Petitioner Rodney K. Burns brings this Section 2254 action seeking habeas relief following his conviction in the State of Texas by a jury on two counts of aggravated robbery and his sentence to two concurrent 99-year prison sentences in 1974. The record reveals that petitioner, together with co-defendants, Richard Hamilton and Charles Gibson, allegedly entered and robbed at gun point a bank in Milford, Texas. Eyewitnesses identified petitioner and his cohorts as the perpetrators of the crime. After robbing the bank, the three men left in two cars, one of which was driven by another co-defendant, George Cobbs. A high speed chase followed in which police observed money being thrown from one car; a pistol and money from the bank were found in the car in which Cobbs and petitioner were eventually captured.
After his conviction in state court, Burns appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals claiming that his trial counsel was ineffective due to a conflict of interest, that improper prosecutorial argument had prejudiced his trial, that his trial should have been severed, and that fundamental erroneous jury instructions had been given at trial. The Texas court affirmed his conviction on direct appeal.
Burns v. State,
Burns filed the present federal habeas petition in November, 1979, claiming (1) that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his attorney failed to call an alibi witness to the stand due to possible conflicts between that defense and the defense of Burns’ co-defendants, (2) that he was deprived of due process because the trial court sentenced him after expiration of its term, and (3) that the state trial court failed to inquire into the alleged conflicts of interest at the time it denied Burns’ motion to sever, violating Burns’ sixth amendment rights.
With respect to petitioner’s first claim, an evidentiary hearing was held below before a U.S. magistrate in which petitioner presented two witnesses, his brother and co-defendant Hamilton, who testified that petitioner was with a person named Ernest Raleigh on the day of the robbery, that Raleigh was now deceased, and that petitioner had informed counsel about the witness Raleigh. The magistrate found that the testimony regarding the existence of an alibi witness was totally unbelievable, that counsel had never been informed about the existence of Raleigh, “and that Ernest Raleigh did not in fact exist.” Accordingly, the magistrate found that “the evidence establishes conclusively that there was no actual conflict of interest between petitioner and his co-defendants, and he is thus not
Exhaustion of State Remedies
The State argues on appeal that Burns has not exhausted his state remedies regarding his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel because the factual details forming the basis of his present claim (that is, the alibi witness story) were not presented to the state court when he raised the issue there. Both the magistrate and district court found that Burns had exhausted his state remedies regarding this claim. On appeal the State again asserts that although it is true that Burns alleged a “conflict of interest” resulting in ineffective counsel as an issue on state appeal, the allegation was unsupported by any of the facts now introduced, and therefore, was not fully developed or fairly presented for consideration by any state court. Accordingly, the State urges this court to dismiss the petition for non-exhaustion of state remedies.
To demonstrate compliance with the exhaustion requirement, a habeas applicant must show that the federal claim he asserts in federal court has been “fairly presented” to the state courts.
Picard v. Connor,
The record reveals that the basis of Burns’ ineffective assistance claim in the state court system was quite different from the claim he now presents. When Burns raised this issue in his motion for severance at the state level, he contended that he would be defending himself “in a manner which would conflict with the defense and interests” of one of his co-defendants. Burns reasserted his conflict of interest claim as denying his effective assistance of counsel in his direct appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. His brief stated: “Appellant does not desire to lengthen this writing by pointing out specific instances where appellant’s trial counsel could have emphasized things that would be beneficial to appellant and detrimental to other co-defendants.” Instead, he referred to the reasons in his motion for severance and to the fact that his counsel was representing three other co-defendants as showing an “obvious conflict of interest.” In its opinion, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals acknowledged that it had “examined and read the record,” and that it had found none of the “ ‘specific instances’ to which appellant makes reference.” The court found that there was no showing of a conflict of interest. Burns did not raise the conflict of interest issue in his pro se state habeas petition.
The “substance” of Burns’ claim is quite different in his federal petition. For the first time, he now sets forth the scenario involving the alibi witness. Although petitioner concedes that he did not present these allegations in the state proceeding, he
The Exhausted Claims
There remains the question of whether this court should address the merits of petitioner’s exhausted claims which the district court erroneously chose to rule upon in considering Burns’ “mixed petition.” Our analysis requires us to examine what effect the Supreme Court’s decision in Rose v. Lundy, supra, has on our decision in Galtieri v. Wainwright, supra.
In
Galtieri,
this circuit adopted what was then a minority view among the circuits that a federal habeas petitioner was required to exhaust all of his federal claims in state proceedings prior to presenting them to a federal court. We held that a federal district court should dismiss without prejudice a habeas petition filed by a state prisoner containing both exhausted claims and unexhausted claims which did not fit within any exception to the exhaustion doctrine. In so holding, however, we acknowledged that “in the rare event” that a district court considered the merits of an exhausted claim in a mixed petition, the appellate court would review the merits of the claim if presented with the issue. We believe that the policies underlying the exhaustion doctrine would not be furthered by dismissal of a petition whose exhausted claims had already been ruled upon, albeit erroneously. The vitality of the
“Galtieri
exception” however, has been called into question by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Rose v. Lundy.
Previously, we have acknowledged this issue without specifically addressing its merits;
see Caldwell v. Line,
In
Rose v. Lundy,
the Supreme Court acknowledged and adopted the “total exhaustion” rule set forth in
Galtieri
requiring a district court to dismiss habeas petitions containing mixed claims. In
Rose v. Lundy,
the petitioner had filed a habeas petition asserting a mixture of exhausted and unexhausted claims. The district court refused to consider the unexhausted claims but did reach the merits of the exhausted claims. The Supreme Court determined that the federal policy “to protect the state court’s role in the enforcement of federal law and prevent disruption of state judicial proceedings,”
id.
There can be little doubt that
Rose v. Lundy
did not significantly narrow, if not altogether eliminate, the “rare” exception which this circuit afforded appellate review proceedings in
Galtieri.
Although the Court approved of the Fifth Circuit’s “total exhaustion” rule, its decision did not reflect similar approval of the
Galtieri
exception.
The opinion of the Court in
Rose v. Lundy
is definite and precise. It creates a rule which the Court characterized as “simple” and “straightforward.” The mandatory language of the decision leaves no room for an exception as broad as that set forth in
Galtieri.
Indeed, Justice Blackmun in his opinion concurring in the judgment, noted that “[e]ven the Fifth and Ninth Circuits, which require dismissal of habeas petitions in the typical case, do not follow the extreme position this Court takes today.”
Rose v. Lundy,
Certainly, the Supreme Court has taken this position in its subsequent disposition of eases before it on appeal. For example, in
Bergman
v.
Burton,
Similarly, those circuit courts which have considered the rule in
Rose v. Lundy
have also found that dismissal is mandated where a petition presents any unexhausted claims.
See, e.g., Pappageorge v. Sumner,
In
Caldwell v. Line, supra,
this court found it “unnecessary to determine whether
Rose
affects our position that when a claim included an unexhausted claim, in the interest of judicial economy we should review the claim if it is manifestly frivolous.”
In
Rose v. Lundy,
the Supreme Court shut the door on the federal habeas petitioner presenting mixed claims. Our decision today does not forever lock that door. Since, in this circuit, exhaustion of remedies is not a jurisdictional prerequisite,
see Felder v. Estelle,
While we find no merit to petitioner’s exhausted claims, we do not believe that these claims fall within the “rare” ease as set forth in Galtieri and narrowed, if not altogether eliminated, by Rose v. Lundy which would permit this court to consider them. We remand this case to the district court with instructions to dismiss the petition for failure to exhaust state remedies. The petitioner will have the opportunity to resubmit a petition containing only exhausted claims or to return the state court to exhaust his remaining claim. 3 Regardless of which action petitioner takes, future federal courts considering petitioner’s exhausted claims will have the benefit of the views already set forth by the magistrate, the district court and this court in this action.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Justice O’Connor’s opinion, except as to Part III — C, represented the opinion of the Court. Chief Justice Burger and Justices Powell and Rehnquist concurred fully in Justice O’Con-nor’s opinion. Justice Brennan, joined by Justice Marshall, concurred in all but one portion of the opinion, Part III-C, discussed infra at note 3. That portion was not relevant to the Court’s adoption of the “total exhaustion” rule. Justice Blackmun concurred in the judgment.
. In only a few cases have courts disposed of a case in a manner which even arguably limits the rule in
Rose
v.
Lundy. See, e.g., Phegley v. Greer,
In
Phegley v. Greer, supra,
the Seventh Circuit suggested that
Rose v. Lundy
applied only to
"district courts.”
In
Dunn v. Wyrick, supra,
the Eighth Circuit found the total exhaustion rule inapplicable where the exhausted claims were fully litigated and decided in the district court prior to the
Rose
decision. The Supreme Court, however, in
Bergman v. Burton, supra,
chose to apply
Rose v. Lundy
retroactively.
Cf. Bergman v. Burton,
In
Felder v. Estelle,
. We express no opinion as to the effect upon petitioner’s unexhausted claim of a decision to delete such claim and reassert his exhausted claims in the federal district court. Justice O’Connor’s plurality opinion in Rose v. Lundy, Part III — C, held that a petitioner “would risk forfeiting consideration of his unexhausted claims in federal court” if he decided to pursue his exhausted claims rather than immediately proceed to state court. Justices Brennan and Marshall expressly dissented from this position. Justice Blackmun in his special concurrence and Justice White in his dissent also disagreed with this portion of the plurality opinion. Justice Stevens did not reach the issue.
