PARKER v. ELLIS, GENERAL MANAGER, TEXAS PRISON SYSTEM
No. 38
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 20, 1960.—Decided May 16, 1960
362 U.S. 574
Leon F. Pesek, Assistant Attorney General of Texas, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Will Wilson, Attorney General, and Linward Shivers, Assistant Attorney General.
PER CURIAM.
This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus brought in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas alleging unlawful detention under a sentence of imprisonment following a trial in the state court in which petitioner was, according to his claim, denied due process of law as guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the
Before the case could come to be heard here, the petitioner was released from the state prison after having served his sentence with time off for good behavior. The case has thus become moot, and the Court is without jurisdiction to deal with the merits of petitioner‘s claim. “The purpose of the proceeding defined by the statute [authorizing the writ of habeas corpus to be issued] was to inquire into the legality of the detention, and the only judicial relief authorized was the discharge of the prisoner or his admission to bail.” McNally v. Hill, 293 U. S. 131, 136. “Without restraint of liberty, the writ will not issue.” Id., 138. See also Johnson v. Hoy, 227 U. S. 245.* “It is well settled that this court will not proceed to adjudication where there is no subject-matter on which the judgment of the court can operate.” Ex parte Baez, 177 U. S. 378, 390. We have applied these principles to deny the writ of certiorari for mootness on the express ground that petitioner was no longer in respondent‘s custody in at least three cases not relevantly different from the present one. Weber v. Squier, 315 U. S. 810; Tornello v. Hudspeth, 318 U. S. 792; Zimmerman v. Walker, 319 U. S. 744.
Since the case has become moot before the error complained of in the judgment below could be adjudicated, the case is remanded to the Court of Appeals to vacate its judgment and to direct the District Court to vacate its order and dismiss the application.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, joined by MR. JUSTICE CLARK, also considers this case moot on a further ground. It appears that petitioner has outstanding against him felony convictions in a number of other States. Under Texas law any one of those convictions would carry the same consequences with respect to petitioner‘s exercise of civil rights in Texas (Election Code Art. 5.01) as his conviction in this case. See Harwell v. Morris, 143 S. W. 2d 809, 812-813. This Court is as much bound by constitutional restrictions on its jurisdiction as it is by other constitutional requirements. The “moral stigma of a judgment which no longer affects legal rights does not present a case or controversy for appellate review.” St. Pierre v. United States, 319 U. S. 41, 43.
If the Court is right in holding that George Parker‘s five-year quest for justice must end ignominiously in the limbo of mootness, surely something is badly askew in our system of criminal justice. I am convinced the Court is wrong. Even assuming arguendo that we could not enter a nunc pro tunc order, I believe that we still would be able to grant relief.
We have here the case of a man who was convicted of a felony in flagrant disregard of his constitutional right to assistance of counsel. Since the Court terms his claim an “impressive” one, lengthy discussion of its merits is unnecessary. Still, it is not amiss briefly to describe what it is the Court here declines to decide.
In 1954, petitioner was tried in the District Court of Moore County, Texas, on a charge of forging a check. He was then 67 years of age and, respondent concedes, in “failing health.” The judge refused to appoint counsel to represent him.1 He was convicted and received a sen-
Item:
“Direct examination by Mr. PARKER:
“Q. Ted, you go ahead and tell the court about my condition and how you have known me—tell the jury?
“A. Well, do I understand it right?
“Q. Huh?
“A. You mean your physical condition, so forth and so on?
“Q. Yes. Just go ahead and tell the jury about what you know?
“A. Well, his physical condition, according to everything, is bad or, at least, the doctors say so, you know. I couldn‘t—as far as the checks, I don‘t
“Q. Yes, I guess so; just go ahead and tell them what you know about me. That is all—only—that is all I want to ask—I am just leaving mine up to them, you know?
“The COURT. Do you know what he is driving at—what he wants?
“A. Well, if I understood it, the condition, you know—
“The COURT. That is up to you too.
“[The PROSECUTOR]. You got anything else?
“Mr. PARKER. No. Go ahead and ask him.”
Item:
“The COURT. Are you through?
“Mr. PARKER. Judge, here are some letters I would like for the jury to see.
“The COURT. We can‘t give the letters to the jury.
“Mr. PARKER. For—from the doctors?
“The COURT. No, sir.
“Mr. PARKER. That is all.”
This is enough to give the flavor of the “trial.” It is difficult to recall a case which more clearly illustrates the helplessness of the layman when called upon to defend himself against a criminal charge. Judge, now Chief Judge, Rives, who dissented from the judgment of the Court of Appeals, was clearly correct in stating:
“Upon such a record, it would appear that Parker‘s efforts to defend himself were little short of farcical. In view of the small amounts of the checks, his family connection with the Quattlebaums, and the open way in which the checks were payable to and endorsed by Parker, it is quite possible that he may have had a defense to the charge of forgery, or at least that miti-
gating circumstances might have been shown. The record . . . shows that he suffered badly from the lack of assistance of counsel, and tends to corroborate his claim of extreme illness.” 258 F. 2d 937, 944.
But George Parker‘s unhappy experience with the law was not destined to end with the trial. Instead, time after time the courts have turned aside his applications for redress. There has hardly been a minute in the past five years that Parker‘s case has not been before a court. He was convicted in November, 1954, and on March 23, 1955, the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas affirmed his conviction in a brief opinion. 276 S. W. 2d 533. Parker then applied to the Court of Criminal Appeals for habeas corpus, but his petition was denied on September 21, 1955, without a hearing. On February 27, 1956, this Court denied certiorari.6 350 U. S. 971. Next, on May 31, 1956, Parker turned to the Federal District Court and sought relief by way of habeas corpus. The district judge denied his petition on June 24, 1957, after his thrice-repeated request for a lawyer had been thrice-ignored. The Court of Appeals affirmed on August 29, 1958. 258 F. 2d 937. Parker petitioned for certiorari on October 24, 1958; and this Court granted the petition on March 2, 1959. 359 U. S. 924. At last an attorney was appointed to represent Parker‘s interests. 359 U. S. 951. Then, on June 6, 1959, Parker was released from the penitentiary—almost five years after his conviction, three years after he had applied to the Federal District Court for relief, more
I.
The Court does not suggest that this strange result is a happy one. But it appears to believe it is bound by precedent to the view that, because of the nature of the habeas corpus remedy, “it is a condition upon this Court‘s jurisdiction . . . that the petitioner be in custody when that jurisdiction can become effective.” Consequently, the Court does not express any view on the mootness question considered de novo. Since, as will appear, I do not regard the decisions upon which the Court relies as at all decisive, I am obliged to consider whether the habeas corpus statute,
It is quite true that the statute provides that the writ of habeas corpus will not issue unless the applicant is “in custody.”
Granting Parker relief would not only comport with the statutory mandate, but would also be in keeping with the spirit of the writ. Habeas corpus, with an ancestry reaching back to Roman Law,10 has been over the centuries a means of obtaining justice and maintaining the rule of law when other procedures have been unavailable or ineffective. The early years of its development in England were distinguished by the role it played in securing enforcement of the guarantees of Magna Charta.11 But even the Great Writ was not secure from the pressures of the English Crown, and perhaps the most effective method
The general problem we confront in the case at bar, then, is hardly novel in the history of the writ—an intolerable delay in affording justice and the absence of any other remedy.15 The causes, to be sure, have changed with the times. Instead of the arbitrariness of judges, Parker has had to contend with the time-consuming nature of our system of appellate review and collateral attack. We cannot expect history to tell us exactly how to cope with this problem, because it simply did not exist in the early days of the common-law writ, when there was little if any appellate review of the then relatively simple habeas corpus proceedings.16 But history does provide general guidance. This guidance is incompatible with the idea that the writ designed as an effective agent of justice has become fossilized so that old problems, once thought to have been solved, are now insurmountable because they have taken slightly new forms. The Court has not hesitated to expand the scope of habeas corpus far beyond its traditional inquiry into matters of technical “jurisdiction.” The statute permitted this adaptation in the interests of “law and justice,” and the Court has responded to the demands of that compelling standard. We have the same
II.
The Court apparently believes that these considerations are foreclosed by prior decisions. The fact is, however, that while the writ-remedy argument seems never to have been squarely presented to this Court, the weight of authority favors petitioner.
In Pollard v. United States, 352 U. S. 354, the Court was confronted with a mootness question identical to that presented here. Pollard involved a collateral attack upon a conviction by way of motion under
The Court recognizes the difficulty posed by Pollard, and solves it by stating that this aspect of Pollard was predicated upon an “unconsidered assumption” which was overruled by Heflin v. United States, 358 U. S. 415, “after full deliberation.” But Heflin did not purport to discard Pollard, and there is no inherent inconsistency between these two decisions. In Heflin, the Court decided that a prisoner could not secure § 2255 relief from a sentence which he had not yet begun to serve because he was not yet “in custody” pursuant to that sentence. But the mootness problem dealt with in Pollard was not involved in Heflin. A construction of § 2255 similar to the construction of the habeas corpus statute proposed above would harmonize Heflin and Pollard; it is only the Court‘s opinion in this case which tends to make them irreconcilable. Thus the Court‘s argument comes full circle.
Moreover, it is curious that the Court, in dealing with the cases upon which it relies, does not exhibit the same attitude that is reflected by its treatment of Pollard. The three cases which constitute the principal basis for the Court‘s judgment are Weber v. Squier, 315 U. S. 810; Tornello v. Hudspeth, 318 U. S. 792; and Zimmerman v. Walker, 319 U. S. 744.19 While in Pollard the Court ren-
Weber was the first of the trio. There the petitioner was paroled while his petition for certiorari was pending, and the Court thereupon denied the petition on grounds of mootness. Since a lower court had issued a writ of habeas corpus prior to the parole, Weber would be directly in point if the Court‘s order had rested upon the premise that petitioner, as a parolee, was no longer in custody within the meaning of the habeas corpus statute. But the respondent did not suggest that the petition be denied on this ground. Rather, his sole argument was that the case was moot because the petitioner was no longer in his custody. The only case respondent cited, Van Meter v. Sanford, 99 F. 2d 511, held that a habeas corpus action becomes moot when the respondent loses custody and is thereby disabled from complying with the order which might be necessary upon remand—in Weber‘s case, an order of discharge. It was this theory the Court adopted in denying certiorari because petitioner was “no longer in the respondent‘s custody.”20 It is instructive to note
The second case discussed by the Court is Tornello v. Hudspeth, supra, where a petition for certiorari was
Not surprisingly, perhaps, the order in the third case, Zimmerman v. Walker, supra, relied solely upon Weber and Tornello, and repeated the “released from the respondent‘s custody” phrase. In that case, respondent filed a suggestion of mootness in which he mentioned the total lack of custody, but in which he relied primarily upon the ground which had proved successful in the past—the absence of custody by him. But it is unnecessary to explore this case further, inasmuch as no writ or rule to show cause had ever issued. Since custody is a prerequisite for issuance of the writ, the case was clearly moot; but it is just as clearly irrelevant.
Orders of this character do not provide a solid basis for disposition of Parker‘s case. The “law and justice” standard of the statute does.
III.
The concurring opinion raises another objection to granting Parker relief. While the Court‘s opinion simply construes the statute, the concurring opinion construes the Constitution. The Court‘s opinion would not foreclose Congress from authorizing relief in a case like Parker‘s; the concurring opinion would. While the Court‘s decision is based on the theory that nothing can be done for Parker because of the nature of the relief authorized by the habeas corpus statute, the concurrence is grounded upon the view that Parker has such an insubstantial interest in securing an adjudication that his claim could not present a “case or controversy” under
One could take exception to the factual premise of this conclusion. The evidence of record which is relied upon to establish the existence and number of Parker‘s convictions leaves much to be desired,25 and there is nothing to
Aside from these considerations, however, there is something fundamentally wrong with the theory that mootness should turn upon whether or not a convicted person can run for office or cast a ballot. The principal policy basis for the doctrine of mootness, when that term is employed in the “case or controversy” context, is to insure that the judiciary will have the benefit of deciding legal questions in a truly adversary proceeding in which there is the “impact of actuality,”27 and in which the contentiousness of the parties may be relied upon to bring to light all relevant considerations.28 Here the
In sum, I cannot agree with the Court that George Parker‘s case comes to us too late. It is too late, much too late, to undo entirely the wrong that has been inflicted upon him; but it is not too late to keep the constitutional balance true. I dissent from the notion that, because we cannot do more, we should do nothing at all.
I do not take the dim view of fictions that the opinion of the Court reflects. Fictions are commonplace to lawyers. In Delaware, prior to its adoption of a modern code of civil procedure, the action of ejectment was based on a series of fictions. The declaration averred a lease to a fictitious lessee, the entry by a fictitious lessee, and the ouster by a fictitious ejector “which when proven or admitted by the consent rule” left “the question of title as the only matter to be determined in the case.” 2 Woolley, Practice in Civil Actions (1906), § 1591.
We know from English history how the King‘s Bench and Exchequer contrived to usurp the Court of Common Pleas—by alleging that the defendant was in custody of the king‘s marshal or that the plaintiff was the king‘s debtor and could not pay his debt by reason of the defendant‘s default. See 3 Reeves’ History of the English Law (Finlason ed. 1869), 753.
We are told by Maine, Ancient Law (New ed. 1930), 32, that in old Roman law “fictio” was a term of pleading and signified a false averment which could not be traversed, “such, for example, as an averment that the plaintiff was a Roman citizen, when in truth he was a foreigner.”
The list is long, and the case for or against a particular fiction is often hotly contested. See Fuller, Legal Fictions, 25 Ill. L. Rev. 363, 513, 877.
Some fictions worked grievous injustices such as the presupposition that a defendant, though far away, was within the jurisdiction and should be proceeded against by outlawry.1 Bentham inveighed against “the pesti-
We have here an injustice to undo. Parker was convicted in a Texas court of a crime without benefit of counsel; and the nature of the charge, the kind of defense available, and the capabilities of Parker to defend himself, make it plain to all of us, I assume, that due process of law was denied him under the standards laid down in our cases,4 the most recent one being Cash v. Culver, 358 U. S. 633. No remedy against this invasion of his constitutional rights was available to him except by habeas corpus. While in prison, he followed the federal route. The writ was applied for, the District Court ordered respondent to answer, see Walker v. Johnston, 312 U. S. 275, 284, and a hearing on affidavits, other documents, and the trial record was held. The petition was dismissed and the Court of Appeals affirmed. 258 F. 2d 937. Then a petition for a writ of certiorari was filed here. More than seven months after his petition for certiorari was filed with us and over three months after we granted certiorari he was released from prison. That was June 6, 1959. So the Court now rules that he has no relief by way of habeas corpus because the illegal detention he challenged has been terminated. And so it has. But his controversy with the State of Texas has not ended. The unconstitutional judgment rendered against him has a continuing effect because under Texas law “[a]ll persons convicted of any felony except those restored to full citizenship and right of suffrage or pardoned” are disqualified from voting. Texas Election Code, Art. 5.01. The loss of these civil rights prevents a case from becoming
If this were a federal conviction, Parker would have a remedy under
Any judgment nunc pro tunc indulges in a fiction. But it is a useful one, advancing the ends of justice. A man who claims to be unlawfully in the custody of X is not required to start all over again if X has died and Y has been substituted in X‘s place. We treat the habeas corpus petition as the facts were when the issue was drawn and enter judgment nunc pro tunc “as of that day.” Quon Quon Poy v. Johnson, 273 U. S. 352, 359. The same is done when other parties die before final decision. See Mitchell v. Overman, 103 U. S. 62; Harris v. Commissioner, 340 U. S. 106, 112-113. These cases can all be distinguished from the present one. But the principle
“[T]he rule established by the general concurrence of the American and English courts is, that where the delay in rendering a judgment or a decree arises from the act of the court, that is, where the delay has been caused either for its convenience, or by the multiplicity or press of business, either the intricacy of the questions involved, or of any other cause not attributable to the laches of the parties, the judgment or the decree may be entered retrospectively, as of a time when it should or might have been entered up. In such cases, upon the maxim actus curiae neminem gravabit,—which has been well said to be founded in right and good sense, and to afford a safe and certain guide for the administration of justice,—it is the duty of the court to see that the parties shall not suffer by the delay. A nunc pro tunc order should be granted or refused, as justice may require in view of the circumstances of the particular case.”
It is the fault of the courts, not Parker‘s fault, that final adjudication in this case was delayed until after he had served his sentence. Justice demands that he be given the relief he deserves. Since the custody requirement, if any, was satisfied when we took jurisdiction of the case, I would grant the relief as of that date.
