Appellant James Smith is currently serving a fifteen-year sentence for a 1994 armed robbery conviction in the circuit court of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. In 2007, Smith petitioned the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In his petition, Smith claimed, inter alia, that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel during his state jury trial. The district court dismissed the petition. We find merit in Smith’s claims and remand to the district court with orders to issue the writ.
I. Background
Smith was arrested in early 1994 on a charge of armed robbery. Following his arrest, Wisconsin’s Office of the State Public Defender appointed Smith’s first counsel, Assistant Public Defender Steven Sargent. At a status hearing held March 23, 1994, Sargent informed the court that Smith desired a new attorney. Smith, who was present at the hearing, told the court that he was not interested in another lawyer from the Public Defender’s office. Smith said that he wanted the Public Defender to appoint Thomas Marola, an attorney in private practice, to handle his case. Marola had defended Smith at a recent trial in which a jury acquitted Smith of both sexual assault and armed robbery.
If the Public Defender’s office would not appoint Marola, Smith insisted that he would represent himself. The court conducted a cursory examination of Smith, *1039 inquiring about his education and experience with the judicial system. , The court then concluded the hearing, leaving both representation options open: “[W]e can work it out with the Public Defender’s office, however they want to do it. You can represent yourself, or they’ll appoint a lawyer for you.” At the March 23 hearing, Smith also reiterated a previous request for a speedy trial.
A week later, on March 31, 1994, the court held a status hearing in Smith’s absence at which Thomas Wilmouth, Smith’s second appointed counsel, entered his appearance. The court set the trial date for May 25, 1994, which it later changed to May 31.
The next status hearing occurred on May 4, 1994, with both Smith and Wilmouth present. At that hearing, Wilmouth moved to withdraw as Smith’s attorney, a sentiment echoed by Smith, who also requested new representation. Wilmouth said that he had spoken with the Wisconsin Public Defender’s office and “they indicated at this point that they have a mind [to appoint a third lawyer].” The court granted the motion. The court then allowed Smith to be heard pro se on a motion related to his bond, but it continued to indicate its expectation that Smith would be represented by counsel at trial: “I’ll grant the motion Mr. Wilmouth on the condition ... that a new attorney should be appointed as quickly as possible.... [W]e can see who the new lawyer is and when he’ll be ready to go [to] trial.”
The court held its final pretrial hearing on May 10, 1994. Smith appeared without counsel, and the court informed him that the Public Defender’s office had refused to appoint a third attorney. Smith claimed this was the first he had heard of this development, but a letter to this effect was apparently sent to Wilmouth, his former lawyer. Smith reiterated his desire for legal counsel. After more discussion, Smith inquired about his options, to which the court responded, “Well, ... you can represent yourself.” Smith reminded the court that at the May 4 hearing, Wilmouth had said that the Public Defender’s office would appoint Smith another lawyer.
Later in the hearing, the court conducted another brief examination of Smith, asking essentially the same questions that it had at the March 23 hearing. The court learned that Smith had graduated from high school and received some vocational training. Smith also informed the court that he had been through at least one criminal trial, the aforementioned proceeding during which Attorney Marola had represented him. Smith noted that he had required the help of other inmates to prepare various motions in the present case. Near the end of the hearing, Smith again expressed his desire for representation, saying, “I would like an attorney, but if I can’t hire one, I guess I will be representing myself.”
The first day of Smith’s trial came on May 31, 1994. From the beginning, Smith made it clear that he wished to be represented by counsel. After the court called the case, Smith immediately said, “The Court can appoint me an attorney.” The court declined Smith’s request and gave Smith an option. He could waive his right to a speedy trial — a demand Smith had made on March 14 and renewed during his March 23 hearing — and adjourn that day’s proceedings, or he could continue in a pro se fashion. Smith declined to waive his speedy trial right, and the court said, “Okay, we’ll go to trial.”
Smith continued to assert his desire for counsel in the minutes preceding voir dire, saying: “I don’t think it’s right. I asked for an attorney before, the Court ignored me.... No way I can defend myself because I don’t know anything about the law.”
*1040 Immediately prior to opening statements, Smith made a motion to dismiss based on the denial of his right to counsel. In support of his motion, Smith said the following: “The defendant can’t possibly defend hisself [sic] in a court of law.... Defendant is unable to employ counsel and is unable and incapable of making his own defense because of ignorance, feeblemindedness, illiteracy, or the lack thereof.” Despite Smith’s protestations, the court conducted the trial with Smith acting pro se.
On June 3, the jury found Smith guilty of armed robbery in violation of Wis. Stat. § 943.32(1)(a)-(2). Six weeks later, on July 14, the court sentenced Smith to fifteen years in prison. In the years since, Smith has traveled a long and twisted road through the Wisconsin court system, the details of which are largely irrelevant to the present appeal. 1
In a decision dated August 29, 2006, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals denied Smith’s direct appeal. The court recounted Smith’s inconsistent behavior during the series of healings we discussed above, where Smith sometimes requested appointed counsel and at other times asserted his right to defend himself. The court highlighted the choice presented to Smith by the trial court — either waive his right to trial counsel and proceed pro se or waive his right to a speedy trial and adjourn the proceedings — and Smith’s decision to proceed with the trial. The result, said the court, was that Smith, “by asserting mutually exclusive constitutional rights (one of which was clearly more important to him than the other), ... waived his right to counsel by operation of law.” The court summarized its conclusions as follows: “By knowingly choosing the frequently inconsistent courses of action he did (by repeatedly requesting to discharge counsel and appoint successor counsel at the eleventh hour, by seeking to proceed pro se, and by refusing to waive his speedy trial demand), Smith essentially elected to defend himself at his jury trial.”
Smith’s journey has now crossed over into the federal court system, where he filed a petition in the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin seeking a writ of habeas corpus. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In the portion of his petition at issue in this appeal, Smith argued that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel at trial and was therefore being held in violation of the United States Constitution.
In an order issued on March 28, 2007, the district court dismissed the petition after concluding that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals did' not base its decision on an unreasonable determination of the facts or an unreasonable application of United States law. This appeal follows from that order.
II. Analysis
We are presented with two issues. First, the State contests the time and manner in which Smith filed his notice of appeal and claims that we are left without jurisdiction. Second, if we have jurisdiction, we must decide, under our deferential standard of review, whether Smith was denied his right to counsel at trial.
*1041 A. This Court’s Jurisdiction on Appeal
The first issue that we must address is whether we possess jurisdiction to hear this appeal. The State contends that Smith did not appeal the district court’s order of March 28, 2007, in a timely manner. For the following reasons, we disagree and conclude that we have jurisdiction.
The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure dictate that a party wishing to appeal an adverse judgment or order must file a notice of appeal with the clerk of the district court within thirty days of the entry of the contested judgment or order. Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1)(A). Smith made three filings in 2007 that are potentially relevant to our analysis, one on each of the following dates: April 2, April 20, and June 4. Neither Smith nor the State disputes that the notice of appeal filed by Smith on June 4, 2007, was untimely. If that were Smith’s only filing, we would have no choice but to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction.
See Remer v. Burlington Area Sch. Dist.,
Acting pro se, Smith made the first of these filings with the Western District of Wisconsin on April 2, 2007. In his letter, Smith sought to appeal the district court’s March 28 order directly to the Supreme Court of the United States. In support, Smith cited Supreme Court Rule 18, which governs the appropriate procedure “[w]hen a direct appeal from a decision of a United States district court is authorized by law.” Sup.Ct. R. 18(1). In a letter dated May 15, 2007, the Supreme Court returned the notice of appeal to the district court, stating that direct appeal of a district court order is permitted only when issued by a three-judge district court panel. See 28 U.S.C. § 1253. It was after receiving the Supreme Court’s response that Smith filed his untimely notice of appeal to this court on June 4, 2007.
In the interim period between filing his notice of appeal to the Supreme Court and receiving the Court’s response, Smith, again acting pro se, made a second filing. He filed a document, captioned “Circuit Rule 52 Certification of Question of State Law,” with our court on April 20, 2007. This submission, spanning thirty-five handwritten pages, appears to detail every perceived wrong he endured in the then-thirteen years since the date of the armed robbery.
The question we must answer is one with which we are familiar, particularly when confronted with a pro se party: whether either of the filings made within the thirty-day deadline is sufficient to serve as a valid notice of appeal. Generally, a notice of appeal must (1) contain the name of the party or parties taking the appeal; (2) designate the judgment or order, or part thereof, being appealed; and (3) name the court to which the appeal is being taken. Fed. R.App. P. 3(c)(1).
When a party proceeds
pro se,
however, we will, if possible, liberally construe his actions to find Rule 3’s requirements satisfied.
Smith v. Barry,
In
Barry,
With these general principles in mind, we turn first to Smith’s April 2 filing with the district court, in which he sought direct review by the Supreme Court of the district court’s March 28 order. This filing contained both the name of the party taking the appeal and designated the order being appealed, thus satisfying Rule 3(c)’s first two requirements. See Fed. R.App. P. 3(c)(1)(A)-(B). The only variance from Rule 3 was in the name of the court to which the appeal was being taken. See id. 3(c)(1)(C). Instead of seeking appeal to this court as he should have, Smith sought to appeal directly to the Supreme Court. This was a non-fatal error.
When a party may appeal only to a certain court, we have recognized the validity of a notice of appeal that contains no mention whatsoever of the court to which the case is being taken; we infer that the party intended to appeal to the only available forum.
See Ortiz v. John O. Butler Co.,
Further, we have held that a notice of appeal was valid even when, as here, it designated the wrong court for - appeal.
See Musa,
The State attempts to distinguish the two cases. It argues that, unlike in Ortiz, *1043 Smith’s intent to seek review in the Supreme Court was obvious, making it unnecessary to infer the court to which Smith intended to appeal. And unlike in Musa, the State contends, Smith made no mistake in deciding the court to which he appealed; he intentionally attempted to bypass this court, thus rendering his notice of appeal invalid.
The State’s arguments, which hinge largely on Smith’s subjective intentions, are unconvincing. In
Barry,
the Supreme Court, when discussing whether the petitioner’s appellate brief was the functional equivalent of a notice of appeal, downplayed the petitioner’s intentions: “[T]he notice afforded by a document, not the litigant’s motivation in filing it, determines the document’s sufficiency as a notice of appeal.”
As the Court instructed in
Barry,
we return to the purpose of a notice of appeal, which is to provide fair notice to both the opposing party and the district court.
B. Smith’s Sixth Amendment Right to Trial Counsel
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), we may grant a petition for habeas relief from a state court judgment only in one of two limited circumstances: if the state court decision (1) was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States;” or (2) “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). In conducting this deferential evaluation, we presume that the state court’s factual determinations are correct, a presumption the petitioner may rebut only by clear and convincing evidence.
Id.
§ 2254(e)(1). As the petitioner, Smith bears the burden of showing that the state court’s finding of fact or its application of federal law was not only erroneous, but unreasonable.
See Waddington v. Sarausad,
— U.S. -,
*1044
The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees a party engaged in a criminal prosecution the assistance of counsel. U.S. Const. amend. VI. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated this right, making it applicable to state criminal prosecutions as well.
See
U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1;
Danforth v. Minnesota,
— U.S. -,
Although the Constitution provides the right to the assistance of counsel, it does not permit a state to force unwanted counsel upon a party.
See Faretta v. California,
Notwithstanding the right to represent oneself, however, courts have continued to recognize the overwhelming advantages that an accused gains from a lawyer’s guidance.
See, e.g., Faretta,
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals’s opinion identified two separate grounds in support of its conclusion that Smith waived his right to trial counsel. First were Smith’s “inconsistent courses of action,” in which Smith vacillated between utilizing appointed counsel and representing himself. The second ground was Smith’s refusal, on the day of his trial, to adjourn proceedings, notwithstanding his continued *1045 pleas for appointed assistance. On appeal, Smith contends that this decision by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals was both an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law and an unreasonable determination of facts. Upon review, we agree and find that habeas relief is warranted.
In certain circumstances, a defendant may waive his right to counsel through not only his words, but also his conduct.
United States v. Traeger,
The Public Defender’s office provided Smith with two lawyers, both of whom Smith terminated. But at the time Smith rejected the second, Attorney Wilmouth, he did so under the impression that he would be appointed new counsel. At Smith’s May 4 hearing, Wilmouth, addressing the court in Smith’s presence, said that he had spoken with the Public Defender’s office, which had indicated its intentions to appoint a third attorney to represent Smith.
The court, in fact, made its decision to grant Wilmouth’s withdrawal contingent on another appointment: “I’ll grant the motion Mr. Wilmouth on the condition ... that a new attorney should be appointed as quickly as possible.” The court then set another status hearing for the following week, “so we can see who the new lawyer is and when he’ll be ready to go to trial.”
It was not until a week later, at the May 10 hearing, that Smith learned that the Public Defender would not provide him another lawyer. When Smith asked about his options, the court provided only one: self-representation. Smith reiterated throughout the May 10 hearing his desire for counsel, a request that he reasserted on the day of his trial, all to no avail. The court concluded that Smith, having fired his previous two appointed lawyers, had elected to proceed pro se. Yet when examined in context, Smith had done nothing of the sort. Smith, rather than electing to proceed pro se, had simply requested another lawyer, a request he made with the court’s blessing.
Thus, while it is often true that “[i]f you’re given several options, and turn down all but one, you’ve selected the one you didn’t turn down,”
Oreye,
Furthermore, we find no waiver in Smith’s election to proceed to trial when the court gave him the choice of adjourning the proceedings and waiving his right to a speedy trial. Smith began the day of his trial by renewing his request for appointed counsel. The court denied Smith’s request and said, “It’s up to you, do you want to go ahead with the trial or do you want to adjourn it? Do you want to waive your right to a speedy trial?” Smith replied simply, “No, I don’t want to waive my right.”
The' problem, again, is that the court gave Smith no real options. True, Smith could have adjourned the day’s proceedings, but what would he have gained? Immediately before giving Smith his “choice,” the court reiterated that Smith would be appointed no further counsel, a fact confirmed by the Public Defender’s office, which sent a note to the judge just before voir dire indicating that it would not provide Smith another attorney.
Such a Hobson’s choice is actually no choice at all. Under these circumstances, we find it unreasonable to recognize Smith’s election to proceed to trial as a knowing and voluntary waiver of such an important and fundamental right.
At the time Smith terminated Wilmouth, he did not know, nor did the court warn him, that in so doing he was electing to proceed
pro se.
This is in direct contradiction to Supreme Court precedent, which imposes
“the most rigorous restrictions
on the information that must be conveyed to a defendant, and the procedures that must be observed.”
Patterson,
The Supreme Court has not provided extensive direction on the nature of the “rigorous restrictions ... [and] procedures” that a court must observe before finding valid waiver of a defendant’s right to trial counsel.
See Moya-Gomez,
The Court has said, however, that a defendant “should be made aware of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation, so that the record will establish that ‘he knows what he is doing and his choice is made with eyes open.’ ”
Faretta,
We remain mindful of the difficult position in which the Sixth Amendment’s parallel rights to assistance of counsel and self-representation can place a trial judge.
See Oreye,
Nonetheless, even the Supreme Court’s minimal guidance makes it clear that the procedures followed by the Wisconsin state trial court were inadequate to demonstrate a knowing and voluntary waiver of Smith’s right to trial counsel. As we have alluded to, the court, in a series of interactions that one could only describe as “cursory or by-the-way in nature,”
Belanger,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons above, we conclude, first, that we have jurisdiction on appeal. Second, we hold that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, in determining that Smith knowingly and voluntarily waived his Sixth Amendment right to assistance of counsel, made an unreasonable determination of the facts and unreasonably applied federal law. We Reverse the decision of the district court and Remand with instructions to Grant the petitioner’s request for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. If the State elects not to retry Smith within 120 days, he shall be released from confinement.
Notes
. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals denied Smith’s first direct appeal on May 29, 1996. Seven years later, however, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals reinstated Smith’s direct appeal rights after it concluded that during Smith’s 1996 appeal, which Smith had filed pm se, Smith had not knowingly and voluntarily waived his right to postconviction/appellate counsel. As we will discuss, in 2006, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals issued a decision on Smith's renewed appeal that now becomes the basis for our review of Smith’s habeas corpus petition.
. In
Ortiz,
we noted that certain situations would prevent the application of this general rule,
.
See also Powell v. Alabama,
. During the March 23 hearing at which Attorney Sargent sought to withdraw, the court told Smith that “the next attorney you get will have to be the one that represent [sic] you whether you like it or not.” This warning, however, was negated by the court’s subsequent assurances to Smith, made at later hearings, of a third appointed counsel, and we therefore refuse to consider it as part of our analysis.
