In a hearing on this petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois determined: that petitioner Brownstein had not made an express waiver, at his trial in Illinois courts, of his right to a jury; that the state appellate court had improperly found that he had expressly waived the right; that because there was no state determination of procedural default the cause and prejudice standard of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
I.
Ronald Brownstein is a state prisoner, serving a six-year prison term for a series of drug-related offenses. His convictions were affirmed in part and vacated in part by the Illinois Appellate Court.
People v. Brownstein,
When Brownstein was brought to trial on May 28, 1980, the state trial court judge neglected to admonish Brownstein of his right to a jury trial. Brownstein, who testified at the habeas hearing that he had been fully aware of his right to a jury trial, inquired of his lawyers whether he ought not to ask for a jury; the judge seemed to him in a bad mood. His lawyers put him off:
Q. And they basically ... answered by saying the judge made a mistake and you should say nothing because if you were convicted his mistake in not advising you about a jury trial would mean you would get a free trial?
A. I don’t remember the exact words, but that is the way it worked out. He more or less told me, he said, let us see what happens.
After the state court judge found him guilty and sentenced him, Brownstein moved for a new trial on the grounds that he had never waived his sixth and fourteenth amendment right to a jury trial. The trial judge refused to convene a hearing on the issue, mistakenly finding that he had admonished Brownstein and received from him an express waiver of the right to jury trial. The Illinois Appellate Court, holding that the finding of express waiver was not against the manifest weight of the evidence, denied Brownstein relief on the sixth amendment point.
Then began a procedural chase through federal and state courts, due largely to dubious representations on the part of the state’s attorneys about whether Brown-stein had exhausted his state remedies.
See
After finding the facts as we have described them (and finding in addition that no mention of a jury trial had been made in open court on the day of Brownstein’s trial), the district judge concluded that the finding of express waiver was not entitled to deference under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, since no hearing had ever been held in state court to determine whether the state trial judge had admonished Brownstein of his rights. He also concluded that in fact Brownstein had not been properly admonished of his rights.
All of this presented the district judge with a dillemma. The state appellate court had not found procedural default (finding in fact that Brownstein had expressly waived his right to a jury trial); and, believing that
Wainwright v. Sykes,
[0]nly a State can declare a state-level procedural default [such as is required by Sykes ]. If the State forgives a procedural default and proceeds to consider the merits of a constitutional claim, habeas corpus review normally is available____ There is no question here but that the Illinois Appellate Court considered the merits.
That is not to say, however, that federal courts considering habeas corpus petitions cannot assert their own interest in orderly procedure. True enough, federal courts’ enforcement of their own interest in orderly procedure is much less pervasive in habeas corpus litigation since Wainwright v. Sykes ... announced federal courts would henceforth honor state findings of procedural default---[Sjince Sykes federal courts have relied to a much greater degree on state court determinations of the propriety of petitioners’ state procedural activities.
Here there is no state court finding of procedural default entitled to deference under Sykes — there is only a finding Brownstein expressly waived his right to a jury trial.
But application of the [Noia ] “deliberate by-pass” principle is not subsidiary to state courts’ determinations as Sykes’ “cause and prejudice” standard is.
While we feel that the denial of the writ is appropriate, the state has presented us with an interpretation of the district court opinion which we feel merits some discussion.
II.
In
Fay v. Noia,
the United States Supreme Court held that although procedural default in state court might be an adequate and independent state ground precluding direct review of a state decision in that Court itself, the same principles did not govern habeas review. Procedural default would not bar habeas review unless the “suitor’s conduct in relation to the matter at hand ... disentitle^] him to the relief he seeks.”
Over the years the “deliberate by-pass” standard eroded, until finally in
Wainwright v. Sykes,
when a procedural default bars state litigation of a constitutional claim, a state prisoner may not obtain federal habeas relief absent a showing of cause and actual prejudice.
Although Sykes is generally read as creating a higher hurdle for habeas litigants to get over than Noia did, creating in effect a rebuttable presumption that default would bar review where Noia had presumed that default would not bar review, the district court found that in the circumstances before us Noia bars review of a case that Sykes would allow. The court’s reasoning is that Sykes requires deference to state court determinations of default whereas Noia does not, and in this case the state court mistakenly did not declare a default.
The district court is certainly right in thinking that, under Noia, federal courts can look beyond state court determinations of default. But so can we look beyond state court determinations under Sykes. In Sykes itself the federal courts did that very thing. The issue was whether habeas review would be available on the question of the admission of evidence in spite of the fact that the petitioner had forfeited the right to review of that issue in state courts. The Court found that the petitioner had forfeited his right of review in state courts, in spite of a state court holding to the contrary:
In a subsequent state habeas action, the Florida District Court of Appeals, Second District, stated that the admissibility of the post arrest statements had been raised and decided on direct appeal____ The United States District Court in the present action explicitly found to the contrary, ... and [Sykes] does not challenge that finding.
III.
The state has read the district court opinion as entailing that there has been a default in this case, but no one has made any effort to make clear to us just how the petitioner is supposed to have defaulted. If there has been a default, then, as the state argues and as we have shown above, there is no reason to go beyond Sykes to find reason to exclude the petitioner from the federal courts. If there has been no default, then Sykes is not applicable, and unless we can find ground in Noia for denying the writ, the merits of the petitioner’s claim will have to be reached. Because we agree with the district judge that Noia is broader than Sykes in at least this respect, allowing us to refuse relief even where there has been no procedural default, we think the district court was right in not reaching the merits. But we take this opportunity to make clear our impression that the state is mistaken in thinking *841 that in these circumstances there has been a procedural default under Illinois law (a proposition for which the state offers no authority). What precedent we find on the matter seems to us to go the other way. Sykes does not apply, we believe, not because there was no state determination of procedural default, but because there was no procedural default in fact; and if Noia applies, it is not because of any deliberate by-pass of a procedural requirement, but because of strategic behavior which, under the equitable principles announced in Noia, allow a federal court to close off federal relief.
A.
If there has been a procedural default, then we believe the state is right, and the cause and prejudice standard applies; and if it applies, it applies in the case in which the default was inadvertent. That is the very meaning of Sykes: that a default need not be intentional to preclude review. Thus, as the state interprets the district court ruling, the petitioner who has done innocently what Brownstein did deliberately will have to show cause and prejudice to get habeas review.
But that outcome is insupportable. Suppose that the circumstances had been the same except that Brownstein and his lawyer had merely neglected to raise the jury trial question at trial. Suppose that the state court of appeals, and all subsequent reviewing courts, relying on the word of the trial judge, had found that Brownstein expressly waived his right to a jury trial. Suppose further that the federal habeas judge was as conscientious as the federal judge in this case, and found that the determination of express waiver was incorrect. If Brownstein, under those circumstances, had defaulted procedurally, he would now have to show cause and prejudice to get federal habeas review; but since the jury trial issue had merely slipped his (and his attorney’s) mind, he would not be able to show cause. And therefore, on the theory that there has been a procedural default, he gets no review in those circumstances.
B.
But evidently there has been no default, in Illinois, in those circumstances. A procedural default cuts off further state remedies, and Illinois, in these circumstances, would not cut off review. In Illinois, the responsibility is on the trial judge to secure an express waiver in open court,
People v. Clark,
*842 C.
But if there has been no procedural default in this case, so that Sykes does not apply, does it follow that the merits of the petitioner’s claim must be reached? We think not. We interpret the district court’s reasoning differently from the way the state interprets it. As we understand what the district judge has to say about the matter, a “deliberate by-pass” in the Noia sense does not require a procedural default. As the district court said, the discretion granted by Noia was broader than that granted by Sykes. In our judgment, Noia goes beyond procedural defaults and allows federal judges to deny habeas relief whenever the petitioner’s strategic behavior clearly requires it. We caution that such cases, where Noia will apply though Sykes does not, will be rare; in this case the district judge had the benefit of the petitioner’s candid admission that his attorney had suggested using the trial judge’s mistake to their own advantage.
Thus
Noia
apparently does survive
Sykes,
though not quite in the way the district court suggests. It is not that
Noia
allows us to go beyond state court determination of default;
Sykes
does that too. It is rather that
Noia
enables us to look beyond the state procedural rules themselves. For
Noia
premised its exception to federal jurisdiction on equitable considerations underlying the Great Writ of habeas, relying on the broad principle that “a suitor’s conduct in relation to the matter at hand may disentitle him to the relief he seeks.”
IV.
Here, the prisoner forwent, with the advice of counsel, “the privilege of seeking to vindicate his federal claim[] in state court.”
Noia,
*843 If Abrams [Brownstein’s counsel] had ... objected to the failure to offer a jury trial, Judge Close no doubt would promptly have given Brownstein the same speech he had given him a few months before. Brownstein and his counsel would then have had a brief opportunity to discuss their preferred course of action once again, but the consequences would have been precisely the same. Whatever factors led them to choose a bench trial originally (say the favorable verdict Brownstein obtained from Judge Close a few months earlier) were still present and led to their sticking with that decision. Had it been otherwise, Brownstein and his lawyers— both fully aware of the right to a jury trial, as Brownstein’s own forthright testimony confirms — would have opted to go that route instead. Thus nothing at all could have been gained by pointing out Judge Close’s oversight to him. On the other side of the ledger, counsel’s remaining silent gave them a double chance: they could wait for Judge Close’s verdict and pursue their objection at that time if Judge Close found Brown-stein guilty. Thus the decision not to object can only be described as a tactical one stemming from competent (though not necessarily forthright) representation.
Since the state courts did not, under state law, refuse to review the issue, the Court found no ground for denying federal relief:
In Fay v. Noia, ..., the Court held that a federal habeas judge may deny relief to an applicant who has deliberately bypassed the orderly state-court procedures for reviewing his constitutional claim.372 U.S. at 438 [83 S.Ct. at 848 ], But the Court also held that if the state courts have entertained the federal constitutional claims on the merits in a subsequent proceeding, notwithstanding the deliberate bypass, the federal courts have no discretion to deny the applicant habeas relief to which he is otherwise entitled. Id. at 439 [83 S.Ct. at 849 ]. It would seem to follow necessarily that when there is no bypass of state appellate procedures, deliberate or otherwise, and the state courts entertained the federal claim on the merits, a federal habeas court must also determine the merits of the applicant’s claim.
But in Lefkowitz the petitioner asked only for review that he was entitled to under state law. No doubt it was a strategic choice to plead guilty rather than go to trial; Newsome probably expected a lighter sentence because of so pleading. But he was entitled to expect the benefits of both the reduced sentence and the reservation of his right to appeal on the admissibility of the evidence; the state reserved that right to him. His strategy involved nothing he was not entitled to under state law.
Brownstein was entitled to a jury trial; but he knew that he was, and he could have asked for it. Instead he deliberately chose *844 to have two chances at acquittal, and that was something he was not entitled to. The district court found that (a) Brownstein forewent a timely objection on the advice of competent counsel, and (b) foregoing the objection was intended to secure him some benefit. The same was true in Lefkowitz: Newsome could have preserved his objection by going to trial and objecting to the admission of evidence at trial; in many states that would have been the only way he could have preserved his objection. He did not choose to go that way because he wanted to secure a certain benefit — a lighter sentence. But in New York objection at trial was not the only way of preserving the objection; and since under state law Newsome could pass up that way of objecting, and do it in order to obtain the benefit, without losing the right to appeal, he did not thereby forfeit his right to federal habeas review.
The difference here is that the benefit Brownstein intended to secure was one he was not entitled to. To have denied New-some habeas review would have defeated the point of the New York law; prisoners wanting to preserve the possibility not only of state review but also of federal review would be required to go to trial in any case. We know of no such state policy that would be defeated here. Although he did everything state procedural rules required, Brownstein did not do everything he could have; and the reason he did not was a strategic one: he wanted the chance of another trial, if he lost the first time. In these circumstances we need not reach the issue whether he waived his right to a jury trial knowingly and understanding^. 4 We hold that he is not entitled to federal relief. The ruling of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Some circuits have taken the view that procedural matters more likely to involve decisions of the defendant himself — rather than those of his counsel alone — remain subject to the
Noia
rather than to the
Sykes
standard.
See, e.g., Graham v. Mabry,
. It might be argued that something that does not amount to a procedural default when done inadvertently can nevertheless be a procedural default when done deliberately. However, as we understand the term, "procedural default” requires the by-pass of a procedural requirement, and not merely the by-pass of a procedural opportunity. It would be odd if questions of
*842
procedural default could not be determined by looking at compliance with clear rules of procedure; one of the reasons why lack of compliance with procedural rules is judged so harshly is that procedural rules are ordinarily not difficult to understand. A rule of procedure that depended on the state of mind of the litigant would be a procedural monstrosity. In any case, federal courts have used the term as we are using it.
See Maxwell v. Sumner,
. We stress that the circumstances of this case are highly unusual. The federal court has been obliged to consider behavior the state court did not elect to consider. Having considered it, we find that no state rule seems to proscribe it. Had the state appellate court recognized that there was in fact no express waiver in open court, it would very probably have sent the case back for a new trial without regard to the defendant’s state of mind. The result we reach does not depend on what the state court would do; rather, as the district judge said, it arises out of the notion of the orderliness that a federal court may impose when called upon to grant habeas. The writ was intended to set free those illegally detained, and it occupies a place of special importance in our legal system. Particularly at a time when the federal caseload may work to deprive deserving prisoners of access to federal court, it would be wrong to allow Brownstein — however engaging his apparent lack of guile before the district court — to misuse the writ by employing it in this unworthy cause.
. Were we obliged to reach the merits, it is likely we would have to find that Brownstein has waived his right to a jury trial. Although interrogation by the judge on the choice between a jury trial and a bench trial is the preferred procedure, it is not constitutionally required.
Estrada v. United States,
