Williams v. Georgia

*393Mr. Justice Clark, with whom Mr. Justice Reed and Mr. Justice Minton join,

dissenting.

To borrow a phrase from Mr. Justice Holmes, the opinion of the Court “just won’t wash.” While I, too, am not deaf to the pleas of the condemned, I cannot ignore the long-established precedents of this Court. The proper course, as has always been followed here, is to recognize and honor reasonable state procedures as valid exercises of sovereign power. We have done so in hundreds of capital cases since I have been on the Court, and I do not think that even the sympathetic facts of this case should make us lose sight of the limitations on this Court’s powers.

To see just how far the Court has “stretched” here, it is only necessary to compare today’s majority opinion with Patterson v. Alabama, 294 U. S. 600, the decision relied on to support the Court’s remand. In that case, Patterson and one Norris had been charged in a common indictment. Prior to trial, both interposed constitutional claims of systematic exclusion of Negroes from the jury. Patterson, however, failed to file his bill of exceptions within the time prescribed by state law. The Alabama Supreme Court decided the separate appeals on the same day, denying Norris’ claim on the merits, Norris v. State, 229 Ala. 226, 156 So. 556, while dismissing Patterson’s case as out of time. 229 Ala. 270, 156 So. 567. This Court thereafter reversed Norris’ conviction. 294 U. S. 587. In Patterson, however, the Court was confronted with an independent and adequate state ground which presented an insuperable obstacle to reversal. Nevertheless, it was quite possible that had the Alabama court realized the validity of the objection it had overruled on the merits in Norris, it might have regarded the whole complexion of the case as different and chosen not to rest on a narrow procedural ground in Patterson. This Court, *394therefore, remanded the case to the Alabama Supreme Court for reconsideration of its decision in the light of the important intervening factor.

Note the magnitude of the “important intervening factor” here and just how it changes the complexion of the ease. The majority relies on the fact that the State “[o]n oral argument here . . . agreed that the use of yellow and white tickets in this case was, in light of this Court’s decision in Avery, a denial of equal protection, so that a new trial would be required but for the failure to challenge the array.” The .Solicitor General of Fulton County, the Court reasons, “had urged [by brief] before the Georgia Supreme Court that no denial of equal protection was involved, and that court may well have been influenced by the contention.”

The Solicitor General of Fulton County presented no oral argument here. Only the State Attorney General, whose sole contention before the Georgia court was that the “question [was] not ground for extraordinary motion for new trial,” was represented before this Court. The majority's “important intervening factor,” therefore, is that an Assistant Attorney General of Georgia has now expressed an opinion on a question his superior did not reach in his brief before the Georgia Supreme Court. Since good advocacy would dictate that the Attorney General argue this point before the Georgia court had he thought it substantial, I do not think his office underwent any great change of mind in the interim between that argument and this. On argument, after questioning on the point — which we note was not one of the questions he raised — the Assistant Attorney General stated only what the Attorney General’s brief below had intimated. In any event, I am completely at a loss to understand what difference it makes what was argued in the Georgia Supreme Court or conceded here, since the Georgia *395Supreme Court clearly stated that, but for the procedural objection, Avery would govern:

“Defendant in his motion sets forth a practice which has been condemned by this court and the Supreme Court of the United States. However, any question to be considered by this court must be raised at the time and in the manner required under the rules of law and practice and procedure in effect in this State.” 210 Ga. 665, 669, 82 S. E. 2d 217, 219.

The majority’s other ground for remand is even weaker, relying on a phrase from the Attorney General’s brief before the Georgia court — “we do not say that he [Williams] does not have some remedy at law.” The ground asserted is that in the light of this “intimat[ion]” of the Attorney General, Georgia’s court “should have an opportunity to designate the appropriate remedy.” If Williams has a remedy, he can certainly pursue it as well without this remand; and if he has no other state remedy, it is even clearer that nothing is to be gained by the Court’s disposition of the case.

Another difference between this case and Patterson is at once evident. In Patterson, the Court, through Chief Justice Hughes, said:

“We are not convinced that the court, in the presence of such a determination of constitutional right, confronting the anomalous and grave situation which would be created by a reversal of the judgment against Norris, and an affirmance of the judgment of death in the companion case of Patterson, who had asserted the same right, . . . would have considered itself powerless to entertain the bill of exceptions or otherwise to provide appropriate relief. ... At least the state court should have an opportunity to examine its powers in the light of the situation which *396has now developed. We should not foreclose that opportunity.”1 (Italics supplied.) 294 U. S., at 606-607.

In this case, unlike Patterson, the Court determines the state law itself. We have always insisted that, if possible, state courts be permitted to decide difficult and uncertain questions of state law before the federal courts do so, even to the point of having the federal courts decline jurisdiction to await the State’s ruling. Cf. Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 319 U. S. 315. To me nothing could be clearer than that a state question arising in a case which is to be remanded to the state court should be left open for resolution by the State without the pressure of a decision by this Court.

Furthermore, I agree with Mr. Justice Minton that the majority has misconstrued Georgia’s law. As I read the state law, the decisions indicate that the Georgia courts have no power to hear and determine petitioner’s extraordinary motion on the merits. Ever since Jordan v. State, 22 Ga. 545 (1857), the Georgia law has been that the defendant must challenge the array when the panel is “put upon” him and not thereafter. And since it is too late to raise such a challenge in a motion for new trial, Moon v. State, 68 Ga. 687 (1882), certainly the objection cannot be made in an extraordinary motion coming, as here, seven months after verdict. See also Cumming v. *397State, 155 Ga. 346, 117 S. E. 2d 378 (1923). In fact, as late as 1941, Georgia’s highest court rejected a claim of discrimination in the selection of jurors “for the reason that an objection of this kind should have been presented in a proper way at the trial, and upon failure to do so it is to be considered waived.” Wilcoxon v. Aldredge, 192 Ga. 634, 637, 15 S. E. 2d 873, 876. This was a capital case, and it was conceded that the prisoner’s claim had substantive validity. But even in those extreme circumstances the Georgia Supreme Court did not consider the objection available after trial.

The Georgia Court of Appeals has consistently taken the same position. In Ivey v. State, 4 Ga. App. 828, 831, 62 S. E. 565 (1908), and Williams v. State, 31 Ga. App. 173, 174, 120 S. E. 131, 132 (1923), it was held that “If he [defendant] does not challenge the array, no other method of complaint as to the deficiency of the panel is open to him.”

In reaching the opposite conclusion, i. e., that the Georgia courts have discretionary authority to consider the petitioner’s untimely objection in the circumstances of this case, the majority relies on two factors. First, the Georgia court in the instant case, after holding that petitioner had waived his objection by failing to raise it at the proper time, went on to find that the proffered justification was inadequate as a matter of pleading and as a matter of fact. But it is difficult to see how this separately numbered alternative ground can impair the court’s other decision that, excuse or no excuse, petitioner had waived his claim “once and for all.” Second, it is urged that the Georgia courts frequently exercise their discretion in favor of untimely objections directed at individual jurors — “challenges to the poll” as they are called in Georgia. The majority cites no case, however, where such discretion was exercised on a challenge to the array, and not one of the majority’s individual juror cases is men*398tioned, much less distinguished, in the Georgia court’s opinion in this case. Since courts usually distinguish apparent conflicts, it is fair to assume that the Georgia court considered the two types of challenge to be governed by entirely different rules. This conclusion is buttressed both by the distinction drawn between these types under Georgia law and by the differing considerations controlling their allowance.

Challenges to the array are “directed to the whole group collectively for causes in the nature of irregularities in the form, manner and making up of the panel.” Davis and Shulman, Georgia Practice and Procedure, p. 454. Challenges to the poll are “directed solely for objections which are inherent in the individual jurors,” Georgia Practice and Procedure, supra, at 455. Circumstances require that challenges to the array be made before trial. If permitted thereafter — and upheld — the judgments in many, if not all, other cases tried before juries obtained from the same panel would be subject to like attack. For example, illegality in the array summoned for March 9, 1953, from which the Williams jury was selected, might result in the overturning of all verdicts returned in the county during their tenure. This would be both expensive and time-wasting, as well as disruptive of the proper administration of justice. Hence Georgia requires a challenge to be made before trial in order to give the judge an opportunity to correct the irregularity. On the other hand, a challenge to a petit juror or to the poll merely affects the one verdict of that jury of twelve rather than all the verdicts of the panel of one hundred and twenty.

The majority dwells on the extreme circumstances of this case, discusses in great detail the Georgia cases affording discretionary relief in less strong cases involving individual jurors, and warns that “we are not concluded from assuming jurisdiction and deciding whether the state court action in the particular circumstances is, in *399effect, an avoidance of the federal right.” Although I find it difficult to ascertain exactly what ground the majority could give for striking down the Georgia result, it is clear to me that no theory ever before accepted by this Court could lead to reversal.

It is elementary that this Court has no jurisdiction over a case here from a state court where there is an independent and adequate state ground supporting the conclusion reached below.2 A purported state ground is not independent and adequate in two instances. First, where the circumstances give rise to an inference that the state court is guilty of an evasion — an interpretation of state law with the specific intent to deprive a litigant of a federal right.3 Second, where the state law, honestly applied though it may be, and even dictated by the precedents, throws such obstacles in the way of enforcement of federal rights that it must be struck down as unreasonably interfering with the vindication of such rights.4

It is obvious that the Georgia court has not been guilty of “evasion.” Although the Georgia court’s interpretation of state law may not be free from doubt, it is not possible to say that the Georgia decision is without “fair support” in the previous cases.5 I regard it also as note*400worthy that Presiding Justice Wyatt wrote this opinion for the Georgia Supreme Court. It was he who, in the Georgia court's decision in Avery, said in dissent:

“I cannot agree with the ruling [as to discrimination] for the reason, in my opinion, that this practice is conclusive evidence of discrimination, and for that reason the case should be reversed.” 209 Ga. 116, 131, 70 S. E. 2d 716, 726.

In this ruling he went further in protecting the integrity of the jury system than we ourselves thought necessary. Compare Avery v. Georgia, 345 U. S. 559, 562-563 (petitioner established “a prima facie case of discrimination” which the State failed to rebut). One who had so acted would hardly be attempting to evade the very federal right he had previously upheld so strongly.

*401Similarly, the Georgia procedure is not unduly burdensome. The majority concedes that “[a] state procedural rule which forbids the raising of federal questions at late stages in the case, or by any other than a prescribed method, has been recognized as a valid exercise of state power.” Even if the majority could somehow strike down the Georgia court's holding that it lacked discretion, it is not enough to show that Georgia has the power and refuses to exercise it. There is no case to support the implication that the exercise of discretion against a federal right is, without more, an evasion. See Brown v. Allen, 344 U. S. 443, 484-486. Indeed, it would seem that there would have to be a withholding of discretion for the -purpose of depriving Williams of a federal right. There is nothing even approaching that here.

A state court’s decision cannot be overturned if any one of the grounds supporting it is independent and adequate. There is one ground here which appears so unassailable that the majority does not even attack it. Georgia law makes a showing of due diligence on the part of the movant a prerequisite to granting extraordinary motions for new trial. The state court in this case found that due diligence had not been properly pleaded, and that the facts of which the Georgia court could take notice conclusively demonstrated that diligence was indeed completely lacking.

On the first ground, there is clearly substantial support in the prior state decisions. Petitioner’s attorney stated that “he did not know of the facts [establishing the constitutional claim] before the trial and before the verdict in said case, and that the same could not have been discovered by him in the exercise of ordinary diligence.” It had been held in at least four prior Georgia decisions that such conclusory pleading of diligence was inadequate to support a motion for a new trial or an extraordinary action for the same. Taylor v. State, 132 Ga. 235, 63 S. E. 1116; *402King v. State, 174 Ga. 432, 163 S. E. 168; Redding v. State, 183 Ga. 704, 189 S. E. 514; Edge v. State, 200 Ga. 257, 36 S. E. 2d 673.6

On the second ground, the Georgia opinion speaks for itself:

“Furthermore, the facts and circumstances contradict the statements made in the affidavits. When the instant case came on for trial in Fulton Superior Court on March 10, 1953, the case of Avery v. State had been tried in the same county, and that case had been affirmed by this court on April 14,1952, and was pending in the United States Supreme Court. . . . The opinion of this court affirming the lower court in the Avery case sets out fully the methods and practices employed in the selection and empaneling of juries in Fulton County, including the practice of putting the names of white jurors on white slips of paper and the names of colored jurors on yellow slips of paper. Due diligence would certainly have required the defendant and his attorney to make themselves familiar with the opinions of this court on the question now raised.” 7 210 Ga. 665, 668, 82 S. E. 2d 217, 219.

*403It is evident on this record that, even if the Georgia court is deemed to have discretion in this matter, it could adhere to its present decision and not be reversed in this Court without a major departure from our doctrines requiring respect for state procedural rules affording a “reasonable opportunity” to present federal questions. Cf. Parker v. Illinois, 333 U. S. 571.

Had the state court possessed the power, it might have been desirable to have permitted petitioner to adjudicate his substantial constitutional claim instead of sending him to his death because his attorney failed to take advantage of the usual opportunity afforded by the state law. On the other hand, had the jury acquitted petitioner, he would not have complained about any unconstitutionality in its selection. A State may be influenced by the unfairness of allowing the litigant who remains silent two chances for acquittal while giving the diligent litigant only one. And orderly administration of the laws often imposes hardships upon those who have not properly preserved their rights. In any event, the resolution of these conflicting interests should be a matter wholly for the Georgia courts. See Herndon v. Georgia, 295 U. S. 441.

The Court in Patterson was more scrupulous about keeping its opinions on state procedure to itself. Here, the Court says:

“Fair regard ... for the constitutional commands binding on all courts compels us to reject the assumption that the courts of Georgia would allow this man to go to his death as the result of a conviction secured from a jury which the State admits was unconstitutionally impaneled.”

This characterization is especially unfortunate in view of the fact that the state court, with full knowledge of all the facts, has already refused to order a new trial. See page 403, infra.

Cf. the statement of the majority: “But the fact that we have jurisdiction does not compel us to exercise it.”

This charge upon the integrity of a State Supreme Court is so serious that this Court has restricted such findings to cases where •the state court decision lacked “fair support” in the state law. See Rogers v. Alabama, 192 U. S. 226. Cf. Fox Film Corp. v. Muller, 296 U. S. 207, 209.

See Davis v. Wechsler, 263 U. S. 22; Iowa-Des Moines National Bank v. Bennett, 284 U. S. 239, 247. Cf. Missouri v. Gehner, 281 U. S. 313 (1930).

The cases cited by the majority are not helpful here. In Rogers v. Alabama, 192 U. S. 226, the Alabama court struck a federal claim of discrimination on the ground that the pleading was prolix. The pleading was two pages in length. It goes without saying that the *400State was evading the issue. In Abie State Bank v. Bryan, 282 U. S. 765, the bank’s constitutional plea that conditions had so changed as to make a state statute confiscatory was stricken on grounds of estoppel, the bank having acquiesced in the regulation for several years. Chief Justice Hughes held that “earlier compliance . . . does not forfeit the right of protest . . . .” 282 U. S., at 776. In view of the changed circumstances, the state ground unreasonably interfered with the vindication of a federal right. In Pierre v. Louisiana, 306 U. S. 354, there was a timely objection, on federal grounds, to the systematic exclusion of Negroes from the grand jury list. This Court first rejected the State’s claim that the illegal composition was harmless error, and then affirmed the power of this Court to make an independent investigation of the facts. In Urie v. Thompson, 337 U. S. 163, 172, Mr. Justice Rutledge in an FELA case held that, since the final judgment rule had prevented any earlier consideration by this Court, local practice rules could not bar this Court’s consideration of “all substantial federal questions actually determined in earlier stages of the litigation.” And in Vandalia R. Co. v. Indiana ex rel. South Bend, 207 U. S. 359, 367, Mr. Justice Brewer said, “Even if it be conceded that the conclusion of the Supreme Court of the State is not free from doubt, there is nothing to justify a suspicion that there was any intent to avoid the Federal questions. . . .” We agree that this is the test here.

Smith v. Georgia, 2 Ga. App. 574, 59 S. E. 311, cited by the majority, is not to the contrary. There the court recognized that due diligence is required in making an extraordinary motion for new trial, and held, consistent with the Georgia practice of treating the various objections on an individual basis, that the requirement of ordinary diligence had been satisfied where counsel had interrogated the subsequently disqualified juror concerning his relation with the prosecutor and had obtained a negative answer.

On May 26, 1953, on its front page, the Atlanta Constitution ran a complete story of the reversal of Avery’s case here. It is interesting to note that an article in the same paper pointed out “that old cases in which convictions were obtained under the two-color jury selection system could not be reopened because objections must have been made at the time of the trial.” The same day, the Atlanta *403Journal carried a story that Fulton County was “moving to ban different colored jury slips.” The subhead on the article said, “Court ruling against practice draws prediction of action.” This article concluded with a paragraph:

“The change to all-white slips will have no effect on cases already adjudicated but will affect cases now in progress where the point of different colored jury slips has been raised.”