delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal by the Warden of the Maryland Penitentiary and the Board of Parole and Probation, (the Board), and a cross appeal by Samuel E. Palumbo, (Petitioner), who filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
On September 23, 1948, Petitioner was found guilty in the Criminal Court of Baltimore of assault with intent to rape and was sentenced to life imprisonment in the Maryland *409 Penitentiary. His sentence was later reduced to twenty years and on January 24, 1955, he was released on parole by the Board subject to certain conditions set forth in the parole order.
On P'ebruary 17, 1956, while still on parole, Petitioner was arrested and indicted for extortion and for having in his possession a deadly weapon. He was tried on these charges and acquitted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore. On February 20, 1956, the Board issued a warrant charging him with violating the conditions of his parole. Following his acquittal on the aforementioned charges, he was returned to the Maryland Penitentiary on May 8, 1956.
Petitioner employed an attorney to represent him and on May 23, 1956, Petitioner appeared before the Board to answer the charge that he had violated his parole. The Board denied his attorney’s request to appear before it at that time on the ground that the Board was not required by law to permit the attorney’s attendance at interviews and appearances before the Board, involving the revocation of parole. Later, on the day of the hearing, however, the Board met and consulted with the attorney representing the Petitioner. On July 5, 1956, the attorneys for Petitioner again appeared before the Board and presented arguments in support of Petitioner’s contention that the conditions of parole had not been violated and subsequently submitted to the Board a memorandum containing legal authorities and further arguments to support their contention that Petitioner had not violated his parole. The Board, in an opinion dated July 27, 1956, ruled that the conditions of the parole had been violated and ordered that it be revoked and Petitioner be returned to the Maryland Penitentiary to serve the remainder of the sentence originally imposed upon him, without credit for the time spent in the community under parole supervision.
Thereafter, Petitioner filed in the Baltimore City Court a petition for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus alleging that the Board acted illegally in revoking the parole without permitting him to be represented by counsel before the Board, and that none of the conditions of the parole had actually been violated. Judge Manley heard the petition, took testimony, *410 heard argument of counsel and filed a comprehensive opinion in which he held that Petitioner had been unlawfully deprived of employed counsel. In an order filed on February 15, 1957, he ordered that Petitioner was entitled to the writ; that Petitioner be discharged from the Mary laird Penitentiary subject to the conditions of the parole dated January 24, 1955; and that, as the Attorney General had stated that he intended to file an application for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals, the order be stayed pending a decision of this Court on Petitioner’s application for leave to appeal and pending a further decision on said appeal if same be allowed by this Court. He further stated in his order that the question whether the matters considered by the Board were sufficient to justify its action in revoking Petitioner’s parole, and whether the conditions set forth in the order dated January 24, 1955, for release on parole are proper, reasonable or sufficiently definite, should not be decided by him at that time. Leave to appeal from Judge Manley’s order to this Court was granted on May 28, 1957.
The Warden appeals from that part of the order which discharged the Petitioner. The Petitioner cross appeals from the failure of the trial judge to pass upon the question whether the facts before the Board were sufficient to justify a revocation of his parole.
The question for our decision is whether the attorneys employed by Petitioner should have been permitted to appear with him before the Board.
It is provided in part by Chapter 625, Acts of 1953, Code, 1957 Cumulative Supplement, Article 41, Section 91H: “Whenever a prisoner released on parole is retaken, he shall, at the next meeting of the Board of Parole and Probation at the institution designated for the return of the parolee, be given an opportunity to appear before the Board or a member thereof.”
In the case of
Murray v. Swenson,
In
Swan v.
State,
*412 Chapter 406, Section 55-A, Acts of 1939, Code, 1951, Article 41, Section 101, provided in part: “Whenever the Director of Parole and Probation shall issue a warrant for the-retaking of any paroled prisoner, he shall within a reasonable-time thereafter conduct at any convenient place a hearing to-determine whether or not the parole issued to such paroled prisoner shall be revoked.” Although the word “hearing” was used in that Act, while the words “an opportunity to appear” are used in the present statute, as aforesaid, we do not consider that this change was intended to take away the right of Petitioner to be represented by counsel employed by him.
In
Avery v. Studley,
Among cases which have reflected the view that a necessary ingredient of a fair hearing is the right to be represented by counsel are
People ex rel. Mayor of New York v. Nichols, 79
N. Y. 582;
People ex rel. Brady v. O’Brien, 9
App. Div. 428, 41 N. Y. S. 529;
People ex rel. Ellett v. Flood,
In a recent article entitled “The Right to a Hearing in English Administrative Law”, 68 Harvard Law Review 569,. 578, it is stated: “Where, however, he is held to be entitled to appear in person, there is authority for maintaining that he *413 is entitled to be represented by agent or by counsel, except perhaps before a forum of a private organization.” See also Regina v. Assessment Commission of St. Mary Abbotts, [1891] 1. Q. B. 378.
The case of
State of Delaware v. Boggs,
49 Del. (10 Terry) 277,
We are of opinion that Petitioner was entitled to be represented at the hearing by counsel employed by him and that he is entitled to a further hearing before the Board with such counsel. Petitioner is to remain in custody until such hearing. We do not intimate that the same rule would apply in an application for parole.
As another hearing is to be conducted and as we have no knowledge of what will be presented at that hearing, it would be premature to pass upon the question as to whether the parole should have been revoked.
Order affirmed, costs to be paid by the mayor and city council of Baltimore.
