One day in 1976, Augustin Carbajol (“Carbajal” in the state court proceedings) chased Reuben Hernandez on foot down an alley in Harvey, Illinois, shooting at him. One shot hit Hernandez, who was unarmed, in the back, and killed him. Carbajol was tried for murder. At his trial (a bench trial), he testified that the night before the shooting, Hernandez, accompanied by a cousin, had come to Carbajol’s house and told him that he intended to kill him and his children and rape his wife; that he would take his time, but would eventually carry out his threats. The next day Carbajol saw Hernandez in a car on the street outside Carbajol’s house, and in an encounter later that day Hernandez told Carbajol that he, Carbajol, was a dead man. Carbajol borrowed a gun from his cousin. His intention was to kill Hernandez, because he thought Hernandez would carry out his threats. When Carbajol returned home with the gun, he saw Hernandez and Hernandez’s cousin standing on the street. Seeing Carbajol, Hernandez reached into his car and took something out, and then he and his cousin began running away. All this testimony was admitted but on the prosecutor’s motion the trial judge refused to allow Carbajol to testify that 14' years earlier in Mexico Hernandez had killed two of Carbajol’s uncles and raped Carbajol’s niece.
Carbajol was convicted of murder and sentenced to 14 to 20 years in prison. The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed his conviction,
People v. Carbajal,
The state argues that Carbajol has waived his objection to the exclusion of the evidence. He had offered the evidence at trial to prove that he had killed Hernandez in self-defense (and, what is the same thing under Illinois law, defense of others — the members of his family) and out of necessity. See Ill.Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 38, §§ 7-1, 7-13. These are complete defenses. Carbajol now argues that the evidence should have been *399 admitted for the different purpose of showing that he was guilty just of voluntary manslaughter, because “at the time of the killing he believe[d] the circumstances to be such that, if they existed, would justify or exonerate the killing under the principles stated in Article 7 of [the Illinois Criminal Code], but his belief [was] unreasonable.” Ill.Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 38, § 9-2(b).
It is necessary to distinguish between failure to exhaust state remedies, and waiver. The state does not argue that Carbajol has failed to exhaust his state remedies. Although exhaustion requires that “the substance of a federal habeas corpus claim must first be presented to the state courts,”
Picard v. Connor,
Failure to exhaust state remedies merely requires the habeas corpus petitioner to present his claim to a state court before presenting it in the federal habeas corpus proceeding; it postpones but does not eliminate his right to obtain relief in that proceeding. Waiver bars him forever; and it is waiver rather than failure to exhaust that the state argues bars us from considering Carbajol’s claim. See
Engle v. Isaac,
“Waiver” is something of a misnomer in this context; the real question is forfeiture. If a state withholds the right of appellate review of issues not raised at trial, the federal courts will not undermine the state’s interest in orderly procedure by allowing the defendant to litigate the issue in a federal habeas corpus proceeding.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
As waiver is not a jurisdictional issue, we think we should go on to consider the merits of Carbajol’s constitutional claim, at least provisionally; for if we reject it on the merits, we reach the same result as if we had held that he had waived the claim, but *400 without having to decide the question of waiver.
Unless the evidence of what had happened in Mexico 14 years earlier was relevant to Carbajol’s defenses against the murder charge, he cannot complain under the Sixth Amendment or anything else about its exclusion. The evidence had a twofold significance, only one fold being conceivably relevant to Carbajol’s defenses. It explained why Carbajol hated Hernandez —and, in so doing, far from helping his defense would have helped the prosecution to establish a motive for murder, if any help had been needed. But it also explained why Carbajol might have expected Hernandez to carry out the threats that he had made on the night before the shooting and repeated on the day of the shooting. Nevertheless, the evidence was inadmissible to prove self-defense (or defense of another) without a foundation that Carbajol failed to lay. “[I]n the absence of preliminary evidence of self-defense” — that is, evidence “that would justify a finding that deceased was the aggressor” in the incident that resulted in his death — “specific acts of violence and threats made by the victim should not be admitted.”
People v. Carbajal, supra,
The question of relevance is more difficult when the excluded evidence is considered in relation to an unreasonable belief by Carbajol that he had to kill Hernandez in defense of himself or his family. Maybe Carbajol, when he saw Hernandez standing in the street in front of his (Carbajol’s) house, thought that the moment when Hernandez’s implacable malignancy would flare out had arrived, and, when Hernandez was fleeing before him, thought that it was only a momentary respite and that if he relented Hernandez would carry out his threats forthwith. This is an unlikely but not absurd account of what may have been going through Carbajol’s mind, and the excluded evidence was relevant to that account.
Also, the Illinois Criminal Code distinguishes between defense of oneself or another against “imminent use of unlawful force,” on the one hand, and conduct justified by “necessity,” that is, conduct “reasonably believed” to be “necessary to avoid a public or private injury greater than the injury which might reasonably result from” the defendant’s effort to prevent it. Ill. Rev.Stat.1981, ch. 39, § 7-13;
People v. Unger,
If, therefore, the excluded evidence was relevant to Carbajol’s defenses, as we think it was, we must consider the constitutional significance of a trial court’s ruling, which the appellate courts of the state refuse to disturb, excluding evidence relevant to a criminal defendant’s defense. Carbajol cites a number of cases, of which
Washington v. Texas,
*401
Carbajol argues that the trial judge erred as a matter of Illinois law in excluding the evidence in question. It is hard to see how this argument can help Carbajol. If the Illinois Appellate Court refused to consider the argument because it was not made (or not made with adequate clarity) to the trial judge, then Carbajol has forfeited his entire federal habeas corpus claim. If the Illinois Appellate Court considered the argument and rejected it on its merits, we are bound by that rejection, as we have no authority to correct that court on questions of state law. And if we did have the authority we would not exercise it here, because there is no indication that Illinois courts would ever admit evidence of the victim’s past violent acts, even on the issue of an unreasonable belief that killing the victim was necessary in self-defense, unless, as in
People v. Foster,
Even if we could say that the evidence excluded at Carbajol’s trial was admissible under Illinois’ rules of evidence, that in itself would have no significance in a federal habeas corpus proceeding. The Constitution requires that criminal trials be fair but not that they be free from errors of state law,
Gryger
v.
Burke,
at the petitioner’s trial, at some point an isolated evidentiary ruling might so hamper his defense that it could no longer be said that he had had a fair trial, and then we would have to intervene.
Webb v. Texas,
The judgment denying the petition for habeas corpus is
AFFIRMED.
