The court
sua sponte
withdraws the opinion originally issued at
Richard Lowe appeals the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.
I.
In 1986, Lowe pleaded guilty in state district court to injury to a child, indecency with a child, and aggravated sexual assault. The state trial court, did not give Lowe permission to appeal as required by Tex.Code Crim. PROC.ANN. art. 26.13(a)(3) (Vernon 1989).
Foreclosed from direct appeal, Lowe challenged his conviction through a surfeit of state habeas petitions. ' After the fourth of these petitions, the state trial court determined that Lowe had abused the habeas process, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied Lowe’s application without written order.
Undeterred, Lowe filed a fifth habeas petition in state court. Relying upon the earlier finding that Lowe had abused the writ, the trial court did not reach the merits of his application. It did, however, explicitly determine that Lowe’s complaints were all either repetitious or of a character such that they should have been raised in earlier petitions. In a written opinion, the trial court determined that Lowe had abused the habeas process for the second time. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, holding that Lowe’s complaints had been “waived and abandoned by his abuse of the writ of habeas corpus.”
In his sixth state habeas petition, in 1990, Lowe finally got around to making the claims he is asserting in the instant federal habeas petition, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and the involuntariness of his guilty plea. After reviewing the petition, the Court of Criminal Appeals issued an unpublished opinion expressly citing Lowe for abuse of the writ:
A proper respect for the concept of justice which the office of the Great Writ is to protect, requires that applications be filed in earnest and that all contentions of merit be presented and ruled upon as expeditiously as possible....- If an applicant has grounds which would justify the granting of habeas corpus relief, he should present them for determination with dispatch, rather than doling them out one-by-one in repeated attempts to obtain relief....
*875 It is obvious [Lowe] is continuing to raise issues which have been presented and rejected or should have been presented on appeal and in his prior applications. We find [Lowe’s] contentions have been waived and abandoned by his abuse of the writ of habeas corpus.
Ex Parte Lowe, No. 18,225-06 (May 9, 1990) (citations omitted). The court also extended the prohibition to future applications challenging the present conviction, absent a showing of good cause. Id.
The federal magistrate judge reached the merits of several of Lowe’s federal habeas claims. First, the magistrate judge found that errors that allegedly occurred in the course of a state habeas proceeding cannot serve as the basis of an action for federal habeas relief, and therefore Lowe’s claims regarding access to the record of his trial in his state habeas proceedings and the handling of his petition for state habeas relief were not cognizable. Next, the magistrate judge found Lowe’s breach of plea agreement and deficiency of the indictment claims to have been foreclosed by his guilty plea. Finally, relying upon the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’s abuse-of-the-writ order, the magistrate judge determined that Lowe’s procedural default in the state courts 'precluded federal review of the ineffective assistance of counsel and plea-voluntariness claims, absent a showing of cause and prejudice, which Loyre had not made. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
II.
A federal court may not grant a habeas petition unless the petitioner “has .exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the state, or [ ] there is either an absence of available state corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) (1988). A petitioner is generally not considered to have exhausted state remedies within the meaning of subsection (b) if “he has the right under the law of the State to raise, by any available procedure, the question presented.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(c) (1988). A petitioner generally need not utilize state habeas corpus or other state collateral proceedings to satisfy the requirement that he exhaust available state remedies.
Brown v. Allen,
Where the petitioner urges an,issue that he failed to raise on direct appeal, however, he must use available state collateral procedures to satisfy the exhaustion requirement.
Wade v. Mayo,
Federal review of a habeas claim is barred by the procedural default doctrine if the last state court to review the claim states clearly and expressly that its judgment rests on a procedural bar.
Harris v. Reed,
The Texas'abuse-of-the-writ doctrine precludes Texas courts from granting habeas petitions where the petitioner has failed, without cause, to address'the same issue on direct appeal or in a previous petition. Set forth in
Ex parte Dora,
Supreme Court precedent supports the conclusion that this type of state procedural rule can be an. adequate and independent state ground foreclosing federal habeas review. In
Murch v. Mottram,
In Wilcher, we addressed the issue of how regularly a state rule must be followed for it to constitute a procedural bar. We reversed the district court’s dismissal of a habeas petition because the Mississippi courts had not regularly and strictly asserted a procedural bar to claims not raised on direct appeal.
In
Ex parte Barber,
For the reasons stated in the memorandum opinion and order, we affirm the district court’s judgment on Lowe’s claims challenging the constitutionality of Tex.Code Crim. Proo.AnN. art.. 26.05 (West 1989) and contending that he is being restrained pursuant to . Tex.Code CRiM.PROC.ANN. art. 42.12 § 15(b) (now art. 42.18 § 8(b) (West Supp. 1993)). We reverse the dismissal of the ineffective assistance of counsel and plea-volun-tariness claims and remand with instructions for the court to consider them on the merits. We intimate no view on how those issues should be decided.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
