This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus by a State court prisoner. The relator, through his attorney, alleges that he has been deprived of his constitutional rights because he has been convicted on the basis of a coerced confession.
It is conceded that the relator did not appeal the judgment of conviction and that a subsequent petition for a writ of error
coram nobis,
although granted by the County Court of Kings County, People v. Noia,
Relator relies upon the abortive coram nobis proceeding as exhausting his State court remedies. I have grave doubt as to the efficacy of the coram nobis proceeding as exhausting his State court remedies. Accordingly, even though the issue has not been raised by the petition or the answering affidavit of the District Attorney, I deem it advisable to grant a hearing on the writ, limited at this time to the circumstances surrounding the failure of the relator to take an appeal in the first instance.
The hearing on the writ shall be held on the 31st day of March, 1960, at two P. M. At this hearing the parties shall present any evidence available to them concerning the issues to be determined on the hearing.
Let the attorney for the relator submit a writ.
It is so ordered.
On the Merits
This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought by the relator’s attorney.
The relator, along with two others, namely, Frank Bonino and Santo Caminito, was arrested on Sunday, May 11, 1941, by the New York City Police Department in connection with a homicide which occurred during the commission of an armed robbery on February 16, 1941, on the streets of Brooklyn. 1 Each of the three arrested later confessed to the crime under investigation, were indicted and were found guilty of murder in the first degree. The only evidence adduced at the trial was the fact that the crime had been committed and the confessions of the defendants.
The trial was conducted on the theory of “felony murder”. Under New York State law the death sentence is not mandatory in a felony murder case. Rather, the jury may recommend mercy and if this recommendation is accepted by the court a sentence of life imprisonment is imposed. In the trial, of which the relator presently complains, the jury recommended mercy for all three defendants. Although the trial court ultimately accepted the recommendation as to all *224 'three, the acceptance as to the relator ¡vas made with great reluctance since the relator had confessed to being the defendant who had actually perpetrated the homicide.
The defendants, Bonino and Caminito, appealed their conviction to the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department and, on affirmance by that court, to the Court of Appeals of the State of New York. In these appeals there was presented for consideration by the appellate courts the federal constitutional question of denial of due process because of the admission of coerced confessions. The convictions were affirmed by both courts. Neither defendant petitioned to the Supreme Court of the United States for certiorari at that time. The relator did not appeal at all. Sometime later, the codefendant Caminito moved in the Court of Appeals of New York for reargument. This re-argument was denied (People v. Caminito,
Taking advantage of Caminito’s successful proceedings Bonino moved in the Court of Appeals of New York for re-argument. This motion was granted (People v. Bonino,
The relator was not able, of course, to follow the proceedings pursued by either Caminito or Bonino since he had not appealed the original conviction. Rather, the relator brought in the sentencing court, the County Court of Kings County, a proceeding in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis. This proceeding was successful, the conviction was set aside and the relator was released. However, upon appeal the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, Second Department reversed the County Court, the Court of Appeals of New York affirmed the reversal, and the Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari. People v. Noia, County Court,
Section 2254 of Title 28 U.S.C. provides that—
“An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, or that there is either an absence of available State corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.
“An applicant shall not be deemed to have exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, within the meaning of this section, if he has the right under the law of the State to raise, by any available procedure, the question presented.”
In one sense, of course, the relator has exhausted his state court remedies since there is no proceeding available to him in the State, apart, of course, from executive clemency, which can effect his release from a patently unconstitutional detention.
3
However, exhaustion of state court remedies does not only mean that at the time of the petition before the Federal District Court there is no remedy available in the State. It further means that the relator has availed himself of at least one corrective process available in the courts of the state if there be such a process. Ex parte Hawk, 1944,
The relator claims that he has invoked a corrective process in the state court by means of the coram nobis proceeding. In my prior Memorandum in this case filed on March 14, 1960, ordering that the writ issue, I characterized the coram nobis proceeding as “abortive”. I utilized this term since the Court of Appeals held, in its opinion on the coram nobis proceeding, that the relator could not obtain a review of his conviction by coram nobis because of the coerced confession since such review could have been obtained by appeal. Thus, it is clear that the constitutional question presented here was not passed upon by the state appellate courts in either the coram nobis proceeding, because the court would not consider the question, nor in direct appellate proceedings because the relator took no appeal.
The relator has not, therefore, within the meaning of Title 28 U.S.C. § 2254, exhausted his state court remedies. I had thought that perhaps a hearing on the circumstances surrounding the relator’s failure to appeal might reveal some exceptional circumstance which would excuse the lack of invocation of the ordinary appellate procedure. The hearing, however, utterly failed to reveal any such circumstance.
Belator’s trial counsel testified that he had advised relator of his rights to appeal. The relator did not at all deny that he knew of his rights to appeal. He, however, testified that he did not appeal because he had no funds to retain an attorney to prosecute the appeal and did not wish to put his family further into debt. 4 However commend *226 able this motive for not appealing might be, it does not aid the relator. 5
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has held, as recently as 1957, that indigency alone cannot excuse a failure to appeal so as to give a state court prisoner a right to invoke federal habeas corpus. This decision was rendered in the case of United States ex rel. Kozicky v. Fay,
“ * * * the merits of the case were never presented either to the Court of Appeals or the United States Supreme Court.”
So, in the instant proceeding the merits of the case were not presented to those courts nor even to the appropriate ■Appellate Division. There, as here, the petitioners sought to avoid the effect of their failure to appeal by reason of poverty but without success. Here, as there, the relator must also be unsuccessful.
The relator relies exclusively on the case of United States ex rel. Alvarez v. Murphy, 2 Cir., 1957,
“It cannot be argued that because these matters were not brought to the jury’s attention Alvarez may be foreclosed from raising them in the coram nobis proceeding or in this proceeding”.
Thus, the Court of Appeals found that the question of coerced confession had been properly presented to the state courts for review and thus was properly before the federal courts for review.
In the instant case there has been absolutely no showing, in fact it appears conceded otherwise, that any facts tending to show coercion were presented in the state court coram nobis proceeding which were not presented at the trial and thus available for review by the ■ state courts by way of appeal. As a further indication of the weakness of the Alvarez case to support the present relator is the fact that the author of the Alvarez opinion, decided July 9, 1957, Judge Lumbard, concurred in the opinion of Judge Waterman in the Kozicky case decided September 20, 1957, only some two and one-half months subsequent to the Alvarez decision.
A very recent case decided by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit also supports my conclusion. This case
*227
is United States ex rel. Williams v. La Vallee,
On the reasoning in the authorities cited above I feel constrained to dismiss the writ because of relator’s failure to exhaust his state court remedies. In taking this action I am not unaware that an anomalous situation is presented. This anomaly arises as follows:—
If a state is zealous in assuring that unconstitutional convictions are not obtained and to this end allows a post-conviction remedy other than appeal, the federal court has jurisdiction to review the state court conviction no matter when this post-conviction remedy is availed of. On the other hand, if a state is far less zealous in the interests of justice and refuses any post-conviction remedy on grounds which could have been raised by appeal, the federal courts are precluded from any review if an appeal be not taken. However, this is the only conclusion which I can reach on a review of the decided cases.
I have reached the conclusion that I must dismiss the writ. I have done this with great reluctance. Not only is the anomalous situation just pointed out present but also my dismissal of the writ leaves one codefendant incarcerated for the term of life imprisonment while the other two codefendants, convicted on the basis of precisely the same coercion, are virtually scot free. 6 Accordingly, I have determined that a certificate of probable cause should issue.
Writ dismissed. Certificate of probable cause granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. In the petition relator’s attorney states that the relator was “taken into custody” and distinguishes such action from an “arrest”. Whether there is any distinction between these two terms I will not consider since, for the purpose of this Opinion, any such distinction is irrelevant. I will, therefore, use the term of “arrest” to describe the action taken by the police.
. The New York Court of Appeals rules have no time limitation for a motion for reargument.
. Even a cursory reading of the opinion of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in the Caminito case (
. The respondent adduced evidence which tends to show that the relator’s motive for not appealing might well have been the fear that on a retrial the death penalty might be imposed. I prescind from making any finding on this issue since I think it is entirely unnecessary.
. I might note, in passing, that absolutely no evidence of the indigency of relator’s family was adduced at the trial except the relator’s conclusory statement, despite the fact that there were several spectators at the hearing who were presumably relatives of the relator. In addition, absolutely no explanation was offered by relator for his failure to proceed to adduce any such evidence of indigency.
. Even though Bonino and Caminito still remain under indictment it is most highly improbable that they will ever be tried again since the State presented no evidence but the presently unavailable coercion confessions in 1942. The obtaining of new evidence would appear at this late date impossible. See People v. Caminito,
