This state prisoner’s petition for habeas corpus comes to this Court by appeal for a second time. Petitioner, James T. Caver, was convicted of second degree murder in the Circuit Court of Calhoun County, Alabama, and was sentenced to imprisonment for 50 years. Caver’s petition alleges: (1) that his initial arrest for vagrancy was pretextural and, hence, illegal, so as to make all of the subsequently obtained evidence inadmissible as tainted fruit of the poisonous tree; and (2) that he was subjected to a counselless line-up which was unduly suggestive. In our earlier
per curiam
opinion, this Court vacated the district court’s summary dismissal of the petition and remanded for an evidentiary hearing on the issues raised by petitioner.
Caver v. Alabama
, 5 Cir. 1974,
On remand, a hearing was held before the Honorable Robert E. Varner, Judge of the Middle District of Alabama. Testimony and arguments were heard on the issues of the legality of Caver’s arrest and the suggestiveness
vel non
of the line-up at which Caver and his accomplice, Jerry White, were identified by witnesses who later testified at trial against the defendants. Counsel for the State contended that Caver was lawfully arrested for murder and robbery and not for vagrancy. The convictions of Caver and White in state court were premised on the fact that their initial arrest was for vagrancy.
See White v. State,
1972,
On the issue of suggestiveness vel non of the line-up, petitioner Caver testified that there were four persons in the line-up other than Jerry White and himself. Those persons were described by Caver as “dirty, nasty; they hadn’t shaved, they had cotton *1335 and lint in their hair.” Caver testified that all four of them had come directly from the jail to the line-up and were wearing “more or less” jailhouse clothing. In contrast to these individuals, Caver was clean in appearance, had recently shaved, and was wearing a knitted sweater, a pair of dress slacks, and dress shoes. There is also evidence in the record that the other participants in the line-up and the codefendants, Caver and White, had age and weight differences. However, Judge Varner ruled that this line-up was not so unduly suggestive as to violate due process.
In the present appeal, Caver contends that the district court violated the mandate of this Court’s earlier opinion and/or the law of the case when it allowed the State to proceed under its new theory that the initial arrest was for murder and robbery. 1 Petitioner further contends that the district court erred when it found that the line-up was not unduly suggestive.
I. Suggestive Line-up
An identification procedure that is unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification violates due process of law.
Stoval v. Denno,
II. Petitioner’s Initial Arrest
The question of the legality
vel non
of petitioner’s initial arrest has become less important due to a recent Supreme Court decision.
Stone v.
Powell, - U.S. -,
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The mandate dated May 2, 1975 of this Court in
Caver v. Alabama
reads: “. . this cause be, and the same is hereby remanded to the said District Court in accordance with the opinion of this Court.” The opinion instructed the district court to obtain on remand the transcript of the joint trial of Caver and White “to consider whether all or any part of
the contentions raised by Caver
have been exhausted in the courts of the State of Alabama.”
. When this appellant’s petition was prepared, he could not have known that his sole prospect of habeas relief lay in a claim that he did not have a fair opportunity to litigate his fourth amendment claim in Alabama courts. Under these circumstances, the case should be remanded to allow appellant to address the requirements of
Stone v.
Powell, - U.S. -,
