Samuel Simmons v. L. L. Wainwright, Secretary, Department Offender Rehabilitation

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Samuel Simmons v. L. L. Wainwright, Secretary, Department Offender Rehabilitation, 585 F.2d 95 (5th Cir. 1978)
1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7440

Samuel Simmons v. L. L. Wainwright, Secretary, Department Offender Rehabilitation

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The district court dismissed the petition for writ of habeas corpus for failure to exhaust state remedies on two of several claims — effective assistance of state appellate counsel and failure of the prosecutor to properly investigate the crime for which petitioner was convicted. Galtieri v. Wainwright, (CA5,1978) (en banc), 582 F.2d 348, holds that the district court must dismiss a “mixed” habeas corpus petition, that is, one in which petitioner has included both exhausted and unexhausted claims. Galtieri’s policy is that petitioner is required to exhaust all of his constitutional claims, p. 356, to achieve the goal that he will travel through each system (state and federal) one time for vindication of alleged constitutional errors. Id. The claim that the prosecutor failed to investigate is not of constitutional dimension. There is no such due process right. A district judge, in implementing Galtieri, is not mandated to remand for exhaustion of issues that do not reach constitutional dimension though alleged as such. He does not have to remand a “mixed” petition to require exhaustion on an allegation that the court reporter was redheaded.

Thus we affirm the dismissal on the ground of failure to exhaust the claim of effective assistance of state appellate counsel. But we note that exhaustion is not required on the claim asserting a constitutional deprivation consisting of the prosecutor’s failure to sufficiently investigate the alleged offense against the petitioner.

As modified, the dismissal is AFFIRMED.

Reference

Full Case Name
Samuel SIMMONS, Petitioner-Appellant, v. L. L. WAINWRIGHT, Secretary, Department Offender Rehabilitation, Respondent-Appellee
Cited By
10 cases
Status
Published