George E. BANKS, Appellant
v.
Mаrtin HORN, Commissioner, PA Dept of Corrections; James Price, Superintendent of State Correctional Institute Greene; Raymond J. Colleran, Superintendent State Correctional Institute Waymart; Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
No. 99-9005.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued April 2, 2001.
On Remand from the United States Supreme Court by Order of June 17, 2002.
Filed January 14, 2003.
Albert J. Flora, Jr., [Argued], Wilkes-Barre, PA, William Ruzzo, Kingston, PA, for Appellant, George E. Banks.
Scott C. Gartley [Argued], David W. Lupas, Office of District Attorney, Luzerne County Courthouse, Wilkes-Barre, PA, for Appellee, Commonwealth of PA.
Peter Goldberger, Law Office of Peter Goldberger, Ardmore, PA, for Amicus-Appellant, PA Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Louis M. Natali [Argued], Turner & McDonald, Philadelphia, PA, for Amicus-Appellants, PA Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and Louis M. Natali.
Before: SLOVITER, ROTH and RENDELL, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
In Horn v. Banks,
I.
George Banks was sentenced to death for the murder of thirteen people in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in 1982. His conviction and sentence were upheld by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania on direct appeal, Commonwealth v. Banks,
On October 31, 2001, we reversed the District Court and granted Banks a provisional writ of habeas corpus, finding meritorious Banks's argument that his death sentence was unconstitutional. Banks v. Horn,
In reaching that conclusion, we were presented with the question of whether Mills was applicable for purposes of our collateral review of Banks's conviction and sentence under Teague v. Lane,
Teague's new rule of nonretroactivity was premised at least in part on a respect for the workings of state courts and state judges appropriate to our federal system. In particular, the Supreme Court has noted that by validating "reasonable, good-faith interpretations of existing precedents made by state courts," the principles of nonretroactivity established in Teague "effectuate[] the States' interest in the finality of criminal convictions and foster[] comity between federal and state courts." Gilmore v. Taylor,
Because Banks's conviction became final in October of 1987,1 eight months before the Supreme Court issued its decision in Mills, one of the Commonwealth's primary arguments before us in Banks I was that Mills was not applicable to Banks's petition for habeas relief. We disagreed. We reasoned that, although Teague "retroactivity is a `threshold question,'" Banks I,
Teague teaches that the federal courts in habeas corpus proceedings should be reluctant to apply new rules of federal jurisprudence in state court cases decided before such new rules were handed down. Principles of comity and finality counsel that we maintain a circumscribed scope of habeas review. Here, however, ... the Pennsylvania Supreme Court applied Mills. We are examining the application of Mills, not because we wish to impose a new rule not considered by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, but as the court in fact did consider and apply it. In such a situation, Teague is not implicated. Accordingly, we need ask only whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's application of Mills should be disturbed under [the appropriate standard of review].
Id. at 543 (citations omitted). Accordingly, we held that resolution of the retroactivity of Mills under Teague was unnecessary, and proceeded directly to our examination of the merits of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's application of Mills to the facts presented in Banks's appeal. As noted above, we resolved that question in Banks's favor, holding that the sentencing phase jury instructions and forms were clearly unconstitutional, and therefore that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision finding otherwise involved an unreasonable application of established Supreme Court precedent. Id. at 551.
In Horn v. Banks,
II.
We note at the outset that our determination as to the merits of Banks's Mills claim was not reviewed by the Supreme Court. The Court thus did not vacate our previous decision but only reversed that portion of our opinion that concluded that a Teague analysis was unnecessary for our review of Banks's habeas petition. Accordingly, the sole issue presently before us is whether our application of Mills on habeas review of Banks's sentence was improper under the Supreme Court's nonretroactivity jurisprudence.3 To provide background for the analysis, we first briefly discuss the Court's decision in Mills itself, then turn to an examination of the Supreme Court's retroactivity framework.
A.
In Mills, the Court considered the constitutionality of a set of jury instructions, as well as the implementing verdict forms, that could be understood to prevent the consideration of mitigating circumstances if the jury was not unanimous in finding the existence of such circumstances. Mills,
If eleven jurors agree that there are six mitigating circumstances, the result is that no mitigating circumstance is found. Consequently, there is nothing to weigh against any aggravating circumstancе found and the judgment is death even though eleven jurors think the death penalty wholly inappropriate....
[In] a situation just as intuitively disturbing: All 12 jurors might agree that some mitigating circumstances were present, and even that those mitigating circumstances were significant enough to outweigh any aggravating circumstance found to exist. But unless all 12 could agree that the same mitigating circumstance was present, they would never be permitted to engage in the weighing process or any deliberation on the appropriateness of the death penalty.
Id. at 373-74,
It is beyond dispute that in a capital case the sentencer may 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. The corollary that the sentencer may not refuse to consider or be precluded from considering any relevant mitigating evidence is equally well established.
Id. at 374-75,
B.
Again, the sole issue before us is whether the rule enunciated in Mills is retroactively applicable to Banks's appeal. Retroactivity analysis is governed by the principles first articulated in Teague v. Lane, in which the Supreme Court held that "[u]nless they fall within an exception to the general rule, new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced." Teague,
In Teague itself, the Court admitted that it is "often difficult to determine" whether a case announces a new rule, and explicitly avoided any "attempt to define the spectrum of what may or may not constitute a new rule for retroactivity purposes." Teague,
Perhaps as a result of the inevitable difficulty in articulating one test to govern all possible retroactivity scenarios, the Supreme Court has "stated variously the formula for determining when a rule is new." O'Dell v. Netherland,
At the same time, the Court has focused on the decision-making process confronting state court judges. See, e.g., O'Dell,
III.
We hold that Mills did not announce a new rule of constitutional law for retroactivity purposes, and accordingly that our application of Mills on our habeas review of Banks's sentence was completely proper.5 There are four aspects to our reasoning: (1) the legal landscape at the time of Banks's conviction, (2) the Supreme Court's decision in Mills itself, (3) the relevant post-Mills decisions of the Supreme Court, and (4) the opinions of our sister Courts of Appeals who have addressed whether Teague bars retroactive application of Mills.
Our "first and principal task" under Teague is to survey the legal landscape to determine whether Mills "was dictated by then existing precedent ... that is, [whether] the unlawfulness [of the situation in Mills] was apparent to all reasonable jurists." Lambrix,
By the time Banks's conviction became final in 1987, the legal landscape was primarily defined by Supreme Court case law spanning nearly a dozen years.6 We begin our examination of this precedent with the Supreme Court's decision in Woodson v. North Carolina,
The Court articulated the full import of Woodson's constitutional directive more clearly in Lockett v. Ohio,
[T]he Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments require that the sentencer ... 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.
Id. (first emphasis added). The Court explained that:
Given that the imposition of death by public authority is so profoundly different from all other penalties, we cannot avoid the conclusion that an individualized decision is essential in capital cases. The need for treating each defendant in a capital case with that degree of respect due the uniqueness of the individual is far more important than in noncapital cases .....
There is no perfect procedure for deciding in which cases governmental authority should be used to impose death. But a statute that prevents the sentencer in all capital cases from giving independent mitigating weight to aspects of the defendant's character and record and to circumstances of the offense proffered in mitigation creates the risk that the death penalty will be imposed in spite of factors which may call for a less severe penalty. When the choice is between life and death, that risk is unacceptable and incompatible with the commands of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Id. at 605,
Four years later, in Eddings v. Oklahoma,
The limitations placed by these courts upon the mitigating evidence they would consider violated the rule in Lockett. Just as the State may not by statute preclude the sentencer from considering any mitigating factor, neither may the sentencer refuse to consider, as a matter of law, any relevant mitigating evidence. In this instance, it was as if the trial judge had instructed the jury to disregard the mitigating evidence proffered on his behalf. The sentencer ... may determine the weight to be given relevant mitigating evidence. But they may not give it no weight by excluding such evidence from their consideration.
Id. at 113-115,
First, in Skipper v. South Carolina,
There is no disputing that ... in capital cases the sentencer may 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. Equally clear is the corollary rule that the sentencer may not refuse to consider or be precluded from considering any mitigating evidence.
Id. at 4,
A year later, in California v. Brown,
Finally, in Hitchcock v. Dugger,
Although Banks relies primarily on the Lockett/Eddings line of cases, we mention another Supreme Court case, Andres v. United States,
Clearly, the Andres decision took place within a different statutory context and, in our view, is not a model of clarity. However, because it, like Mills, involved jury instructions on unanimity in a capital case, Andres certainly plays some role in the relevant legal landscape — a conclusion reinforced by the Court's citation to it in Mills itself. See Mills,
We agree with Banks that this legal landscape — as exemplified by Lockett and Eddings, but also including at least Andres, Woodson, Skipper, Brown, and Hitchcock—strongly supports Banks's position that the Court in Mills did not develop any new principle of law, but instead merely relied upon clear and well established constitutional rules, such that Mills was compelled and dictated by the legal landscape, and no reasonable jurist could have reached a different result. Insofar as the landscape evidenced the Supreme Court's unwavering recognition and insistence that the Eighth Amendment prohibits any barrier to the sentencеr's consideration of mitigating evidence, it provided a clear indication that a jury instruction that could work to prevent a juror from considering any and all mitigating evidence, whether because of unanimity requirements or otherwise, would be constitutionally infirm.
In reaching this conclusion, we are not unmindful of the difficulty of employing Teague's mandates to divine whether the legal landscape supports a finding that a rule is or is not new, given the Court's various formulations of the measuring stick for determining whether a particular case does or does not announce a new rule. It is not precisely clear just how short the "step" must be between existing precedent and the current announcement, or how strong the pull of precedent must be in a certain direction. There certainly must be some gradation or difference, or the rule in question would not be even arguably new. Thus, a decision that does extend reasoning may nonetheless be viewed as not "new" under Teague. The Supreme Court has acknowledged as much when it has noted the difficulty of determining whether a new rule was announced where "a decision extends the reasoning of our prior cases." Saffle,
The Supreme Court's reasoning and rhetoric in Mills itself follows form from the legal landscape, and bolsters the view that it was not announcing a new constitutional rule. Initially, we note that "[i]t is significant" that Mills did explicitly and heavily rely on controlling precedent. Lambrix,
It would certainly be the height of arbitrariness to allow or require the imposition of the death penalty under the circumstances ... postulated by petitioner.... It is beyond dispute that in a capital case "`the sentencer [may] 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.'" Eddings v. Oklahoma,
....
Under our decisions, it is not relevant whether the barrier to the sentencer's consideration of all mitigating evidence is interposed by statute, Lockett v. Ohio, supra; Hitchcock v. Dugger,
The critical question, then, is whether petitioner's interpretation of the sentencing process is one a reasonable jury could have drawn from the instructions given by the trial judge and from the verdict form employed in this casе.
Mills,
Moreover, we note that recent Supreme Court references to the Teague test have indicated that the "determinative question" under Teague is whether reasonable jurists, reading the case law in existence at the time the conviction became final, could have concluded that Banks's sentencing "was not constitutionally infirm." Graham,
While the Commonwealth and our concurring colleague seize on the fact that there were four dissenting justices in Mills in arguing that "reasonable jurists" could have differed on the outcome at the time of that case, a careful reading of the Mills dissent makes clear that the dissenting justices did not take issue with the principle that jurors must be able to consider all mitigating factors without the requirement of unanimity. The dissenters never questioned the strong statements by the majority to the effect that the result in Mills was mandated by the Lockett/Eddings line of cases. Rather, they viewed the majority as having applied the wrong test as to the probability that jurors misunderstood the instructions in the factual setting presented. See Mills,
Our conclusion finds support in the Supreme Court's decision in Penry v. Lynaugh,
In arguing for the nonretroactivity of Mills, the Commonwealth invokes two other Supreme Court decisions handed down after Mills. First, the Commonwealth relies on the dissenting opinion and one of the concurring opinions in McKoy v. North Carolina,
Secondly, the Commonwealth places great reliance on the Supreme Court's reasoning in Saffle v. Parks,
The Commonwealth, as well as our concurring colleague, seizes on Saffle's "what" versus "how" distinction as supporting its view that Mills was a new rule; in effect, it argues that jury unanimity requirements made unconstitutional by Mills are nothing but a rule regarding how the jury must consider mitigating evidence, i.e., the jury must consider it unanimously. While perhaps viscerally appealing, upon reflection this linguistic shorthand does not withstand scrutiny. Indeed, we believe that, if anything, Saffle supports the conclusion that Mills did not announce a new rule. As discussed above, the harm identified in Mills by the Supreme Court — as well as the dissenting opinion in the Maryland Court of Appeals — was the potential that jurors were precluded from considering any and all mitigating evidence. See Mills,
Finally, we note that our conclusion finds additional support in a recent ruling by the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. In Gall v. Parker,
It is worth emphasizing here that Banks's case is far stronger than the one presented to the Sixth Circuit in Gall. Whereas Gall's conviction became final in 1981, limiting the legal landscape to primarily the plurality opinion in Lockett, Banks' conviction was not final until late in 1987, only months before Mills and after the Supreme Court's decisions in Eddings, Skipper, and Hitchcock, in all of which a clear majority of the Court applied the Lockett rule and reversed a sentence of death.
In contrast to the Sixth Circuit's decision in Gall, two Courts of Appeals have held that Teague bars the application of Mills on habeas. In Miller v. Lockhart,
The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has also repeatedly stated that Mills announced a new rule under Teague. See Woods v. Johnson,
IV.
Our previous ruling in this case was reversed by the Supreme Court only insofar as we held it unnecessary to decide whether Mills had retroactive application. Because we now hold that our application of Mills on habeas review of Banks's sentence was not prohibited by Teague, we do not disturb the remainder of our previous opinion, including its discussion and holding with regard to the merits of Banks's Mills claim. We merely augment that opinion by essentially replacing its discussion of the Teague issue with the analysis here. Accordingly, our judgment requiring a new penalty phase for Banks will remain unchanged.
Notes:
Notes
A conviction becomes final forTeague purposes "when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally denied." Caspari v. Bohlen,
On July 12, 2002, Banks filed a Petition for Rehearing. The Supreme Court recalled its issuance of judgment on July 17, but on August 26, the Court denied rеhearing and reissued judgment
This is not the first time we have been presented with the issue of the retroactivity ofMills. In Zettlemoyer v. Fulcomer,
The Maryland Court of Appeals upheld the sentence of deathSee Mills v. State,
Because we conclude thatMills did not announce a new rule under Teague, we need not address Banks's arguments regarding whether Mills falls within one of the two exceptions to nonretroactivity. We note, however, that in Williams v. Dixon,
It is worth noting that although the Supreme Court has instructed that "the reasonable views of state courts are entitled to consideration" as part of the legal landscape,Caspari v. Bohlen,
The Court's opinion inWoodson was a plurality of three — Justices Powell, Stevens, and Stewart. Justices Brennan and Marshall both concurred in the judgment given their opinion that capital punishment inherently violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Lockett's plurality opinion was written by Chief Justice Burger and joined by Justices Powell, Stevens, and Stewart. Justice Brennan took no part in the case, and Justice Marshall again concurred on the ground that capital punishment is always unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court has made clear thatBrown was not dictated by Lockett and Eddings. See Saffle,
In her concurrence, Judge Sloviter focuses on whetherMills was "commanded" or "dictated" by the legal landscape in concluding that it announced a new rule.
Although it has been noted that forTeague purposes an opinion's language is not always "conclusive," see, e.g., Butler,
Unlike our concurring colleague, we do not viewGraham v. Collins as adding anything of significance to the legal landscape. In Graham, the Supreme Court decided that, unlike Penry — in which the Court held that the "special issues" structure did not give the jury a genuine opportunity for consideration of diminished capacity attributes such as mental retardation and an abused childhood — the "special issues" structure did place certain mitigating evidence such as youth, family background and positive character traits within the sentencer's "effective reach." Graham,
Moreover, to the extent the Commonwealth relies on theMcKoy minority's view that Mills was not actually decided on Lockett/Eddings grounds, we are unpersuaded that their argument is particularly relevant. Asking whether Mills is retroactive in this case is shorthand for asking whether the rule Banks seeks to have applied on habeas — that the Constitution prohibits unanimity instructions that preclude jurors from giving proper consideration to proffered mitigating evidence — was a new rule under Teague given the date his conviction became final. It is for similar reasons that, as we discuss below, our decision here is not formally inconsistent with, for instance, the Eighth Circuit's decision in Miller v. Lockhart,
Similarly, in an opinion we have previously referred to as "brief but thoughtful,"Frey v. Fulcomer,
We also note that inMcDougall v. Dixon,
SLOVITER, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I continue to adhere to the judgment of the court instructing the District Court to grant a provisional writ of habeas corpus directed to the petitioner's penalty phase. However, my response to the issue on which the United States Supreme Court remanded this case to us differs from that of the majority.
I.
In its per curiam opinion remanding this case, Horn v. Banks,
The petitioner in Teague sought to challenge the composition of his jury, as the prosecutor had used all 10 of his peremptory challenges to exclude blacks. Teague had argued throughout, without success, that the jury was not a fair cross section. His habeas petition in the Supreme Court sought the benefit of its decision in Batson v. Kentucky,
Thus, the Court turned to Teague's fair cross section claim, where he relied on the holding in Taylor v. Louisiana,
As to the definition of a "new rule," the Supreme Court explained in Teague that "[i]n general ... a case announces a new rule when it breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government." Id. at 301,
In the Supreme Court's opinion in Caspari, the Court elaborated on the responsibility of a federal court faced with a habeas petition seeking relief based on a rule announced after the defendant's conviction became final. Caspari,
The rule on which Banks relies is that enunciated in Mills. In Mills, the Supreme Court vacated a death sentence where the sentencing court's instruction left a substantial probability that the jurors may have believed they had to be unanimous on the existence of a particular mitigating factor before it could be weighed against an aggravating factor in determining whether the death sentence should be imposed.
Banks contends that in 1987, at the conclusion of his direct review in state court, the Supreme Court had decided numerous cases creating the framework upon which Mills was predicated, and that therefore Mills should not be regarded as a new rule for purposes of non-retroactivity under Teague. Banks argues that by the time his sentences became final as defined under Teague and Caspari, the Supreme Court had decided ten cases before Mills that "embody the Eighth Amendment prohibition against a state mandated process that creates a barrier to juror consideration of indispensable evidence of the character and record of an offender in a death penalty proceeding." Appellant's Supp. Br. at 3. He counts among those cases Furman v. Georgia,
Banks states that in Woodson v. North Carolina,
Banks next notes the decision in Roberts v. Louisiana,
He next references Skipper v. South Carolina,
Banks argues that this line of cases, embodying the rule that a jury in a capital case must be permitted to consider all mitigating factors, compelled the holding in Mills that "prohibited a state from requiring a jury to be unanimous before they could find the existence of a particular mitigating circumstance." Appellant's Supp. Br. at 9. He continues, "The Woodson-Lockett-Eddings-Dugger lines of cases dictate such a result." Id. He relies on the following language in Mills:
Under our decisions, it is not relevant whether the barrier to the sentencer's consideration of all mitigating evidence is interposed by statute, Lockett v. Ohio, supra; [citation omitted]; by the sentencing court, Eddings v. Oklahoma, supra, or by an evidentiary ruling, Skipper v. South Carolina, supra. The same must be true with respect to a single juror's holdout vote against finding the presence of a mitigating circumstance. Whatever the cause ... the conclusion would necessarily be the same: `Because the [sentencer's] failure tо consider all of the mitigating evidence risks erroneous imposition of the death sentence, in plain violation of Lockett, it is our duty to remand this case for resentencing.' Eddings v. Oklahoma,
Mills,
Banks finds further support in Penry v. Lynaugh,
Before reaching its decision, the Court considered whether granting Penry the relief he sought would create a "new rule" under Teague. The Court concluded that it was not applying a new rule under Teague becausе, at the time the petitioner's conviction became final, it had already been decided in Lockett and Eddings that a state could not prevent the sentencer from considering and giving effect to mitigating evidence from the defendant's background, character or circumstances of the offense. Id. at 318,
The Commonwealth reads the pre-Mills cases differently than does Banks, leading it to conclude that Mills announced a new rule. It reads the decisions on which Banks relies, Lockett, Eddings, Skipper, and Hitchcock, which represent where the law stood at the time Banks' conviction became final, as reversing the death sentences imposed because the sentencer "had been entirely precluded from considering a category of appropriate mitigating evidence." Appellees' Supp. Br. at 4. It points out that in contrast to those cases, the Mills jury could hear and consider any evidence of mitigation that the defendant presented. The Commonwealth states that the Mills rule (which declared unconstitutional the requirement that jurors agree unanimously on a mitigating factor to be used in the weighing step) went beyond the previously enunciated principle that the jury must be allowed to consider mitigating evidence. The Commonwealth argues that Mills enunciated a new rule when it rejected, for the first time, the requirement of unanimity on a particular mitigating factor.
The Commonwealth also contends that the result in Mills, a 5-4 decision, was not a foregone conclusion and "marked a significant leap from prior precedent." Appellees' Supp. Br. at 4. It notes that four present Supreme Court justices dispute that the Mills decision was "`controlled or governed' by Lockett and Eddings, let alone dictated by those earlier decisions." Id. at 9, citing McKoy v. North Carolina,
The courts of appeals that have considered whether Mills announced a new rule have divided on their view. In Gall v. Parker,
Unlike the Sixth Circuit, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit concluded that Mills announced a new rule that does not apply retroactively on collateral review. In Miller v. Lockhart,
I previously expressed my view that under the Teague analysis the Supreme Court would likely view Mills as announcing a new rule, and that it would not apply retroactively. See Zettlemoyer v. Fulcomer,
My view is informed in large part by several decisions of the Supreme Court which, after analyzing Teague, characterized the rules at issue in those cases as new ones. In Saffle v. Parks,
In concluding that the principle Parks advanced created a new rule under Teague, the Supreme Court held that Lockett and Eddings did not dictate such a result. Id. at 490,
Another application of the Teague new rule/existing rule distinction is found in Butler v. McKellar,
Butler noted that the Supreme Court had stated in Roberson that the case was directly controlled by Edwards. Nonetheless, the Court in Butler decided, in an approach consistent with that it took in Saffle, that Roberson announced a new rule because its result was not "dictated" by the Edwards precedent.
Thereafter, in Graham v. Collins,
Although Mills can be viewed as establishing an incremental step in the series of cases beginning with Furman, I believе it is not commanded by the earlier cases in the sense the Court approached that issue in Saffle, Butler and Graham. Hence, I conclude that Mills established a new rule within the Teague inquiry that does not apply retroactively, unless it falls within one of the two exceptions to Teague.
Those exceptions are narrow. The first exception, that for new rules that place "`certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal lawmaking authority to proscribe,'" Caspari,
Banks contends that if Mills created a new rule, the second exception, that for "`watershed rules of criminal procedure' implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding," id. (quoting Saffle,
No Supreme Court case since Teague has held the second exception applicable. For example, in Sawyer v. Smith,
Although I believe that the rule in Mills is aimed at improving the reliability of capital sentencing, in light of the Supreme Court's decisions in Saffle, Butler, and Graham I cannot conclude that Mills alters our understanding of the bedrock procedural elements essential to the fairness of a proceeding. Therefore, I reject Banks' argument that Mills falls within the second Teague exception.
II.
Notwithstanding my view that Mills created a new rule under Teague that does not fall within either of the Teague exceptions, I believe that Teague does not apply in the special circumstances under which the Pennsylvania Supreme Court reviewed Banks' post-conviction petition. I note initially that in its opinion remanding to this court, the Supreme Court focused only on our failure to analyze the Teague issue and did not reach the merits of our holding in Banks I "that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling involved an unreasonable application of Mills." Banks v. Horn,
Banks' 1983 conviction of first degree murder and related crimes was affirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on direct appeal in 1987. Commonwealth v. Banks,
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court considered the Mills claim on the merits. This was the first time it did so. It reviewed the jury instruction and found that it had determined in another case that the instruction, "which mirrors the language found in the death penalty statute of [the Pennsylvania] Sentencing Codе," did not violate Mills. Id. at 470. It similarly held that the form of the verdict slip did not violate Mills, and that the answers provided by the jurors during the poll did not suggest that they believed unanimity was required in finding mitigating circumstances. Id.
A state conviction and sentence become final for purposes of retroactivity analysis when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally denied. Caspari,
The Teague rule stems in large part from the desire to accord comity to decisions of the state courts, which, in their review of the case, did not have the opportunity to analyze the effect of a subsequent Supreme Court decision. The rationale for the comity principle has been articulated most forcefully in the cases dealing with the exhaustion doctrine. More than a century ago, in Ex parte Royall,
After Congress' 1948 codification of the exhaustion doctrine at 28 U.S.C. § 2254, the Supreme Court in Rose v. Lundy,
The exhaustion doctrine is principally designed to protect the state courts' role in the enforcement of federal law and prevent disruption of state judicial proceedings. [citation omitted]. Under our federal system, the federal and state `courts [are] equally bound to guard and protect rights secured by the Constitution.' [citation omitted]. Because `it would be unseemly in our dual system of government for a federal district court to upset a state court conviction without an opportunity to the state courts to correct a constitutional violation,' federal courts apply the doctrine of comity, which `teaches that one court should defer action on causes properly within its jurisdiction until the courts of another sovereignty with concurrent powers, and already cognizant of the litigation, have had an opportunity to pass upon the matter.' [citations omitted].
Id. at 518,
More recently, in O'Sullivan v. Boerckel,
State courts, like federal courts, are obliged to enforce federal law. Comity thus dictates that when a prisoner alleges that his continued confinement for a state court conviction violates federal law, the state courts should have the first opportunity to review this claim and provide any necessary relief. [citations omitted]. This rule of comity reduces friction between the state and federal court systems by avoiding the `unseem[liness]' of a federal district court's overturning a state court conviction without the state courts having had an opportunity to correct the constitutional violation in the first instance. [citations omitted].
Id. at 844-45,
In this case, because of the application of Pennsylvania's unique relaxed waiver doctrine in capital cases, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court not only had the first opportunity to review Banks' jury instructions, verdict slip, and jury poll in light of Mills, but exercised that opportunity. It thus treated that claim as on direct appeal and there is no reason why, even though Mills announced a new rule, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's resolution of that issue should not be cognizable on federal habeas review. I adhere to the majority's judgment in our decision filed October 31, 2001 that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's ruling denying Banks' claim under Mills was unreasonable. Therefore, I concur in its judgment today.3
Notes:
The holding inPenry rejecting the claim that the Eighth Amendment prohibits the execution of a retarded person was abrogated in Atkins v. Virginia,
The special issues were (1) whether the defendant's conduct was delibеrate and with the reasonable expectation that death would result; (2) whether there is a probability that the defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would be a continuing threat to society; and (3) if raised by the evidence, whether the conduct of the defendant in killing the deceased was unreasonable in response to the provocation, if any, by the deceasedPenry,
The unique circumstances presented by this case are unlikely to recur because the Pennsylvania Supreme Court now strictly construes the state's Post Conviction Relief Act. InCommonwealth v. Albrecht,
