The State of South Carolina v. James Edward Moore

447 F.2d 1067, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 1971
Docket14042_1
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 1067 (The State of South Carolina v. James Edward Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The State of South Carolina v. James Edward Moore, 447 F.2d 1067, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8169 (4th Cir. 1971).

Opinions

HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge:

This appeal presents a procedural tangle arising out of the Civil Rights Removal statute.1

[1069]*1069Late in the eleventh hour, Moore undertook the removal of a murder prosecution he was facing in a state court. In the removal petition he admitted his commission of the homicide, but claimed he had employed only reasonable force in meeting an assault upon him by a white man resentful of Moore’s presence in a place of public accommodation. Without a hearing, the District Judge remanded the case to the state court, but only after Moore’s trial had proceeded in the state court to a conviction of manslaughter and the imposition upon him of a sentence of twelve years suspended upon the service of three years with five years probation.

We conclude that the homicide prosecution was not removable, but that the proceedings in the state court in the interval between the filing and service of the removal petition and the remand order were void. Accordingly, we will direct the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus requiring Moore’s release from custody subject to the state’s right to retry him.

Moore, a black man, was indicted on a charge of murder during the October 1968 term of the Court of General Sessions of Greenville County, South Carolina. Released on bail, he obtained an attorney to represent him. He discharged his lawyer in May 1969 and employed another. The second lawyer sought and obtained a continuance of the case until July in order to prepare himself. On the eve of trial in July, Moore discharged the second lawyer, and the trial was again postponed until August 25, 1969.

On the morning of August 25, 1969, the third lawyer whom Moore had retained filed a removal petition in the District Court, filed a copy in the office of the clerk of the state court and served a copy on the state prosecutor. Confronted with that situation when the state court convened at 10:00 A.M., the judge, nevertheless, ordered the trial to proceed. The next day, Moore filed in the District Court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus and an order staying further proceedings in the state court, but this petition did not receive the immediate attention of a district judge, and the trial in the state court continued to its conclusion. As noted above, he was convicted of manslaughter and received an active sentence of three years imprisonment with subsequent probation.

Later the District Judge considered the removal petition, concluded it was facially insufficient and remanded the case to the state court. The order denied all other relief sought.

I

In the removal petition, Moore alleged that he was engaged in the peaceful exercise of his rights under Title 2 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, seeking service in the Waffle House, a place of public accommodation in Greenville, South Carolina, when a white person “by violence, threat and intimidation attempted to and did interfere and oppress the petitioner for the purpose of depriving the petitioner of [his equal rights]. As a result of the petitioner’s reasonable effort to preserve his own life and enjoy rights protected by Title 2 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the person who attempted to interfere therewith lost his life. * * * ”

Moore thus makes no claim of nonin-volvement in violence. In the removal petition, he admitted his commission of the homicide for which he was indicted, but sought to justify it, somewhat equivocally, as having been done in self-defense and in aid of his exercise of his protected right of equal access to a place of public accommodation. To the extent that the petition may be construed as an attempt to justify the homicide by a claimed right of forceful self-help in seeking to exercise rights guaranteed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it is obviously deficient, for the Act confers no such right of self-help.2 In this appeal, Moore’s counsel concedes as much, but construes that part of the petition as ex[1070]*1070pressing only the claim that the right of self-defense has a federal origin in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. For present purposes, we may accept that construction of the petition.

It is important at the outset, however, to emphasize that there was admitted violence. Moore’s acknowledgment of his commission of the homicide distinguishes this case from every other criminal prosecution successfully removed from a state to a federal court.

Prerequisite to a removal of a pending criminal prosecution under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1443(1) 3 is a showing that the defendant is being denied rights guaranteed under a federal law “providing for specific civil rights stated in terms of racial equality.” 4 The defendant must show that there is a basis for a firm prediction that such rights will be denied in the state court or that the pendency of the prosecution without more, is a deprivation of such a federally protected right. It is not enough to show that he has a defense with more or less hope of its successful assertion in an impartial tribunal; he must show that his federally secured right of racial equality is denied by the pendency of the proceeding or “by reason of the operation of a pervasive and explicit state or federal law that those rights will inevitably be denied by the very act of bringing the defendant to trial in the state court.” 5

Moore’s petition does not meet those requisites.

The Georgia v. Rachel, City of Greenwood v. Peacock dialogue, of course, governs our decision. It, too, illuminates our path. Federally protected rights of racial equality are not to be inhibited by state prosecutions, however characterized, for conduct which clearly enjoys the federal protection. One who peaceably seeks to enjoy his federally guaranteed right of free access to a place of public accommodations is not subject to state prosecution for trespass, for incitation to riot, a breach of the peace or any other charge that alleges no more than a peaceful exercise of a federally guaranteed right.6 Rachel gives such persons a clear right of removal and an immunity from state prosecution on any charge which might be sustained by proof of conduct within the federal protection.

It is plain from Peacock, however, that the right of removal under § 1443(1) is limited to cases in which the charged conduct clearly enjoys federal protection. The distinction was foreshadowed in Hamm,7 in which the emphasis was all upon the peacefulness of the defendants’ conduct and the federal protections it enjoyed. But just as there is no federal law conferring upon anyone the right “to obstruct a public street, to contribute to the delinquency of a minor, to drive an automobile without a license or to bite a policeman,” 8 so there is no federal law giving any private citizen the right to take another’s life. If the civil rights worker who allegedly bit the policeman could be prosecuted in a state court for assault, as the Supreme Court [1071]*1071held, surely he could be prosecuted for homicide had he slain the policeman.

It has been the uniform holding or assumption of all of the cases in the lower courts that the Civil Rights Acts extend their protections only to peaceful conduct. Violence, whether justifiable or not under state law, is beyond their reach.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F.2d 1067, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-state-of-south-carolina-v-james-edward-moore-ca4-1971.