Anthony Charles Arnold, Texas prisoner # 1061997, appeals the dismissal of his petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 challenging his Texas conviction and life sentence for aggravated sexual assault and aggravated kidnapping. A certificate of appealability (COA) was granted to review whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to tell Arnold about plea offers of 25 and 15 years. Because the district court’s rejection of Arnold’s ineffective-assistance claim rested on a clearly erroneous factual finding, we reverse the judgment and remand the petition for further consideration. In so doing, we hold that Arnold’s claim does not require him to demonstrate a reasonable probability that the trial court would have approved the plea agreement, only a reasonable probability that he himself would have accepted the plea offer while it was still open.
Arnold was indicted in the 238th District Court of Midland County, Texas for aggravated sexual assault and aggravated kidnapping. Prior to Arnold’s jury trial, the prosecutor communicated a plea offer of 25 years to Clifford Hardwick, Arnold’s attorney at the time. Hardwick negotiated with the prosecutor and obtained a better offer- — 15 years. The prosecutor did not impose a deadline for responding to the offer. Hardwick never told Arnold about either offer. One to two weeks later, the prosecutor rescinded the offer because she learned of Arnold’s prior felony convictions and an earlier arrest for sexual assault. Some time later, Arnold was appointed new counsel, who renewed plea discussions with the prosecutor. The prosecutor’s final offer resulting from these discussions was 40 years, which Arnold rejected.
Following his conviction, the state trial court sentenced Arnold to life imprisonment. Arnold moved for a new trial, asserting that Hardwick was ineffective for failing to tell him about the earlier plea offers. At a hearing before the state trial court on Arnold’s motion, the parties entered into a stipulation that Arnold “never received the 15 year plea bargain offer or the 25 year plea bargain offer from Mr. Hardwick, and if he had done so, he would have considered it.” The prosecutor testified that if Arnold had accepted the offer before it was rescinded, she would have honored the agreement. Nevertheless, the trial court would have had the authority to reject the plea bargain in light of Arnold’s criminal record. The trial court denied Arnold’s motion for a new trial, quoting a *369 transcript excerpt in which Arnold rejected the 40-year offer at a pre-trial conference. The court apparently mistook this 40-year offer for the 15-year offer that was the subject of the new trial motion and denied the motion on that basis.
The Eighth Court of Appeals affirmed on different grounds. Relying on Texas case law, the court held that the prosecutor’s “intervening and evolving knowledge of [Arnold’s] criminal history ... changed the factual premises of [the] original plea offer,” and therefore the offer was “withdrawn with just cause.”
Arnold v. State,
No. 08-01-00298-CR,
Arnold sought habeas relief in federal court. In his federal habeas petition, Arnold claims he told the attorney who represented him at the state-court hearing that he would have accepted the 15-year offer “because he was in a racist county and the odds were against him.” He alleges that his attorney never sought to put this information before the state trial court, beyond the stipulation previously discussed. Arnold also submitted an affidavit to the district court, stating that he “would have accepted the District Attorney’s plea-bargain offer of 15 or 25 [years] had defense counsel informed me of the state’s offer.” He claims that he was “deceived into stipulating” that he would have merely considered, rather than actually accepted, the offer. According to his affidavit, he misunderstood the meaning of the term: “When I stated ‘considered’, I actually mean[t] that I would have definitely accepted the state’s plea-bargain offer had the offer been related to me by defense counsel Cliff Hardwick.” Nevertheless, in rejecting Arnold’s petition, the district court found that “[nowhere] in his pleadings does [Arnold] say he would have accepted the plea deal as offered.” Arnold filed a timely notice of appeal, and this court granted a COA on the issue of whether Hardwick’s failure to convey the original plea offer to Arnold constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel.
Because the certified question was rejected on the merits by the state appellate court on direct appeal of Arnold’s conviction, we must defer to the state court’s adjudication unless it was “contrary to” or an “unreasonable application of’ clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court.
See
§ 2254(d). To find an unreasonable application of federal law, this court must determine that the state court’s ruling was objectively unreasonable and not simply erroneous or incorrect.
Williams v. Taylor,
A petitioner claiming ineffective assistance of counsel must show that: (1) his attorney’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and (2) there is a reasonable probability that, but for his counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Strickland v. Washington,
No one disputes that Hardwick’s complete failure to relay the 15-year plea offer to Arnold fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
See Teague v. Scott,
On this question, the state court made no finding to which we must defer.
1
If anything, by rejecting the claim on other grounds, the state court implicitly agreed — or at the very least assumed— that Arnold would have accepted the offer.
See Valdez v. Cockrell,
Despite the district court’s misreading of the record, Respondent urges us to affirm on another ground: even if Arnold had accepted the 15-year plea offer, it would not necessarily have been approved by the trial court. We decline to do so. To establish prejudice under
Hill,
a petitioner must show a reasonable probability that, absent counsel’s ineffectiveness, he would have changed his plea. Specula
*371
tion about whether the court might have approved a hypothetical plea has no place in this analysis.
See Mask v. McGinnis,
Not only would requiring a petitioner to show a reasonable probability that the court would have approved the plea be inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent, it would also yield an unworkable standard. The Sixth Circuit has observed that such a requirement would be “unfair and unwise” because it would “require litigants to speculate as to how a particular judge would have acted under particular circumstances.”
Turner v. Tennessee,
We therefore refuse to engraft onto
Strickland
the requirement that, in addition to demonstrating a reasonable probability that he would have changed his plea, a petitioner must demonstrate a reasonable probability that the judge, in turn, would have accepted his plea.
2
A number of our sister circuits have similarly rejects ed such a rule.
See United States v. Rodriguez Rodriguez,
In sum, to establish that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s deficient performance, Arnold need only demonstrate a reasonable probability that he would have accepted the 15-year plea offer before it was withdrawn, had his counsel told him about the offer. Because the district court’s rejection of this claim rested on a clearly erroneous factual finding, and the state court made no findings on this point, we reverse the judgment and remand the petition for further consideration in light of this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The only mention of the issue in the state court’s opinion is the observation that Arnold “claims that if he had known about the deal he would have accepted the offer.”
Arnold,
. In doing so, we respectfully decline to follow our unpublished per curiam opinion in
United States v. Trainor,
No. 97-10854,
