Without a prior plea agreement, Jay Harry Fern pleaded guilty in an Illinois court in May 1989 to two counts of unlawful delivery of a controUed substance (cocaine). The court sentenced him on July 19 of the same year to concurrent twenty-five- and ten-year terms and imposed fines totaling $75,000. After announcing its sentence, the court informed Fern of his right to appeal and ad
*256
vised him that he would first have to file a written motion asking the trial court to permit him to withdraw his guilty plea. Despite this admonition, Fern’s attorney did not file the motion mandated by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 604(d), but instead appealed directly to the Appellate Court of Illinois. Not surprisingly, that court refused to reach the merits, rejecting Fern’s appeal on the basis of counsel’s failure to file the Rule 604(d) motion.
People v. Fern,
In his state petition for post-conviction relief, filed
pro se,
Fern alleged,
inter alia,
that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance by failing to preserve his direct appeal. The trial court summarily dismissed Fern’s petition, and the Illinois appellate court affirmed.
People v. Fern,
I.
In
Castellanos,
we stated unequivocally that “[i]f the defendant told his lawyer to appeal, and the lawyer dropped the ball, then the defendant has been deprived, not of effective assistance of counsel, but of
any
assistance of counsel on appeal. Abandonment is a
per se
violation of the sixth amendment.”
Castellanos,
A.
Under the non-retroactivity doctrine announced in
Teague,
we will not apply on collateral review a rule of criminal procedure that “was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
*257
An initial clue in this regard, overlooked by both petitioner and respondent, is that
Castellanos
itself was decided on review of a habeas petition brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
See
Yet this does not necessarily mean that
Castellanos
did not in fact announce a new rule within the meaning of
Teague,
for “[t]he ‘new rule’ principle ... validates reasonable, good-faith interpretations of existing precedents made by state courts even though they are shown to be contrary to later decisions.”
Butler,
Fern points to a triad of Supreme Court cases which he insists had established by 1990 the rule upon which he now relies:
Penson v. Ohio,
Penson,
however, compels the rule of law that Fern seeks to have applied to his petition. In
Penson,
Penson’s appellate attorney filed only a “Certification of Meritless Appeal and Motion” stating that there were no grounds for reversal and asking to be removed from the case. The Ohio Court of Appeals granted the attorney’s wish and pro
*258
ceeded to conduct its own review of the record. Although it found that there were “arguable” grounds for appeal and that one count had to be reversed, the appeals court determined that Penson suffered no prejudice as to the remaining counts because the court itself had reviewed the record with the benefit of arguments by counsel for code-fendants. The Supreme Court reversed. Noting that “[t]he need for forceful advocacy does not come to an abrupt halt as the legal proceeding moves from the trial to the appellate stage,” the Court, found that “the Ohio Court of Appeals deprived both petitioner and itself of the benefit of an adversary examination and presentation of the issues.”
As we stated in Strickland, the “[ajctual or constructive denial of the assistance of counsel altogether is legally presumed to result in prejudice.” ... Our decision in United States v. Cronic, likewise, makes clear that “[t]he presumption that counsel’s assistance is essential requires us to conclude that a trial is unfair if the accused is denied counsel at a critical stage of the trial.” ... Because the fundamental importance of the assistance of counsel does not cease as the prosecutorial process moves from the trial to the appellate stage, ... the presumption of prejudice must extend as well to the denial of counsel on appeal.
The present ease is unlike a case in which counsel fails to press a particular argument on appeal ... or fails to argue an issue as effectively as he or she might. Rather, at the time the Court of Appeals first considered the merits of petitioner’s appeal, appellate counsel had already been granted leave to withdraw; petitioner was thus entirely without the assistance of counsel on appeal_ It is therefore inappropriate to apply either the prejudice requirement of Strickland or the harmless-error analysis of Chapman [v. California,386 U.S. 18 ,87 S.Ct. 824 ,17 L.Ed.2d 705 (1967)].
Respondent nevertheless objects that
Penson
is “too broad” to have dictated our holding in
Castellanos. We
do not believe, however, that
Teague
should be read as a manifesto hostile to all but the narrowest conception of legal determinism. Our system of jurisprudence is premised on the notion that, at least in some cases, precedent will lead ineluctably to a specific legal outcome.
Strickland,
in announcing its two-prong performance/prejudice test, was careful to leave untouched the rule that prejudice would be presumed in the case of a constructive or actual denial of counsel.
Ev-itts
established that ineffectiveness claims could be raised as to appellate counsel to which an accused was entitled under
Douglas v. California,
If what respondent means by “too broad” is that the facts of Penson differ from those presented by Fern’s petition, respondent certainly is correct: Penson was “entirely without the assistance of counsel on appeal” because his attorney failed to file a merits brief; Fern lost his direct appeal on the merits because his attorney failed to file a motion in the trial court. Penson at least enjoyed the benefit of the state appellate court’s indepen *259 dent review of the record and assessment of his legal claims. If anything, therefore, Fern suffered a more severe deprivation of his Sixth Amendment rights than did Penson. It is true that on collateral review the Illinois appellate court ultimately scanned the record to determine Fern’s chance of success on appeal, but this is precisely the approach disapproved in Penson. 3
At oral argument, respondent attempted to distinguish the present case from the kind of actual or constructive denial of counsel to which
Strickland, Cronic
and
Penson
refer on the ground that those cases involved circumstances in which counsel was “either totally absent, or prevented from assisting the accused.”
See Cronic,
Respondent points- to two decisions of this court, decided after
Penson
but before
Cas-tellanos,
that reached conclusions contrary to our holding in
Castellanos.
In
Van Russell v. United States,
We could dispose of this objection by pointing out, as does Fern, that the legal landscape in 1990 did not comprise these two 1992 opinions. But that would be too formalistic. If
Van Russell
and
Belford
reached their holdings after considering the precedent we find so compelling today, this would be a strong indication that the rule applied in
Castellanos
was theretofore susceptible to debate among reasonable jurists. The problem for respondent is that
Van Russell
and
Belford
did not address that precedent. As we observed in
Castellanos, “Belford
and
Van Russell
did not cite
Penson
or the portion of
Cronic
recognizing that a lawyer’s abandonment - of his client is ineffective
per se.
We doubt that the parties brought these cases to the panels’ attention.”
We conclude that Teague does not bar us from holding that it was error for the district court to require Fern to show that he suffered prejudice as a result of counsel’s failure to perfect his direct appeal.
B.
We next address respondent’s argument that the new habeas law prevents us from granting relief. Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), a federal court must deny a habeas petition with respect to any claim adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the state-court adjudication “resulted in *260 a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” As we recently explained,
The novelty in this portion of § 2254(d)(1) is not the “contrary to” part but the reference to “Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States” (emphasis added). This extends the principle of Teague by limiting the source of doctrine on which a federal court may rely in addressing the application for a writ. It does not, however, purport to limit the federal courts’ independent interpretive authority with respect to federal questions.
Lindh,
Viewed in light of Lindh’s comparison between § 2254(d)(1) and
Teague,
our task becomes straightforward. On review of petitioner’s state petition for post-conviction relief, the Appellate Court of Illinois squarely rejected petitioner’s argument that because counsel “was ineffective both at the plea stage and for failing to move to vacate the judgment prior to taking an appeal, defendant was procedurally defaulted on appeal and that prejudice, the second prong of the
Strickland
test of ineffective assistance of counsel, need not be shown, but may be presumed.”
II.
Thus far, we have assumed that Fern told his attorney to file an appeal, as
Castellanos
requires. Whether or not Fern did in fact make such a request is hotly disputed by the parties. We agree with Fern that there has been no finding of fact in either the state courts or the district court below to the effect that Fern did not request an appeal. In his post-conviction petition, Fern alleged that he “immediately informed his attorney ... to file the appropriate motion to withdraw the guilty plea.” The trial court was of the view that it “need not address petitioner’s ... contention that his counsel failed to file a Motion to Withdraw the guilty pleas.” The court opined that “[sjince ... the petitioner’s guilty pleas were not produced by negotiations, ... such a Motion was not contemplated by petitioner or his counsel.” Be that as it may, the trial court’s finding does not instruct on whether Fern asked his attorney to challenge the sentence within the thirty-day window provided by Rule 604. We note that Fern’s attorney filed the notice of appeal on August 17,1989 — apparently within thirty days of his sentencing, which took place on July 19. Given the state of the record, however, the question of what Fern communicated to his attorney is better left to the district court. See
Castellanos,
Notes
. Because we conclude that Fern does not ask us to apply a new rule, we need not consider whether either of the exceptions to the non-retroactivity principle applies.
. In a footnote following this passage, the Court noted that "[a] number of the Federal Courts of Appeals have reached a like conclusion when faced with denials of appellate counsel.”
Penson,
. Although Fern's state petition for post-conviction relief was filed
pro se,
the state appellate court ultimately appointed counsel to represent him on appeal from the trial court's dismissal of the petition.
See
. In
Belford,
we noted that, although
Murray v. Carrier,
