This is an appeal by the State of Connecticut from an order of Judge Blumenfeld of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut granting Ralph Maselli’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, he had been denied the effective assistance of counsel.
Maselli and his codefendant, John T. Reid, had been jointly tried for robbery in Connecticut Superior Court, and, on virtually identical evidence, a jury found both guilty. Counsel for Reid promptly moved to set aside the verdict and, upon denial of his motion, after both Reid and Maselli were sentenced on June 19, 1964, filed a notice of appeal. Counsel for Maselli, one Frank A. Piccolo, did neither. On appeal, Reid’s conviction was reversed by the Connecticut Supreme Court for insufficiency of evidence, State v. Reid,
Maselli, on April 8, 1965, fourteen months before Reid’s conviction was reversed, sought post-conviction relief in the Connecticut state courts, alleging that he had been prevented from taking a timely appeal because Attorney Piccolo had never advised him of his right, under Douglas v. State of California,
The state court having denied all relief to Maselli, he then returned to the federal district court with a new petition, and this time his claim was examined on its merits. The court below noted that the findings of the state habeas corpus court were “ambiguous” and that the record, which lacked the key testimony of Piccolo, was “scanty,”
The State first contends that the court below erred when it conducted an independent factual hearing without first requiring the petitioner or the State to produce a supplemental record of the state proceedings. This contention merits little discussion. It is based upon present 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), (e), a statute not effective until November 2, 1966. That section was not the law when, on September 28, 1966, the court commenced and completed its evidentiary hearing. Under such circumstances new procedural requirements are not retroactively applicable, see NLRB v. Whittenburg,
Adopting the findings of the court below, which are uncontested on this appeal, we must determine whether a convicted accused whose retained counsel fails to move to set aside the guilty verdict, or, though he knew an appeal was
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meritorious and his client had requested an appeal, failed to perfect an appeal, has been denied the effective assistance of counsel required by the Sixth and by the Fourteenth Amendments, Gideon v. Wainwright,
Here, under circumstances suggesting that an appeal would probably, if not certainly, be successful,
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counsel’s conduct effectively deprived Maselli of his right to appeal as well as his right to the assistance of counsel on appeal. This is not a case where hindsight reveals tactical or strategic errors “over which conscientious attorneys might differ”, United States v. Garguilo,
Nor is this a case in which federal collateral relief is foreclosed for lack of a showing that “any prejudicial errors occurred that would have called for a reversal of his conviction”, McGarry v. Fogliani,
However laudable his motive, court appointed counsel for Simpson had no authority, without consulting 3 with *133 or obtaining the consent of his client, deliberately to forego Simpson’s right to move for a new trial or to appeal. When he did so, counsel proved himself ineffective. More, he completely abdicated his function and deprived Simpson of the aid of any counsel at a critical stage of the criminal proceeding.360 F.2d at 309-310 (original footnotes omitted).
Nevertheless, the State contends that collateral relief from a state conviction may not be had unless counsel’s incompetency may be attributed to the State, citing Farrell v. Lanagan,
The State tells us that relieving defendants of responsibility for the sort of misconduct of their chosen counsel which transpired here will invariably “ * * * put a premium on incompetent and inefficient counsel whose mistakes could be more certainly relied upon as effective aid for reversal than the sound and competent advice and trial conduct of the most efficient counsel.” Popeko v. United States,
Moreover, to hold otherwise would result in invidious discrimination against indigent defendants. As “there can be no equal justice where the kind of an appeal a man enjoys ‘depends on the amount of money he has’ ”, Douglas v. State of California,
Finally, we note that while it has not been held that state judges must advise defendants of their rights to take indigent appeals with the assistance of assigned counsel,
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see United States ex rel. Bjornsen v. LaVallee,
Accordingly, the order below is affirmed.
Notes
. On July 20, 1965 Piccolo wrote to a Hartford attorney as follows:
Be: Balph Maselli
In regard to your letter of July 19, 1965, please be advised as follows:
My recollection of the situation is that after the conviction in Superior Court on July 12, 1964, I discussed the matter of an appeal with Mr. Maselli. I informed him that I did not consider myself an appeal specialist and if he wished to take an appeal, he would do well to contact one of the noted appeal attorneys in the city. He stated to me that he was without funds and that unless some miracle happened, he would not be able to afford an appeal. I also believe that at the present time there is still money owing our firm of approximately $250.00 for services rendered for the trial of that case and an appearance in Middletown.
If I can be of any other assistance, kindly contact our office.
. The court below, after carefully reviewing the evidence against Maselli and the opinion of the Connecticut Supreme Court handed down when Reid’s conviction was reversed, concluded that “Nothing that would account for a different result in Maselli’s case had he appealed was mentioned,”
. That counsel here consulted with his client is no ground for distinguishing these cases. While Maselli certainly had less reason than Simpson to believe that counsel would take an appeal, the sole effect of Piccolo’s advice to Maselli was to mislead Maselli into believing that, because he was indigent, he had no appellate rights. Both Simpson and Maselli were equally abandoned by counsel and, when, without authority to forego appeals, counsel forewent them, they were equally deprived of the aid of any counsel at a critical stage of the criminal proceedings.
. Of course a defendant’s constitutional right to fundamental fairness is not violated when, looking back upon the events occurring at a trial, one can perceive ways in which the trial representation could have been bettered and some errors or mistakes avoided. Fundamental fairness is denied only in extreme situations and then only when the defendant is obviously prejudiced thereby. See, e. g., the discussion, and the authorities cited, in Snead v. Smyth, supra,
. The gravity and obviousness of the prejudice to Maselli occasioned solely by his counsel’s failure to protect his appellate rights after trial serves to distinguish contrary decisions involving similar omissions which denied collateral relief, e. g., McGarry v. Fogliani,
. We are not unaware of our rejection in United States ex rel. Mitchell v. Follette,
. It is also arguable, though the point was not raised on this appeal and we need not decide it, that drawing a distinction between cases in which the assistance of counsel on appeal was expressly requested of the State, e. g., Pate v. Holman,
. The failure of the New York state courts to grant an out-of-time appeal in United States ex rel. Bjornsen v. LaVallee,
