Timothy George BALDWIN, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Ross MAGGIO, Jr., Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary, and
William J. Guste, Jr., Attorney General of the
State of Louisiana, Respondents-Appellees.
No. 82-3318.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
May 16, 1983.
Gravel, Robertson & Brady, Helen G. Roberts, Alexandria, La., for petitioner-appellant.
Bruce G. Whittaker, Asst. Dist. Atty., Monroe, La., for respondents-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.
Before RUBIN and JOHNSON, Circuit Judges, and PARKER,* District Judge.
JOHNSON, Circuit Judge:
Timothy George Baldwin is sentenced to die for the murder of Mary James Peters. A panel of this Court stayed his execution to consider his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt and sentencing phases of his trial.1 The performance of his attorneys in the guilt phase was not constitutionally deficient; the alleged deficiencies in their investigation into considerations in mitigation of sentence have not been shown to have caused actual, substantial prejudice to the petitioner's defense. Baldwin's request for habeas corpus is denied.
I.
On the evening of April 4, 1978, eighty-five year old Mary James Peters was savagely beaten and left to die in the kitchen of her home in West Monroe, Louisiana. The instruments of death were the articles of everyday life: a telephone, a television, a kitchen stool and a cast iron skillet, all shattered into pieces by the force of the assault. She was found the next day, semicomatose and incoherent, on the floor surrounded by the debris of the attack; she died on April 6 of massive cerebral hemorrhage and swelling, secondary to external head injuries.
Timothy Baldwin stood trial for her death. The jury convicted him of murder in the first degree,2 and recommended death on finding that the murder was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious and cruel manner during the perpetration of an armed robbery.3 He was sentenced to die by electrocution. Baldwin's exhaustive appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court was rejected, State v. Baldwin,
The Louisiana trial court then ordered Baldwin to be electrocuted on May 27, 1982. Ten days before his sentence was to be carried out, Baldwin initiated the present proceedings for post-conviction relief. His petition was denied by the state trial court on the day it was filed, and by the Louisiana Supreme Court the following day. One day later he presented identical claims to the federal district court.5 The district court denied his petition for habeas corpus relief without a hearing, and declined to stay his execution. Three days before the appointed date of execution this Court granted a stay pending appeal.
II.
Baldwin asks reconsideration of our earlier ruling that his trial counsel's failure to move for a new trial upon acquisition of an alibi-corroborating motel receipt did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel, see Baldwin II,
A.
Whether an evidentiary hearing is necessary to resolution of a charge of inadequate representation turns on an assessment of the record: if the petition's allegations cannot be resolved absent examination of evidence beyond the record, a hearing is required, Clark v. Blackburn,
This claim may be resolved without recourse to a hearing. Baldwin's challenge is limited to the reasonableness of his trial counsel's decision to forgo a motion for new trial in view of what he argues is the "inescapable conclusion" of his innocence apparent on a simple comparison of the motel receipt with trial testimony establishing the time of the murderer's departure from Mrs. Peters' home.7 All of the information that was relevant to Baldwin's trial attorneys' assessment of the motel receipt as a foundation for a motion for new trial is now before us. The record in support of the present petition includes a complete transcript of the trial testimony and a copy of the motel receipt; Baldwin's present counsel has ably directed our attention to the portions of the record bearing directly on his claim. Further debate on the significance of various passages in the trial record would neither aid nor enhance our evaluation. We turn to consideration of Baldwin's allegation of ineffective post-trial representation.
B.
The sixth amendment, applicable to the states through the fourteenth amendment, Cuyler v. Sullivan,
Constitutionally effective assistance of counsel is "not errorless counsel, and not counsel judged ineffective by hindsight, ...," Herring v. Estelle,
Gray v. Lucas,
To establish a constitutional violation under this standard, a petitioner must demonstrate both an identifiable instance of seriously inadequate performance by counsel, and some actual, substantial disadvantage to the course of his defense resulting from that lapse. Washington v. Strickland,
Evaluation of Baldwin's claim of ineffective representation in his attorneys' decision not to move for a new trial on the basis of the motel receipt must begin with an appreciation of the standard against which motions for new trials are measured in Louisiana courts. La.Code Crim.Pro. art. 851 (West) provides that
The motion for a new trial is based on the supposition that injustice has been done the defendant, and, unless such is shown to have been the case the motion shall be denied, no matter upon what allegations it is grounded.
The court, on motion of the defendant, shall grant a new trial whenever:
* * *
(3) New and material evidence that, notwithstanding the exercise of reasonable diligence by the defendant, was not discovered before or during the trial, is available, and if the evidence had been introduced at the trial it would probably have changed the verdict or judgment of guilty;8
Art. 851(3) consistently has been interpreted to demand that the defendant must show "not simply whether another jury might bring in a different verdict, but whether the new evidence is so material that it ought to produce a different result from the verdict reached." State v. Molinario,
The information provided by the receipt is limited. While it indicates that Baldwin checked into the White Sands Motel in El Dorado, Arkansas on April 4, 1978, it does not specify the time at which he checked in.10 Baldwin's argument, therefore, depends on a construction of the trial record both to establish that the murderer left Mrs. Peters' home too late to arrive in El Dorado before midnight on April 4, and to eliminate the possibility that Baldwin checked into the White Sands prior to arriving at Mrs. Peters' residence. Neither proposition is supported by a fair reading of the record.
Trial testimony linked the murderer, and Baldwin, with a dark-colored van. Half a dozen witnesses stated that a van was parked in front of Mrs. Peters' home for several hours on the night of the fourth. Two of those witnesses, Paul Thomas Rice and Robert Grisham, testified that they first noticed the van when they walked past Mrs. Peters' house at about 10:15 p.m. As they passed, Rice heard scuffling. He paused, then called Grisham back. Both men approached the house and looked into the lighted kitchen through an open window. As they watched, a man swung his arm, bending with the downswing as if striking a target on the floor. Circling and jumping as if to stay on target, the man struck repeatedly. Rice and Grisham decided they were seeing an interspousal quarrel, and resumed their walk to a nearby convenience store. Eight to fifteen minutes later, they returned.11 Both noticed a man and woman standing in Mrs. Peters' yard near the van; the woman appeared to have something in her hand. Rice testified that he heard the man call "We'll see you later, Mrs. Peters", then watched them get into the van and head north. Grisham also testified that he saw them get into the van, but that he then turned his back and did not see the van pull away. Rice's and Grisham's testimony puts the assailant's departure at about 10:25 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Their testimony was contradicted only as to the time of the van's departure by the recollection of another neighbor, Mrs. J.C. Hawkins. Hawkins stated that she noticed the van from the kitchen window of her home "catercorner" from Mrs. Peters' home and that she saw the van there at 11:10 p.m.
Baldwin admitted at trial that he was driving a dark van on April 4 and that he took his girlfriend with him on a visit to Mrs. Peters' home that night.12 The van was seized by the police when Baldwin was picked up several days later in El Dorado. Subsequent search of the van by West Monroe police turned up a bank bag containing savings bonds and certificates of deposits in Mrs. Peters' name.
El Dorado, Arkansas, is approximately seventy miles north of West Monroe, Louisiana. Baldwin, relying exclusively on Hawkins' recollection that she saw the van outside Mrs. Peters' home at 11:10 p.m., argues that he could not have left West Monroe after 11:00 p.m. and arrived in El Dorado before midnight. He offers proof of his presence in El Dorado as irrefutable evidence of the truth of his claim that he left Mrs. Peters before the attack occurred. Baldwin does not argue that his arrival in El Dorado before midnight is inconsistent with Rice's and Grisham's testimony of the assailant's departure from Mrs. Peters' home at 10:30 p.m. We cannot say that it is, or that Hawkins' testimony to the van's presence should necessarily be accepted over Rice's and Grisham's testimony to the assailant's movements.
Even less certain conclusions can be drawn from the record as to Baldwin's whereabouts on April 4 prior to his visit to Mrs. Peters' home. Baldwin testified that he and his girlfriend, travelling together in the van, started out about noon from a park located about 50 miles north of Jackson, Mississippi, and arrived in West Monroe about 2:00 p.m.13 The park superintendent testified that he noticed around 10:00 a.m. that Baldwin, the woman and the van were gone. Michelle Baldwin, the petitioner's stepdaughter, testified that she met him in West Monroe at about noon on the fourth. The record clearly discloses that Baldwin, after once arriving West Monroe, did not leave the town until after he stopped at Mrs. Peters' home. But a large, indeterminate amount of the day elapsed before Baldwin got to West Monroe. The record does not address, much less substantiate, the contention that Baldwin did not stop in El Dorado on his way to West Monroe.
Finally, Baldwin's conviction was supported by more than this circumstantial evidence. Michelle Baldwin testified that on the afternoon of the fourth, before his visit to Mrs. Peters, her father told her he was facing "Old Smokey." When she said that she didn't understand, he told her that he meant the electric chair. Michelle spoke again with Baldwin on April 7. By then, she was aware of Mrs. Peters' beating and death; believing it was to the intended assault on Mrs. Peters that her father had referred in his mention of "Old Smokey", she asked why he did it. She stated that Baldwin answered only, "She didn't suffer, it was fast." William Odell Jones, a friend and travelling companion of Baldwin, Baldwin's girlfriend and her children,14 testified that before going to West Monroe, Baldwin told him that Mrs. Peters had money and that if he had to kill her to get it, he would kill her. Jones further testified that on the day after the assault Baldwin admitted to him that he had killed Mrs. Peters by striking her with his hand, a telephone, a frying pan, a television and a mixer, and had stolen her valuables.
On the record before us we cannot conclude that the motel receipt, if presented on a motion for new trial, would have exculpated Baldwin. It is not inconsistent with conclusions that he was at Mrs. Peters' home at the time of the assault, and was the assailant. It is not such evidence that, as required by the standard controlling the granting of a new trial in Louisiana courts, ought to have produced a different result. Baldwin was not prejudiced by his trial attorneys' decision not to pursue a motion for new trial on the strength of the receipt. His request for habeas corpus relief on this ground must be denied.
III.
Baldwin's second argument in support of his habeas corpus petition charges his trial counsel with incompetency in their preparation for the sentencing phase of his trial. He claims that they failed utterly to conduct a substantial, independent investigation into the one line of defense on which they stake their attempt to stave off the death penalty; he has supported his claim with affidavits attesting to his counsels' inattention to matters in mitigation of punishment, and to the substance of the evidence which he claims they would have found available if only they had looked. He asks for a new sentencing hearing, or, at the least, an evidentiary hearing on his allegations of inadequacy.
The constitutional norms by which effectiveness of criminal representation is measured extend equally to the guilt and sentencing phases of capital trials. Washington v. Strickland,
But the matter does not end with an evaluation of the adequacy of trial counsel's investigative efforts and the validity of his strategic choices. Not every breach of the duty to investigate lays the basis for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus. A petitioner who seeks resentencing through allegations of a discrete failure by his trial attorney's investigation of, and preparation for, his sentencing hearing may not rest on proof only of the failure alleged and its constitutional dimension. He also shoulders the burden of proving that his counsel's ineffectiveness resulted in an actual and substantial disadvantage to the course of his defense. Washington v. Strickland,
Baldwin's argument does not analyze ambiguities in the question of the adequacy of his trial attorneys' preparation for his sentencing hearing. He claims that his is the clear case: his trial counsel simply did nothing to prepare for his penalty proceeding, he charges, and in result presented a far weaker case for amelioration of his punishment than they might have done.
Baldwin's attorneys put on a case for mitigation of punishment based on their client's good character in the years preceding his offense. Three witnesses close to the petitioner offered emotion-charged pleas for mercy. Baldwin's wife and his stepdaughters Michelle and Doris described his years of hard work and dedication to his family. The girls emphasized the love he had shown equally to his biological children and stepchildren, and the sense of moral responsibility he had instilled in them. His wife spoke of his deepening sense of failure and futility in the face of worsening financial problems and the heavy drinking he had turned to after years of near abstinence; she recalled his intelligence, compassion and capabilities, and spoke of their three young children who still needed a father.
Baldwin now argues that his trial counsel put on this case for want of anything else. He charges that they did not begin to prepare for the sentencing hearing until the guilt trial was underway, and that they did not seek out witnesses who could have added a broader, unbiased dimension to his plea. The State counters by defending his trial attorneys' presentation as a reasonable tactical choice. If the truth of the matter is, as Baldwin claims it to be, that his trial attorneys simply failed to make a reasonably substantial investigation into the availability of mitigating character evidence, his attorneys are guilty of a clear violation of their duty to provide effective assistance. Washington v. Strickland,
Baldwin has offered the affidavits of eleven people who say they would have testified for him at his sentencing hearing if they had been asked. All attest to his good character, kind nature, and hard work. But none had known him for a prolonged period of time, and none had been in contact with him during at least the two years prior to his offense. Some knew him only slightly, as the courteous, industrious man who had put siding on their houses; others had been neighbors or co-workers for a while in the mid-1970's. One was a cousin close to Baldwin while they were children; another was a parish priest whose services the Baldwins had attended in 1973 and 1974. Their testimony would have served only to corroborate the portrait of the man sketched by his wife and daughters. It would have been largely cumulative, and from sources whose relationships with Baldwin were, both in time and intensity, remote from his offense. Brooks v. Estelle,
IV.
Careful examination of Baldwin's charges of ineffective assistance has led us to the conclusion that the courses he claims his trial attorneys should have taken would not have been of substantial benefit to his defense. The judgment of the district court denying his petition for habeas corpus is accordingly affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
John V. Parker, Chief Judge of the Middle District of Louisiana, sitting by designation
Baldwin presented a third claim in his petition for habeas corpus: he argued that the Louisiana Supreme Court's practice of conducting its proportionality reviews of sentences meted out in capital murder cases on a district-by-district basis fails to satisfy the eighth and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution. Baldwin concedes that this panel's consideration of that claim is foreclosed by the en banc Court's rejection of an identical claim in Williams v. Maggio,
We note that the Supreme Court has recently granted a petition for certiorari presenting proportionality review issues similar to those raised by Baldwin in his petition for habeas corpus. Pulley v. Harris,
Baldwin was convicted under La.Rev.Stat.Ann. Sec. 14:30 (West), which provides, in pertinent part,
First degree murder is the killing of human being: (1) When the offender has specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated escape, aggravated arson, aggravated rape, aggravated burglary, armed robbery, or simple robbery:
* * *
Whoever commits the crime of first degree murder shall be punished by death or life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence in accordance with the recommendation of the jury.
Louisiana allows a sentence of death to be imposed if "the jury finds beyond a reasonable doubt that at least one statutory aggravating circumstance exists and, after consideration of any mitigating circumstances, recommends that the sentence of death be imposed." La.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 905.3 (West). The recommendation must be unanimous. La.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 905.6 (West)
Aggravating circumstances are defined by La.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 905.4 (West), which provides, in pertinent part, that
The following shall be considered aggravating circumstances:
(a) the offender was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated burglary, aggravated arson, aggravated escape, armed robbery, or simple robbery;
* * *
(g) the offense was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner.
Mitigating circumstances, under La.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 905.5 (West), include
(a) The offender has no significant prior history of criminal activity;
(b) The offense was committed while the offender was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance;
* * *
(e) At the time of the offense the capacity of the offender to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was impaired as a result of mental disease or defect or intoxication;
* * *
(h) Any other relevant mitigating circumstances.
The petition also included an allegation that the Louisiana Supreme Court conducted its proportionality review of Baldwin's death sentence in a constitutionally impermissible manner. See Baldwin II,
Baldwin has exhausted state remedies on the three claims presented to the federal district court, i.e., that his trial counsel was ineffective insofar as counsel failed to move for a new trial on the basis of the motel receipt, that his trial counsel inadequately prepared for presentation of, and presented, evidence in mitigation of punishment at the sentencing hearing, and that the Louisiana Supreme Court's proportionality review procedures are unconstitutional. Daniels v. Maggio,
In anticipation of the possibility that this successive petition might be opposed or dismissed as an abuse of the writ, see Rule 9(b), Rules Governing Section 2254 cases in the United States District Courts, 28 U.S.C. foll. Sec. 2254; Sanders v. United States,
We find it unnecessary to comment either on the application of the doctrine to the circumstances of this proceeding, compare Potts v. Zant,
Baldwin's petition for habeas corpus relief did not allege that his trial counsel's performance was constitutionally inadequate because they failed to search for additional evidence buttressing the alibi suggested by the motel receipt. Rather, his petition, and his presentation in this Court, charged ineffective representation solely on the ground that his trial attorneys failed to act on new evidence which, viewed in the light of the trial record, conclusively demonstrates that Baldwin could not have been at the scene of the crime, at the time of the crime. The adequacy of trial counsel's investigation into the importance of the receipt was mentioned but once, and that only in passing, in Baldwin's appellate brief; no factual allegations were made in amplification of the charge. That one bare suggestion is wholly inadequate to raise a substantial claim of constitutional dimension, Baldwin II at 947; United States v. Gray,
Baldwin's trial counsel acquired the receipt approximately five months after the close of trial. The State concedes for the sake of argument that the motel receipt is material evidence which could not have been discovered prior to the close of trial even in the exercise of due diligence
The revising committee's note to art. 851 emphasizes that the section was phrased deliberately to "stress[ ] the basic requirement that the irregularities complained of in a motion for a new trial must have resulted in the doing of an injustice to the accused." La.Code Crim.Pro. art. 851, official revision comment. This limitation of new trials to situations in which a convincing showing of injustice has been made is firmly established in Louisiana jurisprudence, see id., citing Acts 1928, No. 2, Sec. 1, arts. 506, 508, 509 (repealed 1967); State v. West,
We assume the accuracy of the receipt for the purposes of this discussion. It is, of course, possible that the receipt was misdated, perhaps accidentally, because the person checked in shortly after midnight on April 4, 1978, and the room clerk had failed to change the date stamp promptly at midnight
Rice and Grisham's testimony diverged somewhat on this point. Rice estimated the time elapsed as eight minutes; Grisham under direct examination stated that their return was about 15 minutes later. When confronted with Rice's statement on cross-examination, Grisham stated that he could not remember precisely, but would estimate that they were gone about 10 to 15 minutes
Mrs. Peters was a longstanding friend of the Baldwin family. Timothy Baldwin met her in 1973, after she had already developed a close friendship with his wife Rita. Mrs. Peters visited the Baldwin's home on occasional Sundays, Christmas and Easter; she was godmother to one of their twin boys, and remembered the boys' birthday with gifts of savings bonds. Timothy Baldwin frequently did handyman work for Mrs. Peters around the house
Baldwin's recollection of this trip must be erroneous in some aspect: the park is about 200 miles from West Monroe
The group wandered from Louisiana to Ohio to Florida and back. Their travels are chronicled in part in Baldwin II. Id. at 945
Baldwin also complains that his trial attorneys failed to prepare his wife and stepdaughters for their testimony at the sentencing hearing, that his attorney's closing argument was lackluster, and that he failed to mention that Baldwin had no prior record of violent crime. But he does not specify how his family's testimony might have been improved; neither does he deny that emphasis on the absence of violence in his criminal record would have served as well to underscore his prior criminal activities. As to the alleged deficiencies in the closing argument, we decline to embark on a course of regulation of rhetoric condemned not for impropriety, but for an absence of intensity
