This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus by a state prisoner. Relator was indicted for murder and at the time of trial in 1951, he entered a plea of guilty. After a hearing, a three-judge court en banc found relator guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced him to life imprisonment. No appeal was taken at that time.
A petition for writ of habeas corpus was filed in the state court in 1959. That petition was discharged without hearing by the Court of Common Pleas No. 2 of Philadelphia County. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed, Commonwealth ex rel. Wilkins v. Banmiller,
This petition was thereafter filed, and then District (now Circuit) Judge J. Cullen Ganey ordered a hearing. The matter was continued to afford relator an opportunity to obtain counsel, and on November 13 and 21, 1961, relator was present with counsel and presented evidence.
Relator complains of (1) improper remarks of one of the trial judges, Judge Kun, which indicate his misconception of the law and the evidence, all of which appears in the transcript of the trial; (2) improper acts of relator’s counsel in allegedly coercing and fraudulently inducing the plea of guilty upon a misrepresentation that a deal had been made with the District Attorney and the court for a light sentence, and upon the further misrepresentation of counsel that he had investigated the case and obtained statements from witnesses which would convict relator, although no such investigation had been made; (3) improper conduct of the prosecutor in allegedly presenting false evidence. 1
Any alleged error on the part of Judge Kun is a matter of record and if it was error, could have been corrected on appeal. Ordinarily, the failure to exhaust available state remedies precludes the grant of a writ of habeas corpus: 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254; Brown v. Allen,
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Relator’s petition for a writ in the state courts does not cure his earlier failure to appeal. It is clear that under Pennsylvania law the proper remedy for the correction of record errors is by appeal and not by habeas corpus: Commonwealth ex rel. Bishop v. Maroney,
It follows that as to the first ground on which the writ is sought, the petitioner has failed to exhaust available state remedies within the meaning of § 2254, and as to this ground the writ must be denied.
Petitioner’s second ground for the writ complains of the alleged improper acts of his counsel. None of these, of course, appear on the record of the original trial, and therefore no appeal could have been taken as to this issue. United States ex rel. McCann v. Adams,
Relator’s conviction stems from a shooting which he claims was accidental. During ■ an argument at a bar, Wilkins claims to have seen one of the participants pull out a gun. Wilkins then drew a gun which discharged, he says, when someone knocked into his arm. The only witness to this-phase of the events merely saw the gun pointed up in the air immediately after it was fired. After he was *127 arrested, Wilkins pleaded not guilty. His family hired an attorney, one Hardin, 3 who visited relator in jail on several occasions. Wilkins maintained that the shooting was accidental and insisted that he would not plead guilty, but counsel finally prevailed upon relator to change his plea. During this time relator claims he tried to discharge his attorney because of the disagreement as to his plea. His mother convinced him to continue with Hardin, since she had already paid him f 500 and could not afford to hire another lawyer.
The attorney told relator, and we believe this part of the testimony, that there was no first degree murder, and that he had arranged the matter with the District Attorney and with the court so that Wilkins would receive a light sentence if he pleaded guilty. Both relator and his mother testified to such conversations. The attorney also told Wilkins that he had interviewed the witnesses and their testimony would convict him. They would testify, according to the lawyer, that they saw Wilkins deliberately pull the gun and shoot the victim. These witnesses testified at our hearing that they never saw the attorney until the morning of the trial. We accept relator’s version of these facts.
On the day of the trial, relator withdrew his plea of not guilty and entered a plea of guilty. Under Pennsylvania law, a plea of guilty to murder is a plea of guilty generally. A hearing is then held by the court to determine the degree of guilt. The burden is on the Commonwealth to establish that the offense was in the first degree: Commonwealth ex rel. Dandy v. Banmiller,
Relator now complains that the actions of his attorney deprived him of due process. Mere inappropriate advice to plead guilty is not of constitutional dimensions: Richardson v. Baldi,
We are, it is true, concerned here with more than inappropriate advice to plead guilty, and with more than a promised light sentence. As we view this case, the significant fact is the deliberate misrepresentation by the attorney of the prospective testimony of certain witnesses. But the due process standard is solely whether or not the state played any part in the wrong done the accused.
In Application of Hodge,
That responsibility on the part of the state must appear in order to constitute a denial of due process is also the law of this Circuit. In United States ex rel. Darcy v. Handy,
At relator’s trial there would have been nothing apparent to the court which would have indicated the underhanded method in which the attorney shirked his duty to his client and procured a guilty plea. 4 The matters complained of here occurred prior to the trial and were unknown to the court or the prosecutor. On the facts before it, a plea of guilty was not so apparently unwarranted as to put the state on notice of any misconduct. Relator’s trial may not have been a completely “fair” one in the conceptualistic sense. However, intervention by this court requires that the denial of relator’s rights be the doing of the state. 5 There is no indication here that the state participated in any such denial, and the writ must be denied.
The petition for a writ of habeas corpus is denied.
Notes
. As to this, it is enough to say that no such complaint was ever presented to the state courts and we therefore may not pass on it.
. “Tlie petitioner also contends that he was inadequately represented by counsel in that the attorney engaged for him by his mother failed to interview witnesses and led him to believe that he would receive a light sentence. A careful reading of the record indicates no improper action on the part of counsel. However, the fact that a criminal, after conviction, believes that his trial was not wisely conducted by his counsel furnishes no ground for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus. See Commonwealth ex rel Norman v. Banmiller,
. The fact that Hardin has since been disbarred may lend some credibility to petitioner’s allegations.
. Mention is made in relator’s brief of incompetence of counsel in the handling of the trial, as for example, inadequate cross-examination. Trial tactics of this nature are generally not reviewable. Darcy, supra; Ernst, supra.
. Johns v. Smyth,
