In October, 1975, Lloyd C. Ashe and Hilliard P. Ashe were convicted by a jury in the Superior Court of Cherokee County, North Carolina of safecracking and larceny by breaking and entering. After unsuccessful direct appeal and state post-conviction attack, they sought from the district court, but were denied, a federal writ of habeas corpus. We permitted this appeal to consider their claims that they were affirmatively denied the opportunity to address the sentencing court and that a potentially biased juror was allowed to sit on the jury panel. Since both allegations, if true, may establish a denial of due process of law, we vacate the dismissal of the petition for the writ and remand the case for an evidentiary hearing.
I.
Petitioners allege that they sought to address the state trial court prior to the imposition of sentence, but that the judge through petitioners’ attorney, instructed them to remain silent. 1 The district court thought that the allegation was insufficient *336 to warrant relief because, in its view, a defendant has no right of allocution and the trial judge’s refusal to extend the privilege is discretionary. Petitioners contend that refusal of a defendant’s request to speak to the sentencing court constitutes a denial of due process under the fourteenth amendment, and we agree.
In interpreting Rule 32(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires federal courts before imposing sentence to address the defendant personally and ask him if he wishes to make a statement in his own behalf and to present any information in mitigation of punishment, the Supreme Court said that it is not enough that defense counsel has an opportunity to speak at sentencing; the defendant must be given this right personally.
Green
v.
United States,
Notwithstanding Rule 32(a), a defendant has no constitutional right to be asked if he wishes to address the court before sentencing.
Hill
v.
United States,
Since
Hill,
the Supreme Court has not had occasion to determine whether silencing a defendant who wishes to speak to his sentencing would be constitutional error.
See McGautha v. California,
We think that when a defendant effectively communicates his desire to the trial judge to speak prior to the imposition of sentence, it is a denial of due process not to grant the defendant’s request. 3 This is not to say that a defendant’s right to address the sentencing court is unlimited. *337 The exercise of his right may be limited both as to duration and as to content. He need be given no more than a reasonable time; he need not be heard on irrelevancies or repetitions.
Because of our view of a defendant’s right, upon request, to speak in his own behalf, we remand the case to the district court to determine whether petitioners in fact made such a request which was denied. If the district court finds that such a request was made, it should also explore what the petitioners wished to say at their sentencing. Should this information prove to be irrelevant or cumulative in view of statements by their attorney at sentencing, the denial of their right to speak may be found to be harmless error. Otherwise, if the request was made and denied, petitioners’ sentences must be vacated, and they should be resentenced in a proceeding which allows them the opportunity to speak in their own behalf.
II.
Petitioners alleged, in addition, that a potentially biased juror was allowed to serve on the jury panel, contrary to their due process right to trial by an impartial jury. This juror, they assert, was related by marriage to one state’s witness and by ties of friendship to another. The juror was not presented in the selection process until after petitioners’ peremptory challenges were exhausted and the trial court declined to grant their challenge for cause.
Since timely objection to the impanelling of the juror was made only by petitioners’ codefendant, the issue immediately arises as to whether the claim is barred by the doctrine of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Until one crucial fact is established, however, we need not consider any of these questions. It appears from certified copies of the jury list and jury worksheet of the state trial court that the juror in question was excused prior to the commencement of the trial. These documents would be dis-positive of the issue if it were not for the indication in the transcript of the trial that the jury was impanelled immediately after the codefendant’s challenge to the suspect juror was denied. We therefore remand this aspect of the case to the district court for a determination of the facts. Certainly the juror herself, if she can be found, should remember if she took part or not. If the district court finds that the challenged jur- or did not serve, this will resolve the issue. If the district court finds that the juror did serve, it will address and decide the other issues that we have identified.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Petitioners allege, in addition, that their attorney informed them that, if they attempted to speak to the trial judge, the judge would hold them in contempt. It is unclear from petitioners’ allegation whether the judge or the attorney originated the threat. We do not rest our decision, therefore, upon this allegation.
. In Taylor, the prisoner alleged that he would have revealed that his guilty plea had been induced by government threats had he been given the opportunity to speak.
. Our conclusion is strengthened by the post-Hill decisions of
Mempa v. Rhay,
