Stаtutes that impose stiff penalties on habitual offenders give new weight to old convictions. Because custody direсtly under these old convictions has ended, 28 U.S.C. § 2254 does not authorize a petition for a writ of habeas corpus seeking release; you can’t be released from a sentence that expired by its own terms.
Maleng v. Cook,
— U.S.-,
William E. Crank maintains that he is in the same position as Tucker: his sentence has been enhanced because of an invalid prior conviction. In 1974 Crank was conviсted in an Indiana court of second degree burglary; in 1981 Indiana convicted him of two counts of battery. Crank’s sentencе on the 1981 conviction was eight years, plus another thirty because of his prior conviction. Crank filed this petition under § 2254, аrguing that his 1974 conviction is invalid because counsel furnished defective assistance — particularly, did not appeаl or secure his consent to forego an appeal. Crank wants the same relief afforded to Tucker: a new sentence uninfluenced by the prior conviction. The difference is that before Tucker filed his petition under § 2255, he secured orders nullifying the prior convictions. Crank wants the court *1091 with jurisdiction of his current custodian to inquire into the validity of a diffеrent court’s conviction. The district judge held that Maleng prevents that inquiry, because “custody” under a sentence — the foundation for collateral attack under § 2254 — ends when the sentence ends.
Although the district court did not spell this out, the implicatiоn is that Crank’s only recourse is to seek a writ of error coram nobis vacating the 1974 conviction and return, writ in hand, to obtain collateral relief from the 1981 conviction on the theory of
Tucker.
Recurring to the jurisdiction that imposed the original penalty is a sound way to proceed. See
Johnson v. Mississippi,
A few days after the district court dismissed Crank’s petition, we concluded that a return tо the place of the original conviction is not the exclusive way to proceed.
Lowery v. Young,
Indiana asks us to overrule
Lowery
on the ground that it is inconsistent with
Maleng. Maleng
holds that when sentеnce A has expired but has been used to augment sentence B, the prisoner is “in custody” only on sentence B. The cоnsequences of sentence A for sentence B do not yield continued “custody”
on sentence
A, the Court concluded.
Lowery
holds that a person in custody on sеntence B may contend that
that
custody violates the Constitution if it was augmented because of an invalid sentence A. Thеre is no conflict between these holdings. The “custody” question in
Lowery
is identical to the “custody” question in
Tucker,
which
Maleng
reaffirmed,
That a person happens to be in custody is of course not a sufficient reason to rummage through old judgments in search of ones that may be invalid. To obtain relief under § 2254 the prisoner must show that his
current
confinement violаtes the Constitution or laws of the United States. That will be so only if the prior judgments not only are invalid but also were used to augment the current one.
Hendrix v. Lynaugh,
Vacated and Remanded.
