The New York state courts and the court below held that the habeas corpus petitioner in this case, Samuel Witt, lost his appellate rights in the state courts when he failed timely to appeal his conviction after a jury trial in which he had been represented from arraignment to sentence by an assigned counsel. Petitioner states that he had grounds upon which he could have appealed and that he did not waive his right to appeal but the appeal was not filed within the allowed time because his assigned counsel did not tell him and he did not know that inasmuch as he was indigent he could appeal without cost to himself and with the assistance of counsel assigned to him for that purpose at the expense of the State of New York.
Witt was convicted in Bronx County of robbery in the first degree and of the included crimes of larceny and assault. On February 5, 1952, he was sentenced as a recidivist second felony offender to a term of twenty-five to forty years in prison. As above stated, the court had determined that Witt was indigent and he was represented by assigned counsel, Otto Fusco, Esq., from his arraignment throughout an eight day trial and until he was sentenced.
No appeal was taken from Witt’s conviction. On July 28, 1963, some eleven and one half years after his sentencing, Witt wrote Mr. Fusco to inquire why no appeal had been taken. Mr. Fusco replied :
At no time did you request that I file a notice of appeal and at no time did I suggest to you that I would file a notice of appeal. My services were done when the court duly and properly sentenced you.
On October 21, 1964, Witt filed a petition for a writ of error
coram nobis
in the applicable New York Supreme Court. In it he alleged, as he alleges here, that he lost his right to appeal only because of his poverty and because he was not advised of his appeal rights by his assigned lawyer and had no personal knowledge of those rights. He claimed that this failure of the state to inform him of his rights deprived him of due process, the equal protection of the laws, and the right to counsel. Witt’s petition was forthwith, on November 4, denied without a hearing. This denial was affirmed without opinion by the Appellate Division, First Department, People v. Witt,
Witt then filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court below, alleging, as he had alleged in his state petition for the error
coram nobis
writ, that although New York had refused to provide a transcript of his trial for purposes of appeal, he has meritorious grounds to support a reversal of his conviction which he could present to the state courts if he had the opportunity to do so.
1
On November 21, 1966 the district court denied the petition
*423
without a hearing, and, citing United States ex rel. Mitchell v. Follette,
The holding below, which petitioner is attacking, was reached before the New York' Court of Appeals had decided the two cases of People v. Callaway,
The time has come for us to announce clearly that every defendant has a fundamental right to appeal his conviction and that, accordingly, basic fairness and due process require that the right not be dissipated either because the defendant was unaware of its existence or counsel failed to abide by a promise to either file or prosecute an appeal. This determination in no way indicates that courts should or can attempt to second guess counsel. Our decision, very simply, demonstrates a fundamental concern that defendants be informed of their right to appeal, and that, where an attorney, whether assigned or retained, fails to apprise his client of this vital privilege, there is no justification for making the defendant suffer for his attorney’s failing. Id. at 132,299 N.Y.S.2d at 159 ,247 N.E.2d at 132 .
And in United States ex rel. Smith v. McMann our court overruled our 1966 precedent of United States ex rel. Bjornsen v. LaVallee,
supra,
in which we had held that the State of New York had no affirmative obligation to advise a convicted defendant of his right to appeal and to inform him of the procedure to enforce that right. United States ex rel. Smith v. McMann,
supra,
The rule stated in Smith defines the duty which the State of New York owed Witt and adopts as that duty the duty set forth by the New York Court of Appeals prior to our decision in Smith in People v. Montgomery, supra, and People v. Cal-laway, supra. The only question to be resolved is one of fact, whether Witt’s allegations that he was not informed of *424 his appellate rights and that he was not otherwise aware of them are true.
The letter of Witt's assigned attorney corroborates Witt’s testimony that he was not informed of his rights. On the other hand, Witt is a second offender and, as he was an indigent adult recidivist, it is more likely that he had personal knowledge of his appellate rights than Smith had, for Smith was but sixteen years of age at the time of his trial and was a first offender. Clearly, a factual hearing is required here, and if appellant is successful in substantiating his allegations the State should shortly provide him an opportunity to appeal his conviction.
Therefore, as in Smith, we remand the case to the court below 3 for further consideration not inconsistent with this opinion and for an evidentiary hearing on the issue of whether appellant was informed or knew prior to the expiration of his time to appeal that he could appeal without cost to himself and with counsel appointed by the State.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
Notes
. Although irrelevant to the determination of the constitutional issues involved here, see United States ex rel. Smith v. McMann,
infra,
. People v. Montgomery,
supra,
In Callaway no appeal had been taken by assigned trial counsel from a June 1964 conviction; in Montgomery no appeal had been taken by assigned trial counsel from a December 1957 conviction.
In the overruled case of People v. Kling,
. As we stated in United States ex rel. Smith v. McMann,
