The question is whether the district court correctly refused to hear the merits of these petitioners’ habeas corpus claims because they had not shown “cause” within the meaning of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
I
Petitioner Breest was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in New Hampshire in 1973. His conviction and sentence were affirmed on appeal.
State v. Breest,
Petitioner Martineau was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death in New Hampshire in 1959, together with a co-defendant Russell Nelson. These convictions were affirmed in
State v. Nelson,
We invalidated a New Hampshire jury instruction because its reasonable doubt instruction was constitutionally infirm.
Dunn v. Perrin,
II
Petitioners first contend that we must proceed immediately to the merits of their constitutional complaints about their jury instructions because New Hampshire’s enforcement of its contemporaneous objection rule did not constitute an “independent and adequate ground” for the state decision here.
1
We think New Hampshire’s procedural bar was “adequate”, however, for the reason that petitioners had fair and timely notice of the true nature of New Hampshire’s procedural demands. Like many jurisdictions, New Hampshire generally requires that criminal defendants object at
*3
trial if they are to save issues for review.
2
E. g., State v. Cass,
121 N.H.-,
It is argued that New Hampshire’s contemporaneous objection policy serves no “legitimate state interest” and so is invalid under
Henry v. Mississippi,
Finally, petitioners claim that New Hampshire “arbitrarily” denied them the benefit of the recognized exception to the contemporaneous objection rule that the state applied in
State v. Nelson,
Assuming for the sake of argument that a state’s occasional and arbitrary grant of
relief
from procedural requirements— when so clearly discretionary as to give no cause for reasonable reliance by litigants upon its exercise — can invalidate an otherwise adequate state ground on habeas corpus review, there was no arbitrary denial by New Hampshire of its
Nelson
exception to the contemporaneous objection rule. Petitioners fail to establish that they meet either of
Nelson’s
two requirements. First, neither Martineau nor Breest presently face the death sentence. It is understandable that New Hampshire would confine its
Nel
*4
son
exception to capital cases.
4
“For after all, death cases are indeed different in kind from all other litigation.”
Coleman v. Balkcom,
- U.S. -, -,
*5 III
We must now consider the extent to which federal review of petitioners’ claims will intervene, notwithstanding the state’s independent and adequate procedural bar, due to the special policies of federal habeas corpus review. The relevant test is set out in
Wainwright v. Sykes,
The lone “cause” that petitioners assert for their failure to object at trial is the state of the law at the time of their trial, which purportedly made objection pointless. As just explained, petitioners have failed to substantiate this claimed “cause”. We consequently affirm the district court without taking sides in the current controversy over whether “futility” can ever constitute “cause” under
Sykes. See, e. g., Isaac v. Engle,
Affirmed.
Notes
. This is an issue that must be considered before deciding the effect of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. Unlike the federal courts,
see
Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 46; Fed.R.Crim.Proc. 51; New Hampshire also has preserved the older common law requirement of exceptions to some degree.
See State v. Boisvert,
. For this reason we cannot consider New Hampshire’s action to be “an obvious subterfuge to evade consideration of a federal issue.”
Radio Station WOW, Inc. v. Johnson,
. In a case that refused to abolish New Hampshire’s requirement of taking an exception after an objection has been overruled, the New Hampshire Supreme Court cited
Nelson
and referred to its futility-of-objection element but not its death penalty setting.
Barton
v.
City of Manchester,
. Petitioners claim that the New Hampshire court considered the merits of a tardy jury instruction challenge in the noncapital case of
State v. Belkner,
. Petitioners cite two cases upholding New Hampshire reasonable doubt instructions.
See State v. Hutton,
.
See State v. Wentworth,
. Petitioners cite a number of New Hampshire cases showing that the state relaxes its procedural requirements in other classes of cases.
E. g„ Gove
v.
Crosby,
. Petitioner Breest argues that
Sykes’
“cause and prejudice” test should not apply when a habeas petition raises only questions of law that require no factual determinations.
See Cole v. Stevenson,
