Lead Opinion
In this appeal from the district court’s denial of his habeas petition, Albert Pitts challenges his state court conviction on Batson and ineffective assistance of counsel grounds. We agree with the district court that petitioner’s Batson claim was procedurally defaulted and that petitioner fails to show the cause and actual prejudice necessary to avoid the procedural default bar.
I.
Albert Pitts, a black man, was convicted in 1985 of theft of property worth ninety dollars. The prosecution’s case and resulting conviction were based almost entirely on identification testimony of two white witnesses.
The jury venire consisted of fifty-three people, including eighteen blacks. One black man was struck for cause because of his relationship to Pitts. The prosecutor then used all twenty of its peremptory strikes, striking sixteen black and four white people. Pitts’ counsel made no objection to the prosecution’s use of its peremptory strikes. The resulting jury was composed of eleven whites and one black.
Pitts appealed his conviction. In April 1986, during the pendency of petitioner’s appeal, the Supreme Court announced its decision in Batson v. Kentucky,
Pitts then filed a pro se petition for writ of federal habeas corpus, raising the Batson issue for the first time.
After an evidentiary hearing, the magistrate recommended that the writ be granted based on Batson. The magistrate concluded that, because Batson significantly altered prior law, petitioner’s failure to object contemporaneously to the jury selection process did not constitute a procedural default. He further ruled for petitioner on the merits of the Batson claim, concluding that the state had failed to state neutral reasons for the peremptory strikes. The prosecutor from Pitts’ original trial for theft testified at the evidentiary hearing on the Batson claim; but, approximately four years after that trial, he could not recall the reasons for his strikes.
The district court rejected the magistrate’s recommendation, holding that petitioner’s claim was procedurally defaulted and that no cause existed to excuse the default. Petitioner’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim was rejected on the merits, and the petition was dismissed.
II.
In Batson v. Kentucky,
The first part of the Batson holding was a reaffirmation of principles over a century old. See, e.g., Swain v. Alabama,
Petitioner Pitts is a black man, and several blacks were struck from his jury by the prosecution. In this habeas petition, therefore, Pitts wishes to challenge the constitutionality of his jury based on Bat-son.
Under Alabama’s contemporaneous objection rule, however, review on appeal is limited to matters on which rulings were invoked in the trial court. See, e.g., Cochran v. State,
When a defendant is barred from raising a federal constitutional claim in the state courts because of his failure to follow the state’s procedural rules, he is also barred from raising the claim in his federal habeas petition absent a showing of cause for, and actual prejudice from, the procedural default. Engle v. Isaac,
III.
To show cause sufficient to excuse a procedural default, a petitioner ordinarily must establish that some objective factor external to the defense impeded his counsel’s efforts to raise the claim. Murray v. Carrier,
Petitioner Pitts utilizes these alternatives to argue that the state cannot “have it both ways.” According to Pitts, either Batson was so novel that a pre-Batson failure to raise a Batson -type objection should be excused for “cause”; or it was not so novel — in which case a pre-Batson failure to raise a Batson -type objection should constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. While this argument has initial appeal, it in fact presents a false dichotomy. The state can “have it both ways,” because the standard for “cause” to excuse a procedural default differs from the standard for objective unreasonableness of counsel. See Pelmer v. White,
The novelty of a claim will constitute cause sufficient (when joined with actual prejudice) to excuse procedural default if the legal basis for the claim was “not reasonably available to counsel,” Reed,
Neither the Supreme Court nor the Eleventh Circuit has addressed whether a Batson claim before April 1986 was sufficiently novel to constitute cause for failing to object contemporaneously to the prosecution’s use of its peremptory challenges. The Fifth Circuit has addressed the question, however, and has held that a Batson -type objection or claim was reasonably available — and thus not sufficiently novel— in 1985. See Jones v. Butler,
From the gost-Reed case law, we can glean a mode of analysis reflecting the language in Engle quoted above — an analysis focusing on whether others were recognizing and raising the same or similar claims in the period preceding or concurrent with the petitioner’s failure to raise his claim.
As noted by the Jones court, by the time of Pitts’ trial in 1985 the Batson -type claim — that the prosecution’s discriminatory use of its peremptory challenges is unconstitutional — was familiar and had been asserted in many other cases.
By 1985 one federal circuit had recognized a Batson -type claim based on the federal constitution. See McCray v. Abrams,
Given all this activity in the area by others who perceived and litigated Batson -type claims, we conclude that such a claim was reasonably available to petitioner Pitts in 1985. We, therefore, hold that the Bat-son claim was not so novel that failure to raise it in 1985 should be excused for cause.
IV.
Petitioner Pitts alternatively contends that if his Batson -type claim was reasonably available prior to the Batson decision, his attorney’s failure to raise it rendered his assistance ineffective; and that this ineffective assistance of counsel was “cause” for the default. That counsel failed to recognize a reasonably available claim, however, or failed to raise the claim despite recognizing it, does not constitute cause for procedural default. Murray v. Carner,
As noted in Pelmer, there will often be a “gap” between the spheres of novelty and ineffective assistance of counsel; “[b]ecause law is not an exact science, an ordinary, reasonable lawyer may fail to recognize or to raise an issue, even when the issue is available, yet still provide con
V.
In addition to arguing ineffective assistance of counsel for purposes of excusing the procedural default of his Batson claim, petitioner Pitts also raises ineffective assistance of trial counsel as a separate claim for relief. Because this claim is based entirely on trial counsel’s failure to object to the prosecution’s peremptory strikes, however, it must be rejected based on the same reasoning: an attorney’s failure to raise a Batson -type claim before Batson does not fall below the range of reasonable professional competence, see Poole,
VI.
For these reasons, the district court’s denial of Albert Pitts’ habeas petition is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because we conclude the petitioner fails to show cause for his default, we do not reach the question of actual prejudice.
. Respondents have waived the exhaustion of state remedies requirement for federal habeas relief under 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254, stating that under Alabama law petitioner would be precluded from raising his Batson claim in the state courts because the claim could have been, but was not, raised at trial. Put differently, petitioner has no state remedy available for him to exhaust. See Castille v. Peoples,
. Pitts had been convicted when Batson was decided, but his direct appeal was still pending. Although Batson is not generally retroactively applied to habeas petitions, Allen v. Hardy,
. See supra note 2.
. Petitioner argues, and the magistrate below mistakenly held, that the Batson holding was so novel that a pre-Batson failure to raise a Batson -type claim cannot constitute a procedural default. Petitioner and the magistrate cite Reed v. Ross,
. In dissent, Judge Tuttle takes a different approach, apparently equating reasonable availability of a legal challenge with high likelihood of success; if a legal challenge is likely to fail because it is contrary to precedent, he would deem it unavailable. Judge Tuttle quotes dicta from Reed for support. But Reed and Engle must be read together. The Supreme Court said in Smith v. Murray: "as a comparison of Reed and Engle makes plain, the question is not whether subsequent legal developments have made counsel’s task easier, but whether at the time of the default the claim was 'available’ at all.” Smith,
That an argument might have less than a high likelihood of success has little to do with whether the argument is available or not. An argument is available if there is a reasonable basis in law and fact for it. Cf. Neitzke v. Williams,
Even if others have not been raising a claim, the claim may still be unnovel if a review of the historical roots and development of the general issue involved indicate that petitioners did not "lackf ] the tools to construct their constitutional claim.” Engle,
. We recognize, as did the Fifth Circuit in Jones, that the Supreme Court has stated in a different context that Batson was "an explicit and substantial break with prior precedent." See Allen v. Hardy,
. At oral argument petitioner’s counsel cited Hollis for the opposite proposition: that attorney failures short of constitutionally ineffective assistance can constitute cause. Hollis, an Eleventh Circuit decision, would of course be controlled by the Supreme Court’s holding in Carrier. In any event, Hollis does not support petitioner’s proposition; as noted above in the text, Hollis says that ineffective assistance must be constitutionally ineffective to constitute cause for procedural default.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Respectfully, I dissent. I simply cannot agree that the new principle announced by the Supreme Court in Batson was not sufficiently novel to excuse court-appointed counsel in the Alabama State Court from raising a Batson claim on direct appeal of Pitts’ conviction. I agree with the Court’s statement that the novelty of a claim will constitute cause to excuse a procedural default if the legal basis for the claim was “not reasonably available to counsel.” That language is explicitly used in Reed v. Ross,
As stated in the majority opinion:
Neither the Supreme Court or the Eleventh Circuit has addressed whether a Batson claim before April 1986 was sufficiently novel to constitute cause for failing to object contemporaneously to the prosecution’s use of its peremptory challenges.
That means that the duty devolves on us to decide this precise issue, because there is no dispute over whether the Batson decision was “novel.”
The record here clearly discloses that Pitts has been denied his constitutional right to be tried by a fair jury. This Court should not lightly decide that a Supreme Court opinion that the Court has stated was “an explicit and substantial break with prior precedent” was not sufficiently novel to provide cause for Pitts’ failure to raise it on his appeal.
The Court in Allen v. Hardy,
While dealing with the contention of a defendant in a criminal case that he had been represented by inefficient counsel, the Court in Reed v. Ross,
Counsel’s failure to raise a claim for which there was no reasonable basis in existing law does not seriously implicate any of the concerns that might otherwise require deference to a State’s procedural bar.... It is in the nature of our legal system that legal concepts, including constitution concepts, develop slowly, finding partial acceptance in some courts while meeting rejection in others. Despite the fact that a constitutional concept may ultimately enjoy general acceptance, as the Mullaney [v. Wilbur,*1575 421 U.S. 684 ,95 S.Ct. 1881 ,44 L.Ed.2d 508 (1975)] issue currently does, when the concept is in the embryonic stage, it will, by hypothesis, be rejected by most courts. Consequently, a rule requiring a defendant to raise a truly novel issue is not likely to serve any functional purpose. Although there is a remote possibility that a given state court will be the first to discover a latent constitutional issue and to order redress if the issue is properly raised, it is far more likely that the court will fail to appreciate the claim and reject it out of hand. Raising such a claim in state court, therefore, would not promote either the fairness or the efficiency of the state criminal justice system. It is true that finality will be dis-served if the federal courts reopen a state prisoner’s case, even to review claims that were so novel when the cases were in state court that no one would have recognized them. This Court has never held, however, that finality, standing alone, provides a sufficient reason for federal courts to compromise their protection of constitutional rights under § 2254.
In addition, if we were to hold that the novelty of a constitutional question does not give rise to cause for counsel’s failure to raise it, we might actually disrupt state-court proceedings by encouraging defense counsel to include any and all remotely plausible constitutional claims that could, some day, gain recognition. Particularly disturbed by this prospect, Judge Haynsworth, writing for the Court of Appeals in this case, stated:
“If novelty were never cause, counsel on appeal would be obliged to raise and argue every conceivable constitutional claim, no matter how far fetched, in order to preserve a right for post-conviction relief upon some future, unforeseen development in the law. Appellate courts are already over-burdened with meritless and frivolous cases and contentions, and an effective appellate lawyer does not dilute meritorious claims with frivolous ones. Lawyers representing appellants should be encouraged to limit their contentions on appeal at least to those which may be legitimately regarded as debatable.” [Ross v. Reed ] 704 F.2d [705] at 708 [(4th Cir.1983) ].
The Court then made the following statement:
Although the question whether an attorney has a “reasonable basis” upon which to develop legal theory may arise in a variety of contexts, we confine our attention to the specific situation presented here: one in which this Court has articulated a constitutional principle that had not been previously recognized but which is held to have retroactive application. In United States v. Johnson,457 U.S. 537 [102 S.Ct. 2579 ,73 L.Ed.2d 202 ] (1982), we identified three situations in which a “new” constitutional rule, representing “ ‘a clear break with the past,’ ” might emerge from this Court. Id. at 549 [102 S.Ct. at 2586 ] (quoting Desist v. United States,394 U.S. 244 , 258-59 [89 S.Ct. 1030 , 1039,22 L.Ed.2d 248 ] (1969)). First, a decision of this Court may explicitly overrule one of our precedents. United States v. Johnson,457 U.S. at 551 [102 S.Ct. at 2588 ]. Second, a decision may “overtur[n] a longstanding and widespread practice to which this Court has not spoken, but which a near-unanimous body of lower court authority has expressly approved.” Ibid. And, finally, a decision may “disapprov[e] a practice this Court arguably has sanctioned in prior cases.” Ibid. By definition, when a case falling into one of the first two categories is given retroactive application, there will almost certainly have been no reasonable basis upon which an attorney previously could have urged state court to adopt the position that this Court has ultimately adopted. Consequently, the failure of a defendant’s attorney to have pressed such a claim before a state court is sufficiently excusable to satisfy the cause requirement.
Id. at 17,
Although I recognize that the Reed case dealt with the retroactivity of a court opinion, Pitts finds himself in the same situation as did the appellant in Reed because
It appears to me, therefore, that this language should be accepted by us to control the ease now before us. I would, therefore, hold that Pitts had established the required “cause” for failing to raise the Batson issue in the state court in Lee County, Alabama.
