OPINION OF THE COURT
Flеtcher appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1970).
In his petition for habeas corpus, Fletcher contended that in imposing sentence the state court judge had improperly considered convictions which, because uncounselled, were constitutionally invalid. See United States v. Tucker,
The district court referred Fletcher’s petition for habeas corpus to a United States magistrate in accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(3) (1970). In her report and recommendations, the magistrate concluded that the petition should be dismissed because of Fletcher’s failure to exhaust state remedies by challenging the North Carolina guilty pleas in the North Carolina state courts. On May 30, 1974, the district court entеred an order adopting the recommendations of the
I.
It is well settled thаt a conviction obtained in violation of Gideon v. Wainwright,
Fletcher contended below, as he does on appeal, that Tucker controls the disposition of his petition. The district court, in adopting the magistrate’s report, found Tucker distinguishable from the present case because in Tucker the unconstitutionality of the prior convictions had been fully determined by a state court. The lower court, in accepting the magistrate’s recommendations, held that a petitioner seeking to assail a sentence under Tucker by way of a collateral proceeding in federal court must first attempt to have the prior convictions invalidated in the state courts in which the convictions werе obtained. Accord, Young v. United States,
We do not agree that the exhaustion requirement of section 2254(b), or any rule analogous to that requirement, applies to prevent the federal district court from considering the validity of the 1940 and 1942 North Carolina convictions. Mitchell v. United States,
The Tucker decision itself does not contain a requirement that a habeas corpus pеtitioner must return to the state of a prior conviction to secure a ruling
The Supreme Court’s decision in Loper v. Beto,
We recognize that there exists a split among the Circuits on whether a petitioner seeking to challenge a sentence under Tucker by way of a collateral proceeding in federal court must first attempt to procure a ruling on the constitutionality of the priоr convictions in the state courts in which the convictions were obtained.
II.
We face two additional issues: 1) whether Fletcher’s 1940 and 1942 North Carolina convictions were violative of Gideon ; and 2) whether the sentencing judge considered these North Carolina convictions in imposing sentence.
When a convicted defendant who was indigent at the time of his conviction collaterally attacks the conviction on right-to-counsel grounds and the record shows that he was not represented by counsel or is silent as to representation of counsel, the government has the burden to prove affirmatively that the defendant waived his right to counsel. Burgett v. Texas,
We also conclude that resentencing is necessary. It is certainly true, as the Commonwealth argues, that mere knowledge of invalid convictions by a sentencing judge does not necessitate re-sentencing.
Even though the statements of the sentencing judge do not explicitly reveal his consideration of the invalid sentences, we are of the opinion that the principles of Tucker are best effеctuated by resolving any doubts we might have on this issue in favor of resentencing.
III.
Accordingly, we vacate the order of the district court dismissing Fletcher’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus and remand to that court to enter an order stating that the writ shall issue unless the relator’s sentences in the Greene County Court of Quarter Sessions at Nos. 22 & 66 September Term 1965 and Nos. 13 & 14 December Term 1966 are vacated and he is resentenced, within a reasonable time, without consideration of the 1940 and 1942 North Carolina convictions.
Notes
. Since 1966, Fletcher has instituted more than 40 proceedings in this court аnd in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania. See Appellee’s Supplemental App. However, if the Commonwealth’s argument for affirmance is grounded on the number of claims brought, the argument must be rejected. While we are, of course, against proliferаtion of frivolous petitions and appeals, we emphasize that this court is ever available to review the merits of a litigant’s claim as long as it is not duplicative of a claim previously adjudicated by this court.
. No. 22 September Term 1965, Nos. 13 & 14 December Term 1966.
. No. 66 September Term 1965.
. The issues that form the basis of Fletcher’s petition for habeаs corpus were raised in the Pennsylvania state courts. See Petition Under Post Conviction Hearing Act at 3 & Exhibit No. 2, Nos. 66 & 22 September Term 1965, Nos. 13 & 14 December Term 1966, Ct. of Common Pleas, Criminal Division, Greene County, Pa., Oct. 18, 1971; Brief for Appellant at 3, No. 120 April Term 1973, Super.Ct. of Pa.; Petition for Allowance of Appeal, No. 422 Allocatur Docket, Sup.Ct. of Pa. July 18, 1973. Consequently, we find that he has “exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State” having custody. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) (1970); see United States ex rel. Geisler v. Walters,
. No. 59 September Term 1940, Nos. 63 & 64 September Term 1942.
. Fletcher appended to his petition a letter from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Watauga County, North Carolina which states that there is no reference to an attorney in the records of the North Carolina case. Amended Petition for Habeas Corpus at Exhibit A, Dec. 7, 1973.
. On appeal, the Commonwealth suggests that Fletcher might have waived his right to counsel. See Brief for Appellee at 5.
. The federal district court in California had considered Tucker’s threе prior felony convictions, two in Florida and one in Louisiana. Several years after sentencing, the Superior Court of Alameda County, California had determined in collateral proceedings that the Louisiana conviction and one of the Florida convictions were invalid under Gideon.
. See generally Note, Defendant’s Right to Protection From Prior Uncounselled Convictions, 1973 Wash.U.L.Q. 197.
. See Wilsey v. United States,
. It is worthy of note that Tucker had not challenged the prior convictions in the state courts in which they were obtained, a procedure the district court would insist that Fletcher follow. Instead, a California state court had ruled on the validity of Tucker’s Louisiana conviction and one of the Florida convictions in a state collateral proceeding. See note 8 supra.
. Compare Young v. United States,
. The procedure developed by several Circuits in section 2255 proceedings is to remand to the district court to resolve questions con
. Pickelsimer v. Wainwright
. See also Argersinger v. Hamlin,
. It would be highly unrealistic of us to find a waiver on a silent record in light of the fact that the conviсtions occurred at a time when state courts were not required to provide counsel to indigent defendants.
. The sentencing judge was familiar with Fletcher’s previous record, including the 1940 and 1942 North Carolina convictions, as the judge had been the prosecuting attorney in a prior case in which Fletcher had been the defendant.
. Fletcher was sentenced by the state court judge to the maximum penalty allowed by law on three of the four counts. See Appellant’s Brief at 3.
