OPINION OF THE COURT
Robert Hubbard appeals from the denial of his application for a writ of habeas corpus. He is in custody on a mandatory term of life imprisonment and a concurrent term of twelve to fifteen years for robbery. 1 These sentences were imposed following his conviction in a New Jersey state court for first degree felony murder, robbery, and robbery while armed. The charges against Hubbard resulted from an incident on May 27, 1971, when Hubbard and three other men entered an apartment at 482 South 19th Street, Newark, New Jersey, as part of an alleged robbery attempt. One of the four, James Rainey, possessed a pistol and, during an altercation, the pistol was discharged, killing Robert Howard, the occupant of the apartment. All four participants in the incident were charged in a single indictment with murder, 2 robbery, 3 and armed robbery. 4
Because Rainey had given a statement to the police inculpating himself and the codefendants, the state successfully moved to sever Rainey’s trial in order to use that statement against him while avoiding prejudice to the other defendants.
See Bruton v. United States,
Thereafter, Hubbard was tried on the same indictment and convicted of felony murder, robbery and armed robbery. He presented to the New Jersey courts the contention that because Rainey was acquitted of felony murder, the Rainey jury must have found that no robbery took place during the May 27,1971 affray. He urged that the federal constitution required the application of collateral estoppel to this finding, and therefore that the state should not have been permitted to prosecute him for robbery or for felony murder. The state courts *416 declined so to rule, 8 and a federal habeas corpus petition followed. The district court concluded that the Constitution does not require application of collateral estoppel in favor of one defendant because of the outcome in the trial of another defendant. 9 We affirm.
The New Jersey Supreme Court sensibly recognizes that there is some place in the criminal law for the doctrine of collateral estoppel. But unlike in civil cases, where that state has joined those enlightened jurisdictions that have abandoned the requirement of mutuality for the application of estoppel by judgment,
United Rental Equipment Co. v. Aetna Life & Cas. Ins. Co.,
The New Jersey courts in Hubbard’s case declined to make any further inroad upon the requirement of identity of parties. Their determination of the estoppel effect of the judgment of Rainey’s case is binding here, unless the federal Constitution requires a different result. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1738, 2241(c)(3). Hubbard suggests two constitutional provisions which may do so: the Double Jeopardy Clause of the fifth amendment and the Due Process Clause of the fourteenth.
In
Ashe
v.
Swenson,
Prior to
Benton v. Maryland, supra,
the Court in
Hoag v. New Jersey,
Of course, some contrary data can be found in the case law. In
United States v. Oppenheimer,
Assuming that the state has had an opportunity for a full hearing on suppression and at least one appeal as of right, we think due process would forbid relitigation of the issue determined adversely to it, although not, of course, the prosecution ... on the basis of other evidence.
Id. at 1266. He was careful to note that collateral estoppel is not mandated by due process in civil cases, id.; rather, he observed that the disparity of resources between the state and a criminal defendant and the strain of a second prosecution in which the same non-jeopardy issues would be relitigated — both of which render criminal prosecutions especially vexatious — made a strong case for the application of collateral estoppel against the state as a matter of due process.
There is much to be said, in the criminal law context, for associating the doctrine of collateral estoppel with the principles of due process. Plainly, the appearance of evenhandedness in the administration of justice weighs heavily among our jurisprudential concerns, and estoppel is directly addressed to that appearance. For that *418 reason thoughtful observers probably will applaud the introduction of non-mutual collateral estoppel into New Jersey criminal law. See State v. Gonzalez, supra. But there are countervailing considerations as well, to some of which Justice Pashman refers in his opinion for the Court in Gonzalez. One consideration is the adverse effect on law enforcement when the state is deprived of the use of evidence which might produce a different outcome in the later proceeding. Moreover, the goal of judicial efficiency- — one underpinning for the doctrine of collateral estoppel — may actually be subverted if the government must appeal every adverse pretrial ruling or else risk preclusion in a subsequent case. Still another consideration, not mentioned by Justice Pashman but particularly applicable to the extension of collateral estoppel to non-parties, is the potentially inhibiting effect such a rule might have upon the grant of severance motions. In this case, for example, New Jersey may not have been so solicitous of Hubbard’s Bruton rights if it knew that all matters decided adversely to it in Rainey’s trial would inure to appellant’s benefit. It would be unfortunate if, in the pursuit of fairness in one aspect of the criminal justice process, we were to cause untoward consequences in another. Thus, whatever may be said in favor of the application of collateral estoppel when the defendant is a party to the judgment, the case for such application in favor of non-parties is a good deal less compelling.
Hubbard also relies upon
United States v. Bruno,
Appellant proposes two additional sources of authority for his due process contention: those cases holding that when two persons are charged with conspiracy, the acquittal of one requires an acquittal of the other,
14
and those cases holding that the acquittal of a principal requires the acquittal of one charged with aiding and abetting.
15
But the cases to which Hubbard refers do no more than interpret specific federal statutes. They do not address the question whether such interpretations are constitutionally compelled. Any suggestion that they are so compelled is dispelled by the settled rule that inconsistent verdicts in
*419
criminal cases are permissible.
E. g., Dunn v. United States,
Without suggesting either approval or disapproval of Judge Friendly’s suggestion in DiGiangiemo that due process requires the recognition of collateral estoppel against the state in a subsequent criminal case where the defendant was a party to the first case, we hold that where he was not a party to the first case the Due Process Clause imposes no collateral estoppel requirement. The judgment preclusion effect of the earlier judgment is determined solely by the law of the forum, state or federal, which rendered it. Thus, the writ of habeas corpus was properly denied.
Notes
. Hubbard was also sentenced to a term of two to three years for robbery while armed, which was to have been served concurrently with the life term but consecutively to the robbery term. The armed robbery conviction, however, was vacated by the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division.
State v. Hubbard,
. N.J.S.A. 2A: 113-1, 2 (1969).
. N.J.S.A. 2A:141-1 (1969).
. N.J.S.A. 2AU51-5 (1969).
. Since Hubbard was not apprehended until October 27, 1971, he probably would not have been tried with Rainey in any event.
. The other two participants, Robert Arrington and William Anderson, pleaded non vult and were sentenced to prison terms of eight to ten years.
. N.J.S.A. 2A: 113-2 provides:
Murder which is perpetrated by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which is committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate arson, burglary, kidnapping, rape, robbery or sodomy, or which is perpetrated in the course or for the purpose of resisting, avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest, or of effecting or assisting an escape or rescue from legal custody, or murder of a police or other law enforcement officer acting in the execution of his duty or of a person assisting any such officer so acting, is murder in the first degree. Any other kind of murder is murder in the second degree. A jury finding a person guilty of murder shall designate by their verdict whether it be murder in the first degree or in the second degree.
.
State v. Hubbard,
. Hubbard also alleged excessive sentence, prosecutorial misconduct, and erroneous instructions as grounds for habeas corpus relief. Of these, only excessive sentence is pressed on appeal. The district court rejected this contention, and we affirm.
See Townsend v. Burke,
. Of course, the jury might also have believed that, while a robbery was perpetrated, Rainey in particular was not guilty of committing it. The government does not, however, urge this position, and in view of our disposition of the legal issues presented we express no opinion on this possibility.
. The
Ashe
Court recognized the severe burdens on defendants who are reprosecuted under new charges made possible by “the extraordinary proliferation of overlapping and related statutory offenses . . .
. See Rules Governing the Courts of the State of New Jersey 2:5-6(a) (1978); 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1969).
. As the Supreme Court concluded in
Crist v. Bretz,
. E. g.,
Romontio v. United States,
. E. g.,
United States v. Prince,
