Respondent-Appellant appeals from the District Court’s partial grant of petitionerappellee’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The underlying legal issue is whether the imposition of a higher sentence at appellee’s retrial was a product of vindictiveness toward appellee for asserting his right to appeal, and hence whether that harsher sentence violated the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. The District Court found that the second jury’s imposition of a seventy-five-year sentence, when at least some of those jurors knew that the first jury imposed a sixty-year sentence, was sufficient evidence of vindictiveness and ordered release of appellee unless the state of Tennessee completes a resentenc *54 ing of appellee to a term of imprisonment of sixty years or less. 1
Appellant contends on appeal that there is insufficient evidence of vindictiveness and also argues that, in light of newly discovered evidence not considered at the state level, appellee has failed to exhaust state remedies. We decline to reach the first issue, because we agree that appellee has not fulfilled exhaustion requirements.
I.
On February 1, 1975, appellee, Howard Sampson, shot and killed patrolman Billy Wayne Blackwell of the Lewisburg, Tennessee, Police Department. Sampson was tried by a jury and convicted, on June 19, 1975, of second degree murder of a police officer. The jury sentenced Sampson to sixty years in prison.
2
The Tennessee Supreme Court overturned Sampson’s conviction in 1977, because it found that the judge had improperly instructed the jury with respect to Sampson’s insanity defense.
Sampson v. State,
In 1984, Sampson filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus. Appointed counsel filed an amended petition, which appellant answered. With respect to his jury vindictiveness claim, he alleged that he did not know whether the jury knew of the prior sentence but that there was a “significant possibility” that they did in view of the extensive publicity. This was the posture of the jury vindictiveness claim he presented to the state court. In September, the District Court concluded that Sampson had exhausted his available state remedies. In October, Sampson filed a memorandum in support of his petition for habeas corpus and submitted the following documents: (1) newspaper clippings from the Lewisburg Tribune and Marshall County Gazette regarding the crime and Sampson’s trials; (2) 1980 Census of Population, vol. 1, ch. B, part 44 (Tennessee) (Aug. 1982); and (3) affidavits of two jurors from the second trial regarding the jurors’ actual knowledge, at the time of deliberation, of Sampson’s sentence in the first trial. These documents were offered to support Sampson’s claim that the seventy-five year sentence was a product of vindictiveness. 3 Two days later, plaintiff moved to further amend his petition 4 and also moved for summary judgment. On November 20, 1984, the court, having determined that an evidentiary hearing was unnecessary, granted relief on the vindictiveness claim. 5 Appellant sought recon *55 sideration, contending that the court erred in denying appellant at least the opportunity to rebut the vindictiveness claim at an evidentiary hearing, and that, in light of Sampson’s failure to proffer the above-mentioned documents to the state courts, his vindictiveness claim had not been exhausted. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) & (c). The District Court, noting that the uncontroverted evidence showed that some members of the second jury were aware of the original sentence, held that an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the sentence was “otherwise a product of vindictiveness” was unwarranted. No. 84-0270, slip op. at 2 (M.D.Tenn. Jan. 15, 1985) (emphasis in original).
II.
It is undisputed that Sampson argued to the state courts that the higher verdict in the second trial was a product of vindictiveness. Appellant contends that, nevertheless, the claim, as presented to the federal court, was significantly different and in a stronger evidentiary posture. Thus, appellant asks us to require Sampson to present his claim to the state courts pursuant to the post-conviction petition procedures set forth in Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 40-30-101 et seq.
The exhaustion provision of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 requires a habeas petitioner to “ ‘fairly present[ ]” to the state courts the ‘substance’ of his federal habeas corpus claim.”
Anderson v. Harless,
The Sixth Circuit has not yet directly addressed the question whether, or when, new facts or evidence, not presented to the state courts, can affect a habeas petitioner’s claim to such a degree that the new facts or evidence must first be presented to the state courts. Other circuits, however, have considered this question. In light of these other cases and the rationale behind the exhaustion requirement, we hold that the evidence presented in conjunction with Sampson’s federal habeas petition places his claim in a significantly different posture and that the state court must be given an opportunity to consider the claim in that posture.
The First Circuit faced this issue in
Domaingue v. Butterworth,
The Second Circuit addressed this issue in
United States ex rel. Boodie v. Herold,
The Fifth Circuit has also addressed this exhaustion issue in the context of an “ineffective assistance of counsel” claim. In
Brown v. Estelle,
The Fifth Circuit held that “[t]hese affidavits, which had not been presented to the state courts, added some substantiation to contentions which previously had no serious corroboration.” Id. at 495.
The state courts must have had an opportunity to pass on the claim in light of a full record and where the factual basis for a claim was not presented to the state courts, the claim is unexhausted. Where a federal habeas petitioner presents newly discovered evidence or other evidence not before the state courts such as to place the case in a significantly different and stronger evidentiary posture than it was when the state courts considered it, the state courts must be given an opportunity to consider the evidence. [Knoxson v. Estelle,574 F.2d 1339 , 1340 (5th Cir.1978)].
Id. Because petitioner’s claim depended “in large measure on factual allegations outside the record on his direct appeal and in his habeas proceedings in the state courts,” id. at 495-96, the court required further state court proceedings.
The Ninth Circuit reached the same result in another “ineffective assistance of counsel” case. In
Schiers v. People of State of California,
that counsel did not go to the initial arraignment proceedings and did not inform him of his legal rights during his police detention; that counsel, before the trial court, never raised an objection based on petitioner’s illegal detention; that (as discovered by petitioner after trial and appeal) counsel did not secure the introduction into evidence of certain color slides allegedly crucial to petition *57 er’s defense, although counsel had falsely represented to petitioner that they had been introduced; that counsel was not even aware that they had not been received into evidence and indeed had argued to the jury that it should examine them with care.
Id.
at 176. The Ninth Circuit held that state remedies had not been exhausted because petitioner’s contention “rests upon a cumulation of many asserted delinquencies not heretofore presented to the state courts.”
Id.
The holding in
Schiers
was cited with approval in dicta in
Hudson v. Rushen,
Finally, the Tenth Circuit has considered this exhaustion question in a case where petitioner complained of the “apparent bias or inadequacy of the trial judge.”
Jones v. Hess,
transformed the claim of bias and prejudice into a significantly different and more substantial claim, one involving averment of judicial misconduct of a distinct character____ A federal claim is unexhausted where it presents “a materially different claim and stronger evidentiary case” than was before the state court. United States ex rel. Figueroa v. McMann,411 F.2d 915 , 916 (2d Cir.).
The state courts must have had an opportunity to pass on the claim “in light of a full record,” United States ex rel. Boodie v. Herold,349 F.2d 372 , 373-74 (2d Cir.), and where the factual basis for a claim was not'.presented to the state courts, the claim is unexhausted. Gurule v. Turner,461 F.2d 1083 , 1084 (10th Cir.). Although “bits of evidence” which were not before the state courts will not render a claim unexhausted, [citations omitted], where a federal habeas petitioner presents newly discovered evidence or other evidence not before the state courts such as to place the case in a significantly different posture, the state courts must be given an opportunity to consider the evidence. Needel v. Scafati,412 F.2d 761 , 766 (1st Cir.) (“significantly different posture”), cert. denied,396 U.S. 861 [90 S.Ct. 133 ,24 L.Ed.2d 113 ] ...; Schiers v. California,333 F.2d 173 , 176 (9th Cir.) (“facts outside the record”); Ex parte Farrell,189 F.2d 540 , 545-46 (1st Cir.) (dictum), cert. denied,342 U.S. 839 [72 S.Ct. 64 ,96 L.Ed. 634 ],...
Id. at 693-94. Applying these cases, the Tenth Circuit held that petitioner had not exhausted his claim.
Sampson’s claim certainly falls within the category of claims considered in the above-mentioned cases. Previously, Sampson could only speculate whether the jurors knew of the prior sentence. Now he has direct proof. The District Court hinged its decision on this new evidence of actual knowledge. That evidence places Sampson’s claim in a significantly different posture than that at the state level. 7
Finally, Sampson argues that exhaustion would be futile.
Cf. Ferrazza v. Mintzes,
This Court has held that where the state’s remedial process is open to interpretation with respect to the availability of relief via that process, the state should be given an opportunity to adopt that interpretation.
See Parker v. Rose,
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and the action is remanded to the District Court with directions to dismiss the petition without prejudice.
Notes
. The District Court amended this original judgment by removing the sixty-year limitation if the resentencing "is by a jury which is not aware of either of the petitioner's prior sentences, and if its sentence is not otherwise a product of vindictiveness.” No. 84-0270, slip op. at 2-3 (M.D.Tenn. Jan. 15, 1985).
. At the time of Sampson's conviction, Tennessee was one of a handful of states that allows juries to impose criminal sentences. Tennessee has since discontinued this practice. See The Criminal Sentencing Reform Act of 1982, Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-203 (1982).
. The newspaper clippings were offered to show that the case received much publicity, supporting an inference that the second jury was aware of the first verdict and the sentence accompanying it. The census publication showed that the population of Marshall County, Tennessee, to which Lewisburg belongs, was under 20,000 in 1980, further supporting an inference that Sampson's prior sentence was common knowledge in Marshall County.
. The requested amendment was based on the affidavits just referred to. Sampson sought to amend his petition to include the allegation that, not only was there a significant possibility that the prospective jurors had knowledge of the jury verdict at his prior trial, some of the jurors who actually sat at the second trial did have knowledge of the prior sentence.
. Sampson raised two other grounds for habeas relief: (1) that failure to conduct voir dire of each prospective juror separately resulted in the jurors being exposed to prejudicial statements of a fellow prospective juror; and (2) that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of *55 sanity. The District Court rejected both of these claims, and Sampson does not appeal them.
. The statement was: "Excuse me, Your Honor, where’s my lawyer? I haven’t seen him or my wife." Id. at 373.
. The exhaustion requirement adopted in this case does not conflict with procedures in the habeas statute permitting district courts to develop an evidentiary record. Our holding only affects those cases where the new evidence is significant or substantial in relation to the claim and the record below.
