dissenting.
If the Court is right in holding that George Parker’s five-year quest for justice must end ignominiously in the limbo of mootness, surely something is badly askew in our system of criminal justice. I am convinced the Court is wrong. Even assuming.arguendo that we could not enter a nunc pro tunc order, I believe that we still would be able to grant relief.
We have here the case of a man who was convicted of a felony in flagrant disregard of his constitutional right to assistance of counsel. Since the Court terms his claim an “impressive” one, lengthy discussion of its merits is unnecessary. Still, it is not amiss briefly to describe what it is the Court here declines to decide.
In 1954, petitioner was tried in the District Court of Moore County, Texas, on a charge of forging a check. He was then 67 years of age and, respondent concedes, in “failing health.” The judge refused to appoint counsel to represent him.1 He was convicted'and received a sen*578tence of seven years. To any lawyer’s eye — and it is not at all clear that the restriction to lawyers is warranted — his trial was a sham. Although the testimony directly bearing on the issue of forgery was not strong,2 petitioner’s conviction is hardly surprising, for the prosecution’s case consisted in large part of a potent mélange of assorted types of inadmissible evidence — introduced without objection by petitioner.3 But petitioner suffered as much from errors of omission as he did from errors of commission. Petitioner now alleges — and respondent does not deny — that the victim of the alleged forgery was *579petitioner's mother-in-law and that the principal prosecution witness was his brother-in-law, a “bitter enemy”; 4 but petitioner introduced no evidence to this effect at the trial.5 Nor is this strange, for petitioner’s halting attempts to defend himself disclose his utter ineptness in the courtroom. After the prosecution had examined its witnesses — unhampered by searching cross-examination— petitioner conducted what respondent terms “a premeditated type of defense which might have been successful on another jury.”
Item:
“Direct examination by Mr. Parker:
“Q. Ted, you go ahead and tell the court about my condition and how you have known me — tell the jury?
“A. Well, do I understand it right?
“Q. Huh?
“A. You mean your physical condition, so forth and so on ?
“Q. Yes. Just go ahead and tell the jury about what you know?
“A. Well, his physical condition, according to everything, is bad or, at least, the doctors say so, you know. I couldn’t — as far as the checks, I don’t *580know; but, I do know that he needs medical care. Is that what you meant, George?
“Q. Yes, I guess so; just go ahead and tell them what you know about me. That is all — only—that is all I want to ask — I am just leaving mine up to them, you know?
“The Court. Do you know what he is driving at— what he wants?
“A. Well, if I understood it, the condition, you know—
“The Court. That is up to you too.
“[The Prosecutor]. You got anything else?
“Mr. Parker. No. Go ahead and ask him.”
Item:
“The Court. Are you through?
“Mr. Parker. Judge, here are some letters I would like for the jury to see.
“The Court. We can’t give the letters to the jury.
“Mr. Parker. For — from the doctors?
“The Court. No, sir.
“Mr. Parker. That is all.”
This is enough to give the flavor of the “trial.” It is difficult to recall a case which more clearly illustrates the helplessness of the layman when called upon to defend himself against a criminal charge. Judge, now Chief Judge, Rives, who dissented from the judgment of the Court of Appeals, was clearly correct in stating:
“Upon such a record, it would appear that Parker’s efforts to defend himself were little short of farcical. In view of the small amounts of the checks, his family connection with the Quattlebaums, and the open way in which the checks were payable to and endorsed by Parker, it is quite possible that he may have had a defense to the charge of forgery, or at least that miti*581gating circumstances might have been shown. The record . . . shows that he suffered badly from the lack of assistance of counsel, and tends to corroborate his claim of extreme illness.” 258 F. 2d 937, 944.
But George Parker’s unhappy experience with the law was not destined to end with the trial. Instead, time after time the courts have turned aside his applications for redress. There has hardly been a minute in the past five years that Parker’s case has not been before a court. He was convicted in November, 1954, and on March 23, 1955, the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas affirmed his conviction in a brief opinion. 276 S. W. 2d 533. Parker then applied to the Court of Criminal Appeals for habeas corpus, but his petition was denied on September 21,1955, without a hearing. On February 27, 1956, this Court denied certiorari.6 350 U. S. 971. Next, on May 31, 1956, Parker turned to the Federal District Court and sought relief by way of habeas corpus. The district judge denied his petition on June 24, 1957, after his thrice-repeated request for a lawyer had been thrice-ignored. The Court of Appeals affirmed on August 29, 1958. 258 F. 2d 937. Parker petitioned for certiorari on October 24, 1958; and this Court granted the petition on March 2, 1959. 359 U. S. 924. At last an attorney was appointed to represent Parker’s interests. 359 U. S. 951. Then, on June 6, 1959, Parker was released from the penitentiary— almost five years after his conviction, three years after he had applied to the Federal District Court for relief, more *582than seven months after he had petitioned this Court for certiorari, and more than three months after certiorari had been granted. Now that petitioner has dutifully fulfilled the requirement that he exhaust — an apt word- — all other remedies,7 he is told that it is too late for the Court to act.
I.
The Court does not suggest that this strange result is a happy one. But it appears to believe it is bound by precedent to the view that, because of the nature of the habeas corpus remedy, “it is a condition upon this Court’s jurisdiction . . . that the petitioner be in custody when that jurisdiction can become effective.” Consequently, the Court does not express any view on the mootness question considered de novo. Since, as will appear, I do not regard the decisions upon which the Court relies as at all decisive, I am obliged to consider whether the habeas corpus statute, 28 U. S. C. §§ 2241-2254, entitles us to pass upon the merits of this controversy. I conclude that it does.
It is quite true that the statute provides that the writ of habeas corpus will not issue unless the applicant is “in custody.” 28 U. S. C. § 2241 (c). But the statute does not impose this same restriction upon the grant of relief. Rather, the federal courts are given a broad grant of authority to “dispose of the matter as law and justice require.” 28 U. S. C. § 2243. In the case at bar, the “in custody” prerequisite to issuance of the writ is no longer relevant, because the function of the writ — to provide and to facilitate inquiry into the validity of the applicant’s claim — has already been fully served.8 The district judge *583ordered that petitioner’s application be heard upon affidavits, depositions, and the record of the trial,9 and the latter alone conclusively substantiates petitioner’s allegations. Thus all that remains is to determine what form of relief should be given. Under the circumstances of this case, “law- and justice require” that the patent invalidity of Parker’s conviction be proclaimed.
Granting Parker relief would not only comport with the statutory mandate, but would also be in keeping with the spirit of the writ. Habeas corpus, with an ancestry reaching back to Roman Law,10 has been over the centuries a means of obtaining justice and maintaining the rule of law when other procedures have been unavailable or ineffective. The early years of its development in England were distinguished by the role it played in securing enforcement of the guarantees of Magna Charta.11 But even the Great Writ was not secure from the pressures of the English Crown, and perhaps the most effective method *584of eviscerating the remedy proved to be procrastination.12 Abuses such as the delay of over four months in the famous Jenkes case finally caused Parliament to enact the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, 31 Car. II, c. 2, which required returns on the writ to be made within specified periods of time and which proscribed the judiciary’s tactic of refusing to issue the writ during “Vacation-Time.” 13 The summary nature of the remedy thus became es*585tablished, and our own statutory writ has this same stamp.14
The general problem we confront in the case at bar, then, is hardly novel in the history of the writ — an intolerable delay in affording justice and the absence of any other remedy.15 The causes, to be sure, have changed with the times. Instead of the arbitrariness of judges, Parker has had to contend with the time-consuming nature of our system of appellate review and collateral attack. We cannot expect history to tell us exactly how to cope with this problem, because it simply did not exist in the early days of the common-law writ, when there was little if any appellate review of the then relatively simple habeas corpus proceedings.16 But history does provide general guidance. This guidance is incompatible with the idea that the writ designed as an effective agent of justice has become fossilized so that old problems, once thought to have been solved, are now insurmountable because they have taken slightly new forms. The Court has not hesitated to expand the scope of habeas corpus far beyond its traditional inquiry into matters of technical “jurisdiction.” The statute permitted this adaptation in the interests of “law and justice,” and the Court has responded to the demands of that compelling standard. We have the same *586latitude in this case, and the character of the writ does not require us to impose upon applicants what will amount to a “time-is-of-the-essence” strait jacket.
II.
The Court apparently believes that these considerations are foreclosed by prior decisions. The fact is, however, that while the writ-remedy argument seems never to have been squarely presented to this Court, the weight of authority favors petitioner.
In Pollard v. United States, 352 U. S. 354, the Court was confronted with a mootness question identical to that presented here. Pollard involved a collateral attack upon a conviction by way of motion under 28 U. S. C. § 2255. After certiorari had been granted, the petitioner was released from prison. Nevertheless, this Court held that the case was not moot. But, just as the habeas corpus statute provides that the writ '“shall not extend to a prisoner unless . . . [h]e is in custody,” 17 so too is § 2255 available only to a “prisoner in custody under sentence of a court.” Moreover, as this Court has noted, § 2255 affords the same relief as habeas corpus, with the difference, which is not material here, that a § 2255 motion is filed in the sentencing court instead of in the court of the district of incarceration.18 Consequently, if Pollard's *587claim was not moot, it is difficult to perceive why Parker’s claim is.
The Court recognizes the difficulty posed by Pollard, and solves it by stating th.at this aspect of Pollard was predicated upon an “unconsidered assumption” which was overruled by Heflin v. United States, 358 U. S. 415, “after full deliberation.” But Heflin did not purport to discard Pollard, and there is no inherent inconsistency between these two decisions. In Heflin, the Court decided that a prisoner could not secure § 2255 relief from a sentence which he had not yet begun to serve because he was not yet “in custody” pursuant to that sentence. But the mootness problem dealt with in Pollard was not involved in Heflin. A construction of § 2255 similar to the construction of the habeas corpus statute proposed above would harmonize Heflin and Pollard; it is only the Court’s opinion in this case which tends to make them irreconcilable. Thus the Court’s argument comes full circle.
Moreover, it is curious that the Court, in dealing with the cases upon which it relies, does not exhibit the same attitude that is reflected by its treatment of Pollard. The three cases which constitute the principal basis for the Court’s judgment are Weber v. Squier, 315 U. S. 810; Tornello v. Hudspeth, 318 U. S. 792; and Zimmerman v. Walker, 319 U. S. 744.19 While in Pollard the Court ren*588dered judgment after plenary consideration, in these three cases the Court simply denied certiorari, and it did so in terse orders without benefit of briefs or oral arguments. The opinion of the Court in the case at bar hardly seems consistent with this Court’s oft-repeated warnings concerning the lack of significance of denials of certiorari. Furthermore, when the records in Weber, Tornello, and Zimmerman are examined, it becomes unmistakably clear that the orders in those cases were not based upon the theory now espoused by the Court.
Weber was the first of the trio. There the petitioner was paroled while his petition for certiorari was pending, and the Court thereupon denied the petition on grounds of mootness. Since a lower court had issued a writ of habeas corpus prior to the parole, Weber would be directly in point if the Court’s order had rested upon the premise that petitioner, as a parolee, was no longer in custody within the meaning of the habeas corpus statute. But the respondent did not suggest that the petition be denied on this ground. Rather, his sole argument was that the case was moot because the petitioner was no longer in his custody. The only case respondent cited, Van Meter v. Sanford, 99 F. 2d 511, held that a habeas corpus action becomes moot when the respondent loses custody and is thereby disabled from complying with the order which might be necessary upon remand — in Weber’s case, an order of discharge. It was this theory the Court adopted in denying certiorari because petitioner was “no longer in the respondent’s custody.” 20 It is instructive to note *589that the language of the Weber order21 is identical to the language the Court used shortly thereafter to dispose of a case on grounds of mootness where the petitioner had been transferred from one custodian to another, but where he was still in the penitentiary. See United States ex rel. Innes v. Crystal, 319 U. S. 755. Whatever may be said of the Weber theory of mootness,22 it is irrelevant to the instant case, where it would be unnecessary to issue an order of discharge.
The second case discussed by the Court is Tornello v. Hudspeth, supra, where a petition for certiorari was *590denied because “petitioner has been pardoned by the President and ... is no longer in respondent’s custody.” Since the Court used the verbal formula of Weber and Innes, and since the only case cited was Weber, it is evident that the Court relied entirely upon the Weber theory so far as the custody question was concerned. It is unfortunate that the Court did not consider the significance of the fact that there was no custody at all in Tor-nello and that hence no order of discharge would have been necessary. But the Court’s failure to examine this aspect of the mootness problem robs the case of controlling authority. No doubt the Court’s uncritical application of the Weber rule is attributable not only to the fact that the parties did not discuss the mootness issue at all, but also to the Court’s reliance upon the full and unconditional pardon as an alternative ground of mootness.23
Not surprisingly, perhaps, the order in the third case, Zimmerman v. Walker, supra, relied solely upon Weber and Tomello, and repeated the “released from the respondent’s custody” phrase. In that case, respondent filed a suggestion of mootness in which he mentioned the total lack of custody, but in which he relied primarily upon the ground which had proved successful in the past — the absence of custody by him. But it is unnecessary to explore this case further, inasmuch as no writ or rule to show cause had ever issued. Since custody is a prerequisite for issuance of the writ, the case was clearly moot; but it is just as clearly irrelevant.
Orders of this character do not provide a solid basis for disposition of Parker’s case. The “law and justice” standard of the statute does.
*591III.
The concurring opinion raises another objection to granting Parker relief. While the Court’s opinion simply construes the statute, the concurring opinion construes the Constitution. The Court’s opinion would not foreclose Congress from authorizing relief in a case like Parker’s; the concurring opinion would. While the Court’s decision is based on the theory that nothing can be done for Parker .because of the nature of the relief authorized by the habeas corpus statute, the concurrence is grounded upon the view that Parker has such an insubstantial interest in securing an adjudication that his claim could not present a “case or controversy” under Art. Ill, § 2 of the Constitution, regardless of what relief a statute were to authorize.24
One could take exception to the factual premise of this conclusion. The evidence of record which is relied upon to establish the existence and number of Parker’s convictions leaves much to be desired,25 and there is nothing to *592indicate whether Parker has been relieved of the civil consequences of any of these convictions under statutes designed to mitigate the effect of civil disability laws.26 Moreover, Harwell v. Morris, 143 S. W. 2d 809 (Tex. Civ. App.), the decision which the concurring opinion cites as establishing that Parker’s convictions outside of Texas— if still effective — would deprive him of his voting rights in Texas, is not persuasive authority. Not only was the decision not reviewed by the Texas Supreme Court, but it was rendered in the context of an election dispute, where the real issue was not the impact upon the voter but the impact upon the candidates. Cf. Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263, 303. In any event, even conceding the accuracy of the assumption with respect to Parker’s prior convictions and the Harwell issue, it is entirely possible that the conviction in this case would operate to augment the punishment should Parker ever again be adjudged guilty of a crime in Texas or in any other State.
Aside from these considerations, however, there is something fundamentally wrong with the theory that mootness should turn upon whether or not a convicted person can run for office or cast a ballot. The principal policy basis for the doctrine of mootness, when that term is employed in the “case or controversy” context, is to insure that the judiciary will have the benefit of deciding legal questions in a truly adversary proceeding in which there is the “impact of actuality,” 27 and in which the contentiousness of the parties may be relied upon to bring to light all relevant considerations.28 Here the *593issue is surely not abstract. The case comes to us after the actions complained of have occurred, and we have the entire trial record before us. Moreover, George Parker’s interest in this litigation is quite substantial enough to insure that his case has been fully presented.29 Conviction of a felony imposes a status upon a person which not only makes him vulnerable to future sanctions through new civil disability statutes, but which also seriously *594affects his reputation and economic opportunities.30 And the fact that a man has been convicted before does not make the new conviction inconsequential. There is, after all, such a thing as rehabilitation and reintegration into the life of a community. In this case, for example, none of Parker’s previous convictions were in Texas, and he had been out of jail for over five years at the time of the 1954 forgery trial. Five years of law-abiding life in a new community give Parker a significant enough stake in the outcome of this adjudication to preclude a finding of mootness. Furthermore, there is an important public interest involved in declaring the invalidity of a conviction obtained in violation of the Constitution, and, under the Court’s decisions, this is a consideration relevant to the mootness question.31
In sum, I cannot agree with the Court that George Parker’s case comes to us too late. It is too late, much too late, to undo entirely the wrong that has been inflicted upon him; but it is not too late to keep the constitutional balance true. I dissent from the notion that, because we cannot do more, we should do nothing at all.
“The Court. Do you want a trial by jury or without a jury? “Mr. Parker. Well, it is immaterial to me, Judge. I don’t have any attorney.
“The Court. Well, you are going to have to make up your mind. It is certainly immaterial to the court.
“Mr. Parker. I guess a jury then.
“The Court. Do you have a lawyer hired?
“Mr. Parker. No, sir, I don’t.
“The Court. The law does not require the court to appoint an attorney to represent a defendant where he has a trial by jury and it is not the practice of this court to appoint any attorney to represent the defendant. It is up to him to arrange for his own counsel. Now, if you are eligible for a suspended sentence, why, then, the court would get some lawyer to advise you about the procedure in filing *578your application for a suspended sentence but only for that part and only if you are eligible for a suspended sentence.
“Mr. Parker. I will not apply for any suspended sentence.”
For example, the woman on whose account the check was drawn was never called as a witness. The only evidence regarding petitioner’s lack of authority from her to sign the check is contained in this bit of testimony — of highly questionable admissibility — by the woman’s son:
“Q. Did your mother tell you that she authorized him to write checks on her ?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. And, your mother didn’t authorize anyone to use that signature ?
“A. No, sir.”
In his brief, respondent stated that it was “not necessary to discuss” petitioner’s argument that his trial was gravely infected by error, because these matters of state law “are not properly before this Court.” Obviously they are very much before the Court in a deprivation of counsel case, for they are among the factors which indicate to what degree the defendant has been prejudiced. On oral argument, respondent’s counsel, the Assistant Attorney General of Texas, freely answered the Court’s questions regarding these issues, and, with admirable candor, expressed his view that as a matter of fact — though not as a matter of law- — no layman could competently defend himself against a criminal charge.
The allegation is supported by an affidavit of petitioner’s wife.
In fact, the testimony of the brother-in-law conveyed the opposite impression:
“Q. You know G. L. Parker, don’t you?
“A. I know of him.
“Q. Well, he is the defendant sitting here, isn’t he?
“A. I think so.
“Q. Well, as a matter of fact, you know he is, don’t you, Mr. Quattlebaum?
“A. Yes.
“Q. How long have you known him?
“A. Well, a long time.”
Petitioner suffered throughout from the poverty which prevented him from hiring an attorney and from obtaining a transcript of the record of his trial. Left to his own devices, his petitions — at least his first petition to this Court — did not sufficiently reveal the prejudice which he suffered at the trial because of the failure of the trial court to appoint an attorney.
See 28 U. S. C. §§2242, 2254; Darr v. Burford, 339 U. S. 200.
See Ex parte Baez, 177 U. S. 378, 389; Ingersoll, History And Law of Habeas Corpus, 2. In Baez, the Court pointed out that, as a practical matter, the writ could not be issued and the applicant pro*583duced for a hearing before the date scheduled for his release, so that mootness could be anticipated. 177 U. S., at 389-390. This was a proper application of the “in custody” requirement.
28 U. S. C. §§ 2246, 2247. Petitioner secured the transcript through the financial assistance of a fellow prisoner to the extent of $25.
See Church, Habeas Corpus (2d ed. 1893), 2-3.
See 2 Hallam, Europe During the Middle Ages, 552; 9 Holds-worth’s History of English Law 111-125; Hurd, Habeas Corpus (2d ed. 1876), 66-74.
It is instructive to recall the following passages of the Magna Charta:
“39. No free-man shall be seized, or imprisoned, or dispossessed, or outlawed, or in any way destroyed; nor will we condemn him, nor will we commit him to prison, excepting by the legal judgment of his peers, or by the laws of the land.
“40. To none will we sell, to none will we deny, to none will we delay right or justice.” Magna Charta, reprinted in S. Doc. No. 232, 66th Cong., 2d Sess. 17.
“Prerogative then reigned. The obnoxious members of the late Parliament were seized and imprisoned for words spoken in debate. The writ of habeas corpus was rendered powerless even to liberate them on bail by the servile 'procrastination of the court who dared not expressly to deny the right. And finally John Elliott, the most distinguished leader of the popular party, doomed to imprisonment and loaded with fines by a court usurping jurisdiction, died in the Tower — a martyr to parliamentary freedom of speech.” Hurd, Habeas Corpus (2d ed. 1876), 78. See also 3 Blackstone Commentaries (15th ed. 1809), 133-135; authorities cited in note 13, infra.
". . . Jenkes, a citizen of London on the popular or factious side, having been committed by the king in council for a mutinous speech in Guildhall, the justices at quarter sessions refused to admit him to bail, on pretence that he had been committed by a superior court; or to try him, because he was not entered in the calendar of prisoners. The chancellor, on application for a habeas corpus, declined to issue it during the vacation; and the chief-justice of the king's bench, to whom, in the next place, the friends of Jenkes had recourse, made so many difficulties that he lay in prison for several weeks.” Hallam, History of England (8th ed. 1855), 10-11. See also 3 Blackstone Commentaries (15th ed. 1809), 134-135; Church, Habeas Corpus (2d ed. 1893), 24-25; 6 Howell's State Trials 1190-1207; Hurd, Habeas Corpus (2d ed. 1876), 82. It is plain from these other sources that the “several weeks” mentioned in Hallam's account refers only to one period of Jenkes’ incarceration. There is also some dispute among these authors with respect to the historical significance of the Jenkes case. The nature of the abuses which led to passage of the Act is clear, however; and, for present purposes, it is immaterial which particular case aroused the greatest public sentiment.
Under our habeas corpus statute, the court is required to issue the writ or a show-cause order “forthwith” unless the petition does not state a cause for relief. The return must normally be made within three days, and the hearing held within five days thereafter. 28 U. S. C. § 2243.
Respondent’s attorney, the Assistant Attorney General of Texas, conceded during oral argument that there is no other judicial avenue open to petitioner.
See 2 Spelling, Injunctions (2d ed. 1901), 1159-1165. Gf. Ingersoll, History And Law of Habeas Corpus, 32-33; 9 Holdsworth’s History of English Law 123-124.
28 U. S. C. §2241 (c).
Section 2255, of course, is available only with respect to federal judgments, whereas habeas corpus is available to attack either state or federal judgments.
The legislative history of §2255 and its relationship to habeas corpus are exhaustively discussed in United States v. Hayman, 342 U. S. 205, 210-219. See also Heflin v. United States, 358 U. S. 415, 420-421 (concurring opinion). While I share the views expressed by Mr. Justice Douglas in Heflin, supra, at 417-418, I believe that if § 2255 and habeas corpus are to be treated as synonymous when *587the result is to deny their availability, they should be treated in the same manner when this would afford an applicant relief.
The Court mentions three other decisions, but apparently does not rest upon them. In McNally v. Hill, 293 U. S. 131, the Court held that a person who was serving the first of two consecutive sentences could not attack the second at that time. His habeas corpus remedy, held the Court, lay before him. Petitioner’s problem is quite different. His remedy, under the Court’s decision, is gone forever. It is also relevant to note that in McNally the Court suggested that there was another type of relief available to the *588petitioner even before he commenced serving his second sentence. Id., at 140. Johnson v. Hoy, 227 U. S. 245, involved a habeas corpus action brought prior to trial, which obviously presents questions entirely different from those posed by the case at bar. For a discussion of Ex parte Baez, 177 U. S. 378, see note 8, supra.
Had the case been argued, conceivably the petitioner would have urged upon the Court the writ-remedy distinction, and con*589tended that no order of discharge would be necessary in his case because parole was not custody. It is hardly surprising that the Court did not explore this intricate problem sua sponte; nor is it surprising that the petitioner did not suggest this approach, inasmuch as the Court’s opinion left open the possibility that he could maintain a habeas corpus action against a new respondent.
It may be noted that the Courts of Appeals, in considering the difficult question whether parole is sufficient restraint to serve as a basis for a habeas corpus action, seem to have taken divergent views of the significance of Weber. The Weber order, unillumined by the record, is hardly a model of clarity, and it is natural enough that some — though not all — courts have been misled. Compare Siercovich v. McDonald, 193 F. 2d 118 (C. A. 5th Cir.), and Adams v. Hiatt, 173 F. 2d 896 (C. A. 3d Cir.), with Factor v. Fox, 175 F. 2d 626, 628-629 (C. A. 6th Cir.), and Shelton v. United States, 242 F. 2d 101, 109-110 (C. A. 5th Cir.). See also Anderson v. Corall, 263 U. S. 193, 196. (“While [parole] is an amelioration of punishment, it is in legal effect imprisonment.”) But cf. Wales v. Whitney, 114 U. S. 564.
The order reads as follows:
“Petition for writ of certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit denied on the ground that the cause is moot, it appearing that petitioner has been released upon order of the United States Board of Parole and that he is no longer in the respondent’s custody. The motion for leave to proceed further in forma pauperis is therefore also denied.”
The Court finally came to grips with this problem in Ex parte Endo, 323 U. S. 283, 304-307.
This aspect of the mootness question as it relates to the instant case is discussed infra, pp. 591-594. It may be noted that Tornello’s conclusion as to the effect of a pardon is not unchallengeable. See 3 The Attorney General’s Survey of Release Procedures 267-294.
See Muskrat v. United States, 219 U. S. 346.
At the trial, the sheriff testified from an F. B. I. record with respect to Parker’s prior convictions. The record was not introduced into evidence, its nature was not disclosed, and it was not authenticated in any manner. Moreover, the sheriff’s description of the information in the record was confused, and, in response to a question by Parker, he conceded that “some” of the cases were never “disposed of,” so far as the record indicated. During the habeas corpus proceedings, respondent submitted a record from the Texas Department of Public Safety which purported to summarize Parker’s criminal history. It is, so far as appears, merely a compilation of information from various sources for Department use, and it was submitted only as evidence that Parker was being held pursuant to the judgment in this case. Its usefulness with regard to the mootness issue is further diminished by the fact that the Parker, or Parkers, whose convictions appear on the record are listed under seven different first and middle names.
See 19 St. John’s L. Rev. 185; 59 Yale L. J.786, 787, n. 3.
Frankfurter, A Note on Advisory Opinions, 37 Harv. L. Rev. 1002, 1006.
See United States v. Johnson, 319 U. S. 302, 304-305; Bischoff, Status to Challenge Constitutionality, in Supreme Court and Supreme Law (Cahn ed.), 26 et seq.; Freund, On Understanding the Supreme Court, 84-86; Note, 103 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 772-773.
Of opinions expressing a view consistent with the concurring opinion, the Supreme Court of Washington has said, “Those decisions, it seems to us, lose sight of . . . that damaging effect of such a judgment which everybody knows reaches far beyond its satisfaction by payment of a fine or serving a term of imprisonment.” State v. Winthrop, 148 Wash. 526, 534, 269 P. 793, 797. See also In re Byrnes, 26 Cal. 2d 824, 161 P. 2d 376; People v. Marks, 64 Misc. 679, 120 N. Y. Supp. 1106; Village of Avon v. Popa, 96 Ohio App. 147, 121 N. E. 2d 254; Roby v. State, 96 Wis. 667, 71 N. W. 1046; Note, 103 U. of Pa. L. Rev. 772, 779-782, 795. But cf. St. Pierre v. United States, 319 U. S. 41, where the Court held moot on direct appeal the case of a person who had served his sentence for contempt before certiorari was granted. That case is readily distinguishable in view of the factors the Court stressed as relevant. For example, the Court stated that it did not appear “that petitioner could not have brought his case to this Court for review before the expiration of his sentence.” Moreover, the Government admitted that petitioner would again be required to testify before a grand jury and that his commitment would again be sought if he refused, so that, as the Court noted, there might very well be “ample opportunity to review such a judgment Id., at 43. It seems reasonably clear also that the “collateral consequences” cases have considerably undermined the philosophy of St. Pierre. See Pollard v. United States, supra, at 358; United States v. Morgan, 346 U. S. 502, 512-513; Fiswick v. United States, 329 U. S. 211, 220-223. See also Lafferty v. District of Columbia, 107 U. S. App. D. C. 318, 277 F. 2d 348, where the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit set aside a decree of unsoundness of mind after the individual concerned was no longer in a mental institution and was not mentally ill.
Possibly it should be noted, for the sake of completeness, that no one has suggested that the State’s interest in upholding the validity of this conviction is insubstantial.
For example, under § 504 of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959, persons who have been convicted of specified crimes are ineligible to serve for a five-year period in various positions for labor unions or employer associations. 73 Stat. 536— 537.
For a discussion of the “status degradation ceremony” represented by criminal conviction, see Goldstein, Police Discretion Not to Invoke The Criminal Process: Low-Visibility Decisions in the Administration of Justice, 69 Yale L. J. 543, 590-592. See also Waite, The Prevention of Repeated Crime, 30-31; Frym, The Treatment of Recidivists, 47. J. Crim. L., Criminology & Police Science 1; United States v. Hines, 256 F. 2d 561, 563.
See Walling v. Reuter Co., 321 U. S. 671, 674-675; Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Comm’n, 219 U. S. 498, 516; United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Assn., 166 U. S. 290, 309.