OPINION OF THE COURT
This is New Jersey’s second appeal from a district court order granting petitionerappellee a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1970). We previously vacated the district court’s initial judgment, issued after a hearing on petitioner’s fourth amendment claims, and remanded for reconsideration in light of the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in
Stone v. Powell,
Petillo was convicted of violating the New Jersey gaming laws at a trial in which the prosecution introduced evidence seized during a search of Petillo’s home. In the affidavit supporting the search warrant, a state trooper averred he had been told by a reliable informant that a certain male was conducting a gambling operation at 326 Bloomfield Avenue. The informant said he had placed numerous horse bets with this individual by calling telephone number 429-9377. An examination of telephone company records showed that number and an auxiliary number, 429-4933, listed to F. Petillo at the Bloomfield Avenue address. The officer stated that on two occasions in March 1970 he dialed 429-9377 and, after a male voice answered, handed the receiver to the informant who then placed a bet. (Appendix on behalf of Appellant at 64.)
Defendant attacked the truthfulness of the affidavit at his suppression hearing. The defense witness, a New Jersey Bell employee, testified from records which showed the telephone company had on its own initiative disconnected 429-9377 from the home office on December 18,1969. The number had not been reassigned. Unless normal channels have been circumvented, calls placed to 429-9377 in March would have been routed to an intercept message recorded in a female voice.
The affiant was also called to testify for the defense. He essentially restated the facts set out in the affidavit, except that he claimed to have listened to the telephone conversations by cupping his ear to the receiver. The state requested time for an investigation of the inconsistency between the telephone company’s records and the affiant’s testimony which might produce *906 additional evidence. When the hearing was reconvened, however, the state offered no new evidence and the prosecuting attorney actually conceded that the alleged telephone calls could not have been made.
The trial judge denied the motion to suppress because he was not convinced the trooper had lied.
After reading the affidavits particularly after hearing the testimony of the police officer who testified before me as a defendant’s witness, I not only disagree with the argument as to his testimony but I feel it dehors the basic grounds to be considered on the motion.
it * * * * *
I am not completely satisfied nor do I feel it is conclusive that the testimony by the representative of the New Jersey Bell Telephone Company would exclude all possibilities of the phone ringing at the address in Bloomfield Avenue. Even if I were to accept this testimony to eliminate the phone calls which were part of the affidavit, I would hold that the remaining allegations in the affidavit would be sufficient for the issuing Judge to find probable cause on which to issue a search warrant. (11/13/70 T100a-101a).
Appellant’s Brief at 12.
The district court concluded that the state court judge “necessarily” predicated his acceptance of the trooper’s version of the facts on an “erroneous characterization” of the testimony of the telephone company witness. In his ruling on the motion to suppress, the trial judge stated the witness had said it was “probable” that, through some technical irregularity, the trooper could have reached the defendant by dialing the disconnected number. Actually, the witness only admitted it was “possible” to circumvent the interceptor, although she herself did not know how this might be done.
Given these circumstances, it is necessary to restate once again the post-Stone
v. Powell
role of a federal habeas corpus court faced with a petitioner’s fourth amendment claim. The question is not whether the trial court “correctly” decided the fourth amendment issue, but whether the petitioner was given an
opportunity
for
full and fair
state court litigation of his fourth amendment claim.
Holmberg v. Parratt,
Some circuits have found the defendant has been afforded a “full and fair opportunity” if the state courts considered his claim at all.
E. g., Cole v. Estelle,
The
Stone
Court’s only indication of what it meant by “an opportunity for full and fair litigation” was its reference to
Townsend v. Sain,
Even if
Townsend
provided the sole criteria for defining what constitutes full and fair consideration of fourth amendment claims under
Stone but see O’Berry v. Wainwright,
The district court overturned the finding of credibility by the trial judge, who heard and observed both witnesses, apparently because in the district court’s judgment the trooper had lied.
See
The district court also determined that, notwithstanding the flexible guidelines in
McCray v. Illinois,
The district court, having found as a result of its hearing that the trooper lied, also concluded that this “untrue” testimony of the trooper infected all other aspects of the affidavit. Thus the district court rejected the finding of the state trial judge that “the remaining allegations in the affidavit would be sufficient for the issuing Judge to find probable cause on which to issue a *908 search warrant.” We find it necessary to comment only briefly on this aspect of the case. Having determined that the district court was precluded by Stone v. Powell from considering the merits of Petillo’s fourth amendment claim, we need go no further. In reflecting on the propriety of the district court’s resolution of the claim, however, we cannot help but observe that the state trial judge reached the opposite and equally supportable conclusion that probable cause for the issuance of the warrant existed without regard to the controverted portion of the affidavit.
The judgment granting the writ of habeas corpus is vacated; the cause is remanded to the district court with directions to dismiss the petition.
Notes
. In Stone the Court held that
where the State has provided an opportunity for full and fair litigation of a Fourth Amendment claim, the Constitution does not require that a state prisoner be granted federal habeas corpus relief on the ground that evidence obtained in an unconstitutional search or seizure was introduced at his trial.
. The indicated citation is to a table giving only the disposition as reflected in an unpublished opinion. That opinion was reproduced as a
*905
part of the district court’s second
Petillo
opinion.
United States ex rel Petillo v. New Jersey,
. At the time of the district court’s consideration of Petillo’s habeas petition, his claim was consolidated with another application for habeas relief filed by Angelo Albanese. Consolidation was felt proper even though the cases were unrelated, since both actions involved a common question of law. In the wake of
Stone v. Powell,
however, this is no longer accurate. At trial petitioner Albanese was given no opportunity to litigate his claim that evidence was seized from him under authority of a search warrant procured through police perjury. The New Jersey Superior Court, relying on the rule formulated by the state supreme court in its review of Petillo’s conviction on direct appeal, found no constitutional violation in the denial of a hearing of Albanese’s fourth amendment claim.
State v. Albanese,
No. A-2989-71 (App. Div.1973), at 2. While it is true that the Supreme Court of New Jersey articulated “for future guidance” what is now known as the “Petillo Rule” in its disposition of petitioner Petillo’s appeal,
see State v. Petillo,
Although the state initially appealed from the district court’s reissuance of the writ of habeas corpus with respect to both petitioners, it has since been granted permission (by an order of this court dated January 3, 1977) to drop its appeal as to Albanese. Thus the only issue before us is whether Petillo’s claim was given an opportunity for full and fair consideration in the New Jersey courts. Naturally we intimate no views on the “Petillo Rule” itself, since it is not presented as an issue on the record before us.
