United States Ex Rel. Foley v. Ragen

143 F.2d 774, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3192
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1944
Docket8506
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 143 F.2d 774 (United States Ex Rel. Foley v. Ragen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. Foley v. Ragen, 143 F.2d 774, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3192 (7th Cir. 1944).

Opinion

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court, entered on September 27, 1943, discharging upon habeas corpus the appellee, George Foley, from incarceration in an Illinois State Penitentiary located in Will County, Illinois. The writ was directed to respondent, Joseph E. Ragen, warden of the penitentiary, who filed a return thereto. The court heard the testimony of both the relator and the respondent, and also received in evidence a number of written documents and exhibits. The court, in support of its judgment of discharge, entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and also rendered an extended opinion. United States ex rel. Foley v. Ragen, Warden, et al., D.C., 52 F.Supp. 265, 269. Reference to this opinion will obviate the necessity for a detailed narrative of the unusual situation which confronted the trial judge.

Relator was convicted on October 14, 1933 in the Circuit Court of Sangamon County, Illinois, of burglary and larceny and was sentenced, under the Indeterminate Sentence Act, Chap. 38, § 802, Ill.Rev.Stats. 1943, to a term of one year to life. By reason of such sentence, he was confined in the Illinois penitentiary until his discharge in the instant proceeding. He claims that during all of such time he was without funds to employ counsel and without relatives or friends whom he could call upon for assistance. He was permitted to file his petition in the instant matter in forma pauperis, and the court appointed counsel who ably represented him. On respondent’s appeal to this court, we, on our own motion, appointed counsel to represent the relator, who has submitted a well prepared brief and argument in support of the judgment.

We are confronted, as often in cases of this character, with the question as to whether relator had exhausted his remedies in the state court so as to confer jurisdiction upon a federal court. The court below recognized the general rule in this respect, but for reasons hereinafter stated concluded that this was “that rare case where exceptional circumstances of peculiar urgency are shown to exist,” which removed it from the general rule. It would serve no good purpose to cite or discuss the numerous cases in which this general rule has been announced and applied, in view of the recent decision in Ex Parte Hawk, 321 U.S. 114, 64 S.Ct. 448 (decided subsequent to the opinion of Judge Barnes in the instant case). The general rule there stated (page 116 of 321 U.S., page 450 of 64 S.Ct.) is:

“Ordinarily an application for habeas corpus by one detained under a state court *776 judgment of conviction for .crime will be entertained by a federal court only after all state remedies available, including all appellate remedies in the state courts and in this Court by appeal or writ of certiorari, have been exhausted.” (Citing cases.)

We shall, therefore, first consider the relator’s efforts to secure his release through state remedies available, and then the circumstances which the court below thought made this an exceptional case. In doing so, we note that relator’s petition itself is devoid of any jurisdictional allegations. Ordinarily we think this would be fatal, -but in view of thé unusual circumstances we shall consider, as the court below no doubt did, all facts which tend to show jurisdiction, the same as. though they had been properly alleged.

The sole proceeding instituted by the relator in an Illinois court, seeking his release, was a petition filed (or sought to be filed) in the Supreme Court of Illinois in the early part of March 1943, in which he asked leave to proceed in forma pauperis. There is some contradiction in the record as to whether this petition was permitted to be filed. In a letter directed to relator, dated May 11, 1943, and sign'ed by the'clerk of the Supreme Court, this statement is contained :

“Petitioner was allowed to filé this petition for writ of habeas corpus as a poor person. The petition' upon consideration was denied.”

Notwithstanding this positive statement on the part of the clerk of the Supreme Court, Warden Ragen on March 11, 1943 sent a notice to relator as follows:

“I am today in receipt of the following letter dated March 9tli, 1943 from Edward F. Cullinane, clerk pro tempore, Supreme Court, State of Illinois, Springfield, as follows :
“ ‘Re: No. 27136 ex.rel, Foley v. Ragen. The Supreme Court today denied the motion of the petitioner in,the above entitled case for leave to sue as poor person and for writ of habeas corpus.’ ”

It will be noted that the letter from the warden is inconsistent with the letter from the clerk of the Supreme Court and that the former was written almost two months prior to the latter. It seems reasonable to believe that the relator, after receiving the warden’s letter, must have written directly to the Supreme Court and in response received, from the clerk the letter above mentioned. Without endeavoring to explain the inconsistency, we think the statement contained in the clerk’s letter must be accepted as a fact.

It appears from the statement above quoted from the Hawk case that it was incumbent upon the relator to seek a review of the action of the Illinois Supreme Court “by appeal or writ of certiorari” to the Supreme Court of the United States. More important, however, is the fact that other Illinois courts were available to relator. § 2 of the Habeas Corpus Act of Illinois, Ill.Rev. Stats. 1943, Chap. 65, provides three courts to whom application for the writ of habeas corpus may be made: (1) to the Supreme Court,- (2) to a court of competent jurisdiction in the county in which the applicant is imprisoned, and (3) to a court of competent jurisdiction in the county from which said applicant was committed. The Supreme Court may in the exercise of its discretion grant the writ. North Chicago Hebrew Congregation v. Board of Appeals, 358 Ill. 549, 554, 193 N. E. 519. The other courts to which application may be made are of general jurisdiction in which the relator, upon a proper showing, has an absolute statutory or constitutional right to relief by habeas corpus. The order or judgment in such proceeding is not final and, therefore, not appealable. It also cannot be pleaded as a bar to am other such proceeding. People ex rel. Maglori v. Siman, 284 Ill. 28, 30, 119 N.E. 940.

It appears plain, therefore, that it is incumbent upon a' person who seeks habeas corpus to do so in each of the three courts designated by the statute before it can be said that his state remedies have been exhausted. Here again the situation is similar to that before the Supreme Court in Ex parte Hawk, supra, where the court (page 116 of 321 U.S., page 449 of 64 S.Ct.) stated:

“So far as appears, petitioner’s present contentions have been presented to the state courts only' in an application for habeas corpus filed in the Nebraska Supreme Court, which it denied without opinion. From other opinions of that court it appears that it does not usually entertain' original petitions for habeas corpus, but remits the petitioner to an application to the appropriate district court of the state, from whose decision an appeal lies to the state Supreme Court * * *»
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Bluebook (online)
143 F.2d 774, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-foley-v-ragen-ca7-1944.