Petitioner, found guilty of murder by a jury on June 4, 1966, immediately requested an appeal, for which the trial court appointed two counsel to represent him. However, when his appeal was dismissed for want of prosecution in February 1969 and a motion to reinstate his appeal was denied by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court in September, petitioner — claiming his appeal had been lost by ineffective counsel — sought a writ of habeas corpus from the federal district court, which denied his petition for failure to exhaust state remedies. Petitioner comes to us seeking the certificate of probable cause which the district court denied.
28 U.S.C. § 2254 requires that a person in state custody must exhaust his state remedies before proceeding to the federal court for habeas corpus relief. The rationale behind this provision is that, for reasons of comity, a state court should have an opportunity to consider issues concerning its incarceration of a prisoner before a federal court considers the matter. Fay v. Noia,
In a strictly legal sense, the only issue presented by counsel’s belated motion was a procedural one concerning whether the alleged reason for delay constituted “exceptional circumstances” for purposes of Rule 39(a), Maine R. Crim. P., to justify reopening petitioner’s appeal. However, this seems to us a rare case where the very facts recited within the four corners of the court’s opinion presented such clear signals of a possible deprivation of the constitutional right to counsel that more was required than a simple adherence to the precise motion before the court, see United States ex rel. Kemp v. Pate,
This was not a case where the issue of the effectiveness of counsel emerged from a mare’s nest of general allegations from a disappointed client, or where the state’s highest court was inundated wth numerous claims and thus could justifiably confine its attention to issues presented on motion, or where a study of the record and briefs was needed to appraise counsel’s competency and thereafter to apply the rigid test needed to condemn for general incapacity; this was total inaction by counsel appointed to press petitioner’s appeal. The failure of court-appointed counsel to prosecute an appeal — in the absence of waiver by defendant or compliance of counsel with Anders v. California,
The Maine Supreme Judicial Court also concluded that no injustice would result by denying the appeal in this case. To the extent that such thought was an invocation of the rule of Wood v. Maine,
We therefore direct the district court to appoint counsel for the petitioner, and to enter an order granting the writ unless (1) the state, within a reasonable time, shows cause why petitioner’s allegations as to ineffective representation by counsel are without merit; and (2) if it fails to show cause, the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, within such further time as is reasonable, reinstates and hears the appeal.
Notes
. See United States ex rel. Gockley v. Myers,
. Anders v. California, supra; see Williams v. United States,
. While the petition alleges persistent communications to both counsel and eventually to the state’s highest court urging expedition of his appeal, the “dilemma” advanced by counsel in support of the motion, at least on its face, suggests that petitioner had not abandoned or waived his appeal.
