Part 1(A)(2), entitled “Procedural Bar,” is hereby vacated and the following is substituted in lieu thereof:
2. Abuse of the Writ and Procedural Bar
A district court need not consider a claim raised for the first time in a second habeas petition, unless the petitioner establishes that the failure to raise the claim earlier was not the result of intentional abandonment or withholding or inexcusable neglect. Rule 9(b) of the Rules Govéming Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts;
Witt v. Wainwright,
Because the district court’s determination that Adams’ failure to raise his
Caldwell
claim,
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
a. Abuse of the Writ
We find no evidence that Adams’ failure to raise this claim in his earlier petition was the result of inexcusable neglect or deliberate withholding. The
Caldwell
decision, upon which the claim is based, clearly was not available to Adams at the time he filed his first petition in September 1984. Indeed, the Supreme Court did not grant certiorari in
Caldwell
until after the district court had denied Adams’ first petition.
Cf. Bowden v. Kemp,
Nor did Supreme Court precedent at the time of Adams’ first habeas petition make it evident that statements such as those made by the trial judge in this case implicated the Eighth Amendment. In fact, if anything, that precedent indicated that the contrary was true. In
California v. Ramos,
The abuse of the writ doctrine should be “of rare and extraordinary application.”
Paprskar v. Estelle,
b. Procedural Bar
Adams’
Caldwell
claim was raised for the first time in state court in his second 3.850 motion. The Florida Supreme Court refused to consider the merits of that claim
*1497
because it had not been raised on direct appeal.
Adams v. State,
Under Florida law, claims based on constitutional changes in the law since the time of a petitioner’s direct appeal of sufficient magnitude to warrant retroactive application are cognizable in Rule 3.850 proceedings,
Witt v. State,
Further, we find that Adams has established cause and prejudice for any procedural default resulting from his failure to raise this claim on direct appeal. When “a constitutional claim is so novel that its legal basis is not reasonably available to counsel” at the time of a petitioner’s procedural default, the petitioner has cause for the failure to raise the claim in accordance with the state procedural rule.
Reed v. Ross,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Furman v. Georgia,
Between the time Florida enacted its new death penalty statute in late 1972 in an attempt to comply with the Eighth Amendment requirements of
Furman
and the time of Adams’ trial and sentencing, the Supreme Court had issued several decisions that began to give some shape to the Eighth Amendment concerns expressed in
Furman.
In
Gregg v. Georgia,
By the time of Adams’ trial, however, the Supreme Court had placed some substantive limitations on the factors that a capital sentencing jury could consider in determining whether death was appropriate:
In Gregg itself the joint opinion suggested that excessively vague sentencing standards might lead to the arbitrary and capricious sentencing patterns condemned in Furman.428 U.S. at 195 n. 46 [96 S.Ct. at 2935 n. 46]. Moreover, in Woodson v. North Carolina,428 U.S. 280 [96 S.Ct. 2978 ,49 L.Ed.2d 944 ] (1976), the plurality concluded that a State must structure its capital sentencing procedure to permit consideration of the individual characteristics of the offender and his crime. This principle of individualization was extended in Lockett v. Ohio,438 U.S. 586 [98 S.Ct. 2954 , 57 *1499 L.Ed.2d 973] (1978), where the plurality determined that “the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments require that the sentencer [in a capital case] not be precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.” Finally, in Gardner v. Florida,430 U.S. 349 [97 S.Ct. 1197 ,51 L.Ed.2d 393 ] (1977), a plurality of the Court held that a death sentence may not be imposed on the basis of a presentence investigation report containing information that the defendant has had no opportunity to explain or deny.
Ramos,
Further, critical to the Court’s analysis in
Caldwell
is its conclusion that “[i]n the capital sentencing context there are specific reasons to fear substantial unreliability as well as bias in favor of death sentences when there are state-induced suggestions that the sentencing jury may shift its sense of responsibility to an appellate court.”
Caldwell,
Our conclusion that Eighth Amendment jurisprudence at the time of Adams’ procedural default did not provide a reasonable basis for the claim he now makes is supported by the fact that the state has not cited to, nor have we found, any decisions indicating that this type of Eighth Amendment claim was being raised at that time.
6
In
Engle,
as evidence of the reasonable
*1500
ness of the legal basis for raising the
Mullaney
issue involved in that case at the time of the petitioner’s procedural default, the Court “emphasized that ‘dozens of defendants relied upon
[In re Winship,
In this case, as in
Reed,
claims similar to Adams’ were not being raised at the time of his failure to raise this issue, despite the state’s assertion that this Court’s decision in this case will affect numerous cases already litigated in Florida and despite the number of
Caldwell
claims now being presented to this Court. As the Court noted in
Engle,
the fact a reasonable basis exists for a claim does not mean that every competent lawyer necessarily will raise that claim.
Because the legal basis for Adams’ Caldwell claim was not reasonably available to him at the time of his trial in October 1978 and his sentencing and appeal in 1979, we find that he has established cause for his failure to raise that claim on direct appeal. 8 Further, Adams also was *1501 prejudiced by the failure to raise this claim. As discussed below, the judge’s statements to Adams’ jury clearly violated the principles enunciated in Caldwell, thereby creating an impermissible danger that the jury’s recommended sentence was unreliable and, consequently, that Adams’ death sentence was unreliable. 9
With the above modification of the previously published opinion, the Petition for Rehearing is DENIED.
Notes
. In reaching its decision in
Caldwell,
the Court found it necessary to distinguish
Ramos,
which had been relied upon by the Mississippi Supreme Court in upholding Caldwell’s death sentence.
Caldwell,
. We note that statements regarding appellate review such as those involved in
Caldwell
had been held to be reversible error as a matter of state law by a number of states.
Caldwell,
Further, at the time of Adams’ first habeas petition, this Circuit had considered the argument that prosecutorial and judicial comment on the appellate process rendered a petitioner’s trial fundamentally unfair in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
E.g., Corn v. Zant,
. The state asserts that the Supreme Court held this claim barred
both
because
of
Adams’ failure to raise it on direct appeal and because Adams’ failure to raise it in his first 3.850 motion constituted an abuse of the 3.850 procedure. This interpretation of the Florida Supreme Court’s decision is not supported by the language of that opinion. That language makes it clear that the Florida Supreme Court applied abuse of the 3.850 procedure to bar claims that "ha[d] been considered and ruled upon in the previous motion for post-conviction relief.”
.
Proffitt v. Florida,
. Indeed, the dissent in
Caldwell
describes as "conjecture” the majority’s determination that "the jury would ... have ‘delegated’ its responsibility by erring in favor of imposing the death penalty.”
Caldwell,
. The state argues that pre-Furman cases in Florida holding that remarks by the trial judge and the prosecutor regarding appellate review constituted reversible error as a matter of state law provided a reasonable basis for Adams’ Eighth Amendment claim. As we indicated in connection with our discussion of abuse of the writ, see note 2, supra, the mere fact a practice may be condemned as a matter of state law does not indicate that it also constitutes an Eighth Amendment violation. Similarly, despite the state's argument to the contrary, the Tedder decision, Tedder v. State, 322 S.2d 908 (Fla.1975) itself clearly did not provide a reasonable basis for raising this claim, as Tedder dealt only with the weight to be given the jury’s recommended sentence and not with the Eighth Amendment implications of statements that diminish the jury’s sense of responsibility for its sentence.
. The
Reed
Court did note that some authority on analogous issues did exist at the time of the petitioner’s default in that case. The Court found, however, that because these cases provided only indirect support for the petitioner’s claim and because they were the only cases that would have supported the claim at all, it could not conclude that they provided a reasonable basis upon which the petitioner “could have realistically appealed his conviction."
. In
Reed,
the Supreme Court recognized that "whether an attorney has a 'reasonable basis’ upon which to develop a legal theory may arise in a variety of contexts” and, therefore, did not attempt to delineate those situations.
There are significant differences between Adams’ Caldwell claim and the Mullaney claim at issue in Reed which suggest that the present situation is not sufficiently like that involved in Reed to warrant an analysis in terms of the three situations discussed in Reed as constituting a “clear break with the past." The Mullaney claim at issue in Reed was a due process claim and, therefore, could be analyzed in terms of a long history of consideration by the Supreme Court as well as the lower courts. Adams’ Eighth Amendment claim, however, involves an area of law that has no similar "past.” The Supreme Court’s decision in Furman was only six years old at the time of Adams' trial and the statute under which he was sentenced, as well as all modern death penalty statutes, had a similarly brief history. The Reed Court’s analysis of the Mullaney issue before it thus assumes a past- in the form of a long decisional history that simply is not present in the Eighth Amendment context. It is in fact this lack of any past decisional history indicating that the issues raised by Adams’ Caldwell claim were even ad *1501 dressed by the Eighth Amendment that gives rise to "cause” in this case.
Nevertheless, even assuming that our analysis should proceed in terms of the three situations outlined in Reed, the clear indication of the Eighth Amendment decisions at the time of Adams' trial and appeal that the primary concern of the Eighth Amendment was with the procedures by which the death penalty was imposed, rather than with the particular substantive factors considered by the jury in reaching its decision, and the suggestion by the Supreme Court in Dobbert that statements to a Florida jury that they were not the final arbiter of life and death would bias them in favor of leniency rather than death, certainly can be said to have “arguably sanctioned” statements such as those made by Adams' trial judge for purposes of their consistency with the requirements of the Eighth Amendment.
. The state argues that prejudice cannot be demonstrated because (1) the judge’s comments were a correct assessment of Florida law, (2) the judge’s instructions to the jury as to aggravating and mitigating factors and their weighing would make it clear the jury should render its advisory sentence on the individual circumstances of the case and (3) the comments were made during voir dire, when the judge was merely trying to give the prospective jurors some sense of the sentencing structure.
As discussed above, however, the judge’s comments were misleading because they left the jury with a false impression as to the significanee of its role in the sentencing process. Further, the judge’s instructions regarding mitigating and aggravating circumstances did not cure the misleading statements, because there was no withdrawal or correction of those statements.
Cf. Caldwell,
