MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This case is before the court for the second time. A previous opinion was filed herein on October 31, 1967, Haman v. Sigler,
In order to get the matter before the state court, and within the ninety days, petitioner, through his attorney, filed a motion to vacate in the Douglas County District Court under Nebraska’s post-conviction procedure. The state, acting through the county attorney, filed a response to petitioner’s motion which requested “the Court to overrule the defendant’s Motion to Vacate on the grounds that this is a successive motion to vacate the judgment in direct contravention” of Nebraska’s post-conviction law. The court dismissed the motion on the grounds that it was a successive mo
After the expiration of the time limit set forth in the previous order, counsel for petitioner demanded his release from incarceration on the basis that a hearing was not held as ordered by this court. Upon the State’s refusal to release the petitioner, petitioner’s counsel filed the motion now under consideration requesting this court to enforce its previous order, or in the alternative, make a determination that petitioner’s statement was involuntary and grant the writ. Attached to this motion was a copy of the motion, response and order filed in the state court. The respondent has admitted that the copies attached to petitioner’s motion are accurate.
In the argument on this motion, counsel for the respondent indicated his agreement that the state court had not held the voluntariness hearing required by the previous order of this court. However, in a subsequent letter to the court, counsel indicates that he has “about come to the conclusion that the state officials may have thought that they were complying with the terms of your order.” In view of the holding reached by the state court and particularly that part which states “there is nothing for this Court to rule upon in connection with the defendant’s Motion presently before the Court,” this court is of the opinion that the state court did not hold the full, fair, adequate hearing contemplated by the previous order of this court.
This court is now faced with the difficult question of determining the course of action to be followed in the face of the State’s failure to grant the evidentiary hearing. In its previous order, the court required petitioner’s release unless, within ninety days, a hearing to determine voluntariness was held or a new trial granted. Such a disposition was supported by ample authority. U. S. ex rel. Dickerson v. Rundle,
In Rogers v. Richmond,
In Jackson v. Denno,
In Boles v. Stevenson,
In Sims v. State of Georgia,
“A constitutional rule was laid down in * * * [Jackson] that a jury is not to hear a confession unless and until the trial judge has determined that it was freely and voluntarily given. * * * Although the judge need not make formal findings of fact or write an opinion, his conclusion that the confession is voluntary must appear from the record with unmistakable clarity. * * * [The Jackson] rule is, as we have said, a constitutional rule binding upon the States and, under the Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the Constitution, it must be obeyed.” (543, 544,87 S.Ct. 643 )
The Court then reversed the Georgia judgment and remanded it for a Jackson hearing.
In Kirk v. State of Wyoming,
However, the precise question presented to this court by the State’s failure to act has, so far as this court can determine, never before been decided. A closely analogous case was presented to the Supreme Court in the second appeal in Sims v. State of Georgia,
It appears to this court that, in the second Sims appeal the Supreme Court has held that, once a habeas corpus petitioner has made out a prima facie case of involuntariness of a confession whereby Jackson v. Denno, supra, applies, the petitioner will be released unless the state grants him a voluntariness hearing or a new trial. Whether this is achieved by saying that failure to rebut petitioner’s claim supports a conclusion that his version is true or it is achieved as simply a matter of course is irrelevant.
In so ruling, this court is aware of the statement of the Supreme Court in Henry v. State of Mississippi,
An authoritative decision of the proper disposition to be made in cases of this kind is to be desired. In the period of time since the prior order of the court in this case, the Nebraska Supreme Court has made note of the validity of the rule of waiver by failure to make contemporaneous objection in the following cases: State v. Whited,
This court would again mention, lest there be some misunderstanding as to its position, the policy which it has consistently endeavored to follow in previous habeas corpus cases. First, that it should not interfere in the internal management of the prison unless there was clear abuse of constitutional rights, immunities or privileges. Second, because of the delicate relationship existing between the federal and state court systems, that an opportunity should first be furnished to the state courts to administer the state criminal laws within the standards of the United States and the State Constitutions.
Some of the reasons supporting this policy are selfish. The increase in habeas corpus petitions in the federal courts has been the subject of many reports and articles. This increase has not only caused crowded dockets in the federal courts but also has caused agitation and controversy over what should be the authority of the federal district courts. To lessen this agitation, this court has endeavored at all times to afford the state courts the opportunity of correcting their mistakes, if any, and of implementing the constitutional guaranties.
The federal courts should avoid, when possible, supplanting the state courts in holding these hearings. If full hearings were held, to paraphrase Mr. Justice Brennan, greater finality would inevitably attach to state court determinations of federal constitutional questions because further evidentiary hearings on federal habeas corpus would prove unnecessary.
It was with this in mind that the court entered its previous order in this case. It is with regret that the court reads the record showing, as the Attorney General concedes in oral argument, that a hearing was not granted on the issue of voluntariness.
If the state courts are unwilling to give the hearings which the Constitution requires, then the alternative is, and should be, to release the prisoner.
It is therefore ordered that petitioner, Melvin W. Homan, be released and permanently discharged from the custody of the respondent, Maurice Sigler, in his capacity as Warden of the Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex, provided, however, that this order will be stayed pending the outcome of the appeal, if any is taken, from this order.
It is further ordered that the petitioner, Melvin W. Homan, be immediately brought before this court by the respondent for the purpose of allowing his release pending the outcome of any further proceedings in this case.
