After an indictment for first degree murder, petitioner pleaded guilty in 1968 to murder in the second degree. Nothing in the record shows whether petitioner knew that second degree murder involves a particular
mens rea.
Petitioner, a state prisoner, has attacked his guilty plea as involuntary and unintelligent. He relies on the recent Supreme Court decision in
Henderson v. Morgan,
Only last year we rejected petitioner’s habeas claim and affirmed the district court’s finding that his guilty plea was voluntary.
St. Pierre v. Helgemoe,
No. 75-1143 (July 3, 1975) (unpub. mem.). While
res judicata
has no place in habeas proceedings, a similar role is played by 28 U.S.C. § 2244, which restricts repetitive applications for habeas corpus. Petitioner seeks to escape the effect of § 2244. He believes that
Morgan
puts his case in a new light and that our
pre-Morgan
rejection of his claim should no longer be conclusive. We do not now decide that
Morgan
is either retroactive or a change in the law. As the concurring opinion of Justice White shows, these questions may prove difficult.
Morgan, supra,
Before 1966, the petitioner would have had nothing to fear from § 2244. He could have claimed the benefit of
Sanders v. United States,
“Even if the same ground was rejected on the merits on a prior application, it is open to the applicant to show that the ends of justice would be served by per *1308 mitting the redetermination of the ground. If factual issues are involved, the applicant is entitled to a new hearing upon showing that the evidentiary hearing on the prior application was not full and fair; we canvassed the criteria of a full and fair evidentiary hearing recently in Townsend v. Sain, supra, [372 U.S. 293 ,83 S.Ct. 745 ,9 L.Ed.2d 770 ,] and that discussion need not be repeated here. If purely legal questions are involved, the applicant may be entitled to a new hearing upon showing an intervening change in the law or some other justification for having failed to raise a crucial point or argument in the prior application.” Id. at 16-17,83 S.Ct. at 1078 .
However, in 1966 Congress amended § 2244. It created a new section 2244(b), to govern the habeas applications of state prisoners; the new provision omitted the “ends of justice” language on which Sanders had relied. 2
We doubt that Congress meant to deny new hearings to state prisoners when the law has changed since their last applications. Such a result would produce an anomaly whenever the rights of accused persons were expanded by the courts: state prisoners who had slept on their rights before the change would go free, while those who had been diligent would be barred from federal relief. An absurdity of this magnitude ought not lightly be inferred from congressional silence; we therefore turn to the legislative history for guidance. The Senate Report, after paraphrasing the language of § 2244(b), gives it this construction:
“[I]f on a subsequent application for habeas corpus relief a State court prisoner asserts that he has newly discovered evidence relating to an alleged denial of a Federal right, the court would be obliged to entertain the writ provided it was satisfied that the prisoner had not deliberately withheld the newly asserted factual ground for relief in his earlier application, and had not otherwise abused the writ.” S.Rep. No. 1797, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. [1966] U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News, pp. 3663, 3664.
The significance of this language appears when we note the very expansive definition of “ground” given in Sanders.
3
Under
Sanders,
newly discovered evidence would not be a “newly asserted factual ground” but would nevertheless be a predicate for relief under the “ends of justice” language. In specifically observing that new evidence, though perhaps addressed to an issue previously determined — a “ground” in
Sanders’
lexicon — would be a “newly asserted factual ground for relief”, Congress implicitly assumed that the rule in
Sanders
would survive despite the change in text. That this reasoning also applies to the development of new law seems clear. Just as newly discovered evidence can constitute a new factual ground, so, we believe, can new law constitute a new “other ground”. And the courts, admittedly without much discussion, appear to have agreed.
Alford v. North Carolina,
Petitioner’s claim, therefore, that
Morgan
works a significant retroactive change in the law is enough to surmount the hurdle of § 2244(b). But such a claim, by its nature, calls forth another doctrine that at least temporarily bars relief. So far as the record shows, no state court has had a chance to examine petitioner’s claim that
Morgan
invalidates his guilty plea. With respect to claims of this sort, petitioners must ordinarily exhaust their state remedies. 28 U.S.C. § 2254;
Subilosky v. Massachusetts,
Affirmed.
Notes
. However, we note that the court relied primarily on witnesses’ statements made at the sentencing hearing. Since these statements came twelve days after petitioner’s guilty plea, they have only a tenuous relationship to his knowledge at the time of the plea. We believe that difficult questions of law and fact remain unresolved in this case. Although we are aware of the rule in some other circuits that habeas petitions may be rejected even though state remedies have not been exhausted,
Petition of Ernst,
. “When after an evidentiary hearing on the merits of a material factual issue, or after a hearing on the merits of an issue of law, a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court has been denied by a court of the United States or a justice or judge of the United States release from custody or other remedy on an application for a writ of habeas corpus, a subsequent application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of such person need not be entertained by a court of the United States or a justice or judge of the United States unless the application alleges and is predicated on a factual or other ground not adjudicated on the hearing of the earlier application for the writ, and unless the court, justice, or judge is satisfied that the applicant has not on the earlier application deliberately withheld the newly asserted ground or otherwise abused the writ.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b).
. “By ‘ground,’ we mean simply a sufficient legal basis for granting the relief sought by the applicant. For example, the contention that an involuntary confession was admitted in evidence against him is a distinct ground for federal collateral relief. But a claim of involuntary confession predicated on alleged psychological coercion does not raise a different ‘ground’ than does one predicated on alleged physical coercion. In other words, identical grounds may often be proved by different factual allegations.”
Sanders, supra,
. Some have argued that the Sanders rule can be read into § 2244(b) by interpreting that section as a grant of discretion: repetitive applications “need not be entertained”. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b) [emphasis added]. See Developments in the Law — Federal Habeas Corpus, 83 Harv.L.Rev. 1038, 1151-52 (1970). But this reading would leave petitioners at the mercy of the trial judge’s discretion; and it would hardly confirm Congress’s conclusion that “the court would be obliged to entertain” a writ based on new evidence. It would perhaps be possible to eliminate this danger by holding first that § 2244(b) grants the trial courts discretion to entertain such applications and then declaring that it is an abuse of discretion to refuse to hear them. This semantic sleight-of-hand is unjustifiable in the face of a statute specifically declaring that the lower courts “need not” entertain such applications. We think it more reasonable to hold that § 2244(b) takes a narrower view of the meaning of “ground” than did the Sanders Court.
