The defendant in 1954, after two days of government testimony under an indictment charging kidnapping, flight to avoid confinement, and transportation of a stolen automobile, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1201, 1073 and 2312, requested, through counsel, that the court accept a change of plea. The court accepted pleas of guilty forthwith without making inquiry of anyone as to the voluntariness of the pleas or of the defendant’s understanding of the nature of the charges. The defendant was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment on one count, and thereafter to two concurrent terms of five years on the other counts.
In 1966 the defendant, pro se, but aft-erwards with court-appointed Counsel, brought this proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in which he requested that the judgments be vacated and that he be allowed to change his pleas on the ground that the court had violated Fed.R. Crim.P. 11 in failing to make inquiry. 1 *272 Defendant asserted that in pleading guilty he had been confused and had not understood the various matters as to which inquiry should have been made. This proceeding reached the original sentencing judge, and was heard before him, although in the petition the defendant had expressly requested that it be heard by some other judge.
Following a hearing the court ruled,
The government claims, alternatively, that the defendant in fact fully understood the nature of the charges and acted voluntarily. Defendant replies that where Rule 11 was not complied with, subsequent proof is, as a matter of law, too late, citing Heiden v. United States, 9 Cir., 1965,
This brings us to a more difficult question: whether it is proper for the same district judge who had once made a finding of voluntariness, on inadequate evidence, to take new evidence and, in effect, review the correctness of his own determination. In the continuation of a single proceeding, as on a motion for new trial, important considerations suggest that the hearing should be before the original judge. Here there has been a new proceeding. The court decided the issue of whether the defendant in fact acted voluntarily and with full understanding upon further evidence, predicated upon acknowledged, or assumed, error in its prior decision. We have more than once indicated, without in any way suggesting any personal criticism, that the second trial should be before another trier. See The Haverhill Gazette Co. v. Union Leader Corp., 1 Cir., 1964,
It is true that some cases have held that it is inappropriate for a new judge to sit in section 2255 matters. E. g. United States v. Smith, 4 Cir., 1964,
Nor are we moved by other considerations. The contention that it would be unseemly for a judge to testify in contradiction to a defendant as to a past occurrence in his courtroom, e. g., United States v. Edwards, D.D.C.1957,
*274 In sum, there is no authority persuading us to prefer that the sentencing judge conduct an evidentiary hearing on a section 2255 petition challenging the validity of his prior determination under Rule 11 that a plea was made voluntarily and with understanding. We recognize that it is quite another matter to declare him disqualified from conducting such hearings. We do so, not from any feeling of Constitutional compulsion, but from a conviction that the best practice dictates such a policy. It seems to us that hearings on factual issues occasioned by an initial failure to comply with Rule 11 combine whatever ordinary hazards lie in self-review of factual determinations with the danger of improperly interjecting personal recollections of matters outside the record. Were it possible to identify in advance those cases where such a combination of factors would be likely to be present, we might limit our holding to them, but we are persuaded that such a limitation would not be feasible. In saying this we would not be thought to disparage the capacity for objectivity of district judges; rather, we feel that they should be relieved of what we deem the unnecessary burden of deciding when they can properly redetermine factual issues in this particular area. Moreover, it is not unimportant that judicial decision-making not only be fair, but that it so appear to all eyes.
' This interdiction does not mean that the sentencing judge cannot review a § 2255 petition to conclude, if appropriate, that no evidentiary hearing is required. Nor, particularly in a one-judge district, where it is not a simple matter to have the petition heard by a new judge, would there be an objection to an evidentiary hearing before the sentencing judge in order to pass solely on a new issue as, for example, a claim that although Rule 11 was properly observed, the defendant had in fact been subjected to improper extrajudicial influence. The case at bar, however, is not such a case, and the defendant was entitled to a new trier. The judgment is vacated, the findings as to defendant’s voluntariness and understanding are set aside, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. Defendant also alleged that he had not been afforded a right of allocution. We do not agree with defendant that this should aid him with respect to withdrawing his pleas. Since he does not seek resentencing, we do not consider this matter further. Cf. Hill v. United States, 1962,
. In 1954 Rule 11 required that the court determine that the plea was “made voluntarily with understanding of the nature of the charge,” but did not require personal interrogation of the defendant.
. Although we are the first to disagree with Judge Parker in this matter, we note that his views on this statute have been rejected in another particular. See Brown v. Allen, 1953,
. Another motive is suggested by the statutory language authorizing the judge to “discharge the prisoner or resentence him or grant a new trial or correct the sentence as may appear appropriate.” The options open to a habeas corpus judge sitting out of the district of trial are more limited. See S.Rep. 1526, 80th Cong., 2d Sess. (1948).
. It was suggested in United States v. Springfield, N.D.Cal., 1959,
We note, also, oblique references in Machibroda v. United States, 1962,
