Petitioner Mottram in 1958 was indicted in the state court on two counts: one for stealing a car in 1957, and secondly for being an habitual offender by virtue of a prior felony conviction. 15 Me.Rev.Stat. § 1742. Although in fact he had several prior convictions, the only one alleged in the indictment was a 1952 conviction for automobile theft. Petitioner pleaded not guilty, and after
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a false start
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the court granted his motion for separate trials. At the trial on the first count he took the stand and testified with respect to the alleged 1957 theft that the owner had loaned him the car. On cross-examination he was asked, presumably for purposes of impeachment, about his prior convictions. He acknowledged the others, but when asked whether he had been convicted in 1952 of stealing a car, on advice of counsel he pleaded the Fifth Amendment. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. The court then sought to empanel a jury to try the recidivist count. There was a shortage of new jurors a.nd to complete the panel the court, over petitioner’s objection, called four jurors who had sat on the trial of the first count. On this occasion petitioner did not take the stand. The jury found him guilty, and the convictions were affirmed on appeal. State v. Mottram, 1962,
Petitioner was subsequently released on parole, but he was shortly returned as a parole violator. He sought to attack the method as lacking in due process. For some reason not disclosed— counsel is now deceased — his petition contained two complaints about matters occurring during the trial itself. Counsel received permission to strike these, but the court informed counsel, and petitioner personally, that in view of 14 Me.Rev.Stat.[Ann.] § 5507
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it felt petitioner must make his whole case at once and not piecemeal. Counsel expressed disagreement. Petitioner elected to press only his complaint as to the parole procedure. This he ultimately lost. Mottram v. State, Me., 1967,
Pursuing this judicial treadmill, we reach the present federal habeas corpus petition. It being undisputed that petitioner no longer had available state remedies, the district court held an eviden-tiary hearing, at the conclusion of which it dismissed the petition.
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The first question is the correctness of the district court’s finding that petitioner had waived his state court remedies by accepting his counsel’s advice as against that of the Superior Court judge. There is a “heavy burden against the waiver of constitutional rights,” D. H. Overmyer Co. v. Frick Co.,
However, although we of course bow to the Maine court’s ultimate interpretation of its statute, we cannot think that counsel's belief that it would not reach that result was an unreasonable one. Section 5502 does not speak in terms of all common law remedies for illegal procedures and illegal confinement. On the contrary, as the court stated in
Mottram,
In the absence of extrinsic evidence that petitioner was not acting in good faith reliance on counsel’s opinion, but rather was seeking to circumvent state procedures (it appearing clearly from the record that he did not intend to abandon his rights),
see
Fay v. Noia, ante at
At the oral argument, respondent called our attention to an alternative ground of waiver, not decided by the district court, namely a decision by the Maine court that by failing to include his objection to the composition of the jury in his original appeal, petition
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er lost the right to raise it collaterally. Mottram v. State,
Turning to the merits of the repeating jurors matter, we need not quarrel with respondent’s contention that the state could have tried both counts of petitioner’s indictment simultaneously.
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Spencer v. Texas, 1967,
The first source of prejudice was that the four jurors heard evidence in the first trial which they were not entitled to hear in the second.
Cf.
Lett v. United States, 8 Cir., 1926,
Even more strikingly prejudicial was the four jurors’ knowledge that petitioner, when asked specifically about the 1952 conviction during the first trial, had refused to answer, claiming the Fifth Amendment. Knowing that he properly could, and probably would, claim the Fifth Amendment as to the 1952 conviction, it was error, though probably not so prejudicial as to require reversal, for the prosecutor to have asked the question on the first trial.
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See
Namet v. United States, 1963,
The judgment is reversed, and the court is directed to grant the writ unless the petitioner is admitted to bail or retried within a reasonable time if he is presently incarcerated under this sentence.
Notes
. Initially petitioner was convicted on both counts in a single trial, and his convictions were affirmed on appeal. State v. Mottram, 1959,
. “All grounds for relief claimed by a petitioner under this remedy must be raised by a petitioner in his original or amended petition, and any grounds not so raised are waived unless the State or Federal Constitution otherwise requires or any justice on considering a subsequent petition finds grounds for relief asserted therein which could not reasonably have been raised in the original or amended petition.” (14 Me.Rev.Stat.[Ann.] § 5507)
. “In order to prevent harassment of the courts and a piecemeal presentation of asserted grounds of relief, the statute imposes the very reasonable requirement that if multiple petitions are presented, some reason or reasonable excuse be offered for failure to assert present grounds in an earlier petition.” Nadeau v. State, Me., 1967,
. Those who, relying on Johnson v. Zerbst, ante
. Separate trials are now legislatively required, 15 Me.Rev.Stat. § 1742, but were not then. See Stubbs v. State, Me., 1968,
. Petitioner’s affirmative answer to this question would have solved the state’s problems on the second count, it being the law of Maine that a record of a conviction needs some identification other than an identity of names. State v. Mottram, 1959,
