UNITED STATES of America ex rel. Robert Lee GOLDSBY, Appellant,
v.
William HARPOLE, Superintendent of Mississippi State
Penitentiary, Parchman, Mississippi, Appellee.
No. 16481.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
Nov. 20. 1957.
George N. Leighton, Chicago, Ill., Moore, Ming & Leighton, Chicago, Ill., for appellant.
Joe T. Patterson, Atty. Gen. of Miss., John H. Price, Jr., J. R. Griffin, Asst. Attys. Gen., Ross R. Barnett, Jackson, Miss., Barnett, Jones & Montgomery, Jackson, Miss., for appellee.
Before RIVES, JONES and BROWN, Circuit Judges.
JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.
In his application for writ of habeas corpus to the сourt below, appellant Goldsby alleged that his conviction for murder and sentence of death imposed by the courts of Mississippi, Goldsby v. State, miss.,
The District Court dismissed the application without requiring any response from the State of Mississippi, apparently on the thesis that it failed to state any basis for the requested relief since it was asserted that the record of the criminal proсeedings at no time during the trial of appellant for murder showed that the constitutional question was raised. We feel that the petition was too summarily dismissed and that the appellant is entitled to a hearing upon his allegations, Chessman v. Teets,
That Federal Habeas corpus is available to prisoners in custody under the final judgments of the courts of the several states to test the constitutionality of their deprivation of liberty has long been established by statute, 28 U.S.C.A. 2241, and is not open to question. It is equally well settled that the systematic exclusion of members of the racе of an accused from the juries by which he is indicted and tried is a denial of the constitutional guarantees which must be afforded to one accused of crime and brought to trial in a state сourt. Patton v. State,
Having alleged a prima facie case of a denial of due process, Goldsby was entitled to a hearing and an inquiry into the truth of his allegations2 'unless it appears from the application that * * * (he) is not entitled thereto.' 28 U.S.C.A. 2243. The ancient writ of habeas corpus is an extraordinary process which, as such, requires some particularity of pleаding beyond that normally necessary in other civil cases,3 but in the interests of justice and provide the vindication of fundamental rights, the purpose for which the writ is designed, the pleadings of a prisoner should not be scrutinized for compliance with technical niceties, Rice v. Olson,
Whether, on the hearing, the record will bеar out that the constitutional issue has adequately been preserved, Adams v. United States,
This makes the аllegations of Paragraph 14 of the application of extreme importance. In Paragraph 14 Goldsby avers that 'Because of petitioner's ignorance and the circumstаnces of his arrest and incarceration, and as a consequence of the customs, mores and usages of the State of Mississippi, Petitioner was not able to challenge5 the сompetency and qualifications of the Grand Jury that was sworn and impaneled * * *.' This allegation, considered in conjunction with those facts (see note 4, supra) averred which sufficiently set forth the speed in which the indictment was returned and appellant put on trial, at least permit a pleader's inference for proof that petitioner, an ignorant layman, had not had an adequate opportunity for counselling with his various counsel sufficient to enable him intelligently and deliberately to understand and approve the available or recommendеd courses of action, including the availability and desirability of urging defensive constitutional objections to the composition of the grand and petit juries. Whether, under the circumstances briеfly but sufficiently set forth, this was an adequate preservation of the constitutional issue, and, if not, whether it was sufficient to excuse the defent are matters to be determined upon the hearing.
Wе therefore hold that this dismissal was erroneous and that the application should be determined upon a hearing. It is, of course, incumbent upon the applicant to carry the burden in а collateral attack upon a judgment, Williams v. Kaiser, supra; Walker v. Johnson,
Reversed.
Notes
It was alleged that under the Mississippi statutes, prospective jurors are to be selected from the lists of qualified voters and that although Carroll County, according to the 1950 Census, had a population of 15,449 persons of which 8,829 were Engroes, 5,300 of whom were by reason of age and educational qualifications eligible to qualify as voters, that at the time the indictment was returnеd against appellant and for a long time before, no Negro had ever appeared upon the voting lists and therefore none had been included on the lists of prospective jurors
This will include the allegation that state remedies have been exhausted in accordance with 28 U.S.C.A. 2254. On the present uncontroverted record this date originally set for trial re-entеred the been presented to the highest Court of Mississippi and relief denied Goldsby v. State,
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have no application, other than by analogy, to habeas corpus proceedings unless by express statutory requirement. F.R.C.P. 81(a)(2), 28 U.S.C.A. United States ex rel. Jelic v. District Director of Immigration, 2 Cir.,
Although the present record contains little more than the petition for writ of habeas corpus and the order dismissing it, the facts gleaned frоm the state court opinions, to which reference is made, and allegations appear to be that the murder indictment was returned by the Carroll County grand jury on November 8, 1954, arraignment being hеld that same day with trial set for November 10, only two days later. On the date set for trial, counsel previously engaged by a relative of appellant in St. Louis, withdrew from the defense for reasons which are not indicated, leaving appellant without counsel to aid in his defense. The trial court appointed counsel from a neighboring county to assume the defense and the triаl was passed until the following day when another attorney engaged from the local bar by relatives of appellant joined the defense and the trial proceeded to conviction and sentence. An appeal was carried to the Supreme Court of Mississippi which affirmed the judgment and sentence of the trial court, Goldsby v. State,
Apparently as an additional reason why he either did not, or did not have to, make the challenge to the juries, Goldsby further alleged that the statutes of Mississippi preclude questioning the validity or regularity of the selection or impaneling of any jury once it has been impanelled and sworn as any jury once sworn is deemed to be a legal one. Code of Mississippi, 1942, 1784, 1798. But in its opinion denying petitioner's application for writ of error coram nobis,
