Appellants seek reversal of the district court’s denial of their petition for a writ of habeas corpus. They unsuccessfully claimed in the district court that their rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment were denied by the Illinois state trial court which had convicted them of armed robbery. Appellants’ principal ground for seeking reversal is that the state court refused their request to instruct the jury on their defense. Appellants’ subsidiary point is that in their case the state court changed the juducial rule with respect to alibis, and in their view this constituted a constitutionally impermissible retroactive law.
In the state criminal trial court, appellants offered without let or hindrance evidence respecting an alibi and also arguments to the jury in support of their defense of an alibi. But the trial judge, though asked to do so, did not instruct the jury on the defense of alibi. The Illinois appellate court, as a matter of state law, first reversed the convictions because of the trial judge’s failure to give an alibi instruction, but that court on rehearing withdrew its opinion and affirmed the convictions. People v. Waters,
The initial question is whether there is any merit to the suggestion that a state violates the due process clause of the federal constitution when it changes the rule of substantive law by a judicial opinion contrary to the state court’s earlier judicial views. Such a change is not a retroactive law of the type prohibited by the federal constitution, and the state is as free by judicial opinion to change its criminal as its civil law, irrespective of the effect of the change upon cases pending in a lower state court. Cf. Linkletter v. Walker,
The second and main question is whether as a matter of federal constitutional law the Illinois state convictions deny due process because the state judge failed to give an alibi instruction. No authority precisely in point has been drawn to our attention. But as a matter of principle, and as a matter of analogy, . we are clear that the failure of the state court’s trial judge to give the alibi instruction does not involve a point of such
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fundamental nature in the pursuit of justice as to merit protection by the Fourteenth Amendment. “Normally . instructions to the jury in state trials are matters of state law and procedure not involving federal constitutional issues.” Grundler v. State of North Carolina,
Ex majore cautela
we observe that, unlike Stump v. Bennett,
Judgment affirmed.
