Raymond MEADOWS, Defendant-Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee.
No. 24756.
United States Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit.
December 23, 1969.
James F. Hewitt (argued), San Francisco, Cal., for defendant-appellant.
Jerrold Lader (argued), David H. Fox, Asst. U. S. Attys., Cecil F. Poole, U. S. Atty., San Francisco, Cal., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before MERRILL and WRIGHT, Circuit Judges, and BEEKS,* District Judge.
EUGENE A. WRIGHT, Circuit Judge.
The question before us is whether the Supreme Court's decision in Haynes v. United States,
In Haynes, decided January 20, 1968, the Court held that a plea of the privilege against self-incrimination guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment was a complete defense to a prosecution under 26 U.S.C. § 5851 for possession of a firearm not registered pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 5841. Appellant Raymond Meadows was indicted December 15, 1965, in the Northern District of California for violation of the identical statutory provisions involved in Haynes. He pleaded guilty on January 20, 1966, and was sentenced to a term of five years. On July 25, 1969, eighteen months after the decision in Haynes, he filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California a motion pursuant to Rule 32(d), F.R.Cr.P., seeking to withdraw his plea of guilty and to have the judgment against him vacated. The District Court denied the motion, and Meadows appeals.
I.
The Government first argues that appellant cannot benefit from Haynes, whether or not that case is applied retroactively. Haynes, it is argued, did no more than to create a new defense to a prosecution under § 5851, and that defense, like all others nonjurisdictional in nature, was waived by a plea of guilty. Since appellant did not assert the privilege against self-incrimination at the trial, it is said, he may not plead it now. We cannot agree.
Waiver is "an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege," Johnson v. Zerbst,
Under the circumstances of this case it is impossible to say that appellant had sufficient understanding of the "law in relation to the facts" to make a knowing waiver of his Fifth Amendment defense. At the time of his guilty plea, Lewis v. United States,
Appellant's mere failure to advance what at the time seemed a hopeless contention cannot fairly be deemed a deliberate renunciation of a right he knew he possessed. United States v. Miller,
A finding of waiver on this record, moreover, seems to us forbidden by the Supreme Court's holding in Grosso v. United States,
Despite the suggestions to the contrary in Whaley v. United States,
II.
We turn, then, to the question of retroactivity, the principal issue before us.
Prior to Linkletter v. Walker,
Absent such circumstances, we think it continues to be true that "[t]he essential function of courts * * * requires that the normal mode of judicial operation be retroactive," Mishkin, "The Supreme Court, 1964 Term, Foreword: The High Court, the Great Writ, and the Due Process of Time and Law," 79 Harv. L.Rev. 56, 60 (1965). This principle reflects the constraints appropriate to a system of judicial, as opposed to legislative, decision-making, cf. James v. United States,
Retroactivity, indeed, has been denied in two classes of cases only. First, there are the cases where the clear purpose of a new rule is to deter conduct extrinsic to the trial itself and unlikely substantially to affect the reliability of the determination of guilt. Such cases have principally involved the exclusion of evidence obtained by illegal searches and seizures. Desist v. United States, supra; Fuller v. Alaska,
But where the purpose of the new rule is to ensure the accuracy of the determination of guilt, or to correct an abuse that endangers "the very integrity of the fact-finding process," Linkletter,
We believe that the rule announced in Haynes falls into the latter category of cases. The "integrity of the * * * process" by which appellant was tried and sentenced is no less impugned by his conviction for an offense that the United States has no power to punish than by his conviction for an offense he did not commit. In both situations the defect in the conviction, unlike that involved when illegally seized evidence is admitted or even when an improperly procured confession is received, goes to the very center of the legal justification for the punishment imposed. To be valid, a punishment following upon the determination that a certain set of facts exists must necessarily presuppose that that set of facts constitutes an offense, see H.L.A. Hart, Punishment and Responsibility 5. The decision in Haynes negates precisely that presupposition by holding that, as against a plea of the privilege of self-incrimination, § 5851 creates no offense. A punishment in disregard of Haynes hence cannot stand.
We may note that the practical consequences of our decision, in terms of reliance by law enforcement officials or the effect on judicial administration, will be small. Few convictions will be affected, as compared with the huge numbers that would have been overturned had United States v. Wade,
Our conclusion in this case agrees with those reached by the Fourth and Fifth Circuits in similar cases. United States v. Miller,
Reversed and remanded to the District Court with instructions to grant appellant's motion.
Notes:
Notes
The Honorable William T. Beeks, United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation
