This is an appeal from a dismissal of a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on the ground of state procedural default. We hold that the defense of state procedural default may be raised sua sponte so long as the court provides the petitioner an opportunity to respond to the defense.
1
We also hold that defense counsel may, under some circumstances, have a constitutional duty to discuss the merits of appeal with a criminal defendant even though the defendant has pled guilty. Because the Petitioner at bar has alleged facts that, if proven, could establish a violation of this constitutional right to counsel, and because ineffective assistance of counsel may excuse a state procedural default under the cause and prejudice test of
Coleman v. Thompson,
— U.S.-,
FACTS
The Petitioner, Richard Hardiman, seeks habeas relief based upon the alleged unconstitutionality of a 1978 Oklahoma conviction that was used to enhance a sentence he is presently serving for a 1987 Oklahoma conviction. 3 Hardiman challenges his 1978 conviction on two grounds: First, he alleges that the guilty plea upon which that conviction was based was involuntary. He asserts that when he expressed reservations about whether to plead guilty, his court-appointed attorney threatened to quit and told him that the prosecutor had threatened to give Hardiman a life sentence if he chose to proceed to trial.. Second, Hardiman alleges that he was inadequately advised of his right to appeal because he was not informed that his appeal, including counsel and record on appeal, would be free if he could not afford it. The State has stipulated that Hardiman has exhausted these two claims in state habeas corpus proceedings and the record supports the stipulation.
The magistrate did not address the merits of Hardiman’s petition, but instead recommended denial of the petition on the ground of state procedural default. This recommendation was based upon the fact that Hardiman did not file a timely direct appeal from his 1978 conviction. Oklahoma in most situations precludes a prisoner from raising on collateral attack an issue that could have been, but was not, raised on direct appeal.
See Webb v. State,
The State had not raised this issue before either the magistrate or the district court. Rather, the magistrate raised the issue of state procedural default sua sponte. On appeal, Hardiman argues that the district court erred by raising state procedural default sua sponte. Further, he argues that even if state procedural default were properly raised, his default is excusable under Coleman’s cause and prejudice test. We address each of these arguments in turn.
I. A Court May Raise State Procedural Default Sua Sponte in a Section 2254 Action
Generally, where the parties have not raised a defense, the court should not address the defense sua sponte; “The rule that points not argued will not be considered is more than just a prudential rule of convenience; its observance, at least in the vast majority of cases, distinguishes our adversary system of justice from the inquisitorial one.”
United States v. Burke,
— U.S.-,
However, this general rule contains at least two important exceptions. First, a court must raise a defense sua sponte if that defense implicates the court’s subject matter jurisdiction.
See Tuck v. United Servs. Auto. Ass ’n,
In a § 2254 habeas action, state procedural default is not a jurisdictional defense.
See Reed v. Ross,
However, the state procedural default doctrine substantially implicates important values that transcend the concerns of the parties to an action. The doctrine is grounded upon concerns of comity between sovereigns and often upon considerations of judicial efficiency.
See Sykes,
Comity affects federal as well as state interests. As noted by the Eleventh Circuit,
Comity is not a one way street. “The notion of comity ... must be understood not as a capitulation of federal power to state interest; rather, comity involves a delicate compromise of both state and federal concerns.” Carter v. Estelle,677 F.2d 427 , 442 (5th Cir.1982). Strong federal interests may exist that, balanced against those of the state in the particular case, will permit the district court in its discretion to decline a waiver [of a comity-based defense]_
Thompson v. Wainwright,
Moreover, comity interests aside, federal courts have an interest in the procedural default defense because it affects the expenditure of scarce federal judicial resources. Unless the state procedural bar defense can be raised sua sponte, a state that fails to raise that defense can effectively force a federal court to review the merits of a case that may be simpler to decide on procedural grounds. 5
*504 Finally, society has an efficiency interest in the state procedural bar at issue in this case: Oklahoma’s direct appeal requirement. This procedural requirement encourages efficiency by channeling disputes to the best forum for their resolution. Direct appeal permits the state appeals courts to review the case while the record is fresh. By enforcing procedural rules that channel issues to the appropriate forum, efficiency is encouraged.
At least one circuit has explicitly held that a court can raise the issue of state procedural default sua sponte.
See Hull v. Freeman,
Our holding also finds support in
Granberry v. Greer,
The district court’s ability to raise a defense to a § 2254 motion sua sponte is also consistent with the authority that the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts give to the district courts. Specifically, Rule 4 provides: “If it plainly appears from the face of the petition and any exhibits annexed to it that the petitioner is not entitled to relief in the district court, the judge shall make an order for its summary dismissal and cause the petitioner to be notified.” This rule empowers the court to dismiss meritless petitions on its own without requiring any action by the government. Regardless of whether the conditions for sua sponte action under Rule 4 are satisfied here, 7 that rule indicates that Congress intended the courts to play a more active role in § 2254 cases than they generally play in many other kinds of cases.
Bailey v. Cowley,
II. Cause and Prejudice
The district court dismissed Hardiman’s petition upon adoption of the magistrate’s conclusion that Hardiman did not show cause for his state procedural default as required by
Coleman.
Prior to dismissing an action sua sponte, a court must give the complainant an opportunity to respond to the argument for dismissal.
Wilson v. United States,
Hardiman failed to object to the magistrate’s Findings and Recommendations and this failure was referenced by the district court as one basis for affirming the magistrate’s recommendation. However, reliance upon Hardiman’s failure to object was error. We have made it very clear that a pro se petitioner’s failure to object to a magistrate’s report cannot constitute a waiver of the right to object to that report unless the magistrate makes clear on the face of the report the consequences of such a failure to object.
Moore v. United States,
Some courts have held, at least in the context of a sua sponte dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), that if an opportunity to respond would be futile, a court need not provide such an opportunity before dismissing the petition. See Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1350, at 217-18 (1990). The magistrate’s failure to permit Hardiman to respond appears to rest upon the conclusion that a response would be futile — i.e., that Hardiman could not show cause under Coleman’s cause and prejudice standard. We disagree.
The magistrate’s conclusion that Hardi-man could not show cause was based upon his finding that Hardiman “was advised of the proper procedure for appealing [his] conviction.” Findings and Recommendations at 6. However, this finding misses the point. Hardiman does not contend that he should have been advised of the proper procedure for appealing; rather, he contends that he should have been advised that he could avail himself of that procedure without payment. Thus, the question is whether the failure to advise Hardi-man of his right to a free appeal might constitute cause. The record is inadequate for us to conclude that this argument is futile.
Constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel constitutes cause.
See Coleman,
The State attempts to distinguish
Baker
on the ground that there is no indication that the defendant in
Baker
pled guilty. Hardiman, in contrast, pled guilty. “An attorney has no absolute duty in every case to advise a defendant of his limited right to appeal after a guilty plea.”
Laycock v. New Mexico,
Although it is generally true that a criminal defendant has no right to notice of his right to appeal a guilty plea,
Laycock
notes two important exceptions to this rule: “If a claim of error is made on constitutional grounds, which could result in setting aside the plea, or if the defendant inquires about an appeal right, counsel has a duty to inform [a defendant of his right to appeal].”
Id.
at 1188 (citation omitted). This duty arises when “counsel either knows or should have learned of his client’s claim or of the relevant facts giving rise to that claim.”
See Marrow v. United States,
Hardiman’s petition alleges that his counsel took part in coercing him to plead guilty. If Hardiman can prove this allegation, he may well be able to satisfy Lay-cock’s test for when a defendant who pleads guilty is entitled to advice about appeal. If he can show that he was not given such advice, then he may be able to show cause under Baker and Coleman. Thus, the magistrate’s apparent conclusion that it would be futile to let Hardiman attempt to show cause was erroneous.
Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s dismissal of Hardiman’s petition and REMAND for the district court to provide Hardiman an opportunity to show cause under Coleman for his procedural default.
Notes
. In
Hines v. United States,
. Because we believe that Hardiman’s appeal is not frivolous and is pursued in good faith, we GRANT his motions for a certificate of probable cause and to proceed in forma pauperis.
. It is undisputed that the 1978 conviction was used to enhance the sentence for the 1987 conviction. Accordingly, we have jurisdiction to review the constitutionality of Hardiman’s 1978 conviction notwithstanding the fact that he is no longer serving a sentence based directly upon that conviction.
See Gamble v. Parsons,
. Brown involved a nonexhaustion defense, not the state procedural bar defense. Although we recognize important differences between these two defenses, the test elaborated in Brown — i.e., does the defense substantially implicate important values that transcend those of the parties— also applies to the state procedural bar defense.
Moreover, as we discuss in more detail below, the nonexhaustion defense, like the procedural default defense, involves considerations of comity. For this reason, we occasionally look to discussions of comity in cases dealing with the nonexhaustion defense.
. Although a federal court may sometimes be able to conserve its resources by disposing of a case on the ground of state procedural default, procedural disposition will not always be the most efficient course. For example, where the existence of the default or its justification under Coleman's cause and prejudice test is not clear from the record, it may be an inefficient use of resources to engage in a sua sponte search for a
*504
state procedural default.
See Batchelor v. Cupp,
.The fact that Granberry dealt with a belatedly raised defense as opposed to a defense that was not raised at all does not destroy the analogy. The question remains similar in both cases: Is the defense sufficiently important to warrant consideration even though the government failed properly to raise it?
Nor does the fact that Granberry dealt with the ability of an appeals court, as opposed to a district court, to address an improperly raised defense affect the analogy. If an appeals court has the power to address an improperly raised defense, then surely a district court has this power.
.It is not clear that Rule 4 would justify sua sponte review of a defense after the Government responds and fails to raise the defense, as occurred here. Also, it is not clear in the case at bar whether the defense “plainly appeared] from the face of the petition."
. Because we decide this waiver issue on the basis of the magistrate’s failure to notify a pro se litigant of the consequences of a failure to object, we do not address whether Hardiman’s explicit excuses for his failure to object — that he had been transferred to another prison and that his legal materials had been confiscated — might justify his failure to object under the "interests of justice” standard noted in Moore. Id.
. Hardiman does not clearly assert that it was the duty of his counsel to notify him of his appeal rights. Rather, he argues that under Oklahoma law the court should have notified him of these rights.
See Buchanan v. Page,
. We do not decide here whether counsel’s alleged failure to discuss the financial aspects of the appeal constitutes a failure to advise a defendant about "the pros and cons of appealing.”
Baker,
