The District Court upon remand after the first appeal, Thomas v. Cunningham,
As the prior opinion narrates in some detail, Thomas was convicted upon pleas of guilty on July 22, 1955 in the Circuit Court of Buchanan County, Virginia of six larcenous felonies, with sentences totaling twelve years in the penitentiary, two on each indictment. The Circuit Court denied his counsel’s motion after indictment for Thomas’ commitment for observation and report of his mental competency to stand trial. The September following he was indicted, and on his plea — without request for a mental determination — found guilty of grand larceny in the Circuit Court of Dicken-son County, Virginia and sentenced to five years more.
The Buchanan judgments are assailed in the present petition on the averment that the refusal of the mental examination was a deprivation of Federal due process, inasmuch as the evidence before the State court disclosed “reasonable ground to doubt his sanity”. In these circumstances the Virginia statute commands such an inquiry. Va.Code 1950, § 19.1-229. See Wood v. Commonwealth,
As regards the Buchanan sentences the clearly acceptable findings of the District Judge disclose a sufficient indication of mental deficiency to have required an advance inquiry of Thomas’ capacity to comprehend the trial. A preliminary legal determination must be made, however, as to the justiciability of the Buchanan sentences by the District Court because Thomas had finished serving the last of them before entry of the order now on appeal.
With respect to the Dickenson proceeding the District Judge found, securely underpinned in the evidence, a want of adequate legal counsel prior to plea and sentence. First, however, we must detei'mine whether Thomas had exhausted his State remedies — a prerequisite under the pertinent habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2254 — before seeking relief in the Federal Court from the Dickenson mittimus, which still imprisons him.
I. The ratio decidendi of Jones v. Cunningham,
Reason and. necessity underlie these conclusions. As pointed out in United States v. Morgan,
If the conviction is not genuine, the record should be effaced forthwith. More, we are not told of a means as efficient or orderly as habeas corpus for the absolution. Error coram nobis, as indulged in United States v. Morgan, supra,
II. The Dickenson County judgment is patently void for want of adequate legal representation, Jones v. Cunningham,
In 1959, when he was serving his fourth Buchanan sentence, the petitioner sought delivery through habeas corpus in the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, invoking its original jurisdiction. Virginia Constitution § 88; Code of Va. 1950, § 17-97. Failing there, he applied to the United States Supreme Court for certiorari but again did not succeed. Thomas v. Smyth,
But the point is now made that the Supreme Court of Appeals would not then consider an assault on the Dickenson commitment inasmuch as it was premature — there being no detention under it at that time. McNally v. Hill,
In this milieu we do not read 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to demand of Thomas, or burden the State court with, a duplication of his steps. He has not by-passed the State court, and so has observed all considerations of comity — the object of § 2254. Fay v. Noia,
These are “exceptional circumstances * * * [which] require prompt federal intervention”, Darr v. Burford,
For these reasons we affirm the order of the District Court, and direct that Thomas be released from imprisonment within 30 days unless in that period the State undertakes retrial of the indictments reviewed herein.
Affirmed.
