Gideon's Trumpet

Read Gideon's Trumpet Online

Authors: Anthony Lewis

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Retail, #Nonfiction, #Legal, #History

V
INTAGE
B
OOKS
E
DITION
, M
ARCH
1989

Copyright © 1964 by Anthony Lewis

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by
Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally
published, in hardcover, by
Random House, Inc., in 1964.

Much of the material in this book first appeared in
The
New Yorker
, in somewhat different form.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Lewis, Anthony, 1927-
  Gideon’s trumpet.
  Reprint. Originally published: New York: Random House, 1964.
  Bibliography: p.
  1. Gideon, Clarence Earl—Trials, litigation, etc.
2. Wainwright, Louie L.—Trials, litigation, etc.
3. Right to counsel—United States. 4. United States.
Supreme Court. I. Title.
KF228.G53L49 1989     345.73 ’056 88-40504
eISBN: 978-0-307-80528-7

v3.1

To my parents

But the Spirit of the Lord came upon Gideon, and he blew a trumpet.…

JUDGES VI
, 34.

Contents

Epilogue

Notes

Suggested Readings

Table of Cases

1

I
n the morning mail of January 8, 1962, the Supreme Court of the United States received a large envelope from Clarence Earl Gideon, prisoner No. 003826, Florida State Prison, P.O. Box 221, Raiford, Florida. Like all correspondence addressed to the Court generally rather than to any particular justice or Court employee, it went to a room at the top of the great marble steps so familiar to Washington tourists. There a secretary opened the envelope. As the return address had indicated, it was another petition by a prisoner without funds asking the Supreme Court to get him out of jail—another, in the secretary’s eyes, because pleas from prisoners were so familiar a part of her work. She walked into the next room and put the
envelope on the desk of an assistant clerk of the Supreme Court, Michael Rodak, Jr.

Mr. Rodak, among other duties, concerns himself with what the Supreme Court calls its Miscellaneous Docket. This is made up mostly of cases brought by persons who are too poor to have their court papers printed or to pay the usual fee of one hundred dollars for docketing a case in the Supreme Court—bringing it there. A federal statute permits persons to proceed in any federal court
in forma pauperis
, in the manner of a pauper, without following the usual forms or paying the regular costs. The only requirement in the statute is that the litigant “make affidavit that he is unable to pay such costs or give security therefor.”

The Supreme Court’s own rules show special concern for
in forma pauperis
cases. Rule 53 allows an impoverished person to file just one copy of a petition, instead of the forty ordinarily required, and states that the Court will make “due allowance” for technical errors so long as there is substantial compliance. In practice, the men in the Clerk’s Office—a half dozen career employees, all lawyers, who handle the Court’s relations with the outside world—stretch even the rule of substantial compliance. Rule 53 also waives the general requirement that documents submitted to the Supreme Court be printed. It says that
in forma pauperis
applications should be typewritten “whenever possible,” but in fact handwritten papers are accepted.

Gideon’s were written in pencil. They were done in carefully formed printing, like a schoolboy’s, on lined sheets evidently provided by the Florida prison. Printed at the top of each sheet, under the heading Correspondence Regulations, was a set of rules (“Only 2 letters each week … written on one side only … letters must be written in English …”) and the warning:
MAIL WILL NOT BE DELIVERED WHICH DOES
NOT CONFORM TO THESE RULES
. Gideon’s punctuation and spelling were full of surprises, but there was also a good deal of practiced, if archaic, legal jargon, such as “Comes now the petitioner.…” It seemed likely to Rodak that Gideon had a copy of the Supreme Court Rules.

The first of the documents in the envelope was a two-page affair headed “Motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis” and including the notarized affidavit that the statute requires. A quick check indicated to Rodak that this prisoner had substantially complied with the rules. He appeared, for example, to have met the requirement that criminal cases be brought to the Supreme Court within ninety days of the lower court decision. Gideon had applied to the Florida Supreme Court for a writ of habeas corpus—an order freeing him on the ground that he was illegally imprisoned. He enclosed a copy of that application and of a brief order of the Florida court denying it. The Florida ruling against him, which he wanted the Supreme Court of the United States to review, was dated October 30, 1961, less than ninety days before.

There was very little in what he had sent to the Court to portray Clarence Earl Gideon the man. His age, his color, his criminal record if any—not even these basic facts appeared, much less any details for a more complete portrait. Because the case came from the South, one’s assumption might have been that he was a Negro. He was not.

Gideon was a fifty-one-year-old white man who had been in and out of prisons much of his life. He had served time for four previous felonies, and he bore the physical marks of a destitute life: a wrinkled, prematurely aged face, a voice and hands that trembled, a frail body, white hair. He had never been a professional criminal or a man of violence; he just could not seem to settle down to work, and so he
had made his way by gambling and occasional thefts. Those who had known him, even the men who had arrested him and those who were now his jailers, considered Gideon a perfectly harmless human being, rather likeable, but one tossed aside by life. Anyone meeting him for the first time would be likely to regard him as the most wretched of men.

And yet a flame still burned in Clarence Earl Gideon. He had not given up caring about life or freedom; he had not lost his sense of injustice. Right now he had a passionate—some thought almost irrational—feeling of having been wronged by the State of Florida, and he had the determination to try to do something about it. Although the Clerk’s Office could not be expected to remember him, this was in fact his second petition to the Supreme Court. The first had been returned for failure to include a pauper’s affidavit, and the Clerk’s Office had enclosed a copy of the rules and a sample affidavit to help him do better next time. Gideon persevered.

Assistant Clerk Rodak, knowing and caring nothing for any of this, stamped Gideon’s papers and gave them a number—890 Miscellaneous, meaning that the case was the 890th entered on the Miscellaneous Docket in the October Term, 1961. (Supreme Court terms, which usually run from October into June, are formally designated by the month in which they begin.) On a green file card a secretary typed the number and the title of the case: Clarence Earl Gideon, petitioner, versus H. G. Cochran, Jr., Director, Division of Corrections, State of Florida, respondent. Then the papers were put into a large red folder and tied with a string. (Red is the color for Miscellaneous cases; regular prepaid cases, on what is called the Appellate Docket, go into blue folders.) The Gideon folder was dispatched to the file room, one floor down, by an electric dumbwaiter.

Sometimes Rodak or his colleague in the Clerk’s Office, Edward Schade, looking over the confused and often unintelligible prisoners’ petitions that come before them, will spot one with an impressive legal claim. Their view has nothing whatever to do with the action the Supreme Court may take, since only the nine justices act for the Court and they do not discuss the merits of cases with the employees in the Clerk’s Office. Still, just in the office, it enlivens things to say once in a while: “Here’s one that I’ll bet will be granted.”

No one said that about
Gideon v. Cochran
, No. 890 Miscellaneous, October Term, 1961. In the Clerk’s Office it had no ring of history to it. It was just one of nine
in forma pauperis
cases that arrived in the mail on January 8, 1962. Four others were, like Gideon’s, criminal cases from the state courts—from Iowa, Washington, New York and Illinois. Two were appeals from federal convictions. One was a civil case, a claim by an unhappy and unaffluent author that someone had plagiarized his copyrighted play. The last was so confused that the Clerk’s Office was unable to put it in any category at all.

Gideon’s main submission was a five-page document entitled “Petition for a Writ of Certiorari Directed to the Supreme Court State of Florida.” A writ of certiorari is a formal device to bring a case up to the Supreme Court from a lower court. In plain terms Gideon was asking the Supreme Court to hear his case.

What was his case? Gideon said he was serving a five-year term for “the crime of breaking and entering with the intent to commit a misdemeanor, to wit, petty larceny.” He had been convicted of breaking into the Bay Harbor Poolroom in Panama City, Florida. Gideon said his conviction violated the due-process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
to the Constitution, which provides that “No state shall … deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” In what way had Gideon’s trial or conviction assertedly lacked “due process of law”? For two of the petition’s five pages it was impossible to tell. Then came this pregnant statement:

“When at the time of the petitioners trial he ask the lower court for the aid of counsel, the court refused this aid. Petitioner told the court that this Court made decision to the effect that all citizens tried for a felony crime should have aid of counsel. The lower court ignored this plea.”

Five more times in the succeeding pages of his penciled petition Gideon spoke of the right to counsel. To try a poor man for a felony without giving him a lawyer, he said, was to deprive him of due process of law. There was only one trouble with the argument, and it was a problem Gideon did not mention. Just twenty years before, in the case of
Betts v. Brady
, the Supreme Court had rejected the contention that the due-process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provided a flat guarantee of counsel in state criminal trials.

Betts v. Brady
was a decision that surprised many persons when made and that had been a subject of dispute ever since. For a majority of six to three, Justice Owen J. Roberts said the Fourteenth Amendment-provided no universal assurance of a lawyer’s help in a state criminal trial. A lawyer was constitutionally required only if to be tried without one amounted to “a denial of fundamental fairness.” The crucial passage in the opinion read:

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