Hillery v. Pulley

563 F. Supp. 1228
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedMay 31, 1983
DocketCIV S-78-594 LKK
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 563 F. Supp. 1228 (Hillery v. Pulley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillery v. Pulley, 563 F. Supp. 1228 (E.D. Cal. 1983).

Opinion

ORDER

KARLTON, Chief Judge.

Petitioner seeks a writ of habeas corpus. He challenges his 1962 Kings County Superior Court conviction for murder on the grounds that he was denied the equal protection of the laws because blacks were systematically excluded from the grand jury that indicted him.

This case has had a lengthy and often tangled history. See Hillery v. Sumner, 496 F.Supp. 632 (E.D.Cal.1980); Hillery v. Pulley, 533 F.Supp. 1189 (E.D.Cal.1982). Since my last Opinion and Order, an evidentiary hearing has been held and closing arguments submitted. Sad to say, the case is no easier now. After careful review and consideration of the facts, applicable legal principles, and the arguments of both parties, this court has concluded that the application for a writ of habeas corpus should be granted.

FACTS

A. The California Proceeding

In 1962, petitioner, a black man, was indicted by the Grand Jury of Kings County, California. Petitioner moved pretrial to quash the indictment asserting that blacks had been systematically excluded from the Kings County Grand Jury.

At the time of the motion, Kings County had only one superior court judge, the Honorable Meredith Wingrove, who presided at the hearing on the pretrial motion to dismiss. All previous Kings County Superior Court judges had died prior to the hearing. Judge Wingrove had been the sole Kings County Superior Court judge since 1956 and thus, at the time of petitioner’s indictment, had selected all the potential jurors for the seven previous grand juries. Reporter’s Transcript of Pretrial Hearing 41 (hereinafter R.T.). Petitioner asked Judge Win-grove to testify at the hearing, but the judge thought it improper and was not sworn as a witness. 1 The judge did, however, comment at various stages of the hearing on his selection of potential grand *1231 jurors, and ordered that his statements be considered as testimony. 2

By law, potential grand jurors were selected by the superior court. The court was required to select twenty-five to thirty potential jurors annually, from which nineteen were randomly drawn to act as the grand jury. Those selected had to be competent to serve as jurors, 3 not exempt from serving, 4 in possession of their natural faculties, not infirm nor decrepit, and of fair character, approved integrity, and sound judgment. Additionally, the court was required to select potential jurors from each judicial district in the county in proportion to each district’s population.

According to census figures, blacks constituted 1% or less of the Kings County population from 1900 to 1940. In 1950, census figures reflect that approximately 4% of the County’s population was black; in 1960, approximately 5% of the population was black. 5 These figures are consistent with the evidence before the court that increasing numbers of blacks moved to Kings County in the post-World War II years, apparently as a result of the closure of the war plants in the Bay Area. See Deposition of Bessie Welcher at 9. 6

Calculations introduced by petitioner, and accepted as valid by this court, indicate that *1232 the percentage of blacks among those in Kings County age 21 or over was slightly lower than the percentage of blacks in the total county population. 7 For example, in 1960 approximately 4.7% of the county population over age 21, and therefore at least old enough for grand jury service, was black. See Petitioner’s Exhibit 4. The percentage of blacks among those age 21 and over was also estimated for each year from 1900 through 1962. See Petitioner’s Exhibit 6, Table 5.

Judge Wingrove stated at the hearing that he selected thirty (30) grand jurors annually. R.T. 17, 37,106. He further said that in selecting potential grand jurors, he tried to comply with the statutory duty to choose jurors from each judicial district in rough proportion to each district’s population. R.T. 37. The judge observed that he also tried to get a “good cross-section of the people ...” (R.T. 37), “a distribution of racial descents ... both sexes .. . occupations, farmer, business men and various other types.. .. ” R.T. 38. Judge Wingrove further stated that he “endeavors, and I [sic] sure it is the policy of the law, to select, if possible, all possible people who are interested in the community, civic minded, the better type of our citizens ... . ” R.T. 37. The judge described the person who he would feel is qualified for grand jury service as:

[S]omeone who has some substance, some interest in government, some interest in community activities, civil activities, people that take an interest that way. The Court also tries, so far as possible, to find in a Grand Jury [sic] someone who, in the Court’s opinion, is intelligent, and also someone who is qualified. Actually, the Court spent not hours, but days every year trying to boil down a list of getting [sic] the best type of people possibly to be obtained in this county to sit on the grand jury.

R.T. 104. In short, Judge Wingrove asserted that he tried to select “a real representative group of people, of the better type.” R.T. 38.

One fact clearly emerged at the hearing, a fact confirmed at the evidentiary hearing held by this court, namely, no black person had served on the Kings County Grand Jury since Kings County was organized in 1893. 8 *1233 Judge Wingrove acknowledged several times during the course of the hearing that since becoming the Superior Court judge in 1956 he had not selected a black for the grand jury panels. R.T. 38, 64, 103. He explained he had “never had a colored person on the panel, not through lack of desire, but purely through lack of ability to find one that the Court feels would make a proper Grand Juror.” R.T. 38. The judge denied that discrimination was the reason. He said, “[tjhere certainly never has been, as far as the present Court is concerned ... any systematic exclusion of anybody from the Grand Jury because of any racial descent ...,” R.T. 39, and that “[a]s far as the present Court is concerned ... there has never been any feeling of discrimination of any kind ... against anyone .. .. ” R.T. 60; see also R.T. 40-41, 105. The judge also expressed, more than once, his anger at the claim of systematic exclusion. He stated, for example, “the court resents any accusations of discrimination shown by this Court ...,” R.T. 65, and that “the Court very stoutly denies and refutes and feels somewhat incensed with the implication that there has been any discrimination .. . . ” R.T. 64; see also R.T. 36 and 39.

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Bluebook (online)
563 F. Supp. 1228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillery-v-pulley-caed-1983.