delivered the opinion of the' Court.
The question presented is whether petitioner’s application for writ of habeas corpus filed in a Nebraska state court alleged facts which if proven entitled him to release from prison because he was held pursuant to a court judgment rendered in violation of rights guaranteed him by the federal Constitution. The trial court declined to issue the writ, holding that the petition failed to state a cause of action justifying the relief prayed. Without requiring the state to answer and without giving petitioner an opportunity to prove his allegations, the application was dismissed. A motion for reconsideration, setting out additional facts, was similarly dismissed. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Nebraska affirmed, without opinion. _
The judgment of the Nebraska Supreme Court is a final and authoritative answer to petitioner’s contention that his imprisonment was illegal under the state’s constitution or laws. But petitioner also contended that
But before examining the pleadings in order to determine whether the allegations showed a deprivation of federally protected rights, it is necessary to consider a preliminary contention urged by the state. The tenor of this contention is that under Nebraska law petitioner could not have his asserted federal rights determined in habeas corpus proceedings. And, supporting this contention, there is in the record a letter to petitioner from .the trial judge who originally denied the writ — a letter indicating that petitioner’s only relief from illegal imprisonment was by application to the Nebraska Parole and Pardon Board. This letter is not, however, a judicial determination, and apparently no state statutes or court decisions compel the result it indicates. Nor can we lightly assume that Nebraska affords no corrective process for one who is imprisoned under a judgment rendered in violation of rights protected by the federal Constitution. That Constitution is the supreme law of the land, and “Upon the state courts, equally with the courts of the .Union, rests the obligation to guard and enforce every right secured by that Constitution.”
2
Moreover, while
It is therefore our duty to examine petitioner’s allegations in order to determine whether they show that his imprisonment is the result óf a deprivation of rights guaranteed him by the federal Constitution. The heart of his charge is that he, an ignorant layman not represented by counsel, was tricked into pleading guilty to a serious offense. Among the specific allegations are:
Petitioner, without being informed of the charges against him, was arrested in one county, and then removed to another county for two days. There he was told he was wanted for burglary in a third county (Valley County), but would be dealt with leniently if he would plead guilty. After a long distance telephone conversation between petitioner and a man identified as the prosecuting attorney of Valley County, a conversation arranged and listened to by the Valley County sheriff, a sentence of not over three years was agreed upon. Petitioner was soon thereafter transferred to the Valley
These allegations, if true, undermine and invalidate the judgment upon which petitioner’s imprisonment rests. The circumstances under which petitioner asserts he was entrapped and imprisoned in the penitentiary are wholly irreconcilable with the constitutional safeguards of due process. For his petition presents a picture of a defendant, without counsel, bewildered by court processes strange arid unfamiliar to him, and inveigled by false statements of state law enforcement officers into entering a plea of guilty. The petitioner charged that he had been denied any real notice of the true nature of the charge against him, the first and most universally recognized requirement of due process; that because of deception by the state’s representatives he had pleaded guilty to a charge punishable by twenty years to life imprisonment; that his request for the benefit and advice of counsel had been denied by the court; and that he had been rushed to the penitentiary where his ignorance, confinement and poverty had precluded the possibility of his securing counsel in order to challenge the procedure by regular processes of appeal. If these things happened, petitioner is imprisoned under a judgment invalid because obtained in violation of procedural guaranties protected against state invasion through the Fourteenth Amendment. 5 The state court erroneously decided that the petition stated no cause of action. If petitioner can prove his' allegations the judgment upon which his imprisonment rests was rendered in violation of due process and cannot stand.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
It is suggested’that the Nebraska Supreme Court’s final judgment of affirmance rested on petitioner’s failure to file a printed brief in that court, and that this was an adequate non-federal ground, precluding our review of the federal question raised. But this contention is obviously not sound, because the Supreme Court denied petitioner’s motion for relief from the rule requiring printed briefs solely on the ground that upon examination of the whole record the court had found the appeal to be without merit.
Mooney
v.
Holohan,
In re Resler,
See
Newcomb
v.
State,
Cf.
Walker
v.
Johnston, ante,
p. 275;
Johnson
v.
Zerbst,
