Lead Opinion
OPINION ANNOUNCING THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
with whom GIBBONS, JAMES HUNTER, III, WEIS and A. LEON HIGGINBOTHAM, Jr., Circuit Judges, join.
In Moore v. United States,
Appellant Albert DeFalco had been convicted in the United States District Court of New Jersey of conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and of three counts of falsely impersonating a federal official under 18 U.S.C. § 912. The charges alleged that DeFalco had illegally represented himself to be a spokesman for Congressman Henry Helstoski. He was sentenced on December 8,1975 by Judge Frederick B. Lacey and thereafter filed a notice of appeal to this court at No. 76-1028. Subsequently, on January 8,1976, he retained Vincent L. Verdirаmo, Jr., to represent his appeal. Briefs were filed and the matter was listed for disposition without oral argument on October 6,1976. The judgment of conviction was affirmed on October 8, 1976. United States v. DeFalco,
At the time appellant retained Mr. Verdi-ramo, the attorney had already been indicted three times by a grand jury of the United States District Court of New Jersey.
Verdiramo entered a plea of not guilty before Judge Lacey at indictment No. 74-313 on August 23, 1974. His motion for assignment of a judge from outside New Jersey was filed on September 13,1974, and was denied by Judge Lacey on October 29, 1974. He requested from Judge Lacey a bill of particulars and was granted some relief. Judge Lacey denied Verdiramo’s reasserted motions for discovery and for a judge from another district on November 19,1974, and released certain property from Verdiramo’s recognizance bond on January 30, 1974. The case was transferred to Judge H. Curtis Meanor on April 21, 1975. Following his indictment at No. 76-201-4, on June 2, 1976, Verdiramo again filed a motion to recuse the trial court; on September 8, 1976, this, case was also transferred to Judge Meanor by order of Chief Judge George H. Barlow.
Before DeFalco’s appeal was decided by this court, Mr. Verdiramo consummated a plea bargain with the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey and on September 28, 1976, his guilty plea at No. 76-201 — 4 was entered before Judge Mea-nor. The reception of Verdiramo’s guilty plea was interrupted in order to advise Judge Lacey of the assignment of Verdira-mo’s case to another judge. Judge Lacey appeared at the Verdiramo plea reception and gave his consent to the transfer of the Verdiramo case to another judge after being advised of the specifics of the Verdira-mo plea bargain.
it will be my duty ... to suspend you immediately from the further practice of law before this court . [T]his plea places you in jeopardy of disbarment both from this Court and before the New Jersey courts, and perhaps before any other court to which you are admitted to practice.
Appendix at 163-64. On the same date, September 28, 1976, Judge Meanor entered an order suspending Verdiramo “from further practice of law in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey.” (Docket entry Oсtober 4,1976, Indictment No. 76-201-4). Thus, while DeFalco’s appeal was still pending in this court, eight days before the scheduled date of disposition of his appeal, his attorney had entered into a plea bargain, had pleaded guilty, and had been suspended from practicing law in the United States District Court at the District of New Jersey.
In an affidavit filed in this court at No. 76-1028, Mr. DeFalco stated:
1. I am the appellant in the instant matter. On the 8th day of December 1975,1 was convicted in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, of a violation of law and received a sentence of six years.
2. Thereafter, and on the 8th day of January 1976, I retained VINCENT L. VERDIRAMO, ESQ., a member of the bar of the State of New Jersey, to represent me in the appeal to this Court. At no time during any of the ensuing months was I aware of the fact that Mr. Verdiramo had committed any actions which would disqualify him from the practice of law, or in representing me in connection with this appeal.
3. In fact, prior thereto, and subsequent thereto, Mr. Verdiramo had committed actions and participated in actions which resulted in his indictment by a Federal grand jury. Although I learned of Mr. Verdiramo’s indictment in alleging a conspiracy to commit perjury and to obstruct justice, he informed me that the аllegations were worthless, and that he would be vindicated at trial, and that the matter would not prevent him from representing me fully on my appeal. He assured me that he would prosecute the appeal vigorously, and he was confident that my conviction would be reversed. I was therefore astounded to read in the public press on September 30, 1976 that Mr. Verdiramo had pleaded guilty to one indictment, and that there were, in fact, other indictments against him which would not be prosecuted as a result of his dealings with the government.
Appendix at 166-67.
The present appeal arises from the denial of DeFalco’s claim to vacate his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 because of ineffective assistance of counsel on his direct appeal.
It is true that when an appellant’s claim is based on simple incompetence, this court has generally required him to show both a breach of the Moore standard and specific prejudice resulting from that breach. Moore,
a rule requiring a defendant to show that a conflict of interests . . . prejudiced him in some specific fashion would not be susceptible of intelligent, evenhanded application. . . . [T]he evil — it bears repeating — is in what the advocate finds himself compelled to refrain from doing . . . . It may be possible in some cases to identify from the record the prejudice resulting from an attorney’s failure to undertake certain trial tasks, but even with a record of the sentencing hearing available it would be difficult to judge intelligently the impact of a conflict on the attorney’s representation of a client.
Id. at 490-91,
It is for this reason that in representation cases we have emphasized not proof of prejudice, but possibility oí prejudice. Thus, speaking through Judge Rosenn, in the context of joint representation, we have said: “The possibility of prejudice lies in the reality of trial practice — a given course of action may be advantageous to one defendant but not the other.” United States v. Dolan,
To protect the interests of criminal defendants enmeshed in the midst of our adversarial system of justice, the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees each defendant the “assistance of counsel for his defense.” This guarantee “contemplates that such assistance be untrammeled and unimpaired,” Glasser v. United States,315 U.S. 60 , 70,62 S.Ct. 457 , 464,86 L.Ed. 680 (1942). Representation of co-defendants by one attorney, when it is possible to discern a prejudicial conflict of interest arising therefrom, is no longer “untrammeled and unimpaired” and will constitute a constitutionally defective denial of effective counsel. Walker v. United*136 States,422 F.2d 374 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,399 U.S. 915 ,90 S.Ct. 2219 ,26 L.Ed.2d 573 (1970).
Id. at 1180 (footnotes omitted).
The issue before us, then, is whether appellant can establish a legally sufficient risk of prejudice or conflict of interest under Hart to obtain a new appeal by demonstrating that his appellate counsel, unbeknownst to appellant, is under indictment, participating in plea negotiations, and entering a guilty plea for himself in the same court and with the tangential involvement of the sentencing judge from which his client’s appeal is prosecuted. We conclude that he can.
The adversary system of the common law, as distinguished from the inquisitorial system of the civil law, is regarded in the Anglo-American tradition as the surest method of arriving at the truth when facts are disputed, and for discerning the proper legal precepts to be applied to those facts. These goals are to be achieved by the healthy and forceful presentation of partisan viewpoints. Although the ultimate decision is always the responsibility of the jury and the judge, our system can prosper only when lawyers, as officers of the court, are able to develop the fullest dimensions of „ the cause being heard. “[The lawyer’s] principal responsibility is to serve the undivided interests of his client. Indeed, an indispensable element of the effective performance of his responsibilities is the ability to act independently of the government and to oppose it in adversary litigation.” Ferri v. Ackerman,
Appellate courts under the Anglo-American tradition most often entertain assertions of legal error, and a direct appeal usually involves a contention that the trial judge has erred in the choice, interpretation, or application of a legal precept. Although allegations of error in a criminal case are directed at the trial court, they are, more often than not, presented in terms that the error was caused or importuned by the government. Thus, the substance of a criminal appeal usually consists of complaints against both the trial court and the government. For there to be the minimal level of attorney competence on the prosecution of an appeal, counsel must be totally unshackled in his presentation to the appellate court. It is essential that the advocate owe no fealty that conflicts, or even appears to conflict, with the paramount ethical loyalty he owes his client. The competent advocate must stand tall before the appellate tribunal and assert his client’s contentions without fear or favor. This is not the posture a defendant in a criminal case assumes as he goes, hat in hand, to negotiate a plea bargain with his adversary. Nor is it the posture a defendant assumes as he appears before the trial court following a plea of guilty to beg the mercy of the court before sentence is pronounced. The cooperative nature of the plea bargaining process involves compromise of positions by both the accused and the government, positions that would have been ardently asserted or defended in a purely adversarial setting. A plea bargain itself is the product of delicate negotiation conducted in an atmosphere of cooperation and give and take.
We conclude that inherent emotional and psychological barriers created an impermissible potential of preventing appellate counsel from competing vigorously with the government. The totality of the circumstances presented here, including the facts that DeFalco’s appeal emanated from the same district court in which his attorney was indicted, that three of his attorney’s indictments were processed, prior to the striking of the plea bargain, before the
Thus DeFalco’s allegations, if proven, would constitute a deprivation of effective assistance of counsel on appeal, entitling him to a direct appeal de novo. On this record, however, that remedy would be premature. For although the government has conceded the facts of Verdiramo’s indictment, it has not admitted that DeFalco was unaware that his attorney had been indicted. The possibility therefore remains that in a factual hearing the government may be able to show a knowing and deliberate waiver by DeFalco of his right to effective assistance of counsel. On remand, unless the government can show such a waiver, a new direct appeal will be ordered on application to this court for vacation of our judgment of October 8, 1976 at No. 76-1028. Because this contention is based on a constitutional deprivation, § 2255 is the proper vehicle for relief. United States v. Addonizio,
We decline to meet the bulk of appellant’s remaining contentions relating to trial error in view of the likelihood that on remand he may establish a right to a direct appeal de novo, nunc pro tunc. In the event the district court concludes that he waived his sixth amendment right and is precluded from reprosecuting his direct appeal, he will of course be entitled to an appeal from final judgment in this § 2255 collateral proceeding.
We do, however, meet and reject appellant’s contention that the trial judge should have recused himself. Measuring the stated allegation and the record before us in this appeal against the precepts announced in United States v. Thompson,
Notes
. Indictment No. 74-313 had been returned against Verdiramo on August 6, 1974, charging violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1503, and 2512. A second indictment had been returned against him May 15, 1975 at No. 75-221 and was dismissed by Judge Lacey on December 17, 1975. A third indictment was returned December 4, 1975 at No. 75-521-1 charging him with, inter alia, mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
. See Verdiramo Rule 11 transcript 4-5.
Judge Lacey, in addition to presiding at No. 74-313, had also been assigned the Verdiramo indictment at No. 75-521-1 at which Verdira-mo had entered a plea of not guilty on December 12, 1975. The judge had presided over a multitude of motions and hearings and entered orders on this particular indictment on January 26, 1976, January 30, 1976, April 20, 1976, May 20, 1976, May 26, 1976, May 28, 1976, June 1, •1976, June 2, 1976, September 23, 1976, and September 24, 1976. Indictment No. 75-521-1 apparently was dismissed as against Verdiramo
. DeFalco moved for other relief in his § 2255 motion including, inter alia, disqualification of the trial judge, as well as a new trial based on allegations of newly discovered evidence and failure of the government to disclose certain materials as required by Brady v. Maryland,
. The litigants before us do not challenge the relevance of the sixth amendment to the contentions presented in this appeal. This appeal implicates a criminal prosecution by the federal government. The sixth amendment provides explicitly: “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to . . . have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.”
. It is elementary law that all these facts are essential ingredients in the rule we suggest today. A legal rule is a legal precept attaching a definite detailed legal consequence to a definite detailed state of facts. Addonizio v. United States,
Judge Weis would go even further in responding to the presumption of innocence argument in the dissenting opinions. He notes that the court has previously suggested that the presumption of innocence does not serve as the source for the substantive rights of pretrial detainees. “Rather, the presumption allocates the burden of proof. It is a principle of evidence, 9 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 2511 (3d ed. 1940), acting as the foundation for the procedural due process requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” Hampton v. Holmesburg Prison Officials,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring,
I agree that the judgment of the district court should be reversed. However, I write separately because of my disagreement with certain portions of the plurality opinion.
First, the plurality states that “[t]o avoid the appearance as well as the fact of impropriety in the adversary system, doubtful cases are resolved in favor of the defendant.” At 135 (emphasis added). Later in the opinion this position is restated: “It is essential that the advocate owe no fealty that conflicts, or even appears to conflict, with the paramount ethical loyalty he owes his client.” Id. at 136 (emphasis added). I do not believe, however, that the mere appearance of a conflict of interest on the part of appellate counsel, of itself, violates the sixth amendment’s guarantee of effective assistance of counsel.
In United States ex rel. Hart v. Davenport,
In United States ex rel. Horta v. De-Young,
Similarly, in United States ex rel. Sullivan v. Cuyler,
In the case before us, we are not presented with the mere appearance of a prejudicial conflict but with indications that such a conflict actually existed. As Judge Aldisert notes, DеFalco’s appeal emanated from the same court in which his counsel was indicted. Three of Attorney Verdiramo’s indictments were processed prior to the consummation of his plea bargain by the United States Attorney’s Office that was also prosecuting DeFalco and before the same judge who had presided at DeFalco’s trial. Also critical is counsel’s entry into plea negotiations with the same United States Attorney’s Office with which he was in contention on DeFalco’s then pending appeal in this court. Thus, counsel was seeking to negotiate the best possible bargain in this personal behalf from the prosecution while at the same time opposing them in a pending criminal appeal.
Second, I disagree with the plurality’s assertion that “[i]f there is any constraint on counsel’s complete and exuberant presentation, our system will fail.” Plurality op. at 136. It is of course true that there are some constraints which are inherently suspect. Dual representation of a co-defendant at trial is one such constraint. See United States ex rel. Sullivan v. Cuyler, supra; United States ex rel. Hart v. Davenport, supra. Indictment of appellate counsel, unbeknownst to the defendant, may well be another. Nevertheless, there are some constraints that are clearly permissible and even desirable, e. g., those set forth in the Federal Rules of Civil, Criminal, and Appellate Procedure and the Federal Rules of Evidence.
Finally, I disagree with the plurality’s conclusion that “inherent emotional and psychological barriers created an impermissible potential of preventing appellate counsel from competing vigorously with the government.” Plurality op. at 136. I believe the standard this suggests is speculative, imprecise, and incapable of application. Its use would hinder rather than help a reviewing court in adjudicating sixth amendment claims. Furthermore, there is nothing in the record that indicates the presence of such emotional and psychological barriers. The idea that emotional barriers can be “inherent” seems to be self-contradictory. If a response to the stimuli of a given situation is emotional, then I fail to perceive how it can be “inherent.”
. It is true, as Judge Garth indicates, that De-Falco’s brief was filed prior to Verdiramo’s indictment. Garth, J., dissenting op. at 144. One cannot say, however, that Verdiramo’s representation of DeFalco was indisputably complete at that point. There are other actions which Verdiramo could have taken in his representation of DeFalco but did not. As Judges Garth and Adams note, Verdiramo could have filed a reply brief, supplemental brief, if appro
. There are some constraints that are even more basic. For instance, as the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has observed, “although a lawyer has a duty to defend vigorously the rights of his clients, there is a corollary obligation that he conduct himself with decorum.” Kinoy v. District of Columbia,
. Section 7.8(b), ABA Standards, The Defense Function (App.Draft 1971) states: “It is unprofessional conduct for a lawyer to express his personal belief or opinion in his client’s innocence or his personal belief or opinion in the truth or falsity of any testimony or evidence, or to attribute the crime to another person unless such an inference is warranted by the evidence.”
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In these collateral proceedings, those constituting the majority in effect vote to reverse the judgment entered on the direct appeal affirming DeFalco’s judgment of conviction. They do so on the basis of their conclusion that the totality of the circumstances surrounding the direct appeal created a possible conflict of interest that denied DeFalco competent counsel on appeal as a matter of law.
I dissent because I do not believe the circumstances call for the application of a conflict of interest rule that precludes inquiry into the competency of the performance actually rendered on the appeal. Every conflict of interest case has two aspects: the existence of a conflict of interest, and the prejudice resulting therefrom to the defendant. In joint representation cases, once there is a showing of a remote possibility of conflict of interest, prejudice is presumed. An examination of both of these aspects reveals the inappropriateness of applying this rule in this context.
First, the plurality relies on psychological factors for inferring the existence of a conflict of interest. They attempt to limit the legal precept adopted to the circumstances of this case. The reality is that such an approach could have profound implications because of the decisive weight given speculative psychological • factors. Indeed, such speculativeness is illustrated by this case. For example, Verdiramo filed his brief for the defendant in this court on May 3, 1976. Although the record does not reveal the precise date, his plea bargaining in his own case apparently did not begin until later, some time in the summer of 1976. Thus even if psychological speculation were a proper basis for application of conflict of interest rules, one cannot be sure those psychological pressures were present here.
Second, the rationale for presuming prejudice in the joint representation cases does not apply to the present context. The reasoning in the joint representation cases, relied on by those in the majority, is that it is often difficult or impossible to determine whether the defendant has actually been prejudiced by such representation. Holloway v. Arkansas,
In short, the fact situation here neither supports an inevitable finding that a conflict of interest exists nor requires that
The concurring opinion purports to reject psychological factors as a basis for its conclusion. It relies on what it says may be an actual conflict arising from the position of plea bargaining with the United States Attorney on the attorney’s own behalf and about the same time representing a client on a direct criminal appeal from the same district. Passing over the untoward premises on which the argument is cоnstructed, the short answer is that consideration of the appellate record and pertinent testimony is sufficient to permit a reliable determination by the district court as to the level of appellate competency provided.
Because the district court did not address the competency of counsel issue on the merits, I would remand to the district court for an evidentiary hearing and determination as to whether Verdiramo’s appellate representation fell below the standard required by Moore v. United States,
. Verdiramo was not defendant’s counsel at trial. In his motion for § 2255 relief, defendant argued that Verdiramo failed to raise on direct appeal the denial of defendant’s motion (made right before trial) to substitute trial counsel for inadequate factual investigation. He did not, however, claim ineffective assistance of trial counsel as a ground for § 2255 relief.
. I use the word “issues” here because the question is not whеther all possible theories as to each issue were advanced on direct appeal, but rather whether the issues themselves were apparent to the reviewing court.
. I do not reach the remand ordered by the majority to obtain a waiver determination, assuming the propriety of an informal waiver in the circumstances. Nevertheless, my position is not meant to imply there are not circumstances in which an indicted attorney should bring that fact to the attention of his client.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The primary issue presented by this appeal, in my view, is whether an attorney who has been suspended by one of the district courts of this circuit after pleading guilty to criminal charges may represent a client before this Court. Because I believe that such representation would diminish the integrity of the appellate process, I con-elude that he may not do so. Thus, unlike the plurality, I do not believe it necessary to address the question whether DeFalco consented to Verdiramo’s continuing representation after Verdiramo appeared to decide that the indictments were meritorious and began negotiating a guilty plea. Rather, I would vacate the judgment affirming De-Falco’s conviction entered by this Court on Oсtober 8, 1976, and permit DeFalco to retain different counsel to present his appeal anew.
I.
The facts pertinent to the resolution of this appeal may be briefly summarized: On January 8, 1976, Albert DeFalco, convicted in federal court in New Jersey of conspiracy and impersonation of a federal official and sentenced to six years imprisonment,
II.
On the basis of these facts, the plurality holds that DeFalco is entitled to a new appeal unless, on remand, the district court finds that he knowingly and deliberately waived his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel by learning of Verdiramo’s plea negotiations and guilty plea and by consenting to his continued representation.
Whether there existed on DeFalco’s direct appeal emotional and psychological barriers to effective and vigorous representation is difficult for this Court or any tribunal to discern.
As I see it, the case turns on the more narrow question whether this Court should permit an attorney who has been suspended during the pendency of his client’s appeal to continue, after the suspension has been imposed, to represent his client. I would hold that we should not sanction such an arrangement.
The integrity of the Court, and of the judicial process generally, depends in large part on the qualifications of the attorneys
Prior to his suspension, Verdiramo was such an attorney. Although he was a member of the bar of the United States District Court for New Jersey,
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the judgment remanding the case to the district court for a determination whether DeFaleo knowingly and deliberately waived his right to effective assistance of counsel. Instead, I would vacate the judgment entered on October 8, 1976 that affirmed De-Falco’s conviction, and would permit him to retain different counsel for the purpose of preparing a new brief and, if the Court believes it appropriate, orally arguing De-Falco’s appeal.
. DeFalco was convicted on four counts. The district judge sentenced him to three years on count two, three years on count three to run consecutively to the term on count two, three years on count fourteen to run concurrently with the term on count two, and five years on count one to run concurrently with the terms on counts two and three.
. See plurality opinion, supra, at 134.
. As Judge Garth notes, opinion of Judge Garth, infra, at 145 n. 4, the district judge may not have comported strictly with the rules of the district court. See N.J.Dist.Ct.R. 7.
. United States v. DeFalco,
. Plurality opinion, supra, at 134.
. Id. at 136.
. Id. at 136.
. See opinion of Chief Judge Seitz, dissenting, supra, and opinion of Judge Garth, dissenting, infra.
. See opinion of Judge Rosenn, concurring, supra, at 139.
. Fed.R.App.P. 46(a) provides in part:
An attorney who has been admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States, or the highest court of a state, or another United States Court of Appeals, or a United States district court (including the district courts for the Canal Zone, Guam and the Virgin Islands), and who is of good moral character, is eligible for admission to the bar of a court of appeals.
(emphasis added).
Before an attorney may be admitted to the bar of this Court, we require that a present member of the bar certify that the applicant is “a member of the bar in good standing” of one of the courts listed in Rule 46(a), supra, and that the applicant’s “private and professional character is good.” United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Application for Admissiоn to Practice, Motion and Certificate.
. From time immemorial, it has been the practice of this Court, however, to require an attorney to be admitted to the bar of the Court before he may orally argue an appeal.
. As of the date of this writing, Verdiramo has not applied to be reinstated to the bar of the District Court for the District of New Jersey.
. Verdiramo was suspended by the district court because he had been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude.
. Verdiramo did not contest his suspension by the district court.
. Verdiramo’s professional infirmity may have resulted, as the plurality argues, in incompetent representation of DeFalco. For example, Ver-diramo did not file a reply brief. Nor is there any indication in the record that Verdiramo asked the Court for oral argument. See 3d Cir. R. 12(6)(b). Indeed, Verdiramo’s suspension would have precluded his admission to the bar of this Court and thereby prevented him from orally arguing DeFalco’s appeal. Thus, contrary to Judge Garth’s suggestion, opinion of Judge Garth, dissenting, infra, at 144, Verdira-mo’s work should not be considered complete upon his filing the appellant’s brief on May 3, 1976. He could have filed a reply to the government’s brief which was received on June 25, filed supplemental briefs if they bеcame appropriate, and, had he not been suspended, sought to argue the case before the Court on October 6. Although, as Judge Garth points out, the date for filing a reply brief or requesting oral argument had passed by the time of Verdiramo’s suspension, this Court has been liberal in permitting extensions of time for these purposes. Moreover, after Verdiramo’s suspension, another attorney filed on behalf of DeFalco a petition for rehearing as well as a petition for certiorari. When these facts are considered, it is difficult, in my view, to maintain that the task of representing DeFalco had ended prior to Verdiramo’s suspension.
. The concern expressed by Judges Garth and Sloviter that the plurality’s opinion will unfairly preclude attorneys who are under indictment and engaged in plea negotiations from practicing their profession, see opinion of Judge Garth, dissenting, infra, at 144; opinion of Judge Sloviter, dissenting, infra, at 146, would not be applicable to the approach I have taken. Because suspension or a disbarment would be the triggering device of the analysis I have made, it is not necessary for me to reach the questions that they raise.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I join Chief Judge Seitz’ persuasive dissent. I write separately because it appears to me that despite protestations to the contrary, see Plurality Op. at p. 136 and note 5, Concurring Op. at p. 138, there can be no doubt that both the plurality opinion and Judge Rosenn’s opinion promulgate a per se rule that an indicted attorney cannot effectively represent his client. Not only is such a rule inappropriate in my view, but it has potentially grave consequences which apparently were not contemplated by the plurality or, if contemplated, were ignored.
The facts of this case belie any claim that the plurality holding is, in any sense, a limited one. Verdiramo had been indicted a total of three times in the years 1974 and 1975. In early January, 1976, Verdiramo was engaged to represent DeFaleo in his appeal to this court.
In his opinion denying § 2255 relief to DeFaleo, Judge Lacey specifically found that Verdiramo’s guilty plea was “neither consummated nor contemplated until after DeFalco’s case had been submitted to the Court of Appeals (which decided no oral argument was necessary).” Govt.App. at HA n. II.
In light of these uncontested facts, it is crystal clear that the plurality’s and Judge Rosenn’s holdings are predicated on the fact of Verdiramo’s indictment alone.
Chief Judge Seitz aptly demonstrates that there is no reason to presume either conflict or prejudice in this case. I would also point to the consequence of the per se rule which flows from the plurality’s presumptions. By granting collateral relief to those persons who cannot demonstrate conflict or prejudice, cf. United States v. Timmreck,
In sum, the plurality has created a per se rule which is illogical, uncalled for and unsound. By presuming both conflict and prejudice without the need for demonstrating either, a plurality of this court has proceeded far beyond the limits which we have previously set in joint representation cases. See, e. g. United States ex rel. Hart v. Davenport,
. DeFalco’s affidavit, which is quoted in the plurality opinion, indicates that he was aware of Verdiramo’s indictment before Verdiramo had actually begun work on the appeal. DeFal-eo stated in his affidavit that he was unaware, when he retained Verdiramo, that Verdiramo had committed any acts which could lead to his disqualification. But this does not necessarily mean that DeFaleo was unaware of Verdira-mo’s indictment at that time.
Furthermore, DeFalco’s affidavit states that Verdiramo, discounting his indictment, told De-Faleo that “he would prosecute the appeal vigorously . . . .” This language indicates that Verdiramo had not yet begun working on the appeal.
. Apparently the other indictments against Verdiramo, to the extent that they had not been dismissed earlier, were merged in the plea bargain.
. This finding undercuts the factual basis for Judge Rosenn’s concurrence — that there was an actual conflict of interest because Verdira-mo was plea bargaining on his own behalf while simultaneously, representing DeFaleo on a direct appeal from the same district.
. Verdiramo was suspended from practicing before the District Court on September 28, 1976, by the same district court judge who sentenced him on that date. Inasmuch as Ver-diramo had never sought admission to the bar of this court, he could not have been suspended from this court, but only denied admission if he were to seek it. However, because no oral argument had been ordered, and because this Circuit requires only those who argue orally before it to be admitted, there would be no occasion for this issue to arise. Indeed, I have personally urged that all attorneys whose names appear upon briefs or other papers submitted to this court, be required to be members of our bar, particularly since we do not require oral argument in a substantial number of the appeals filed in this Circuit. However, I have been unsuccessful in having this position adopted.
While I draw no conclusions from the procedure utilized By the district court in suspending Verdiramo, I do observe that there is no provision for such suspension in the Rules of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Indeed, Rule 7 of those Rules, entitled “Discipline of Attorneys,” provides that the Chief Judge, who was not the sentencing judge in Verdiramo’s case, shall have charge of all disciplinary matters and that an order to show cause be issued with a hearing 30 days after service on the respondent attorney. Thus, it is evident that the sentencing judge did not comply with Rule 7. Therefore, given the fact that Verdiramo did not plead guilty until September 28, 1976, under its own Rules, the district court could not have disqualified Verdiramo until well after October 8, 1976, the date on which this court disposed of DeFalco’s appeal.
Even assuming a waiver of the local rules, or an otherwise valid suspension no prejudice could have been visited upon DeFalco by Verdi-ramo’s suspension. As noted in text, Verdira-mo had taken all actions on behalf of his client long before the date of the suspension. Thus, this is not a situation where an attorney while under a suspension or disbarment order is required to take some action on behalf of his client. In such a case, I would agree that the client would be prejudiced without more. But if the position urged by Judge Adams were carried to its logical conclusion, we would be required to vacate every .criminal case which was affirmed, after submission on the briefs, where a defense attorney had been suspended, by any court, after all appellate representation had been completed. This would be so even though those attorneys would never have had to become members of the bar of this court. I fail to see how constitutional prejudice could inhere in such cases.
. Judge Adams’s dissent has taken a different approach than that taken by the plurality. He would hold that Verdiramo’s suspension is the primary issue on this appeal, because immediately upon an attorney’s suspension by the district court, he would not permit the attorney to represent his client in this court, as such representation would not be by qualified counsel. (Opinion of Judge Adams, dissenting, supra, pp. 142, 143). However, the record reveals that Verdiramo’s representation was completed long before his suspension and therefore his representation of DeFalco cannot for that reason be deemed unqualified.
As noted, DeFalco’s appellate brief had been filed with this court’s clerk on May 3, 1976. The Government’s answering brief was filed June 25, 1976. Fed.R.App.P. 31 (with an exception not relevant here), permits the appellant to file a reply brief within 14 days thereafter, so in this case the outside date would be July 9, 1976. In any event, this Circuit’s Internal Operating Procedures provide that all briefs are to be furnished to the merits panel four full weeks prior to the panel’s sitting (I.O.P.I.A.), which here would have been September 7, 1976. Orders for oral argument are determined no later than 10 days prior to a panel sitting (I.O.P.II.A.). In this case the last date for such order would have been September 24, 1976. Moreover, although oral argument may be requested by a party, such request must be made within seven days after the filing of the appel-lee’s brief. On this record July 2, 1976 would have been the outside date. It should be noted, moreover, a motion for stay, a petition for rehearing en banc and a petition for a writ of certiorari were all filed on behalf of DeFalco after this court’s judgment order of October 8, 1976. These actions were taken by counsel other than Verdiramo.
It is therefore apparent that no actions taken by Verdiramo on DeFalco’s behalf were taken after Verdiramo’s suspension on September 28, 1976. Furthermore, the time for any theoretical further actions which could have been taken in the reрresentation of DeFalco had expired prior in time to Verdiramo’s suspension. Thus on the record of this case, the fact of Verdira-mo’s suspension is irrelevant to any issue implicating the constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel and is therefore irrelevant to any issue on this appeal.
. Although 1 agree with Chief Judge Seitz that we should remand for an evidentiary hearing as to conflict and prejudice, I cannot help but note the frailness and transparency of DeFalco’s claims which were raised before Judge Lacey and which have been presented before us. I also observe that had DeFalco, in his present endeavors, complied with our circuit’s precedent, the recent proceedings might well have been avoided. See Rivera v. United States, 477 F.2d 927 (3d Cir. 1973).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
It may be that an indicted attorney negotiating on his or her own behalf faces “inherent emotional and psychological barriers” which prevent the attorney from competing vigorously with the government on behalf of a client. No citation to authority for that proposition is given in the plurality opinion. Before an irrebuttable presumption of potential conflict is based on that assumption, some evidence of its validity is needed other than the court’s a priori belief that it is so.
Although the plurality opinion attempts to limit its holding to the specific fact situation presented, it is unlikely that the holding articulated here will not be extended to presume ineffective assistance of counsel by any indicted attorney, absent waiver. If so, the plurality, in a well-meaning attempt to protect a defendant from prejudice which may not have occurred, may perpetrate an injustice at least as severe as that which it seeks to avoid. The plurality’s holding in this case may undermine other values and rights of at least comparable stature under our Anglo-American tradition of law.
An attorney under indictment is under the same presumption of innocence as any other citizen. “Like the school teacher in Slochower v. Board of Education,
Thus the mere accusation represented by an indictment is being transformed into a presumption of incompetency or infidelity. The plurality’s unsupported presumption represents an unwarranted and dangerous derogation of the fundamental constitutional right to be presumed to be innocent until proven guilty.
. I agree with Chief Judge Seitz and Judge Garth that we should remand for an evidentia-ry hearing as to conflict and prejudice. I also agree with Judge Adams that it would have been preferable for the court to have considered the effect of the attorney’s suspension on his qualification to continue representation of the client during the pendency of an appeal. This might have obviated the necessity for reaching the difficult issues raised by the various opinions in this case.
