This is á habeas corpus case. The state of Arkansas argues that petitioner, Jerry Easter, is procedurally barred from having the merits of his petition considered in federal court. The district court agreed. We reverse and remand.
I
In December of 1989, Easter pled guilty in an Arkansas circuit court to burglary, illegal possession of a firearm, and being a habitual offender. Arkansas does not allow persons who plead guilty to appeal their convictions. ARK.R.CRIM.P. 36.1. In addition, at the time of Easter’s conviction Arkansas had no post-conviction remedy (other than a requirement that the convict be informed of his right to move for a new trial based on ineffectiveness of counsel).
In re Abolishment of Rule 37, etc.,
A year and a half after the new Rule 37 took effect, the Supreme Court of Arkansas held that persons who pled guilty during the no-review hiatus had a right to proceed under Rule 37.
Fox v. State,
After Fox, Easter filed a Rule 37 petition. It was rejected as untimely under Fox. Easter’s second Rule 37 petition was likewise rejected. Neither order was appealed. Easter then sought federal habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, contending that his conviction was unconstitutional because he had been denied effective counsel *1345 and because his guilty plea was not based on a full understanding of the law.
The district court found no excuse for Easter’s failure to timely raise his claim in state court, a failure which was held to foreclose federal review.
II
a. Adequate state ground
Federal courts always have the equitable power to look beyond a state procedural bar and proceed to the merits of a habeas corpus petition.
McCleskey v. Zant,
Also, the power to excuse a state procedural default in a criminal case is limited by the fact that there is no federal constitutional right to either direct appeal or post-conviction review.
See Evitts v. Lucey,
In deciding whether state rules purporting to bar federal direct or post-conviction review meet these due process requirements, the Supreme Court has established that the bar (or default) must rest on adequate and independent state grounds.
Ford v. Georgia,
In this case, it is clear that the grounds pointed to by the state as barring review are independent state grounds; the exercise of Arkansas’ criminal Rule 37 is in no way linked to or dependent on any federal law.
See Harmon,
Perhaps the most instructive recent Supreme Court decision on the due process requirement of adequate state grounds is Ford.
Ford was a black whose conviction of rape, kidnapping and murder was upheld by the Supreme Court of Georgia) While his petition for certiorari was pending before the Supreme Court of the United States, the Court held in
Batson v. Kentucky,
On remand, the Supreme Court of Georgia held that Ford’s equal protection claim was procedurally barred because it had not been timely raised in the Georgia state courts. Georgia procedure required that
Batson
claims be raised prior to the jury’s swearing-in, and Ford had failed to raise his claim then. Thus, the issue before the Supreme Court of the United States was whether or not this state procedural ground was an independent ground adequate to bar federal re
*1346
view.
Id.
at 418, 422-23,
Justice Souter, writing for the unanimous Court, noted that it was proper to decline “to apply a state procedural rule ... because the defendant ... could not be ‘deemed to have been apprised of its existence.’ ”
Id.
at 423,
In important ways,
Ford
is similar to orn-ease. The fact that
Ford
was a direct appeal from a conviction, while Easter seeks post-conviction review, is not important; both types of cases demand the same adequacy analysis.
Coleman,
Ford,
when viewed in combination with other cases holding that unexpectable state procedural bars are not adequate to foreclose federal review of constitutional claims, provides the answer to Easter’s ease.
E.g., Coleman,
While Arkansas’ post-conviction procedures as embodied by Fox are not in themselves constitutionally infirm, the question is whether they are adequate to foreclose Easter’s federal habeas corpus petition. We conclude that Arkansas’ Rule 37 scheme is not adequate to bar federal review because it was not a firmly established rule when it was applied to Easter.
b. Cause and prejudice
Many of the relevant cases, including some cited above, analyze the propriety of federal review based not on the preliminary adequacy inquiry, but rather on the subsequent cause and prejudice test. There is
*1347
considerable overlap between the two inquiries, with some courts in effect applying the cause and prejudice test without first determining the existence of independent and adequate state grounds. Indeed, the adequacy inquiry and the cause inquiry are often couched in similar terms.
Compare Coleman,
We note that whether the preliminary adequacy test or the cause and prejudice test is applied, Easter is entitled to a merits hearing of his constitutional claims. It is clear that Easter has demonstrated “ ‘cause’ under the cause and prejudice test [which] must be something
external
to the petitioner, something that cannot be fairly attributed to him_”
Coleman,
Ill
When the Supreme Court of Arkansas opted to retroactively grant Rule 37 relief to convicts like Easter, it was bound to meet Due Process Clause requirements in executing the remedy it had created. Once a remedy, post-conviction or otherwise, is granted by a state, the federal constitution requires that it be reasonably accessible to those affected. Here, there was no way even a diligent, well-trained lawyer, much less an indigent inmate, could have foreseen any remedy, much less the time-limited, retroactive nature it would take.
In light of
Fox
and Easter’s two unsuccessful state court petitions, no state forum is available to, hear Easter’s claims.
Cf. Ellis v. Lockhart,
The order dismissing the petition is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
