On January 18, 1960, the Supreme Court of the United States, in Bailey v. Henslee,
“Petition for writ of certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit denied without prejudice to a further application for writ of habeas corpus in the appropriate United States District Court, on the question whether members of petitioner’s race were deliberately and intentionally limited and excluded in the selection of petit jury panels, in violation of the Federal Constitution.”
Pursuant to this suggestion Luther Bailey, who is the defendant-prisoner concerned and who is now confined in the Arkansas State Penitentiary, petitioned the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas for a writ of habeas corpus. He based his case on the issue specified by the Supreme Court. After a hearing and the introduction of evidence his petition was denied. Bailey v. Henslee, D.C.E.D.Ark.,
Bailey, an adult Negro, was charged by information and convicted by an all-white petit jury in September 1956 (the March 1956 term) in the Circuit Court, First Division, Pulaski County, Arkansas, of the crime of rape (as defined in §§ 41-3401 and 41-3402 of Arkansas Statutes, 1947) committed in Little Rock on June 14, 1956. The jury did not render a verdict of life imprisonment in the state penitentiary at hard labor, as it had the right to do under §§ 41-3403 and 43-2153, and therefore, in line with the interpretation consistently given § 43-2153 by the Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1 Bailey was sentenced to death. 2 Since his conviction and sentence, his case has found its way several times into the appellate courts. We set forth in the margin, for background, its step-by-step progress. 3
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We emphasize, initially, that the question of Bailey’s guilt is not now before us.
4
This is a situation where, as the United States Supreme Court once described the posture of another Arkansas case, “ * * * what we have to deal with is not the petitioners’ innocence or guilt but solely the question whether their constitutional rights have been preserved.” Moore v. Dempsey,
While the three of us who have heard the present appeal would naturally be hesitant and disinclined to differ with conclusions reached by the panel (on which one of us sat) of this court which heard the first federal appeal in the case, Bailey v. Henslee, 8 Cir.,
Arkansas Statutes, 1947, as amended, provide the method of choosing jury commissioners and jurors. 5 This statutory procedure, of course, is followed in Pulaski County. The Circuit Court has a term in that county each September and March. § 22-310. As a matter of local practice, the Court there operates in three divisions. The First Division is concerned exclusively with criminal cases. The Second and Third Divisions are concerned with civil cases. Each division has its own jury commissioners and the juries selected by each set of commissioners operate only in the particular division. One exception to this division practice took place during the March 1956 term (the one at which the defendant was convicted) when 17 jurors were transferred from the Third Division to the First Division in connection with the trial of Emmett Earl Leggett; 6 afterward they were returned to the Third Division and were not used again in the First Division. This transfer had nothing to do with Bailey’s case. Between 1939 and 1956 any juror who was selected for service in either the Second or the Third Division was legally qualified to serve in the First Division.
Most of the pertinent facts having to do with Negro representation on the Pulaski County panels are set forth in the opinion below at
So much for the facts. In turning to the legal aspects of the case, we feel that a preliminary review of established principles is in order:
The right of a defendant in a criminal prosecution to a trial “by impartial jury” is guaranteed by Article 2, Section 10, of the Constitution of the State of Arkansas. 8 When a right to a jury trial exists, 9 then, as was emphasized many years ago by the United States Supreme Court, a jury’s proper composition is fundamental:
“(T)he constitution of juries is a very essential part of the protection such a mode of trial is intended to secure. The very idea of a jury is a body of men composed of the peers or equals of the person whose rights it is selected or summoned to determine; that is, of his neighbors, fellows, associates, persons having the same legal status in society as that which he holds.” Strauder v. West Virginia, 1879,100 U.S. 303 , 308,25 L.Ed. 664 .
Strauder and a long line of succeeding Supreme Court cases hold that discrimination on the basis of race or ancestry in the selection of persons for service on grand or petit jury panels is violative of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
10
A federal statute supplements this rule. 18
*942
U.S.C.A. § 243. This does not mean, however, that a jury must have proportional representation of races in order to assure the equal protection of the laws. State of Virginia v. Rives,
“What an accused is entitled to demand, under the Constitution of the United States, is that, in organizing the grand jury as well as in the empaneling of the petit jury, there shall be no exclusion of his race, and no discrimination against them, because of their race or color”. Martin v. State of Texas,200 U.S. 316 , 321,26 S.Ct. 338 , 339,50 L.Ed. 497 .
Furthermore, inequality or disproportion in the number finally selected does not in itself show discrimination. Akins v. State of Texas, supra, at page 403 of
Discrimination in a jury’s selection must of course be proved; it is not to be presumed. Tarrance v. State of Florida,
A state’s restriction in the selection of jurors to males, freeholders, citizens, persons within certain ages, or those having educational qualifications, has been held, not to violate the Fourteenth Amendment. Neal v. Delaware,
In avoiding racial discrimination in the selection of jurors it is not enough for the jury commissioners or any other selecting agency to be content with persons of their personal acquaintance. Smith v. State of Texas,
Although the question whether racial discrimination exists has been said to be a question of fact, this does not relieve a federal court of the duty to make independent inquiry and to determine whether a federal right has been denied. 15
The Supreme Court of Arkansas itself has recognized these principles and has done so both in opinions affirming convictions against the challenge of unconstitutionality and in opinions reversing. 16
*944 Our task here is to apply these principles to the facts before us. We should note, however, what we are not now concerned with: (1) There is no contention here that the Arkansas Constitution or statutes themselves authorize any discrimination on account of race in the selection of jurors. (2) There is no contention here that the statutory provision that jurors be “persons of good character, of approved integrity, sound judgment and reasonable information” is improper. (3) There is no complaint here resting on the fact that the charge against the defendant was by information rather than by indictment. 17 (4) There appears to be no contention on this appeal that the stipulated fact that since 1938 no Negro has ever been a jury commissioner in Pulaski County is itself unconstitutional discrimination. 18 (5) There is no contention here that the use of peremptory challenges to eliminate representatives of a defendant’s race is improper. 19 (6) And there is no contention here that the Pulaski County three division system itself, with its separate sets of jury commissioners and panels, is invalid.
While the cited authorities establishing the general principles which govern here are numerous, four of the Supreme Court decisions afford special guidance for this case:
1. Norris v. State of Alabama,
2. Smith v. State of Texas, supra,
3. Avery v. State of Georgia, supra,
“* * * (O)pportunity for working of a discriminatory system exists whenever the mechanism for jury selection has a component part, such as the slips here, that differentiates between,white and colored; such a mechanism certainly cannot be countenanced when a discriminatory result is reached. The stark resulting phenomenon here was that somehow or other, despite the fact that over 5% of the slips were yellow, no Negro got onto the panel of 60 jurors from which Avery’s jury was selected. The mind of justice, not merely its eyes, would have to be blind to attribute such an occurrence to mere fortuity.” 20
4. Eubanks v. State of Louisiana,
In the light of these decisions, this case may be a close one. On the one hand, there is no dispute that, whatever may have been the pre-1953 situation, there has been representation of the Negro race on the regular petit jury panel in each of the terms which have come and gone in the Pulaski County Circuit Court, First Division, from March 1953 through March 1960. The actual number of Negroes has varied from one to three. 21 There were at least 31 instances of a Negro juror on the regular panel of the 15 terms during the 7% year period. One Negro may also have been named among the alternates for the September 1954 term. Obviously, then, there has been no exclusion, systematic, studied or otherwise, of Negroes from regular jury panels in the criminal division since 1952.
*946 On the other hand, the record discloses the presence of the following:
1. Since 1939 no Negro has ever served on any kind of panel, regular, alternate or special, in the Second or Third Divisions of the Pulaski County Circuit Court. A fact of this kind, as has been noted above, would support a conclusion that a prima facie case of discrimination in the selection of juries in these civil divisions has been established.
2. The First Division’s panels of alternates, from 1952 to 1960, with one possible exception, contained no Negro name. Here again it can be said that this fact creates an unrebutted prima facie case of discrimination in the selection of these alternates.
3. The 5 special panels assembled for the March 1956 term in the First Division, which contained an aggregate of approximately 450 names, included according to the stipulated Exhibit 1, the name of no Negro. 22
4. Fourteen of the persons on the defendant’s own petit jury panel of 37 names came from those 2 special panels consisting exclusively of white persons. In a not dissimilar situation the Supreme Court of Arkansas has said:
“The State contends, and not without attention-compelling force, that commingling of the original thirteen jurors with the panel containing Negroes gave to the defendant in principle the identical opportunity he was contending for: that is, the right to select twelve names from a list partially composed of members of his race. The answer is that we are dealing primarily with the Constitution as distinguished from a particular defendant. * * * But there is no doubt that the local system of jury selection resulted in systematic exclusion of Negroes in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment,
“Our own cases, and decisions by the Supreme Court of the United States, are too clear for misunderstanding.” Maxwell v. State,
5. Over the years presented no more than 3 Negroes appeared in any regular panel of 24 persons. At the most (6 of 15 times) therefore, Negroes have represented one-eighth of the total. This is a little less than what the evidence seems to show, at least for 1954 and 1955, to be the proportion between the races for persons holding the qualifying poll tax receipts. 23 We recognize, of course, that mere lack of identity in proportions is not in itself unconstitutional. 24
6. There is an unexplained and seemingly unusual amount of repetition of the names of Negroes which do appear on the regular panels from 1953 to 1960 and which in the aggregate made up the 31 instances. A. E. Nabors, who was named in September 1955, was named again in September 1957 and in March 1960. D. B. Lacefield, who was named in September 1955, was also named in March 1958 and March 1960 (he had been named, *947 too, in March 1951). Simon Herron, who was named in March 1956, was also named in September 1958. W. E. Hayes, who was named in September 1955, was named again in March 1959. I. S. Mc-Clinton, who was named in March 1957, was also named in September 1959 (he had been named, too, in March 1951). Vilma T. Nabors, who was named in September 1956, was the wife of A. E. Nabors. The 31 names for the 1953-60 period thus come down to only 24 different persons and 2 of these are husband and wife. 25
7. The Pulaski County poll tax receipts were given racial marks. They contained a “C” when the holders were known to be colored and a “W” when they were known to be white. Where race was unknown, as was often the case when payment of the tax was made by mail, they were marked “W”. 26
8. The jury commissioners, except, perhaps, for two terms, themselves identified names of Negroes on the lists by the designation “(C)” or “(Col)” or “(Colored)”. Why this was done does not appear. There is testimony, as is usually the situation in these cases, that this was of no persuasion so far as the jury commissioners were concerned.
9. The testimony of the jury commissioners as to their efforts to ascertain the names of qualified Negroes leaves much to be desired. 27
The foregoing facts, taken in the aggregate, lead us to the conclusion that a prima facie case of limitation of members of the Negro race in the selection of this defendant’s petit jury panel was established, that the State did not rebut it, and that the District Court’s conclusion to the contrary was clearly erroneous. Here there appears to be a definite pattern of race selection; here there is a device for race identification with its possibility of abuse; here there is exclusion from the alternate panels and from the special panels actually used; here there is an element of recurrence of the same Negro names; and here there is the additional factor, for what atmosphere it may provide, of exclusion from the civil divisions’ panels.
Our determination that the procedure followed in the defendant’s trial
*948
does not measure up to the standards of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, does not mean that he need go free. The State of Arkansas is at liberty to try him again upon the same information by procedure ■which meets constitutional requirements. That this may result in further time consuming proceedings, both trial and appellate, before there can be an end to Bailey’s case, is, of course, regrettable. Long delays in the attainment of an ultimate decision “may show a basic weakness in our government system”,
28
may present “a sorry chapter”,
29
and may be exasperating at times. Nevertheless, it is to the credit and not to the shame of our system that, no matter what the alleged crime may be, a defendant in this nation will receive a trial conducted with the safeguards guaranteed by our fundamental law. The Fifth Circuit recently said: “The very heinousness of the crime and the weight of the physical evidence made it all the more necessary that the defendant’s constitutional rights be not lightly or unadvisedly surrendered”. United States v. Harpole, 5 Cir.,
“A prisoner whose conviction is reversed by this Court need not go free if he is in fact guilty, for Texas may indict and try him again by the procedure which conforms to constitutional requirements. But no State is at liberty to impose upon one charged with crime a discrimination in its trial procedure which the Constitution, and an Act of Congress passed pursuant to the Constitution, alike forbid. Nor is this Court at liberty to grant or withhold the benefits of equal protection, which the Constitution commands for all, merely as we may deem the defendant innocent or guilty * * *. It is the State’s function, not ours, to assess the evidence against a defendant. But it is our duty as well as the State’s to see to it that throughout the procedure for bringing him to justice he shall enjoy the protection which the Constitution guarantees. * * * Equal protection of the laws is something more than an abstract right. It is a command which the State must respect, the benefits of which every person may demand. Not the least merit of our constitutional system is that its safeguards extend to all — the least deserving as well as the most virtuous.”
The State of Arkansas is entitled to a reasonable time within which to retry this defendant for the crime charged against him. Pending a retrial by the State, the District Court is directed to grant a stay of execution. If he is retried, the Court is directed to enter a dismissal of Bailey’s present petition for release on habeas corpus. If he is not retried within nine months from the filing date of this opinion, the District Court is directed to grant Bailey’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
The judgment appealed from is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Kelley v. State,
. No date for execution has presently been fixed pursuant to § 43-2623.
. (a) The first state court appeal. Bailey took an appeal from the judgment of conviction. Errors alleged concerned the sufficiency of the evidence, the denial of procedural motions, the reception and exclusion of evidence, and instructions. Most of these are matters not for our present concern. One assignment, however, had to do with the court’s alleged error in overruling Bailey’s motion “to quash the regular panel and the special panel of the petit jury”; another related to the court’s alleged error “in not allowing the Jury Commissioners, for the March term 1952 to the March term 1956 inclusive, to testify.”
The Arkansas Supreme Court upheld the refusal to permit testimony from the jury commissioners because (1) they “had not been subpoenaed * * * and were not present”, and (2) no offer of proof had been made. It apparently also upheld the denial of the motion to quash because it regarded the deputy clerk’s testimony, which was received, as, contrary to the defense’s argument, not sufficient to show racial discrimination. All other issues were decided adversely to Bailey and the judgment was affirmed. Two justices would have granted a rehearing on a lesser offense instruction issue. Bailey v. State,
(b) The second state court proceeding and appeal. Bailey then filed in the state court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He alleged denial of compulsory process as to the jui’y commissioners, in violation of the Arkansas (Article 2, § 10) and the United States (14th Amendment) Constitutions, and systematic limitation of Negroes in the selection of petit juries in the court where he was tried. This petition was amended, however, so that it recited that it was brought under Act 419 of the 1957 Acts of Arkansas (the Uniform Post-Conviction Procedure Act, codified as §§ 43-3101 to 43-3110 of the Arkansas Statutes and later repealed by Act 227 of the 1959 Acts of Arkan
*939
sas) and that his conviction was void or voidable in that he was denied the right of compulsory process. This revision evidently contained no reference to the issue of systematic limitation of Negroes in the selection of petit jury panels. At the hearing it was shown that prior to the trial the defense had requested the clerk of court to issue subpoenas for the jury commissioners and that the court had refused to allow the clerk to do this. The petition was denied. The Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed on the grounds (1) that the 1957 Act authorized a proceeding to set aside a sentence if “the alleged error has not been previously and finally litigated or waived” and (2) that under the circumstances of the case the compulsory process issue either had been finally litigated on the first appeal or had been waived. Bailey v. State,
(c) The first federal court proceeding and appeal. Pursuant to this suggestion by the Supreme Court, Bailey filed his second petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This one was presented to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas. He alleged violation of his Fourteenth Amendment rights in the trial court’s denial of compulsory process. Apparently in this federal proceeding itself there was no request for compulsory process, no witnesses appeared and no offer of proof was made. Judge Henley found that there had been a denial of such process by the state court but nevertheless denied the petition for the writ. He did so on the grounds that a state prisoner, under 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254, must first exhaust his available state remedies; that this required him to present to the Supreme Court of Arkansas on the first appeal his contention that there was error in the denial of his request for compulsory process; that this issue had not been litigated on the first state appeal and therefore had been waived; and that the attempt to raise the question under the 1957 Act procedure did not constitute an exhaustion of state remedies. Bailey v. Henslee, D.C.E.D.Ark.,
. The evidence is set forth in the first opinion of the Supreme Court of Arkansas, Bailey v. State, supra,
. A poll tax receipt is necessary to qualify a person as an elector. § 3-104.2. The circuit court selects 3 qualified commissioners at each term. § 39-201. The commissioners select from the electors of the county or its subdivision not less than 24 nor more than 36 “persons of good character, of approved integrity, sound judgment and reasonable information” to serve as petit jurors at the next term and, when ordered by the court, additional persons, so qualified and not exceeding 12 in number, as alternate petit jurors; these are set forth in separate lists which are certified, sealed and delivered to the judge who in turn delivers them to the clerk. §§ 39-208, 39-206 and 39-209. Within the 30 days preceding the next term, the clerk opens these lists and delivers copies of them to the sheriff who summons the persons named to attend the term. § 39-210. At the term a petit jury panel of 24 or 36, as the court may direct, is formed from the lists of jurors and alternates. § 39-215. The court also directs the commissioners to provide a list of not less than 25 names in addition to the regular panel and alternates for the use of the court in cases when the regular panel may be exhausted in impaneling any jury. §§ 39-220 and 39-220.1. This list is also sealed and is opened wheis the court determines that a panel cannot be completed from the list of regular and alternate jurors or that it will be exhausted. § 39-221. If it becomes evident that the special panel should be supplemented the court may recall the jury commissioners to perform this task. § 39-221.1. A person who has served on a regular panel of the petit jury is ineligible (with certain exceptions not pertinent here) to serve again for a period of 2 years. § 39-225. A prospective juror may be challenged for cause. § 39-228. Peremptory challenges are provided for, both as to civil cases, § 39-229, and as to criminal cases, §§ 43-1921 and 43-1922.
. See Leggett v. State,
. We recognize that the parties are not in accord as to the propriety of jury selection evidence here for the period after the March 1956 term. (While the State objected to the post-March 1956 data, the court reserved ruling on that objection; the record itself discloses the making of no formal ruling thereafter. Judge Young’s Table does not embrace this data.) There is no question of the propriety of this kind of evidence for a suitable period before that term to the extent it bears upon the alleged plan of exclusion or limitation. Patton v. State of Mississippi,
. Anderson v. State,
. The Fourteenth Amendment, of course, does not compel a state to provide trial by jury. Snyder v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
. Neal v. Delaware,
There have also been suggestions that it is violative of due process. United States ex rel. Goldsby v. Harpole, 5 Cir.,
. Neal v. Delaware, supra at page 394 of 103 U.S.; Bush v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, supra, at page 117 of
. Neal v. Delaware, supra, at page 397 of 103 U.S.; Norris v. State of Alabama, supra, at page 591 of
. Norris v. State of Alabama, supra, at page 598 of
. See also Washington v. State,
. Norris v. State of Alabama, supra, at pages 589-590 of
. Affirming: Smith v. State,
. See Hurtado v. People of State of California,
. In any event this point has been decided by this court adversely to the defense in the recent case of Moore v. Henslee, supra, at page 879 of 276 F.2d, and we adhere to that holding. See also Maxwell v. State, supra,
. See Hall v. United States, supra, at page 164 of 168 F.2d.
. See, also Brown v. Allen, supra, at page 480 of
. While there is some disagreement in the evidence as to the exact Negro representation on certain of the panels under review, we agree with Judge Young’s observation, at page 301 of 184 F.Supp., that the discrepancies are probably more apparent that real.
. There is some indication that certain of these special panel lists were not opened. It is clear, however, that 2 were opened, that these contained about 199 names, and that the name of no Negro was included. This substantial number of special panel jurors was not occasioned by the Bailey litigation but by the Leggett murder case noted above. Leggett was white and we are not concerned here with any problem of his constitutional rights in jury selection. See Haraway v. State,
. See 8 Cir.,
. State of Virginia v. Rives, supra, at pages 322-323 of 100 U.S.; Akins v. State of Texas, supra, at page 403 of
. For the period prior to the term during which the defendant was convicted repetition of a Negro’s name apparently occurred only once.
. As to this the County Tax Collector testified:
“ * * * yye ¿¡0 not fee] that a colored person, in the majority of instances, would feel offended if they got back a poll tax marked ‘W’, where on the other hand, it is completely reversed, if a white person would get back a poll tax receipt through the mail marked ‘colored’, they would have a great resentment. * * ”
. The following appears with respect to Commissioner McArthur:
“Q. (Mr. Williams, resuming) How many Negroes do you know in Pulaski County? A. I really couldn’t say. I’ve lived here off and on all my life, thirty-eight years, and I’d say I know as much as anyone else in this court-room, maybe more.
* * * * *
“Q. My question was whether or not there was any effort made to acquaint yourself with Negro poll tax holders, any special effort outside of the delib-eratíon? A. My answer would be no. If they were on the list of qualified electors, they were qualified as far as we were concerned, white or colored.
“Q. You made no special effort? A. No special effort.”
As to Commissioner Cavin, the following took place:
“Q. Mr. Cavin, was there any special effort made on your part to acquaint yourself with Negro poll tax holders in Pulaski County? A. No. I feel like I know as many colored people in Pulaski County as any other white person, probably more.”
With respect to Commissioner Davis, the following took place:
“Q. Mr. Davis, you did not make any special effort to see that Negroes were represented on this jury panel, did you? A. No special effort either way.
“Q. You didn’t make any special effort? A. Either way.
“The Court: ‘Either way’' — -I (don’t) think I know what you mean, Mr. Davis. Will you explain that — ■ A. I didn’t make any effort to put them on or to not put them on.”
. See Chessman v. Dickson, 9 Cir., 1960,
. See Chessman v. Teets,
