delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for leave to appeal from the denial of a writ of
habeas corpus
by Judge McLaughlin of the Fourth Judicial Circuit. Most of the applicant Jackson’s numerous contentions below were substantially the same as those he set up in the petition for the writ filed in Cecil County (
In January, 1957, Jackson requested Chief Judge Niles of the Supreme Bench to furnish the transcript of the testimony
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on which a jury in the Criminal Court of Baltimore convicted him on a forgery indictment, for use in seeking a new trial. His request was denied on March 13 and since, under its rules, a motion for a new trial will not be considered by the Supreme Bench without a transcript of the testimony, the denial prevented a hearing of his motion. On March 15, sentence was imposed. On March 18, Jackson appealed to this Court in proper person. An exchange of letters between Jackson and the Clerk of the Criminal Court make it plain that the denial of the transcript was one of the grounds on which he intended to rely in his appeal. On May 6, Chief Judge Bruñe advised Jackson that he would be granted an appeal as an indigent, and offered to appoint counsel for him. Jackson rejected the offer of counsel. The transcript was furnished Jackson by the State free of charge and the case was heard in this Court in the fall of 1957. In an opinion filed on October 20, affirming the conviction, the refusal to furnish the transcript for the new trial was not passed upon, the opinion
noting that
although Jackson listed and argued ten specific points of alleged error, he neither listed nor argued in this Court the matter of the refusal of the transcript by the Supreme Bench.
Jackson v.
State,
We may assume,
arguendo,
that
Griffin v. Illinois,
In countless cases (one of which was
Winegard v. Warden,
In
Humphries v. Peppersack,
This Court has held that constitutional rights may be waived. If a statute making certain acts a crime were not challenged below as unconstitutional, its validity may not be
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attacked on appeal,
Martin v. State,
There is no doubt that the waiver of a constitutional right may come from failure to take a timely appeal or to assert the right on an appeal. In
Brown v. Allen,
In
Frank v. Mangum,
Jackson was convicted by a court with jurisdiction as to him and the subject matter; the judgment of that Court not only was not a nullity but clearly was valid. We have assumed for the argument that Jackson had a constitutional right to have his motion for a new trial heard and passed on. He did not raise the question of the deprivation of that right on his direct appeal to this Court and we hold that he waived it. He may not now raise it collaterally by a petition for habeas corpus. He cannot now be heard to say that the judgment against him is a nullity for reasons which he abandoned and waived at the time and in the forum in which he had full opportunity to make use of them.
The application for leave to appeal is denied.
Application denied, with costs.
