This is an appeal by a state prisoner from denial of his petition for the writ of habeas corpus without a hearing.
In 1965, Oswald was convicted of grand larceny, and sentenced as a habitual offender to a term of fifteen years, which he is now serving in the Kansas State Penitentiary. He attacks his sentence on the ground that certain convictions relied upon to invoke the habitual criminal act are invalid for lack of counsel.
A threshold question concerns exhaustion of state remedies. Oswald was previously denied federal habeas relief for failure to utilize state remedies. In *374 March, 1968, he filed a motion to vacate with the state sentencing court, pursuant to K.S.A. 60-1507. In his federal habeas petition, lodged August 16, 1968, he alleged the filing of the motion in the state court, and that it had not been acted upon. It had in fact been denied without hearing May 29. In a motion for rehearing filed with the district court, Oswald denied receiving notice of the state court order until August 30, 1968.
Appellee pleads Oswald’s failure to appeal the denial of his 1507 motion to the Kansas Supreme Court as a bar to federal habeas relief. Certainly, a determination not to appeal denial of state post-conviction relief to the highest court of a state in favor of resort to the federal court may constitute a deliberate bypass of state remedies. Kinnell v. Crouse,
Oswald had three convictions prior to the 1965 Kansas conviction. One, a 1951 Dyer Act conviction, is unchallenged. The journal entry of the second, a 1954 Missouri conviction for burglary, discloses that Oswald entered a plea of guilty therein without assistance of counsel. Appellee disclaims any reliance upon that conviction to support the enhanced sentence.
Oswald’s third conviction, in 1955, is based upon his plea of guilty in a Tennessee court to housebreaking and larceny. The minute entry recites that two co-defendants appeared with Oswald on the day he entered his plea, both of whom entered pleas of not guilty. A jury was empanelled, which determined the guilt of the two co-defendants, and the punishment of all three.
The minute entry recites that the “defendants [appeared] in their own proper persons also their attorneys of record * * * ” and that the jury retired to deliberate “[a]fter hearing all the proof, the argument of counsel, and the charge of the Court.”
Certainly, the journal entry suggests that the three co-defendants appeared with more than one attorney. It does not affirmatively disclose, however, that any one attorney in fact represented Oswald. He may have been represented individually by an attorney, jointly with one or both co-defendants, or not at all. The record is, in short, indefinite and inconclusive as to whether Oswald was himself represented by counsel at the time of his plea. An ambiguous and inconclusive record is tantamount to a silent one, from which we may presume neither the presence of counsel nor the waiver thereof. Carnley v. Cochran,
For the first time on appeal, Oswald urges that only two of his three prior convictions, those from Missouri and Tennessee, were relied upon by the State of Kansas to invoke the habitual criminal act. This factual issue must be determined by the district court. We have held that notice of invocation of the act is constitutionally required, in order that the defendant “have full opportunity to be heard on all matters under consideration and to controvert the allegation that he had been convicted of
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previous felonies which would make him subject to the penalties of the habitual criminal statute.” Browning v. Hand,
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the cause remanded for further consideration in accordance with the views set forth herein.
