This appeal raises questions concerning the scope of federal habeas corpus relief, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254, for violations of the fourth amendment. The district court issued the writ, finding that violations of the fourth amendment had occurred. The respondent-appellant, Frank H. Gray, appeals from the order granting the writ, asserting that
Stone v. Powell,
The petitioner occupied an apartment over the Red Owl Bar in Paulding, Ohio. On September 29, 1976, Police Officer Walter Heinrichs was summoned to the Red Owl, and upon arriving he found the petitioner lying in the doorway of the tavern, bleeding from a gunshot wound. Heinrichs went to the lavatory in the rear of the tavern, where he found James Christian, who indicated that he had accidentally shot Riley. Heinrichs asked to see the weapon which had been used. Christian led him through the tavern and to the door of the second floor apartment. The door, which was the only entrance to the apartment, was locked. Christian gave the key to Heinrichs. 1 Heinrichs opened the door, stepped inside and immediately noticed a revolver lying on the kitchen table. After making a cursory examination of the apartment, he left, closing and locking the door behind him. Heinrichs retained possession of the keys.
Shortly after this initial entry, the Chief of Police, Charles Watson, arrived at the Red Owl Bar. Using the key furnished by Heinrichs, Watson entered the apartment and saw the gun on the table, as well as blood on the floor. After this brief entry Heinrichs again locked the door.
The final warrantless entry was made by Heinrichs and Deputy Sheriff David Harrow. The Paulding Police Department had summoned Harrow because of his expertise in collecting and evaluating physical evidence. Harrow was to “process” the second floor apartment by removing, photographing, and evaluating any physical evidence which was found. While conducting the investigation, Harrow noticed a bullet hole in the wall between the kitchen and the bedroom. In an effort to find the bullet, Harrow entered the bedroom and discovered a variety of contraband, including automatic weapons, marijuana, and lysergic acid diethlamide (LSD). The officers immediately secured the apartment and left to obtain a search warrant. The officers indicated that they first learned that the apartment belonged to Joseph Riley when preparing the affidavits necessary to obtain the search warrant. The police obtained a warrant that evening, approximately five hours after Officer Heinrichs’ initial entry.
After the contraband was seized, the Paulding County Grand Jury indicted Riley for aggravated trafficking, trafficking in marijuana, drug abuse, possession of a dangerous ordnance, and carrying a concealed weapon. Riley moved to suppress the contraband, but the motion was denied. Riley was convicted of aggravated trafficking, trafficking in marijuana, and drug abuse. Riley appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals for the Third District and argued that the drugs should have been suppressed because they had been seized pursuant to a warrant based on information obtained in the war-rantless search of his home, in violation of his fourth and fourteenth amendment rights. The Ohio Court of Appeals ruled that Riley lacked standing to challenge the search. The state did not raise the standing issue in the trial court and neither party briefed or argued the issue. The Ohio Supreme Court overruled Riley’s motion for leave to appeal.
In May, 1979, Riley filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. The respondent filed a return of the writ and argued that habeas review was precluded by
Stone v. Powell,
The threshold issue is whether
Stone v. Powell,
The respondent argues that Stone requires only that the state provide the procedural mechanism for the presentation of fourth amendment claims. The respondent asserts that the scope of our inquiry is limited to the opportunity available in theory, and the opportunity which is in fact afforded to a particular litigant is of no consequence.
E.g., Caver v. Alabama,
The petitioner argues for a narrower interpretation of
Stone.
Essentially, he relies upon
Gamble v. Oklahoma,
We believe that neither position is wholly satisfactory. The respondent’s position is not entirely consistent with
Stone. Stone
is based on the perception that the exclusionary rule should not be applied in federal habeas review of a state conviction because of its limited utility in that setting.
Stone,
Similarly, we decline to adopt the petitioner’s interpretation of
Stone.
We believe that a limited inquiry into the correctness of state court decisions, occurring as a matter of course in the district courts, would be inconsistent with
Stone. Id.
at 493 n.35,
In our view,
Stone
and
Moore v. Cowan, supra,
require a district court to make two distinct inquiries in habeas proceedings. Initially, the district court must determine whether the state procedural mechanism, in the abstract, presents the opportunity to raise a fourth amendment claim.
Williams v. Brown,
The mechanism provided by the State of Ohio for the resolution of fourth amendment claims is, in the abstract, clearly adequate. Ohio R.Crim.P. 12 provides an adequate opportunity to raise fourth amendment claims in the context of a pretrial motion to suppress, as is evident in the petitioner’s use of that procedure. Further, a criminal defendant, who has unsuccessfully sought to suppress evidence, may take a direct appeal of that order, as of right, by filing a notice of appeal.
See
Ohio R.App.P. 3(A) and Ohio R.App.P. 5(A). These rules provide an adequate procedural mechanism for the litigation of fourth amendment claims because the state affords a litigant an opportunity to raise his claims in a fact-finding hearing and on direct appeal of an unfavorable-decision.
See O’Berry v. Wainwright,
The second part of the analysis addresses the problem here. The state appellate court held that the petitioner lacked standing to raise the fourth amendment claim. The parties did not brief or argue this issue, and it was not raised in the trial
*527
court.
4
The state appellate court, in its opinion, did not discuss or apply the rule of
Jones v. United States,
We do not believe that the appellate court’s failure to apply
Jones
denied the petitioner an opportunity for full and fair litigation, because its action may have been warranted in light of intervening decisions.
United States v. Hunter,
In sum, we believe that the district court’s interpretation of Stone must be affirmed. We reach this conclusion, despite the facial adequacy of Ohio’s procedural mechanism, because we believe that the procedure was applied in a. manner that, through no fault of the petitioner, deprived him of an opportunity to fully litigate his claim. We hold that federal habeas relief is available when a criminal defendant is not allowed to fully present his fourth amendment claim in the state courts because of unanticipated and unforeseeable application of a procedural rule which prevents state court consideration of the merits of the claim.
Because we believe that the district court applied
Stone
correctly, we must re
*528
view its decision on the merits of the petitioner’s claim. The district court viewed the search, quite correctly, as warrantless, because a warrant was not obtained until after the contraband had been discovered. Warrantless searches are
per se
unreasonable under the fourth amendment, subject to only a few exceptions.
Katz v. United States,
The respondent relies upon the “consent” exception to the warrant requirement. He argues that Christian’s consent allowed the police to search the petitioner’s apartment, and that Christian’s consent was knowingly and freely given.
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
We believe Christian’s consent was not valid because he lacked authority to permit a search of the apartment. A person may consent to a search if he possesses “common authority over or other sufficient relationship to the premises or effects sought to be inspected.”
United States v. Matlock,
Christian did not live in the petitioner’s apartment. Although he had known the petitioner for several years, he was not a regular visitor to the apartment and, except for the night of the shooting, he never had possession of the keys to the apartment. Finally, Christian testified that he did not have permission to enter the apartment when the petitioner was not there. The petitioner corroborated this testimony, and the respondent did not dispute it. In light of this testimony, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that Christian lacked authority to consent to the search. He had no right to use the property and did not have access or control for any purpose. Moreover, we refuse to infer that the petitioner “assumed the risk” that Christian would consent to a search merely by inviting Christian into his home. We hold that Christian was without authority to consent to the search of the petitioner’s apartment and, therefore, that the warrantless search and subsequent seizure of the contraband was unlawful. 7
Finally, the respondent argues that the deterrent purpose of the exclusionary rule would not be served by the suppression of the evidence seized in this case, because the officers had a reasonable, good faith belief that Christian had authority to consent to the search and that the search was lawful. Essentially, the respondent asks us to adopt the rule and rationale of
United States v. Williams,
The officers’ belief that Christian’s implicit consent permitted them to enter the apartment was unreasonable. The only objective fact which ordinarily might suggest that Christian had authority to consent is his possession of the apartment key. Officer Heinrichs, Deputy Harrow, and Chief Watson testified that they did not know who lived in the apartment. Watson testified that he did not ask Christian whether the apartment belonged to him and that, to his knowledge, no one else asked that question. Harrow indicated that he was unaware whether permission for the search had even been given at all. The law is reasonably clear that there must be some sort of connection between the person consenting to the search and the area to be searched.
United States v. Matlock,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Christian testified, in the hearing held by the district court, that he took Riley’s keys as he was leaving the apartment, after having already shot Riley. Apparently, he picked up the keys and locked the door behind him.
. The Seventh Circuit has adopted a similar position with respect to
Stone. See United States ex rel. Maxey v. Morris,
. Of course, petitioner’s opportunity to raise his claim may be legitimately frustrated by the state’s procedural mechanism. For instance, the harmless error doctrine may legitimately frustrate the petitioner’s claim by rendering his fourth amendment claim immaterial.
E.g. Moore v. Cowan,
.
See State v. Morris,
. The petitioner was convicted of one count of aggravated trafficking, Sec. 2925.03(A)(6) of Ohio Rev.Code Ann.; one count of trafficking in marijuana, Sec. 2925.03(A)(6) of Ohio Rev. Code Ann.; and three counts of drug abuse, Sec. 2925.11(A) of Ohio Rev.Code Ann. Possession is a necessary element of each of these offenses. Further, the district court found, and the respondent does not dispute the finding, that petitioner does have standing to raise the fourth amendment claim.
. For example, questioning of the police officers indicated that the petitioner rented the apartment. Further, Officer Keith Baird indicated that “it was pretty common knowledge where he [the petitioner] lived for the last year,” during trial, in response to an inquiry into the identity of the apartment’s tenant. This record presents a situation which is decidedly different from cases such as United States v. Hunter, supra. In Hunter, the absence of standing was clear from the record before this court. Here, however, the Ohio Court of Appeals indicated that it would not rule on the merits of the petitioner’s claim because Riley’s standing was not clear from the record.
. The respondent also argues that Christian had apparent authority to consent to the search because his possession of the keys caused the police officers to reasonably believe that he, in fact, possessed the requisite authority. This contention can be summarily dismissed.
Stoner v. California,
