A jury convicted Poe, a 22-year-old indigent, of housebreaking and larceny. On August 27, 1963, the trial judge
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sentenced him to imprisonment for two to six years. One year later the judge granted, after a hearing, a motion of new counsel to set aside the conviction and sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Poe v. United States,
The judge found the following undisputed facts. Poe told his court-appointed counsel before trial that he wished to take the stand and counsel agreed. No other defense was available. Counsel “understandably was unprepared for the situation that developed suddenly at the end of the Government’s case” when the judge ruled that statements imputed to Poe were not admissible in evidence. Counsel was uncertain whether the government could use the statements for impeachment purposes if Poe testified. Counsel asked the judge to rule on this question. The judge refused.. It was late in the day and counsel, “believing that the court wanted to conclude the case and submit it to the jury that afternoon,
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felt impelled to make a quick decision on whether to put [Poe] on the stand."
We quote from the judge’s Conclusions of Law: “there is an obligation on the part of both
the court
and trial counsel to inform the accused of his right to testify, if he so desires. Further, it is the
duty of both
to assure that the exercise of this basic right by the accused is a free and meaningful decision. * * * The applicable law would have permitted [Poe] to take the stand and deny all of the elements of the crimes charged in the indictment without giving leave to the Government to use the inadmissible statements.”
As the judge said, “The applicable law would have permitted the petitioner to take the stand and deny all of the elements of the crimes charged in the indictment without giving leave to the Government to use the inadmissible statements. In Walder v. United States,
The trial judge found that appellant was deprived of a fair trial because he was misinformed as to the consequences of taking the stand to deny the charges against him. It is highly unusual and significant when a trial judge concludes that a defendant was unfairly convicted before him by reason of the action or inaction of the judge or counsel, or both. We should not disturb this conclusion unless it is clearly wrong. We cannot say that it is. Neither the facts we have summarized nor any called to our attention disprove the trial judge’s scrupulous conclusion.
Our opinion is no broader than our decision. We deal solely with the extraordinary situation in which the trial judge himself has concluded that a defendant did not have a fair trial. We do not suggest that Poe was deprived of effective representation. The trial judge’s conclusion that Poe did not have a fair trial is not necessarily and clearly wrong because the judge weighed, as only one factor in relation to others, the circumstance that but for counsel’s mis *641 taken impression of the law he would have put the defendant on the stand. Counsel has chosen to disclose his reason. If he had not disclosed it, or if he had indicated that his reason was a weakness in Poe’s personality or a bad record, neither the District Court nor this court suggests that counsel’s décision could have been questioned in any proceeding in any court. Counsel therefore remain free to keep defendants from testifying whenever counsel see fit. Any suggestion to the contrary is chimerical.
The judge’s conclusion that Poe was deprived of a fair trial does not, as the government contends, conflict with Diggs v. Welch,
Affirmed.
It is with some reluctance that I join with my brethren in their disposition of this case.
I do not think that counsel’s representation was inadequate or ineffective, nor do I think the judge conducted the trial in such an improper manner that it rendered the conviction constitutionally defective and vulnerable to collateral attack. However, it seems clear that this is a most unusual case, of a type not likely to arise again, and that the majority has based its affirmance on very narrow grounds. Under the circumstances I am unwilling to vote to set aside the trial judge’s conclusion that appellee was convicted without a fair trial.
Notes
. Circuit Judge J. Skelly Wright, sitting by designation pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 291(c).
. As the government points out, “Counsel was fully justified in so thinking. Twice during the trial the court indicated its desire to conclude the case that evening.
On the second of these occasions, just before recessing to enable counsel to confer with appellee about whether or not the latter should take the stand, the court stated, ‘If counsel have any requested instructions I would like to see them because we are going to send the case to the jury tonight.’ ”
. In the view we take of the case it is immaterial that the judge added:
“Where the defense is substantially weakened because of the unawareness on the part of defense counsel of a rule of law basic to the case, the accused is not given the effective representation guaranteed him by the Constitution.”233 F.Supp. at 178 .
