Albert Lessard v. Fred R. Dickson, Warden California State Prison, San Quentin, California

394 F.2d 88
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1968
Docket21513_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 394 F.2d 88 (Albert Lessard v. Fred R. Dickson, Warden California State Prison, San Quentin, California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert Lessard v. Fred R. Dickson, Warden California State Prison, San Quentin, California, 394 F.2d 88 (9th Cir. 1968).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Judge Johnsen and Judge Barnes are of the opinion that the District Court’s denial of Lessard’s habeas corpus petition is entitled to be affirmed. Judge Ely is of the opinion that the District Court’s disposition was proper as to all of Less-ard’s asserted claims except one, on which he is expressing his dissenting view. Lessard is a California state prisoner under a life sentence for conviction of first-degree murder.

The claim on which we thus differ is one of several charges made by Lessard that the prosecution had knowingly concealed and suppressed matters of evidence favorable to him. All of the claims of suppression (and other unfair-trial claims, such as the alleged use of perjured testimony) were made the subject of an evidentiary hearing before a special master appointed by the California Supreme Court in a habeas corpus proceeding permitted to be instituted in that Court under its original jurisdiction, and of a plenary determination by the Court, on the master’s record and report, of the lack of merit in each of them. See In re Lessard, 62 Cal.2d 497, 42 Cal.Rptr. 583, 399 P.2d 39. Lessard’s conviction had previously been affirmed on an appeal from the judgment [89]*89of conviction. People v. Lessard, 58 Cal.2d 447, 25 Cal.Rptr. 78, 375 P.2d 46.

The situation as to the claim here being discussed differs from that as to Less-ard’s other claims of suppression in the respect that the latter were the subject of express reference to the master and the former was not, and that the master accordingly made no findings upon it as he did on the others which had been referred to him. The lack of reference was due to the fact that Lessard had not made specification or indication of the particular claim in his habeas corpus petition. The master regarded himself as only authorized to make findings upon the issues referred to him. He permitted, however, both Lessard and the State to make full testimonial development of the unreferred claim and included the evidence thereon in the record which he transmitted to the California Supreme Court. And the California Supreme Court allowed presentation and argument to be made of the claim on the master’s record, the same as in the case of his other claims of suppression.

Since the California Supreme Court was dealing with the habeas corpus petition in its original jurisdiction, it constituted in the situation the trier of the facts. In relation to its performance of this function, Lessard had, as noted, been accorded a full evidentiary hearing before the master, both on the referred claims and the unreferred claim involved. Thus the question as to the propriety of the District Court’s disposition of the particular claim is not a matter of lack of evidentiary hearing. Lessard does not contend before us, nor did he in the District Court, that he has any further evidence which could be offered in respect to the claim. The issue therefore simply is whether the California Supreme Court as trier of the facts made such resolution and indication, or findings, as competently to demonstrate and adequately to support its determination of lack of merit in Lessard’s claim of suppression, and as fairly to entitle the District Court to make acceptance thereof.

The majority of the panel here believe that the situation was of this nature and that the District Court could properly treat it, within the language of Townsend v. Sain, 372 U.S. 293, 313, 83 S.Ct. 745, 757, 9 L.Ed.2d 770, as one in which “the state-court trier of fact has after a full hearing reliably found the relevant facts”.

The murder involved had been committed in the deceased’s room at a motel in San Francisco. He was stabbed to death with a knife. He had been carrying approximately $800 on his person from having cashed a check for his summer earnings as a school teacher. During the afternoon, after he had checked into the motel, he went across the street to a tavern, where he fell into drinking companionship with Lessard, a previous felon. Shorty after 6:00 p. m., Lessard absented himself for about 15 minutes, went to a restaurant-supply store located in the neighborhood, and purchased a boning knife. In making selection of the knife he desired, he left his fingerprints upon one of the other knives which he had examined. He returned to the tavern, and about 6:30 p. m. he left with the deceased and went across the street to the latter’s motel.

The deceased’s body was discovered in his room at 11:00 a. m. the next day. Fingerprints of Lessard were found upon an ashtray in the room, a drinking glass and the handle of a toilet bowl. A pink shirt with a distinguishing sheen or glisten, stained with blood, lay rolled up on the bed. There was testimony at the trial that Lessard was wearing such a shirt in the tavern. Also, the daughter of the proprietor of the supply-store, who was waiting in the store for her father, testified that the purchaser of the boning knife had on such a shirt.

Two years elapsed before the police succeeded in catching up with Lessard. They were able to locate and identify him, by means of his fingerprints, only because he had then become an inmate of a federal penitentiary, under a Dyer Act sentence. Lessard had made a hasty [90]*90departure from San Francisco on the night of the murder, taking a 9:30 p. m. bus for Seattle, Washington. After he had been located by the state authorities in the federal penitentiary, he denied to them that he had been in San Francisco at the time of the murder. He claimed that he had not been in the city for approximately ten years. Later he changed this period to a month before the murder, but he continued to assert that he had not been there at the time of the crime. He further insisted that he had never been in either the tavern or the motel involved. On his trial he made a switch and admitted that he had been in the deceased’s motel room during the evening of the crime and that he had stolen the deceased’s wallet, which he said he took from the victim’s coat pocket while the latter was in the bathroom.

On his motion for a new trial, Lessard again shifted his position, claiming that he had not been in the motel room, but that when he and the deceased left the tavern they got into the deceased’s automobile to drive to another bar; that they stopped on the way for the deceased to make a call; and that during the time the deceased was out of the car Lessard opened up the glove compartment, saw the deceased’s wallet lying there, appropriated it, and then exited from the scene.

Lessard’s attitude throughout, as his voluminous papers manifest, has been that if one set of asserted facts doesn’t work, try another. Thus the master’s findings on one of the claims of suppression referred to him included the following: “I find the petitioner to be unworthy of belief. He has made so many incorrect statements, inconsistent statements and downright falsehoods herein that his testimony above-referred to is wholly unreliable, and so far as it is in conflict with other evidence in the case, I find it to be untrue”.

As to all of Lessard’s alleged claims of suppression, the deputy prosecutor, who had handled the trial, testified generally before the master that “there was no ■ withholding of any evidence by the prosecuting attorney or by any other officer, to his knowledge”.

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Bluebook (online)
394 F.2d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-lessard-v-fred-r-dickson-warden-california-state-prison-san-ca9-1968.