On this appeal from an order entered in the Southern District of New York, Frederick van Pelt Bryan, District Judge, granting a state prisoner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus after an evidentiary hearing, the essential issue is the correctness of the district court’s conclusion that the prisoner’s guilty plea must be vacated because it was involuntarily entered or because the prisoner was denied the effective assistance of counsel. We hold that the district court's findings of fact are not clearly erroneous and that its conclusions of law reflect a correct application of the controlling law. We affirm.
In view of the district court’s detailed statement of both the facts and the controlling law, it is sufficient for our purpose merely to state the claims asserted and the district court’s rulings thereon, with which we agree.
Mosher and two co-defendants were indicted in the Westchester County Court for the March 1964 armed robbery of the United States Post Office at Maryknoll Seminary, Ossining, New *1347 York. After first pleading not guilty to the four count indictment, Mosher on June 17, 1964, before Hon. Robert J. Trainor, changed his plea to one of guilty to the count charging armed robbery in the first degree. On July 9, 1964, Judge Trainor sentenced Mosher as a second felony offender to not less than 40 nor more that 60 years.
After exhausting state remedies with respect to his conviction and sentence, 1 Mosher commenced the instant habeas corpus proceeding in the district court. His claims that his guilty plea was involuntarily entered and that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel turn upon the events of the morning of June 17, 1964 just prior to the entry of his plea of guilty. The district court, finding that issues of fact were raised by the papers submitted on the habeas corpus application, held an evidentiary hearing. At this hearing there was testimony by Justice (formerly Judge) Trainor, Mosher, his two co-defendants, the attorney for one of the co-defendants, and James T. Morahan, Esq., the retained attorney for Mosher at the time of his guilty plea in the County Court.
The critical findings made by the district court after the evidentiary hearing are as follows:
“1. Mosher was induced to plead guilty by representations and assurances given him by his counsel, Morahan, which Mosher believed, that Judge Trainor had promised to give him a minimum sentence of 15-16 years if he [pleaded guilty] . 2
2. No such promise had in fact been made by Judge Trainor and the representations and assurances given to Mosher by Morahan that such a promise had been made by the Judge were contrary to the fact and untrue.
3. The sentence of 40-60 years received by Mosher on his guilty plea was directly contrary to the assurances given by Morahan to Mosher as to the Judge’s promise as to the sentence which would be imposed.”351 F.Supp. at 1107 .
On the basis of these findings, which we hold were not clearly erroneous, the district court concluded that Mosher’s guilty plea must be vacated because it was involuntarily entered and also because Mosher was denied the effective assistance of counsel. We agree.
The State correctly notes that this is not a case like those where a guilty plea has been held involuntary because induced by an unfulfilled promise of a lenient sentence made by a judge or prosecutor. See, e. g., Santobello v. New York,
The instant case is the rare one— unique in this Circuit so far as we know —where after an evidentiary hearing the district court has made a finding based on substantial evidence that the state prisoner has sustained his burden of proving that the circumstances as they existed at the time of the guilty plea,
judged by objective standards,
United States ex rel. Curtis v. Zelker,
supra,
We also agree with the district court’s alternative holding that under the particular circumstances of this ease Mosh-er’s guilty plea must be vacated because he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. Cf. United States ex rel. Marcelin v. Mancusi,
Finally, we note that this case provides a striking example of the desirability of opening up the plea bargaining procedure, as recommended by the ABA Standards Relating To Pleas Of Guilty (Approved Draft, 1968) and the ALI Model Code Of Pre-Arraignment Procedure, Tent.DraftNo.5, Art.350 (April 1972).
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mosher’s conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal. People v. Mosher, 29 App.Div.2d 549,
Coram nobis petitions, raising substantially the same issues as in the instant habeas corpus proceeding, were denied without a hearing by the Westchester County Court on December 16, 1968. The Appellate Division affirmed. People v. Mosher, 33 App.Div.2d 906,
. The portion in brackets conforms to the district court’s findings,
