Petitioner-appellant Angel Tueros was convicted in state court of murder and criminal possession of a weapon. Tueros alleges that his attorney in the state-court criminal proceedings believed that she owed a duty of confidentiality to a witness who could have offered exculpatory testimony, but who ultimately invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege not to do so, and that this belief rendered Tueros’ attorney conflicted and thus prevented her from exercising sufficient zeal in her attempts to elicit the testimony. On appeal of the district court’s denial of his habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Tueros does not argue that his state-court lawyer’s belief was correct or that his lawyer actually owed a duty to the defense witness. He argues instead that the resulting subjective belief that she had a conflict by itself gives rise to an “actual conflict” under
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
BACKGROUND
In 1995, petitioner-appellant Angel Tue-ros was convicted of murder and criminal possession of a weapon, both in the second degree, after a jury trial in New York State Supreme Court, Queens County. The State’s case relied on three witnesses to the events surrounding the shooting. Yudis Esteves, one of these three witnesses, lived across the street from the site of the shooting. She testified that she was in her driveway and that she saw Tueros commit the murder.
• Hermena Perlmutter, Tueros’ trial attorney, subpoenaed Juan Esteves (“Es-teves”), Yudis Esteves’ husband at the time, to testify at Tueros’ trial. The evening before Esteves was to appear in court, Esteves called Perlmutter and, with the aid of the translator, stated that Yudis Esteves could not have seen the shooting because she was in the basement when it occurred. At the end of this conversation, Perlmutter asked Esteves if he had ever been convicted or arrested. Esteves replied that he had been arrested in Massachusetts and that he had jumped bail and fled. Upon hearing that Esteves was a fugitive, Perlmutter ended the conversation, stating that she could not speak with him further, that he should come to court in the morning, and that she needed to speak with the judge. Neither party mentioned establishing any form of attorney-client relationship.
The following morning, Perlmutter spoke with the court ex parte. She indicated that she had spoken the night before with a subpoenaed witness who possessed information relevant to Tueros’ defense, and the following exchange occurred:
Perlmutter: [H]e said something ... that, T believe, to have been an attorney-client privilege. Now, if that is an attorney-client privilege, and the way he said it to me, it was to admit to me something which I know would be harmful to him and perhaps criminal.
Court: It is certainly not attorney-client privilege, because you are not his attorney.
Perlmutter: He doesn’t have to pay me to be his attorney. If he comes to me and speaks to me as an attorney, if he believes it is so, then I am bound by that confidentiality.
Court: Well, go ahead
Perlmutter then requested Esteves be assigned an attorney because she believed “it is altogether possible that if he is advised that he may not testify.” The court appointed counsel, who advised Esteves not to answer any questions. When Perlmut-ter examined Esteves during the trial, outside the presence of the jury, Esteves invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege and refused to answer nearly all questions. Perlmutter did not reveal the information that Esteves had previously communicated to her, and she acquiesced in Esteves’ claim to his Fifth Amendment privilege.
Tueros raised a conflict of interest claim on direct appeal, but the Appellate Division affirmed Tueros’ conviction, holding that “the conflict, if any actually existed, was resolved when the court assigned separate counsel to' the defense witness.”
People v. Tueros,
Having exhausted his state-court remedies, Tueros filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habe-as petition in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, Judge). Tueros argued, as he did in state court, that he had been denied his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to counsel because Perl-mutter had an actual conflict of interest under
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
In a brief unpublished decision, the district court dismissed Tueros’ habeas petition. Crediting Perlmutter’s subjective belief that she had been “prohibited by the attorney client privilege from utilizing this witness in a way that might adversely affect [the witness’s] legal position,” it nonetheless concluded that the state court on appeal had “ruled, with justification, that defendant’s attorney was not the witness’s counsel” and that “[t]here was no conflict.” The district court granted a certificate of appealability “on all aspects of the issue of whether there was a conflict of interest.”
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Tueros argues that he was deprived of his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to counsel as defined by
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
I. Standard and Scope of Review
We review a district court’s denial of habeas relief
de novo,
but we review its findings of fact only for clear error.
Del-
*591
Valle v. Armstrong,
Provided a. state court has “adjudicated [petitioner’s claim] on the merits,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), a federal court has only the limited authority to review a state court conviction as established in the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214. Because it is clear that the state court’s response to Tueros’ § 440 motion adjudicated Tueros’ claim “on the merits” as we have, interpreted the phrase,
see Aparicio v. Artuz,
Under either prong, the unreasonably applied Federal law must be “clearly established” at the time that petitioner’s state-court conviction becomes final, and only the holdings of Supreme Court cases may comprise Federal law.
Williams,
II. The State Court Did Not Unreasonably Apply Supreme Court Law
This appeal presents the question whether Tueros’ claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is governed by
Strickland v. Washington,
Despite the importance of the definition of an “actual conflict,” which if demonstrated permits a defendant to bring his case within the ambit of Sullivan, our role as reviewer of the district court’s denial of Tueros’ § 2254 habeas petition is limited and does not entail stating our opinion as to the proper division between the cases in which Strickland and Sullivan should apply. Under our congressionally circumscribed authority established in § 2254(d)(1), we address the issue only tangentially and hold that it was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of, clearly established Supreme Court precedent to conclude that Tueros’ counsel did not have an “actual conflict” of interest as defined in Sullivan.
Furthermore, although we hold that the state court was not required to apply
Sullivan,
we do not proceed to the
Strickland
analysis in this case. Such an analysis will often be a logical subsequent step in similar cases, but petitioner failed to present a
Strickland
argument to this Court in his brief, and expressly disclaimed the applicability of
Strickland
during oral argument, so we consider petitioner’s
Strickland
argument to have been abandoned.
3
See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(9);
LoSacco v. City of Middletown,
A. The alleged “actual conflict” in Sullivan
In
Sullivan,
Sullivan and his two alleged accomplices were tried for murder in Pennsylvania state court in three separate trials, and two privately retained lawyers, DiBona and Peruto, were involved in all three trials.
Sullivan,
Sullivan filed a habeas petition in federal court.
Id.
The district court denied the petition, but the Third Circuit reversed the district court and granted the petition.
Id.
at 339-40,
The Supreme Court vacated the Third Circuit’s judgment.
Sullivan,
B. Multiple representation
Respondent argues that the state court’s decision not to extend the scope of
Sullivan’s
“actual conflict” analysis to encompass Tueros’ claim was not contrary to, or an unreasonable application of,
Sullivan
because the “adverse effect” standard in
Sullivan
is limited to cases of multiple representation.
Cf. Smith v. Hofbauer,
Insofar as respondent suggests that we are
bound
by language in
Mickens v. Taylor,
Insofar as respondent relies on the language of
Sullivan
itself, the argument that
Sullivan
applies only in cases of multiple representation also misses the point: If we were to accept Tueros’ theory, as discussed below, that a subjective conflict of interest can constitute an “actual conflict,” then Perlmutter effectively engaged in multiple representation because she felt she had a duty both to Esteves as a witness and to Tueros as the defendant. Tue-ros alleges a conflict between duties owed to more than one person, not a conflict between a client’s interests and the lawyer’s self-interest, the most common type of case in which courts have held that
Strickland
rather than
Sullivan
should apply.
Cf. Beets,
C. Can a purely subjective conflict be an “actual conflict”?
Tueros argues that his counsel’s subjective belief that she owed a duty of confidentiality to Esteves, combined with the duty she actually owed to Tueros, creates the type of “actual conflict” to which the “adverse effect” standard articulated in Sullivan applies, and that concluding that Tueros’ counsel did not labor under an “actual conflict” is either contrary to or an unreasonable application of Sullivan.
We initially note that we credit Tueros’ allegation, that his counsel believed that she owed a duty of loyalty to Esteves not to divulge confidential information. Although a person’s subjective beliefs are by their nature difficult to verify, the subjective belief of Tueros’ counsel is a question of fact, and the district court found that Tueros’ counsel believed that she had conflicting duties: “Counsel believed that she was prohibited by the attorney client privilege from utilizing this witness in a way that might adversely affect [the witness’s] legal position.” We hold that this finding is not clearly erroneous.
However, while we accept that Tueros’ counsel believed she had a conflict of interest and that, as Tueros states in his brief, she “decided to treat [Esteves’] Massachusetts problems as confidential information,” we do not determine whether Tueros’ counsel owed an actual legal duty of any kind to Esteves. Tueros does not argue on appeal that the objective events that occurred created a relationship entailing any legal duties owed by Perlmutter to Esteves. 5 He argues only that Perlmutter *595 “believ[ed] that she had a duty to act as [Esteves’] attorney as well as petitioner’s” and that the case presents the question “whether the conflict in Perlmutter’s actual, subjective loyalties affected her performance at trial.” 6
This characterization of Perlmutter’s conflict as purely subjective, however, does not minimize the potentially detrimental impact of the conflict on the quality of Tueros’ representation. Although lacking an objective counterpart, a heartfelt belief on the part of counsel that she owes a duty of confidentiality to a witness can wreak the same havoc on an effective defense whether she is correct or mistaken in that belief.
To determine whether the state court’s implicit conclusion that a purely subjective conflict of interest cannot amount to an “actual conflict” under
Sullivan
is contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, we turn to the analysis in
Sullivan
itself. At one point in the opinion, the Court’s language can be read to define whether a conflict exists by the effect of the conflict on the defendant’s representation.
See Sullivan, 446
U.S. at 349-50,
Despite this ambiguous language, however, the Court’s holding in
Sullivan
is not so broad. The Court indicated that before it could discuss whether an actual conflict existed, it had to review the Third Circuit’s rejection of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s conclusion that no multiple representation occurred.
See Sullivan,
*596 In affirming the Third Circuit’s conclusion that multiple representation had occurred, the Court relied on the opinion below and summarized it as follows:
The Court of Appeals carefully recited the facts from which it concluded that DiBona and Peruto represented both Sullivan and his codefendants. The court noted that both lawyers prepared the defense in consultation with all three defendants, that both advised Sullivan on whether he should rest his defense, and that both played important roles at all three trials. In fact, the transcript of Sullivan’s trial shows that Peruto rather than DiBona rested the defense. We agree with the Court of Appeals that these facts establish the existence of multiple representation.
Id. (internal citations omitted). The Court did not focus on whether the attorneys believed that they owed conflicting duties; rather, it queried whether their conduct was the type of conduct that constituted representation of a criminal defendant, a relationship that entails objective legal duties.
The Third Circuit, in the discussion on which the Supreme Court relied, also had examined whether the facts created the legal duties inherent in representation. For example, it described the significance of Peruto’s role in Sullivan’s defense as follows:
We believe that an attorney who enters an appearance on behalf of a criminal defendant, consults with him confidentially for the purpose of preparing a defense, investigates his case, aids in the pretrial preparation of his defense, appears at his trial, participates in the selection of the jury that is to decide his fate, argues motions and objections, confers with co-counsel on trial strategy, offers the defendant legal advice, including advice on whether he should testify or present evidence in his defense, and argues the issue of penalty, a matter of life and death, to the jury on the defendant’s behalf must be said to represent that defendant and owe to him all the duties an attorney owes to a client in a criminal case. We find that Peruto represented Sullivan as well as [his codefen-dants].
Sullivan,
Petitioner therefore mischaracterizes
Sullivan
insofar as he argues that the Court “reasoned ... that multiple representation had occurred because both lawyers
believed
that they were representing all three defendants.”
7
In its discussion of multiple representation, the Court asked whether the conduct of the attorneys constituted representation and, thus, whether duties inherent in representation actually existed; the Court proceeded to ask whether a conflict existed only after determining that more than one such relationship existed. This analysis is reasonably interpreted as objective: Did the events that occurred create actual relationships with legal significance between counsel and more than one person? In summary, the state court’s decision not to apply
Sullivan
to a purely subjective conflict of interest was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of,
Sullivan
— the conflict alleged here does not present facts that are “materially indistinguishable” from those in
Sullivan,
*597
Williams,
Limiting the scope of an “actual conflict” to conflicts arising from actual duties is also reasonable in light of the policies animating the various standards used to vindicate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel in different contexts. Although defense counsel’s actual and perceived duties owed to parties other than the defendant may cause equal injury to the defendant’s case, the question presented is whether defendant’s burden should be the same when trying to prove that such injury amounts to a constitutional violation. Only conflicts arising from actual duties are structural flaws in our adversarial system of justice that guarantees each defendant a lawyer functioning in an institutional role that permits zealous advocacy. A purely subjective conflict is, in contrast, an attorney’s individual shortcoming, flowing from an incorrect assessment of the situation and devoid of any actual obligation. Purely subjective conflicts are, in fact, no more than a polite way of saying personal mistakes, a traditional'type of ineffectiveness of counsel to which Strickland rather than Sullivan is routinely applied. Reserving Sullivan’s limited presumption of prejudice to remedy the structural flaw that occurs when a lawyer is placed in the untenable situation of being required to serve two masters is a reasonable line to draw. 8 Furthermore, where a subjective conflict causes injury to the defendant, Strickland may provide a remedy. 9
We also note that the purely subjective standard for measuring conflicts advocated by Tueros would, in certain situations, create more injustice than it would remedy. If an “actual conflict” is determined only by the attorney’s belief, then an attorney who is blinded to his or her own conflict could not violate his client’s constitutional rights. Tueros instead might have argued that either a conflict of objective duties or a subjective-yet-verifiable belief in conflicting duties could give rise to an “actual conflict,” but the result of our analysis would be the same: It is neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of Sullivan to reserve the “adverse effect” stan *598 dard, and its limited presumption of prejudice, for cases involving an actual conflict of objective duties, such as the duties that arise from the actual representation of a party involved in a criminal proceeding.
Tueros also argues that the
Sullivan
analysis must focus on counsel’s subjective beliefs because the only viable alternative is an objective analysis under the state law of attorney-client privilege, but neither
Sullivan
nor the cases applying
Sullivan
discuss state law. In fact, because federal habeas courts cannot review questions of state law,
Estelle v. McGuire,
Because we hold that it is not an unreasonable application of
Sullivan
to conclude that Tueros’ counsel did not have an “actual conflict,” we do not reach the issue whether the conflict “adversely affected [counsel’s] performance,”
Sullivan,
CONCLUSION
We hold that it was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of, Sullivan to conclude that Tueros’ counsel’s purely subjective belief that she owed a duty to a defense witness did not amount to an “actual conflict” as Sullivan defines the term, and we affirm the district court’s denial of Tueros’ habeas petition under § 2254.
Notes
. On appeal, Tueros does not raise the state court's failure to investigate Perlmutter's conflict as a basis for habeas relief.
. The state court’s failure to cite the relevant federal precedents, and thus the implicit na, ture of the state court’s holding, is not relevant to our review. See
Early
v.
Packer,
. Furthermore, the district court concluded that Perlmutter "acted well within the bounds of propriety in bringing the matter to the court's attention,” a finding that would likely undermine Tueros' Strickland claim.
. In
Wood v. Georgia,
. Tueros does argue that the district court incorrectly stated that the state trial court "ruled” that Perlmutter was not Esteves’ attorney, but he proceeds to state that "any supposed ruling ... [is] irrelevant.” Because we proceed on the basis on which the case was argued to us — namely, that the conflict was purely subjective — we need not address *595 the import of the trial court’s statement or ruling.
. We do note in passing, however, that a witness’s unilateral decision to volunteer information to defense counsel is unlikely to create any legal duty of confidentiality on the part of defense counsel.
. Although the Third Circuit also considered the attorneys' beliefs that they were co-counsel representing all three defendants,
see Sullivan,
. The application of
Strickland
rather than
Sullivan
to purely subjective conflicts is also logical in light of one of the justifications that the Supreme Court has given for the limited presumption of prejudice available under
Sullivan.
"Given ... the ability of trial courts to make early inquiry in certain situations likely to give rise to conflicts, it is reasonable for the criminal justice system to maintain a fairly rigid rule of presumed prejudice for conflicts of interest” under
Sullivan. Strickland,
. The clean division between subjective and actual duties made here might give rise to a hypothetical difficulty in the context of a defense counsel's mistaken-yet-reasonable belief that a separate duty conflicts with the duty actually owed to the defendant. In most cases, counsel’s belief will be reasonable only when there is a conflict between actual obligations. But, informational asymmetry between counsel and the person to whom the duty is perhaps owed, or some other set of unusual facts, might also create a mistaken-yet-reasonable belief in conflicting duties. Analyzing such conflicts under Strickland, however, might prove awkward because the more reasonable the attorney’s belief is (and the closer to an "actual conflict” the subjective conflict becomes), the less likely the attorney’s behavior will be perceived to deviate from the norms of the profession, and, therefore, the less likely the Strickland standard will afford relief. Although this concern might sway our reasoning in a direct appeal of whether a purely subjective, yet reasonable, conflict should be analyzed under Sullivan, it does not in an appeal, such as this one, that is constrained by the AEDPA standard.
