.), modified 5 Cir.,289 F.2d 928 , cert. denied,368 U.S. 877 ,82 S.Ct. 121 ,7 L.Ed.2d 78 (1960); Brown v. Beto,377 F.2d 950 , 957-958 (5th Cir. 1967); King v. Beto,429 F.2d 221 , 225 (5th Cir. 1970).
This is a far different case from that presented by the facts of Gomez v. Beto,
Cases like this one — involving too many lawyers and too many courts 7 — carry the seeds of their own defeat. More importantly, they bode ill for the Great Writ in general through ridiculous looking spurts and stops of seemingly never-ending litigation, and they sap the valuable time of overtaxed judicial systems. However, the importance of the values involved demands more, not less, careful attention. With such consideration, it should not be too much to hope that, when the remaining issues of this case have been properly presented to a court of the State of Texas, a disposition will result which will end Harris’ over-long judicial sojourn.
Affirmed in part and in part vacated and remanded with directions.
Notes
. This is an optional procedure provided by Article 35.11 Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Code Crim. Proc.:
The trial judge, upon the demand of the defendant or his attorney, or of the State’s counsel, shall cause the names of all the members of the general panel drawn or assigned as jurors in such case to be placed in a receptacle and well-shaken, and the clerk shall draw therefrom the names of a sufficient number of jurors from which a jury may be selected to try such case, and such names shall be written, in the order drawn, on the jury list from which the jury is to be selected to try such case, and write the names as drawn upon two slips of paper and deliver one slip to the State’s counsel and the other to the defendant or his attorney.
. This claim originally contended that the prosecutor had suppressed his alibi testimony but at the evidentiary hearing it became clear that Harris’ own attorney had made the decision not to call the alibi witnesses.
. This issue is now before the Supreme Court in a factually distinguishable case. See Pugh v. Rainwater,
. See footnote 1 above.
. The district court can either hold proceedings in abeyance until state remedies are exhausted as to all issues,
see
Pate v. Holman,
.
Wade
and
Gilbert
have not been given retroactive effect.
See
Stovall v. Denno,
. To this point Harris has been represented by five different attorneys in nine trial and appellate court appearances in the state and federal judicial systems.
