ORDER AND OPINION
Thеse are consolidated habeas corpus petitions (28 U.S.C. § 2254) in each of which the primary issue presented is the correctness of the state trial court’s jury instructions on “reasonable doubt”. 1 The Court has had the opportunity to hear oral argument and review the briefs of counsel together with the trial transcripts. 2
Petitioner Wentworth was one of approximately 1400 anti-nuclear demonstrators arrested on May 1, 1977, at the site of the ongoing construction of the Seabrook Nu
*1136
clear Power Plant. He was subsequently charged with and convicted of criminal trespass (RSA 635:2
3
) in the Hampton District Court. Sentenced to fifteen days in jail and a fine of one hundred dollars, he appealed to Rockingham County Superior Court.
4
Jury trial therein resulted in a verdict of guilty, and Wentworth was then sentenced to a jail term of six months, two months of which were suspended. On appeal the Supreme Court of New Hampshire overruled his exceptions on December 6, 1978.
State v. Wentworth,
118 N.H. -,
Wentworth relied in the Supreme Court of New Hampshire on the decision (decided after his conviction) of the First Circuit in
Dunn v. Perrin,
Petitioners Sands and Tsoumas were indicted by a Carroll County grand jury for the crime of perjury (RSA 641:1 6 ) in connection with statements made by them under oath concerning the “Forest Preservation Trust” and the identity of its trustee, “William Smith”. Their trial concluded on December 13, 1978, and resulted in conviction. Inasmuch as Wentworth, supra, had been decided prior to the conclusion of their trial, the trial cоurt largely adopted the “Model Charge” therein set forth.
Because the only issue raised by Sands and Tsoumas concerns the trial court’s instructions to the jury on reasonable doubt, we permitted them to proceed directly in this court without requiring exhaustion of state avenues of appeal.
See: Sarzen v. Gaughan,
I. C. 79-5, Wentworth
The charge on the reasonable doubt standard, to which Wentworth objects, is as follows:
Under our system of justice, which has been time-tested, not only in this nation but in England where we inherited our judicial system, every person accused of crime who walks into а courtroom is presumed to be innocent. The defendant in a criminal case has no burden of proving anything.
What is this presumption of innocence? Until such time as the State proves beyond a reasonable doubt all of the essential allegations contained in the complaint, the defendant is presumed to be innocent.
I just used the phrase ‘reasonable doubt’. Under our system of justice, we *1137 do not require that the State prove their case to a mathematical certainty, nor do we require that the State remove all slight or frivolous doubt from your minds, but before a verdict of guilty can be returned in any case by a jury, all reasonable doubt must be removed by the evidence which you have heard presented by the State. And once again, upon any issue which you have to determine in this case, you can consider the evidence as you heard it from any witness, no matter who produced it.
In December of last year, the State of New Hampshire Supreme Court decided a case called State v. Black, and that case probably has as good a definition of what reasonable doubt is as any I’ve seen. In that case, our Supreme Court defined a reasonable doubt as follows:
‘A reasonable doubt can be defined as a strong and abiding conviction that still remains after a careful consideration of all of the evidence’ — a strong and abiding conviction — ‘but where our belief in a fact is so uncertain that we would hesitate to act upon the strength of it to undertake something of importance and seriousness equal to this case, then there is reasonable doubt.’
Vol. II, Tr. pp. 101, 102. (Emphasis supplied.)
Petitioner herein argues that the language above emрhasized worked an impermissible shift of the state’s burden to prove him guilty of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt. Analysis of this contention in the context of a habeas petition requires resolution of two issues. First, did the inclusion in the jury charge of the “strong and abiding conviction” language constitute an error of constitutional magnitude? 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a);
Grieco v. Meachum,
At the outset, we reject the suggestion of respondents that since
Dunn v. Perrin, supra,
was decided after Wentworth’s conviction, the logic of that opinion is not here applicable. The concern of New Hampshire with regard to past reliance on ancient jury instructions, and its fears about the potentially adverse impact upon the administration of justice, are not here significantly implicated.
See: Hankerson v. North Carolina,
In rejecting the application of
Dunn
to the instant case, the New Hampshire Court stressed the fact that the Circuit had found three errors in the definition of reasonable doubt, but then went on to disagree with its conclusion that one of those errors which dealt with the “strong and abiding conviction” language was properly so classified.
*1138
(
In Dunn, the Court analyzed an instruction which stated:
It [reasonable doubt] does not mean a trivial or a frivolous or a fanciful doubt nor one which can be readily or easily explained away, but rather such a strong and abiding conviction as still remains after careful consideration of all the facts and arguments .
Immediately after quoting the above language of the trial court,
In United States v. Flannery,451 F.2d 880 , 883 (1st Cir. 1971), we condemned virtually that exact wording. Although the existence of other reversible error in Flannery made it unnecessary for us to resolve the constitutiоnal implications of such a charge, we do so now. That definition of reasonable doubt was the exact inverse of what it should have been. See United States v. Magnano,543 F.2d 431 , 436 (2d Cir. 1976); Bernstein v. United States,234 F.2d 475 , 486 n. 8 (5th Cir. 1956). Instead of requiring the government to prove guilt, it called upon petitioners to establish doubt in the jurors’ minds. That is an inescapable violation of In re Winship,397 U.S. 358 , 364,90 S.Ct. 1068 ,25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1969).
United States v. Flannery,
We believe that in charging the jury, with respect to reasonable doubt, that ‘a reasonable doubt can be defined as a strong and abiding conviction that still remains after careful consideration of all the evidence,’ the court must have misspoken itself. A reasonable doubt by definition means a doubt founded upon reason and not speculation, but it certainly does not require, as charged by the court, a ‘strong and abiding conviction.’ This is the burden that is on the government. See United States v. Byrd, 2 Cir., 1965,352 F.2d 570 , 575; Commonwealth v. Webster, 1850, 5 Cush. (59 Mass.) 295, 320.
In addition, on November 14, 1978, prior to the state court decision in the instant case, the First Circuit (Bownes, J., speaking for a unanimous court) again addressed the issue of burden of proof as to reasonable doubt and quoted with аpproval the language we have hereinabove set forth from
Dunn: United States v. Harrigan,
We agree that the instruction must be reviewed in the context of the overall charge (Cupp v. Naughten, supra; United States v. Harrigan, supra), but upon close analysis of the charge as a whole, we do not feel that the offending instruction was effectively “swallowed” by error-free portions of the charge. United States v. Harrigan, supra.
Unlike the charge in Dunn, which included a variety of formulations on reasonable doubt, the instructions here consisted of at most four definitions:
Under our system of justice, we do not require that the State prove their case to a mathematical certainty . nor do we require that the State remove all slight or frivolous doubt from your minds.
“A reasonable doubt can be defined as a strong and abiding conviction that still remains after a careful consideration of all of the evidence” — a strong and abiding conviction
*1139 “but where our belief in a fact is so uncertain that we would hesitate to act upon the strength of it to undertake something of importance and seriousness equal to this case, then there is reasonable doubt.”
Vol. II, Tr. pp. 101, 102.
In the respondents’ view of these formulations in the context of the entire charge the impact upon the jury of the erroneous “strong and abiding” language should be considered minimal. First, quoting from the state court’s opinion (
We are fully aware that the trial judge here, as in Dunn, reminded the jury on several occasions, apart from the definition of reasonable doubt, that the State was obliged to prove beyond a reasonable doubt all of the essential elements of the offense charged. However, in light of the emphasis placed upon the constitutionally erroneous language in that portion of the charge which defined the critical concept of reasonable doubt, we cannot find that the charge in its entirety reduced the impact of the “strong and abiding conviction” language to harmless error proportions. As in Harrigan, supra:
[tjhis was not an obvious misstatement or the careless use of words. The . court was convinced at the time of the correctness of its statement. Like the rest of the charge, the offending instruction was given in clear and precise language. There was no reason for an attentive juror, mindful of his duty to take the law from the court, to ignore or disregard this instruction.”
Turning next to the respondents’ suggestion that the evidence was so overwhеlming that the allegedly erroneous instruction constituted harmless error
(Harrington v. California,
Under the applicable statute (RSA 635:2), the prosecution herein is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner, in defiance of an order to leave that was *1140 personally communicated to him by the owner or other authorized person, knowingly remained in a place where he knew he was not licensed or privileged to so remain. Testimony of William A. Adams, Jr., Executive Vice President of Public Service Company of New Hampshire, and Vice President of Properties, Inc., was sufficient to demonstrate that Colonel Doyon of the New Hampshire State Police had been granted proper authorization to order the demonstrators to leave the property owned by Properties, Inc. (Tr. I, at 36). As to the other elements of the offense charged, however, the State’s strongest evidence was introduced during the course of the petitioner’s own testimony.
On direct examination, petitioner stated that he was on the site of the nuclear power plant on May 1, 1977, and was aware that he would perhaps be trespassing by being there (Tr. II at 12). During cross examination, petitioner further admitted that he was on the parking lot area (which had earlier been shown to be the property of Properties, Inc.) when Colonel Doyon announced over speakers in State Police cruisers that the demonstrators would have to leave or face arrest for criminal trespass (Tr. II at 58); that he was able to hear the announcement and understand its importance (Tr. II at 58); and that he decided to stay despite the announcement (Tr. II at 61). While this and other circumstantial evidence of petitioner’s guilt may most certainly be said to be substantial, it cannot be said to be overwhelming. The issue of where petitioner was actually located at the time of his arrest was never directly established by the evidence adduced at trial. Moreover, the testimony of Pierre Caron, corporate counsel for Public Service Company, and Properties, Inc., and of Vice President Adams of Properties, Inc., left open the possibility that petitioner might well have been on the property of the B & M Railroad, which adjoined the parking lot owned by Properties, Inc., at the time of his arrest (Tr. I at 19, 44). 9 In sum, even in light of the evidence adduced at trial, we cannot say that the trial judge’s erroneous “strong and abiding conviction” instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 10
Since we have determined that the petitioner’s challenge to his jury instructions is to be sustаined, we do not here reach (n. 1, supra). the issue of his sentencing. It is not at all apparent that upon retrial, if any, petitioner will again face the sentence of which he here complains. Therefore, our consideration of his claim under the Eighth Amendment and the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment is best left to another day.
Parenthetically, however, we wish to note our concern regarding petitioner’s allegation that the rights of Seabrook defendants under N.H. RSA 502-A:12 to appeal their Distriсt Court conviction for a trial
de novo
in the Superior Court are being unconstitutionally deterred by the stance of the prosecution in such cases.
See: Blackledge v. Perry,
II. 78 — 447, Tsoumas and Sands
As we have previously indicated, the trial court in the charge in this action substantially adopted the “Model Charge” suggested by the state court in
Wentworth, supra
(
As stated, and you are so instructed, again, the State has the burden of establishing, and thus proving, the guilt of the defendants based on all of the courtroom evidence, and that, alone, to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt, in order for you to return verdicts of guilty. If you were to find, from all the evidence and the applicable law, that is the law applicable to these cases which I’m about to furnish you with, that the State had failed to meet that burden, then, and if that were your finding, you would be duty bound, under your respective oaths, to return verdicts of not guilty in connection with any indictment concerning which you find the State had failed to do so.
As for the legal meaning and importance to be attached to the presumption of innocence of the defendants, as well as the legal burden of proof, the State has to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. I’ll now instruct you regarding that meaning, specifically, in the eyes of the law, the meaning of the term reasonable doubt.
Obviously, there are some things those terms mean, or that doctrine is such, and other things that it doesn’t mean. Members of the Jury, under our Constitution, all defendants in criminal cases are presumed, as I mentioned, to be innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The burden of proof is entirely .on the State. The defendant does not have to prove, neither defendant in this case, his innocence. The defendants entered this courtroom as innocent persons, and you must consider them to be innocent persons, and you must consider them to be innocent until, as I have mentioned, the State convinces you, based on all of the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that they are guilty of every element of the alleged offenses. If, after all the evidence and argument, you have a reasonable doubt, and you will shortly know what that term means, as to the defendants having committed any one or more of the elements of those offenses, which I’ll cover with you, then you must find them not guilty, if that were your finding.
A reasonable doubt, members of the Jury, is just what the words would ordinarily imply. The use of the word reasonable means simply that the doubt must be reasonаble, rather than unreasonable; it must be a doubt based on reason. It is not a frivolous or fanciful doubt, nor is it one that can easily be explained away. Rather, members of the Jury, it is such a doubt, that is reasonable doubt, based upon reason as remains after consideration of all the evidence that the State has offered against it.
The test you must use, in all of these cases, is this: if you have a reasonable doubt as to whether the State has proved any one or more of the elements of the crimes charged, you must find the defendаnts not guilty. However, if you find that the State has proved all of the elements of the offenses charged beyond a reasonable doubt, then you’d be duty bound to find the defendants guilty. (Tr. at 7-9.)
The language of this charge omits the “good and sufficient reason” and “strong and abiding conviction” language found objectionable in Dunn v. Perrin, supra.
*1142
Petitioners Tsoumas and Sands argue that even with these erroneous expressions so excised, the model charge is still constitutionally suspect. In particular, they suggest that defining reasonable doubt as one that is “not a frivolous or fanсiful doubt, nor is it one that can easily be explained away” is analogous to instructing, as has been.held objectionable in other contexts, that this doubt must be “good and sufficient” or “substantial” in addition to being based on reason.
See, e. g., Taylor v. Kentucky,
In the first place, the model charge on “reasonable doubt” employed in this case focuses not on such extraneous words as “strong and abiding conviction” but upon “just what the words would ordinarily imply”: “the doubt must be reasonable, rather than unreasonable, it must be a doubt based upon reason.” In this regard, the complained-of language that appears in the next sentence — “It is not a frivolous or a fanciful doubt, nor is it one that cаn easily be explained away” — serves only an auxiliary, contrasting role. 11 Indeed, the reappearance of the “based upon reason” language in the final sentence of the definitional paragraph reinforces the earlier formulation. Secondly, the trial judge repeatedly admonished the jury that they were to base their decision on whether the State had proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt on “all the evidence” (Tr. at 8,11, 21, and 35). An instruction to that effect was even added to the model charge:
The defendants entered this courtroom as innocent persons, and you must consider them to be innocent until, as I have mentioned. the State convinces you, based on all the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that they are guilty of every element of the alleged offenses.
Tr. at 8. (Underlined portions represent words added by the trial judge to the model charge.) Finally, the transcript of the charge reveals that at several junctures and through a variety of formulations, the trial judge impressed upon the jury that petitionеrs had neither the burden of proving nor of disproving anything, the burden resting solely upon the State (Tr. at 5, 6, 7, and 35.) 12
In sum, even though the jury charge in the case of petitioners Tsoumas and Sands contains arguably less than ideally worded phrases from the model charge set forth in
Wentworth, supra,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons hereinabove set forth, it is hereby Ordered that in Civil Action No. 79-5, Wentworth, respondents shall make arrangements to retry petitioner within sixty days of the date of this Order; otherwise, the writ shall issue.
In Civil Action No. 78-447, Tsoumas and Sands, the petitions for habeas corpus are denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Petitioner Wentworth also challenges the sentence imposed upon him in Rockingham County Superior Court. For reasons hereinafter outlined, we do not find it necessary to decide this issue.
. In Wentworth’s case, the transcript of trial is complete. In the cases of the other petitioners, the trial record wаs not available, but the Court was furnished with a transcript of the complete charge to the jury.
. Insofar as here pertinent, RSA 635:2 provides:
I. A person is guilty of criminal trespass if, knowing that he is not licensed or privileged to do so, he enters or remains in any place.
II. Criminal trespass is a misdemeanor if
(b) the person knowingly enters or remains
(2) in any place in defiance of an order to leave or not to enter which was personally communicated to him by the owner or other authorized person.
. As regards misdemeanors, New Hampshire has a two-tier system wherein defendants are tried in a district or municipal court without jury subject to appeal with a right to trial de
novo
by jury in the superior court.
State v. Dickson,
. Wentworth’s defense of competing harms, not here presented, was disposed of by the New Hampshire Supreme Court in the companion case of
State v. Dorsey,
118 N.H.-,
. Insofar as here pertinent, RSA 641:1 provides:
I. A person is guilty of a class B felony if in any official proceeding
(a) he makes a false material statement under oath or affirmation, or swears or affirms the truth of a material statement previously made, and he does not believe the statement to be true . . ..
. Although
Dunn
resolved for the first time in this Circuit the constitutional implications of including the “strong and abiding conviction” languagе in a jury instruction on reasonable doubt, such holding, rather than marking a clean break with the past, constitutes merely a direct application of the principles enunciated in
In Re Winship,
. As noted in Dunn, supra, at 25, n. 26, the phrases “hesitate to act”, as used in the charge at petitioner’s trial, and “refrain from acting”, as employed in Dunn, are used interchangeably in the case law.
. Through witnesses Caron and Adams, the State introduced evidence to the effect that if petitioner had been on B & M property, Public Service Company apparently had the authority from an agreement with B & M to remove him (Tr. I at 15, 20, 44). Note, however, that the original complaint against petitioner Went-worth charged him with remaining on a certain tract of land owned by Properties, Inc.
. Because we have found that the trial judge’s error in petitioner Wentworth’s case was not harmless in fact, we need not, and do not, resolve the question left open in Dunn, supra, at 25, whether or not such an error can never be considered harmless as a matter of law.
. Compare in petitioner Wentworth’s case the State’s argument that the “strong and abiding conviction” language served only to contrast the earlier appearing “slight or frivolous doubt” phrase in that charge.
. By contrast, note that only once in the trial judge’s charge in petitioner Wentworth’s case was it stated that the defendant had no burden of proving anything. (See Wentworth Tr. II at 101.)
. We recognize too that it is not our function to pass upon the desirability of a particular wording utilized by the New Hampshire Supreme Court in its model charge: “ ‘review . of state action expressing its notion of what will best further its own security in the administration of criminal justice demands appropriate respect for the deliberative judgment of a state in so basic an exercise of its jurisdiction.’ ” Cupp v.
Naughten,
