Troy Cooper, a state prisoner convicted of burglary, assault, robbery, and rape, filed a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 alleging he had not been afforded effective assistance of counsel at trial. The district court denied the petition and Cooper appealed. The appeal was heard in banc to consider the standard to be applied in determining whether counsel’s performance met constitutional requirements, and to decide whether counsel’s deficiencies must have prejudiced the defendant to require a new trial. 1
We hold that the Sixth Amendment requires that persons accused of crime be afforded reasonably competent and effective representation. We also hold that where, as here, the claim of ineffective assistance is founded upon specific acts and omissions of defense counsel at trial, the accused must establish that counsel’s errors prejudiced the defense. We conclude that the representation afforded appellant in this case satisfied the Sixth Amendment, and affirm.
I
The facts, briefly stated, are as follows. A black man wearing a blue sweater broke into the San Francisco home of Mrs. Eva Mae Stewart, entered her bedroom, and attacked her. Mrs. Stewart scratched her assailant on the face and neck. After the attack the assailant fled in the direction of the Jedediah Smith School a few blocks away.
An hour and a half later a black man wearing a blue sweater attacked Mrs. Luisa Younger as she walked across the Jedediah Smith schoolyard on her way to church, and raped and robbed her at knifepoint.
Appellant’s fingerprints were found in the Stewart home. He was arrested when he visited his probation officer. There were scratches on appellant’s face and neck, the result, he claimed, of an attack by a woman on Fillmore Street a few weeks earlier. Appellant denied having been to the Stewart home. He admitted having crossed the Jedediah Smith schoolyard in the past, but denied having been there on the day of the attack.
Appellant consented to a search of his home. The search revealed a pair of shoes allegedly worn by appellant on the day of the attacks and a knife allegedly used in the Younger attack. A search of appellant’s person incident to booking revealed a laundry ticket which led in turn to the retrieval of a blue sweater with discolorations, possibly bloodstains. A lineup was conducted. Mrs. Stewart and Mrs. Younger identified appellant as their assailant.
At trial, Mrs. Stewart identified appellant’s picture from a photograph of the pre-indictment lineup. Mrs. Stewart’s daughter identified appellant as the man who had attacked her mother. Mrs. Younger identified appellant’s picture from a photograph of the lineup and pointed him out at trial. Her identification remained positive after vigorous cross-examination. Fingerprints found in the Stewart home were introduced and identified as appellant’s. The prosecution also introduced the blue sweater, the knife, the shoes, and the statements made by appellant to police following his arrest.
Appellant took the stand on his own behalf. He testified he climbed through the window of the Stewart home to get out of *1328 the rain and Mrs. Stewart attacked him. He denied involvement in the Younger attack. The jury found appellant guilty; he was sentenced to two consecutive five-year to life terms. He did not appeal.
Seven years later appellant filed the present petition. The only claim relevant to this appeal is that he was not afforded effective assistance of counsel at trial. To support this claim, appellant cited counsel’s failure to object to admission of the fruits of the warrantless searches of appellant’s person and home, failure to move to suppress the statements made by appellant to police, failure to object to testimony regarding appellant’s identification at the pre-indictment lineup, and failure to inform appellant of his right to appeal. Appellant also criticized his attorney’s failure to stipulate to appellant’s prior burglary conviction, pointing out that when put to its proof the state established not only that appellant was a convicted felon but also that his probation for the felony had been revoked.
The district court dismissed the petition after an evidentiary hearing on the ground that the challenged acts and omissions of counsel were either not prejudicial or did not reduce appellant’s trial to a “farce and mockery of justice.”
Appellant argues that he was not required to show that his trial was a “farce and mockery of justice” but only that he did not receive reasonably competent and effective assistance of counsel. We agree. Appellant argues that he discharged this burden, and that he is entitled to a new trial whether or not counsel’s errors prejudiced the defense. We do not agree. 2
II
We join other courts of appeals in concluding that the “farce and mockery” standard has been outmoded by the gradual development of the law, and that reasonably competent and effective representation is a more apt and accurate description of the quality of legal assistance required under the Sixth Amendment. 3
The “farce and mockery” test originated when the right to effective assistance of counsel was thought to rest on the general guarantee of the due process clause. The test faithfully reflected its origin: a conviction could be overturned only if the deficiencies in counsel’s performance were so egregious as to shock the conscience of the reviewing court and thus offend due process. 4
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Gideon v. Wainwright,
Experience proved baseless the fear that unprincipled lawyers, indifferent to their professional obligations and reputations, would perform below minimum constitutional standards to render their clients’ convictions vulnerable to collateral attack. The concern that courts would be overburdened with frivolous accusations of incompetent assistance was met by requiring specificity in pleading the inadequacies of counsel’s performance and how they prejudiced the accused. As a description of the protection actually afforded the rights of the accused, the “farce and mockery” formulation became increasingly inaccurate. In practice, the interest in finality was made to yield whenever an accused person had been prejudiced by a lack of reasonably competent legal assistance. With growing frequency the constitutional standard was stated in these terms.
The shift was gradual. In this circuit, as in others, both forms of statement were used during the same period, often in the same opinion. 6 The two were said to be synonymous. 7 We believe the differences are of sufficient importance, however, to justify deliberate rejection of the “farce and mockery” verbiage in favor of a statement of the test in terms of reasonably effective and competent defense representation.
This rephrasing links the standard directly to the Sixth Amendment guarantee of effective assistance of counsel, as well as to the general requirement of due process. It focuses inquiry upon the subject matter of the constitutional guarantee — counsel’s performance. It avoids the misleading implication that what occurred at the trial and appears on the face of the record is all that is relevant.
The restatement substitutes a significantly more objective reference for a peculiarly subjective one. Whether counsel’s deficiencies converted a trial into a “farce and mockery” depends upon the subjective reaction of the particular judge. Whether counsel’s acts and omissions were within the range of competence required of criminal attorneys also involves a measure of personal judgment, but the judgment is made with reference to a fact the court knows or *1330 can determine by inquiry. 8 Similar standards are applied in other areas of the law and are familiar to the judges.
The reformulation more accurately describes the law as it has actually been applied, in this circuit and in others, for many years. It is consistent with, and perhaps required by, the Supreme Court’s characterization of the substance of the constitutional right to assistance of counsel in such recent cases as
McMann v. Richardson, supra,
and
Tollett v. Henderson,
Some courts have particularized elements of the minimal performance to be expected of counsel representing a defendant in a criminal proceeding.
9
Such a checklist would serve to enhance the objectivity of the general standard. Nonetheless, we believe it would be unwise to restrict the constitutional requirement to a list of essential elements applicable to all of the infinite variety of factual situations that arise. As Justice White concluded after stating the general standard, “Beyond this we think the matter, for the most part, should be left to the good sense and discretion of the trial courts . . .
The fact that counsel erred is not alone enough to establish a denial of the constitutional right. This follows from the nature of the right itself. The Constitution does not guarantee representation that is infallible. The accused “assumes the risk of ordinary error in either his or his attorney’s assessment of the law and facts .
[H]e is bound by his plea and his conviction unless he can allege and prove serious derelictions on the part of counsel . . . .”
McMann v. Richardson, supra,
*1331 III
We turn to appellant’s contention that the district court erred because it denied relief in part on the ground that deficiencies in defense counsel’s performance did not prejudice appellant’s defense.
When the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel rests upon specific acts and omissions of counsel at trial, as it does in this case, relief will be granted only if it appears that the defendant was prejudiced by counsel’s conduct. We have found no holding to the contrary.
The leading case is
Chambers v. Maroney,
The claim that [counsel] was unprepared centered around his allegedly inadequate efforts to have the guns and ammunition excluded from evidence. But the Court of Appeals found harmless any error in the admission of the bullets and ruled that the guns and other materials seized from the car were admissible evidence. Hence the claim of prejudice from the substitution of counsel was without substantial basis. In this posture of the case we are not inclined to disturb the judgment of the Court of Appeals as to what the state record shows with respect to the adequacy of counsel. Unquestionably, the courts should make every effort to effect early appointments of counsel in all cases. But we are not disposed to fashion a per se rule requiring reversal of every conviction following tardy appointment of counsel or to hold that, whenever a habeas corpus petition alleges a belated appointment, an evidentiary hearing must be held to determine whether the defendant has been denied his constitutional right to counsel. The Court of Appeals reached the right result in denying a hearing in this case.
Id.
at 53-54,
*1332
Precedents relied upon by appellant for the proposition that prejudice is irrelevant when the right to counsel is denied
(Geders v. United States,
In
Gideon,
no defense counsel was appointed. In
Geders, Herring, Glasser,
and
Powell,
defense counsel were appointed but were prevented from discharging functions vital to effective representation of their clients. In
Geders,
defense counsel was not permitted to confer with his client during an overnight mid-trial recess. In
Herring,
a state statute barred final summation by defense counsel. In
Glasser,
counsel was forced to represent two defendants with conflicting interests, impairing his ability to fully serve either. In
Powell,
counsel was denied an adequate opportunity to confer with the defendant or prepare for trial. Reversal is automatic in such cases for reasons discussed in
Holloway v. Arkansas,
The present case is unlike Geders, Herring, Gideon, Glasser, Powell and Holloway in the very respects that made inquiry into prejudice inappropriate in those cases. In this case, appellant does not assert that he was denied counsel at trial, or that counsel, though present, was prevented from performing a critical function or otherwise impeded in the advocacy of appellant’s cause. Rather, appellant contends that although he had an attorney present and acting freely on his behalf, he did not have effective assistance of counsel because his attorney erred in specific respects in the course of trial — by failing to move to suppress evidence, failing to object to evidence, and failing to stipulate to a prior conviction to avoid damaging government proof. As in Chambers, these omissions were not forced on defense counsel. Their impact appears on the face of the trial record. Their prejudicial effect can be evaluated from that record with reasonable certainty. In such a case there is no reason to reverse a conviction if it appears that the defense was not prejudiced by the alleged inadequacies of counsel’s performance.
*1333 There is a further reason for granting relief in cases of this kind only when the defendant has been prejudiced. Most of the deficiencies to which appellant points consist of failure by appellant’s counsel to object to the admission of evidence allegedly obtained in violation of the Constitution. These underlying errors could have been reviewed on direct appeal only as plain error and, therefore, only on a showing of prejudice. 13 Moreover, they could be relied upon as in themselves justifying collateral attack, rather than as supporting an allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel, only on a showing of both actual prejudice from the error and good cause for the procedural default. 14 If such errors may be successfully attacked where no prejudice appears simply by asserting them under the name of ineffective assistance of counsel, the requirement that prejudice be shown to challenge these errors on direct appeal or collateral attack would be empty form.
Two cautionary comments are in order.
If counsel is charged with multiple errors at trial, absence of prejudice is not established by demonstrating that no single error considered alone significantly impaired the defense — prejudice may result from the cumulative impact of multiple deficiencies.
Finally, the requirement that prejudice appear does not mean that relief is available only if the defendant would have been acquitted but for counsel’s blunders.
Thomas v. Wyrick,
IV
Applying these principles we conclude that appellant’s petition was properly denied. The errors and omissions laid at counsel’s door clearly do not establish that the assistance afforded was constitutionally inadequate.
Appellant claims his counsel should have moved to suppress the fruits of appellant’s arrest because the arrest was without a warrant. But the arrest was based on probable cause — appellant’s fingerprints had been found in the Stewart home — and it was accomplished in a public place — the probation office of the Hall of Justice. Such an arrest does not require a warrant. 15
The warrantless search of appellant’s home was unobjectionable; appellant admitted in his petition for habeas corpus that he consented to the search. 16
Appellant’s counsel cannot be faulted for failing to object to the admission of statements made by appellant to the police after his arrest. The interrogation was proper under pre-Escobedo
17
standards in effect at the time of the trial; it was not incompe
*1334
tent for appellant’s counsel to consider those procedures “to be as valid as the [four] dissenters in that case thought them to be.”
McMann v. Richardson, supra,
The same can be said of counsel’s failure to anticipate the holding three years later of
United States v. Wade,
Appellant claims that because of his counsel’s ineptness, the jury learned that appellant’s probation on an earlier conviction had been revoked. Even if counsel was negligent in this respect, the error was not prejudicial. Had counsel stipulated to the conviction as appellant now says she should have, the fact that appellant had been convicted would still have been before the jury. The only additional fact to come before the jury because of counsel’s failure to stipulate was that probation on the earlier conviction had been revoked. The added prejudice from this additional information was surely slight. Moreover, it would have been obvious from the facts the jurors already knew that appellant would not have been allowed to remain on probation.
Finally, if appellant’s counsel erred in not telling appellant of his right to appeal, the error was of no consequence. The district court found that appellant knew of his appellate rights independently of counsel,
18
and that finding is not clearly erroneous.
See Whitney v. Craven,
AFFIRMED.
HUFSTEDLER, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting; in which Circuit Judges ELY and HUG concur:
I agree with the majority that the Sixth Amendment requires that “reasonably competent and effective” representation be afforded to persons accused of crime. But I cannot agree that the victims of incompetent counsel must be denied relief absent a showing of prejudice. The right to the assistance of counsel is so fundamental that failure to provide constitutionally adequate counsel at trial can never be dismissed as harmless error. The majority’s requirement of a showing of prejudice impermissibly dilutes the Sixth Amendment guaranty. Its diminution of the right to counsel cannot be reconciled with the teachings of the Supreme Court, nor with the authorities in other Circuits that have decided the issue.
I
Defendants who have been denied their Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of reasonably competent counsel at trial should be entitled to relief without a showing of prejudice. The Supreme Court has long held that deprivation of the constitutionally-required assistance of counsel can never be treated as harmless error, because of the importance of the rights involved. More than three decades ago in
Glasser v. United States
(1942)
In recent years the Supreme Court repeatedly has reaffirmed the same principle. In
Herring v. New York
(1975)
These cases indicate that the right to the effective assistance of counsel is more than a right to be free from prejudicial trial errors. The right to competent counsel is also based on considerations of procedural fairness that apply regardless of the strength of the case against an accused.
2
As the majority itself recognizes, “The guilty as well as the innocent are entitled to a fair trial, and ‘[t]he assistance of trial counsel is often a requisite to the very existence of a fair trial.’
Argersinger v. Hamlin,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Chambers v. Maroney
(1970)
The majority’s observation that “[cjourts of appeals have held regularly, and in line with Chambers, that reversal is not required where the defendant suffered no prejudice” (Majority Opinion at n.ll) is misleading. Neither Chambers nor the circuit court decisions requires any showing of prejudice apart from the demonstration *1337 that trial counsel did not conform to the constitutional standard of competency. 6 Courts have considered the prejudicial impact of attorney behavior only to determine whether counsel measured up to the constitutional standard of competency. 7 Thus, cases that the majority reads as holding that “reversal is not required where the defendant suffered no prejudice” actually are based on holdings that the reasonable competency standard had not been violated. 8 They do not hold that violations of the *1338 reasonable competency standard may be harmless error. Once trial counsel has been held to have been constitutionally ineffective, no circuit has denied relief because the error was harmless. 9
I reject the suggestion that the automatic reversal principle can be restricted to cases where no counsel was present or where competent counsel was prevented from performing a vital defense function. The Sixth Amendment right to counsel proscribes with equal force denials of reasonably competent and effective counsel, for “[i]t has long been recognized that the right to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel.”
McMann v. Richardson
(1970)
The fact that the automatic reversal rule is based, in part, on the difficulty of assessing the prejudicial impact of attorney errors does not justify restricting the rule to cases where counsel is denied or where counsel is barred from performing certain functions. Difficulties in assessing the extent of prejudice are simply another reason for applying the automatic reversal rule to denials of the assistance of competent counsel. The majority, quoting from
Holloway,
notes that because “the evil lies in what the attorney does not do, . ‘an inquiry into a claim of harmless error here would require, unlike most cases, unguided speculation.’ ” (Majority Opinion at 1332, quot
*1339
ing
Holloway,
The rule of automatic reversal for violations of the right to effective assistance of counsel is in no sense inconsistent with the requirement that prejudice be shown before other kinds of errors that are challenged for the first time on appeal or by collateral attack can warrant reversal. The plain error doctrine and
Wainwright v. Sykes
(1977)
II
The automatic reversal rule does not require that convictions be overturned upon mere allegations of incompetent counsel. Defendánts still must establish that they have been denied “reasonably competent and effective” counsel before they are entitled to relief. Such a showing is not easy to make. As the majority properly indicates, the Constitution does not require perfect representation. Even under the “reasonable competency” standard, a defendant must show that the errors of his attorney were substantial enough to “reflect a failure to exercise the skill, judgment, or diligence of a reasonably competent criminal defense attorney.” (Majority Opinion at 1330).
In assessing the adequacy of representation, the nature of the alleged attorney errors and their potential impact on the outcome of the case may be relevant. 17 This does not mean that prejudice must be shown to demonstrate that counsel was constitutionally ineffective. Rather, it means that the magnitude of the attorney errors may be relevant to determining whether counsel was constitutionally competent. The outcome of many cases may be identical under both the majority’s standard and the automatic reversal rule, for attorneys who made errors that are likely to have “mattered” are more likely to be found to have been ineffective, than are attorneys who do not. 18 The difference between the two standards is that the majority would deny relief to those who can show that their attorneys were constitutionally inept, but who cannot demonstrate precisely how that incompetence affected their defense. Thus, even a defendant whose counsel had been totally inept could be denied relief if it is not possible to demonstrate from the record that anything could have been done to help his case. Under the automatic reversal rule relief would not be denied to any defendant who demonstrated that he had been denied the assistance of competent counsel.
Ill
While the majority requires a showing of prejudice before violations of the right to
*1341
effective assistance of counsel will be redressed, my brothers do not specify who bears the burden of proving prejudice or how heavy the burden will be.
19
While I do not agree that prejudice must be shown, if the majority nonetheless adopts a harmless error approach,
Chapman v. California
(1967)
IV
The district court failed to determine whether Cooper was provided with the “reasonably competent and effective” representation that the Sixth Amendment guarantees to him. Instead, the court assumed that Cooper’s counsel failed to meet the constitutional standard, but concluded that any violation of Cooper’s Sixth Amendment rights would be harmless error. The majority affirms this approach, despite our holding in
Sanders v. Craven
(9th Cir. 1973)
Because the district court failed to determine whether Cooper was provided with “reasonably competent and effective” representation, I would remand the case to permit the district court to make that determination.
Notes
. Varying formulations of the standard in opinions of this court are identified in
de Kaplany v. Enomoto,
. The panel to which the case was initially assigned agreed.
See Cooper
v.
Fitzharris,
. The “farce and mockery” standard has been abandoned expressly or by clear implication by the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia,
United States v. DeCoster,
.
See Diggs
v.
Welch,
. For cases supporting this outdated approach, see
Diggs v. Welch,
.
See de Kaplany v. Enomoto,
.
Leano v. United States,
.
See Marzullo v. State of Maryland,
.
See, e. g., Coles v. Peyton,
.
See Moore
v.
United States,
In determining whether reasonably competent counsel would have acted as defense counsel did, counsel’s ability to foresee that prejudice might arise as a result of his actions plays an important role. Relief has been denied where the prejudicial consequences of the challenged acts or omissions were not reasonably foreseeable at the time counsel acted or failed to act.
Tollett
v.
Henderson,
The courts have also considered whether counsel had reasonably available to him, at the time of the challenged act or omission, a course of action which was either (i) foreseeably less likely to result in prejudice to the defendant, or (ii) likely to result in prejudice which was foreseeably less severe than that resulting from the chosen course.
United States v. Bradford,
. Courts of appeals have held regularly, and in line with
Chambers,
that reversal is not required where the defendant suffered no prejudice as a result of the asserted trial errors underlying the charge of ineffective assistance.
See, e. g.,
in the Third Circuit,
United States v. Crowley,
The prejudice requirement is also reflected in cases denying relief, without inquiry into the reasonableness of the attorney’s actions, when the court had concluded that evidence not objected to was admissible or that a motion to suppress not made would have been rejected if it had been, or that advice given without proper factual or legal inquiry was nonetheless cor
*1332
rect. See
Sand v. Estelle,
.
See also, Herring v. New York,
.
United States v. Atkinson,
.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
.
See United States v. Santana,
.
See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
.
Escobedo v. Illinois,
. This finding distinguishes
Riser v. Craven,
. The absence of prejudice in
Herring
was emphasized by one dissenting justice: “Whatever theoretical effect the denial of argument may have had on the judgment of conviction, its practical effect on the outcome must have been close to nothing.”
.
See Beasley v. United States
(6th Cir. 1974)
. While the majority notes that to show prejudice a defendant need not demonstrate that he would have been acquitted but for his counsel’s errors, (Majority Opinion at 1333), there are still defendants who would be unable to show prejudice from the absence of counsel.
See Betts v. Brady
(1942)
. The Supreme Court in
Chambers
was faced with the issue of what must be shown to establish that counsel was constitutionally ineffective.
Chambers v. Maroney
(1970)
. The Supreme Court in
Chambers
affirmed the Third Circuit’s decision and held that a mere showing of late appointment was not sufficient to establish that counsel had been constitutionally ineffective. While the Court indicated that the prejudicial effects of late appointment on the defense case were relevant to determining whether counsel was ineffective, the Court never considered whether, once counsel was determined to be ineffective, prejudicial results of this ineffectiveness had to be demonstrated. Indeed, shortly after the Supreme Court affirmed the Third Circuit’s decision in
Chambers,
the Third Circuit, sitting en banc, held the automatic reversal rule applicable to cases of constitutionally ineffective counsel.
Moore v. United States
(3rd Cir. 1970)
. Chambers, as noted above, does not require a separate showing of prejudice. See notes 4 & 5, supra, and accompanying text. That Chambers is not authority for the majority’s harmless error position is reflected in the fact that Chambers is not even cited in any of the numerous circuit court decisions that the majority interprets as recognizing the need for a separate showing of prejudice. See Majority Opinion at n.l1.
Two circuits — the Third and the Sixth — have expressly adopted the automatic reversal rule for cases of constitutionally ineffective trial counsel.
Moore v. United States
(3rd Cir. 1970)
The Fourth Circuit has reversed cases where counsel was ineffective without inquiring into the harmlessness of the error.
Tolliver v. United States
(4th Cir. 1977)
. See notes 8 & 18, infra, and accompanying text.
. For example, the District of Columbia Circuit in
United States v. Moore
(1976)
The Fifth Circuit in
Cheely v. United States
(5th Cir. 1976)
Counsel was found to have been constitutionally ineffective in
United States v. Easter
(8th Cir. 1976)
. The Eighth Circuit’s decision in
McQueen v. Swenson
(8th Cir. 1974)
.
See Herring v. New York
(1975)
. The original panel that heard this case noted, “We cannot agree . . . that there is a significant difference between a case in which counsel was absent and one in which, although counsel was present, his performance has been found to have fallen below that which was constitutionally required. After all, the purpose of
Gideon
was not merely to supply criminal defendants with warm bodies, but rather to guarantee reasonably competent representation.”
Cooper v. Fitzharris
(9th Cir. 1977)
. Cooper alleges that his counsel failed to file a suppression motion, failed to object to admission of certain evidence, failed to stipulate as to Cooper’s prior conviction, and failed to inform Cooper of his right to appeal. These alleged failures to act are among the very kinds of claims that the Supreme Court in
Holloway
described as justifying application of the automatic reversal rule.
Holloway v. Arkansas, supra,
. The majority distinguishes Holloway as a case where “[t]he mere physical presence of an attorney does not fulfill the Sixth Amendment guarantee when the advocate’s conflicting obligations have effectively sealed his lips on crucial matters.” (Majority Opinion at 1332). Yet, from the standpoint of the state of the record, this situation is no different from one in which counsel’s incompetence has effectively sealed his lips. In either case the attorney’s failure to act means that an inquiry into prejudice would require “unguided speculation.”
. This court, in
United States v. Marshall
(9th Cir. 1973)
.
See Wainwright
v.
Sykes
(1977)
. Claims of incompetent counsel are distinguishable from claims of other kinds of error, because incompetence claims turn on the reasons for an attorney’s failure to present a defense, rather than simply the merits of the defenses themselves. The majority’s fear that collateral attack rules will be undermined must rest on a distrust of the ability of courts to distinguish between genuine claims of inadequate counsel and disguised collateral attacks. Since the majority presumes courts to be capable of determining the more subjective issue of prejudice, it is curious that they would distrust the ability of judges to apply the objective standard of attorney competence.
. For example, if an attorney shows that he failed to pursue a particular defense because it would not have helped his client as much as an alternative defense, the propriety of the attorney’s choice is relevant to the competency issue. Other courts that have adopted the automatic reversal rule have recognized that the significance of the alleged errors of counsel may be relevant to determining whether competent representation was provided.
See, e. g., Moore v. United States
(3rd Cir. 1970)
. This may be the reason why the majority construes cases from other circuits that are consistent with the automatic reversal rule as supporting their position on the grounds that prejudice could be presumed from the type of attorney errors involved.
See, e. g., Marzullo v. Maryland
(4th Cir. 1977)
. The majority appears to suggest that the defendant bears the burden of proving prejudice (“the accused must establish that counsel’s errors prejudiced the defense.” Majority Opinion at 1327). Yet at another point in the opinion the majority seems to imply that the prosecution might have to establish the absence of prejudice (“absence of prejudice is not established by demonstrating that no single error considered alone significantly impaired the defense.” Majority Opinion at 1333). In discussing the decisions of other circuits, the majority appears to adopt a neutral position on the burden of proof issue (“reversal is not required where the defendant suffered no prejudice as a result of the asserted trial errors.” Majority Opinion at n. 11). The majority also suggests that the weight of the burden of proof may be something less than that employed by traditional harmless error tests (“the requirement that prejudice appear does not mean that relief is available only if the defendant would have been acquitted but for counsel’s blunders.” Majority Opinion at 1333).
.
Chapman v. California
(1967)
. The suggestion that the defendant bear the burden of proving prejudice appears to be an artifact of the discarded “farce and mockery” test. See
United States v. DeCoster (
1973)
