Opinion
Trоy Johnson petitions for a writ of habeas corpus. He asserts the invalidity of his two concurrent 10-year minimum sentences, imposed in 1965 upon his conviction of two counts of selling marijuana with two priors. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11531.)
Petitioner was convicted in 1950 of a violation of the federal offense of acquiring marijuana without having paid the federal Marijuana Transfer Tax. (26 U.S.C. § 2593(a), now § 4744(a)(1).) Upon violating probation, he served six months in a federal correctional institution in Texas.
Petitioner was convicted in 1954 of possession of marijuana (Health & Saf. Code, § 11500), and served five months in the Alameda County jail.
In November of 1965, and аfter waiving a jury, petitioner went to trial on two counts of sale of marijuana under an indictment supplemented to charge the two prior offenses described above. When the district attorney introduced evidence of the two priors during his case-in-chief, petitioner’s *408 attorney indicated that he had not previously seen the supplemental indictment charging the priors, and that he had not researched the question whether the federal offense could be treated as a prior.
The court indicated that counsel could research the matter and present any argument on thе following day, at which time the district attorney cited
People
v.
McLean,
After counsel argued at length the possibilities of conviction of mere possession and the sufficiency of the priors, the court found pеtitioner guilty of two counts of sale of marijuana, indicated an intention to make the sentences concurrent, and concluded that the federal offense constituted a “good prior felony” while the later offense was “[n]ot a prior felony. It is a prior misdemeanor conviction.”
Apparently the trial judge relied on the fact that petitioner’s five-month sentence rendered his 1954 conviction a misdemeanor. (Pen. Code, § 17.) When the district attorney indicated that the fact the offense carried a possible felony sentence rendered the offense a felony prior for рurposes of Health and Safety Code section 11531 (Health & Saf. Code, § 11533), the judge replied: “That is up to the Adult Authority as long as I leave it in.” The judgment recites that petitioner was found guilty of two counts of sale of marijuana, and that he “was previously convicted of a felony in the U.S. District Court and of a misdemeanor in Superior Court, Alameda County, California, both offenses involving Marijuana; . . .” The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction, rejecting inter aha a contention that the 1954 offense did not qualify as a prior felony. We denied a hearing October 14, 1966.
Petitioner now urges: (1) The 1950 federal convictiоn must be voided in view of
Leary
v.
United States
(1969)
*409
(1)
The 1950
Prior—Petitioner’s 1950 conviction was for violatiоn of a federal statute forbidding any person required to pay the federal Marijuana Transfer Tax (26 U.S.C. § 2590, now § 4741) “to acquire or otherwise obtain any marijuana without having paid such tax” and providing that proof of possession coupled with a failure to produce an order form required of all transferors of marijuana (with some irrelevant exceptions) (26 U.S.C. § 2591, now § 4742) “shall be presumptive evidence of guilt.” (26 U.S.C. § 2593(a), now § 4744(a).) Such a conviction constitutes a prior felony for purposes of the habitual narcotics offender statutes
(People
v.
McLean, supra,
Leary
v.
United States, supra,
Marchetti
v.
United States
(1968)
Grosso
v.
United States
(1968)
It is clear that petitioner could not now be convicted of the same offense for which he was convicted in 1950
(Leary
v.
United States, supra,
The retrospective effect of a law-making opinion is to be determined by “ ‘(a) the purpose to be served by the new standards, (b) the extent of the reliance by law enforcement authorities on the old standards, and (c) the effect оn the administration of justice of a retroactive application of the new standards.’ ”
(Desist
v.
United States
(1969)
When the United States Supreme Court’s view of the importance of a new rule is borne in mind, that court’s retroactivity decisions break down
*411
along consistent Enes. FuUy retroactive decisions are seen as vindicating a right which is essential to a reliable determination of whether an accused should suffer a penal sanction.
Berger
v.
California
(1969)
On the other hand, decisions which have been denied retroactive effect are seen as vindicating interests which are collateral to or relatively far
*412
removed from the reliability of the fact-finding process at trial. Thus
Halliday
v.
United States
(1969)
This review of federal retroactivity law reveals that the more directly the new rule in question serves to preclude the conviction of innocent persons, the more likely it is that the rule will be afforded retrospective application. Further, if the rule relates to characteristics of the judicial system which are essential to minimizing convictiоns of the innocent, it will apply retroactively regardless of the reliance of prosecutors on former law, and regardless of the burden which retroactivity will place upon the judicial system.
Lower federal courts have treated the issue of retroactivity as identical in regard to
Leary, Marchetti, Grosso,
and
Haynes,
and have disagreed as to whether these decisions should be given retroactive effect. Panels from five Circuit Courts of Appeals have held one or more of these cases entitled to full retroactivity.
United States
v.
Lucia
(5th Cir. 1969)
Meadows
v.
United States
(9th Cir. 1969)
Panels from three Circuit Courts of Appeal have taken the opposite view.
Graham
v.
United States
(6th Cir. 1969)
We have concluded that
Lucia
and
Miller
reach the correct result, and that
Graham
is unpersuasive. Initially, it should be noted that
Graham's
abstract fear of a “substantial and adverse” impact of a holding that
Leary's
predecessors are retroactive evaporates upon realistic reflection. Since those cases established the principle that the Fifth Amendment is a complete defense to the prosecutions in question, there is no substantial burden upon the administration of justice in the usual sense of costly retrials with stale evidence and forgetful witnesses. (See
In re Dabney, supra,
Moreover, the states are free to give greater retroactive impact to a decision than the federal courts choose to give
(Jenkins
v.
Delaware, supra,
Independent support for retroactivity is provided by the United States Supreme Court’s per curiam decision in
Forgett
v.
United States, supra,
*416
Finally,
Leary’s
purpose strongly militates in favor of retroactivity, and this factor often is conclusive even if there is a considerable burden on the administration of justice.
(Desist
v.
United States, supra,
Unlike
Tehan
v.
Shott, supra,
The overwhelming concern of recent retroactivity decisions with the relation of the rule in question to the reliability of the truth-determining process at trial is but a corollary to the ultimate test of the integrity of the judicial process: its capacity to ensure the acquittal of the innocent. Since, under our system of justice, the significance of innocence does not vary with its legal cause, the present petitioner is as entitled to a retroactive application of Leary as others are entitled to a retrospective right to trial counsel—counsel whоse job it is to search for legal as well as factual defenses for those accused of crime.
Thus, we have concluded that California must give fully retroactive effect to Leary’s holding that a timely invocation of the privilege against self-incrimination constitutes a complete defense to a prosecution such as the one which resulted in petitioner’s 1950 prior.
*417
The final question with regard to the 1950 prior is that left open by
In re Caffey,
We need not decide whether
Brady
and
McMann
alter California standards with regard to guilty pleas, for it is clear that the principle of those cases cannot reasonably extend to situations in which a petitioner’s right to relief does not depend upon impugning the truth of solemn admissions implicit in such a plea. Thus, an inmate convicted of violating a statute subsequently declared unconstitutional is entitled to relief regardless of the finality with which he conceded its violation. “An unconstitutional law is void, and is as no law. An offence created by it is not a crime. A conviction under it is not merely erroneous, but is illegal and void, and cannot be a legal cause of imprisonment. It is true, if no writ of error lies, the judgment may be final, in the sense that there may be no means of reversing it. But personal liberty is of so great moment in the eye of the law that the judgment of an inferior court affecting it is not deemed so conclusive but that . . . the question of the court’s authority to try and imprison the party may be reviewed on
habeas corpus. . .
.”
(Ex parte Siebold
(1880)
It is therefore evident from
Leary
itself that neither a guilty plea nor a mere failure to raise the privilegе against self-incrimination prior to
Marchetti, Grosso,
and
Haynes
will preclude a prior attack on a final conviction invalid under those decisions. (See also
Meadows
v.
United States, supra,
Thus we have concluded that
Leary
v.
United States, supra,
(2)
The 1954
Prior—Our recent decision in
People
v.
Tenorio, ante,
p. 89 [
(3)
Cruel and Unusual
Punishment—Inasmuch as our decision removes the effect of the 1950 prior from petitioner’s mandatory minimum sentence under section 11531 of the Health and Safety Code (by reducing that minimum from 10 to 5 years), and inasmuch as he may obtain a discretionary dismissal of the 1954 prior from the sentencing court, we need not now reach petitioner’s contention that he is suffering unconstitutionally excessive punishment. (Cf.
People
v.
Clark, ante,
p. 97 [
(4)
Introduction of the
Priors—Petitioner’s claim that he was prejudiced by the introduction of his two priors before he was convicted is based upon
Spencer
v.
Texas
(1967)
(5)
Right to Effective
Counsel—Petitioner’s claim that he was denied effective counsel relates solely to his attornеy’s apparent failure to research the question of whether the federal tax offense constituted a prior for purposes of Health and Safety Code section 11531. “ ‘It is counsel’s duty to investigate carefully all defenses of fact and of law that may be available to the defendant, and if his failure to do so results in withdrawing a crucial defense from the case, the defendant has not had the assistance to which he is entitled.’
(People
v.
Ibarra
(1963)
supra,
In sum, petitioner is entitled to be relieved of the effect of the 1950 prior and to the exercise of the sentencing court’s discretion as to whether to strike the 1954 prior.
The writ is granted, and petitioner is remanded to- the Superior Court of the County of San Diego for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed herein. 5
Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Sullivan, J., and Peek, J., * concurred.
McComb, Acting C. J., and Burke, J., concurred in the judgment.
Notes
Although
Leary
reversed a conviction under section 4744(a) (2) (transporting or concealing marijuana obtained without paying the tax), and petitioner’s conviction was for a violation оf the forerunner of section 4744(a)(1) (acquiring marijuana without paying the tax), there is no conceivable basis upon which to distinguish the provisions with regard to the
Leary
rule, and the United States Supreme Court has so held.
(United States
v.
Covington
(1969)
This case concerns only that portion of Leary which held the Fifth Amendment a complete defense to a prosecution for obtaining or transporting marijuana without paying the federal tax. Leary’s other holding—that the statutory presumption of knowledge of illegal importation from the mere fact of possession violates due process —must be distinguished. We need not now decide whether this holding of Leary is retroactive.
It is possible to argue that regardless of the retroactivity of the rule by virtue of which a priоr conviction could not now be obtained, “if such a prior conviction serve[s] as the basis of augmented punishment, the right to level ... a collateral attack on that prior conviction . . . enjoy[s] complete retroactivity.”
(In re Dabney, supra,
Since petitioner was sentenced before our decision in Tenorio, the sentencing judge could not have been aware that the restrictions section 11718 placed on his discretion *419 were void. Petitioner contends, in essence, that those restrictions account for the judge’s insistencе that the offense was a misdemeanor in spite of the express provision of section 11533 of the Health and Safety Code that any prior narcotics conviction which could have been punished as a felony constitutes a felony prior regardless of the sentence actually imposed. Until and unless petitioner obtains a dismissal of his 1954 prior, it will remain a felony prior.
As we indicated in Tenorio, petitions for a discretionary dismissal of a prior narcotics conviction are to be filed with the superor court with territorial jurisdiction for transfer to the sentencing court. Petitioner in the instant case sought relief hеre before we decided Tenorio.
Future petitions challenging a prior federal narcotics conviction under section 4744 of title 26 of the United States Code (or its predecessor) should be filed with the superior court with territorial jurisdiction. Whenever such a petition would, if meritorious, render an inmate eligible for probation, and whenever such a petition also seeks a discretionary dismissal under Tenorio, the case should be transferred to the sentencing court. In other cases, the court with territorial jurisdiction should dispose of the case by striking any prior which is invalid under Leary.
Retired Associate Justice of the Supreme Court sitting under assignment by the Acting Chairman of the Judicial Council.
