Billy Joe Battie, a Texas state prisoner under sentence of death, has appealed the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On appeal, petitioner raises only three of the numerous claims originally presented in his petition.
1
Each ground challenges only petitioner’s sentence of death and not his conviction. We withheld our decision in this case pending the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in
Estelle v. Smith,
- U.S. -,
I. Statement of the Case
A. Facts of the Crimes
The evidence introduced at petitioner’s trial demonstrated that he murdered a store attendant, Peggy Hester, and a customer, *695 John Howard Robinson, during the course of a rоbbery of a convenience store. On the night of January 13, 1975, Battie entered the In-N-Out Food Store in Fort Worth, Texas, armed with a .410 shotgun along with two accomplices, Artimus Mayfield and Leon Turner. While in the store, Bat-tie trained the shotgun on Hester and Robinson and ordered them to stand against a rear wall of the store while Turner emptied the cash register. After the robbery had been completed, Battie executed both Hester and Robinson with shotgun blasts from point-blank range. Robinson was shot once, Hester twice, and her body was found with her hands clasped together as though begging for her life. All three felons escaped without being seen by any witnesses. Bat-tie was arrested a few days later on an unrelated charge, and sent a note to the police while in custody stating that he “knew something” about the murders. Posing as a witness to the murders, Battie initially implicated someone else as responsible, but ultimately confessed to committing the murders himself. 3
B. State Court Proceedings
Battie was tried for capital murder in Tarrant County, Texas, state court. Prior to trial, Battie’s defense counsel filed a motion for a psychiatric examination of the petitioner to determine whether he was competent to stand trial and whether he was insane at the time of the crime. The state trial court granted the defense motion and appointed Dr. Harold B. Eudaly, a psychiatrist, and Dr. Howard Patterson, a clinical psychologist, to examine the petitioner. Dr. Eudaly concluded that the petitioner was not suffering from any psychotic or severe psychoneurotic mental disorder, and submitted a copy of his report to that effect to the state trial judge, but he did not testify at petitioner’s trial for either the state or the defense. Dr. Patterson conducted a standard battery of psychological tests on Battie and submitted his report of those test findings to Dr. Eudaly. At the time he conducted the psychological testing of petitioner, Dr. Patterson was unaware of petitioner’s background and the facts surrounding the crime charged against petitioner. The tests Dr. Patterson administered did not elicit any facts regarding the crime, and Dr. Patterson did not intеrrogate Battie about the murders. Instead, Dr. Patterson based his diagnostic evaluation of petitioner entirely upon the results of the tests given Battie. From his testing of petitioner, Dr. Patterson concluded that petitioner was suffering from a sociopathic personality disorder. Dr. Patterson was not called as a witness by either the State or the defense to testify regarding either petitioner’s competency to stand trial or sanity at the time of the murders, but was called by the State to testify at the penalty stage of petitioner’s trial. 4 On the basis of the test results, he testified that petitioner was a sociopath and therefore, because of the likelihood that a sociopath would continue to follow a violent career, petitioner was likely to commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society. 5 This testimony forms the basis of petitioner’s challenge to his sentence in this case.
*696
At trial, petitioner was convicted of capital murder and was sentenced to death. He then appealed his conviction and sentence to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which affirmed the judgment of the trial court.
Battie v. State,
C. Federal Court Proceedings
Battie filed his first federal habeas petition on April 3, 1978 in the District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Judge Eldon B. Mahon granted petitioner a stay of execution but subsequently dismissed his petition without prejudice because of failure to exhaust available state remedies. Following denial of the second state habeas petition, the state trial court reset petitioner’s execution for August 25. Battie then filed a second federal habeas petition on August 17 with the same federal district court. Judge Mahon again stayed petitioner’s execution and referred the petition to a United States magistrate. Thereafter, the magistrate entered a report containing his factual and legal findings, conclusions, and recommendation that Battie’s petition be dismissed. Judge Mahon then adopted the magistrate’s report as his own opinion after independently reviewing the record in petitioner’s case and dismissed Battie’s petition in accordance with the magistrate’s recommendation.
II. Self-Incrimination Claim
Petitioner contends that admission of Dr. Patterson’s testimony violatеd his fifth amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination as interpreted in
Miranda v. Arizona,
A. Retroactivity of Estelle v. Smith
The constitution does not require that every decision of federal constitutional law be applied retroactively, and a federal court may apply a rule prospectively in certain circumstances.
Brown
v.
Louisiana,
In
Smith,
the Supreme Court held that the State’s introduction into evidence of a court-appointed psychiatrist’s testimony to prove a capital defendant’s future dangerousness, based on information obtained by the psychiatrist from his interrogation of a defendant in custody who has neither requestеd the examination nor introduced psychiatric evidence on that issue, without a prior warning to the defendant that he has the right to remain silent and that any statement he made could be used against him at a sentencing proceeding, violated the rule adopted in
Miranda v. Arizona, supra,
*698
The Supreme Court held in
Smith
that
Miranda
was applicable in the circumstances of that case and required the reversal of the petitioner’s death sentence. The Court decided that proof of a Texas capital defendant’s guilt did not, by itself, remove the protection of the privilege against self-incrimination because the State must prove a capital defendant’s future dangerousness as a separate and distinct requirement for imposing a capital sentence apart from proof of that defendant’s guilt.
Estelle v. Smith,
supra,-U.S. at-,
The State contends that “the extension of the procedural safeguards [of Miranda] to psychiatric examinations, conducted by mental health professionals, who are not connected with law enforcement officials, originally conducted for neutral purposes, clearly presented an issue of first impression . . . not clearly foreshadowed by any prior cases.” Second Supplemental Brief for Respondent-Appellee at 7 (footnotes omitted). But the distinctions drawn by the State between Smith and Miranda do not withstand close scrutiny. In both cases an agent of the State conducted a custodial interrogation of a defendant, as *699 those terms have been interpreted, the State thereby obtained statements from an accused which it then used as part of its case against the defendant. The only difference between the two situations is that the agent of the State who performed the custоdial interrogation in Miranda was a police officer while the agent of the State who performed the custodial interrogation in Smith was a court-appointed psychiatrist. But the particular office that the official who performs the custodial interrogation represents is inconsequential because Miranda was not concerned with the division of responsibility between the various state investigatory agencies but was concerned with official custodial interrogations of an accused and the use of statements obtained from an accused without an attorney in such circumstances to prove the State’s case against the accused. 12 The Miranda decision was designed to protect a putative defendant against the compulsion to incriminate himself arising from an official custodial interrogation. That compulsion can occur, however, from an interrogation conducted by a court-appointed psychiatrist as well as a police officer. The Smith decision merely recognized that a custodial interrogation conducted by a court-appointed psychiatrist raised the same concerns as a custodial interrogation conducted by a police 11 and officer and therefore must be preceded by the same warnings Miranda requires a police officer to give. 13 Therefore, while the Supreme Court had never held prior to Smith that Miranda warnings must be given to a defendant prior to a custodial interrogation performed by a court-appointed psychiatrist, the holding in Smith followed logically from the Miranda decision itself. Thus, Smith did not establish a new principle of federal constitutional law because that decision merely applied already fixed principles to a new factual situation. Accordingly, this holding in Smith must be given retroactive effect.
B. Application of Estelle v. Smith
Application of Smith to the facts of this case requires that we set aside petitioner’s death sentence. At the time of Dr. Patterson’s testing of petitioner he was confined at the Tarrant County Jail and so was in custody for the purpose of determining the applicability of Miranda. 14 Dr. Patterson’s testing constituted an interrogation of petitioner as that term has been defined under Miranda. 15 Dr. Patterson had been appointed by the state trial court to conduct the examination and therefore the custodial interrоgation was conducted by an agent of *700 the state. 16 Finally, Dr. Patterson did not advise petitioner of his fifth amendment privilege, and the defense neither requested an examination on future dangerousness nor introduced psychiatric or psychological testimony on that issue. Unless there is some significant difference between this case and Smith petitioner’s death sentence must be vacated. 17
The State contends that this case is not controlled by
Smith
for several reasons, none of which we find persuasive. The State argues that petitioner’s responses to Dr. Patterson’s tests constituted real rather than testimonial evidence. However, here as in
Smith
the mental health expert who testified for the State based his analysis of petitioner’s future dangerousness on the content of the responses given by the petitioner to the expert’s tests.
18
Petitioner was not simply “required to use his voice as an identifying physical characteristic” but instead was required “to speak his guilt” by responding to Dr. Patterson’s test questions.
United States v. Wade,
The State also contends that petitioner waived his fifth amendment privilege by requesting a psychiatric examination to determine his competency to stand trial and his sanity at the time of the commission of the crime. This argument however confuses the use of psychiatric examinations by the defense or the State to determine a defendant’s competency to stand trial with the use of a psychiatric examination by thе defense or the State to ascertain the defendant’s insanity at the time of the crime. Each use of psychiatric testimony raises questions different from those raised by the other and different doctrines have developed to account for these different problems.
The use of a psychiatric or psychological examination to determine a defendant’s competency to stand trial
19
is a separate matter as far as the fifth amendment privilege is concerned and is distinct from the use of a psychiatric or psychological examination to determine the defend
*701
ant’s culpability or responsibility for the crimes charged against him. The State’s use of the results of a сompetency examination does not infringe upon a defendant’s fifth amendment privilege because it does not assist the State in proving any of the elements necessary to support the imposition of a criminal punishment under state law.
See Estelle v. Smith,
supra,-U.S. at —-—,
However, when the same type of examination is used to determine a defendant’s culpability or responsibility for the crimes charged against him the fifth amendment privilege is involved because the use of a psychiatric or psychological examination in this context may assist the State in establishing the basis for imposition of a criminal punishment.
21
This use of psychiatric or psychological testimony can arise in a variety of situations. One such situation was present in
Smith.
There the State used the results from a court-appointed psychiatric examination of a defendant who neither requested the examination nor introduced psychiatric testimony himself in order to prove an essential element under state law for imposing a criminal punishment. In that situation, the Supreme Court held that the defendant is entitled to the protection of the fifth amendment ánd also that a court-appointed psychiatrist must inform that defendant of his fifth amendment rights in accordance with
Miranda
prior to any custodial interrogation in order for the State to introduce at trial the results obtained from that interrogation. A different situation was present in
United States v. Cohen,
The State contends however that a defendant’s mere submission to a psychiatric or psychological examination constitutes a waiver of the fifth amendment privilege. But the waiver doctrine is inapplicable, as here, when the defendant does not introduce the testimony of a mental health expert on the issue of a mental state relevant to the offense or a defense raised by the evidence in the case. Accordingly, a defendant can invoke the protection of the privilege when he does not introduce mental health expert testimony. Submitting to a рsychiatric or psychological examination does not itself constitute a waiver of the fifth amendment’s protection. Therefore, this ground offered by the State to distinguish the Smith case is untenable.
Finally, the State argues that
Smith
is distinguishable because the defense requested the psychiatric examination rather than the State and therefore the concerns prompting the Supreme Court to adopt
Miranda
are unnecessary to protect a person when he initiates the interrogation himself. While this factor is relevant once a defendant has been admonished in accordance with
Miranda
and
Smith, see Edwards v.
Arizona,-U.S.-,---& n. 9,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, petitioner’s death sentence must be set aside. The case is remanded to the district court with directions that the State of Texas determine within a reasonable time whether (1) to conduct a new sentencing proceeding, in the manner provided by state statute, or (2) to vacate petitioner’s sentence and impose a sentence less than death in accordance with state law. 25
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS IN ACCORDANCE WITH THIS OPINION.
Notes
. In his habeas petition, Battie also raised the following grounds for relief: (1) his death sentence is disproportionate in light of all the facts and circumstances of his life, character, and record; (2) the Texas capital punishment statutes failed to permit the jury to consider the mitigating circumstances present in his case; (3) capital punishment is inherently unconstitutional; (4) the Texas capital sentencing procedures have been applied since 1973 in an arbitrary and capricious fashion, as well as in a manner discriminating on the basis of race, sex, and wealth; (5) the manner of execution in Texas, lethal injection, constitutes cruel and unusual punishment; (6) his right to voir dire the jury was impaired; (7) the trial court expanded the oath required of jurors; and (8) the excusal for cause of veniremen who stated that they would automatically vote against capital punishment violated his right to an impartial jury, to a jury representative of the community, and to a jury reflecting contemporary standards of decency. Petitioner has not pursued these issues on appeal and has therefore abandoned them.
Tyler v. Phelps,
. Battie also contends that thе admission of Dr. Patterson’s testimony violated his sixth amendment right to counsel under
Estelle v. Smith,
-U.S. -,
. Petitioner has not challenged either the accuracy or the admissibility of his confession in these federal habeas proceedings.
. The Texas capital sentencing procedure is discussed in
Estelle v. Smith,
- U.S. -, ---& nn. 2 & 3,
. Texas law requires the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that “there is a probability that the defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society.” Tex.Code Crim.Pro. Art. 37.071(b)(2) (Vernon Supp. 1980). The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of this statute over the objection that the prediction of future dangerousness was impossible in
Jurek v. Texas,
. The fifth amendment privilege is applicable to thе States through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment.
Malloy v. Hogan,
. “[T]he district courts and courts of appeals should follow our practice, when issues of both retroactivity and application of constitutional doctrine are raised, of deciding the retroactivity issue first.”
Bowen v. United States,
. According to the Supreme Court, “[t]he essence of this basic constitutional principle is ‘the requirement that the State which proposes to convict
and punish
an individual produce the evidence against him by the independent labor of its officers, not by the simple, cruel expedient of forcing it from his own lips,’ ”
Estelle v. Smith, supra,
- U.S. at -,
.
Smith
distinguished the State’s use of a psychiatric examination to determine a defendant’s competency to stand trial and the defense’s use of a psychiatric examination to prove a defendant’s insanity at the time of the crime from the State’s use of a psychiatric examination to prove a capital defendant’s future dangerousness on the ground that future dangerousness was a prerequisite that the State of Texas had to prove to impose a capital sentence.
Estelle v. Smith,
supra,-U.S. at-,
. Smith only held the fifth amendment privilege applicable to the sentencing stage of a capital trial in Texas because the State of Texas must prove a capital defendant’s future dangerousness as an issue separаte and distinct from proof of his guilt. The applicability of the privilege to mandatory or discretionary sentencing procedures not requiring proof of such an additional prerequisite to impose a criminal punishment raises different questions not necessarily resolved by Smith. See note 8 supra & note 21 infra.
. See notes 14 & 15 infra.
. The party conducting the custodial interrogation must have some connection with the State, however. The
Miranda
decision is not applicable to private citizens even if they conduct a “custodial interrogation” as those terms have been interpreted by the Supreme Court.
See
notes 14 & 15
infra.
Absent some connection with the State by the person questioning a defendant,
Miranda
does not bar the State’s use of statements obtained from a defendant by that person.
See
Kamisar, Brewer v. Williams, Massiah,
and
Miranda: What
is “Interrogation”? When Does It Matter?”,
67 Geo.L.J. 1, 52-55 & n. 307 (1978), cited in
Rhode Island v. Innis,
. No particular phraseology of these warnings is required so long as the defendant or putative defendant is informed of his rights.
California v. Prysock,
- U.S. -,
.
See Roberts v. United States,
.
See Rhode Island v. Innis,
. See note 12 supra.
. The fifth amendment question here does not turn on the fact that Battie is under a capital sentence. The text of the privilege states that “[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in
any
criminal case to be a witness against himself,” U.S.Const. Amend. V (emphasis added), nothing in the history of the privilege demonstrates that it was intended to afford any special protection in capital cases,
see
L. Levy, Origins of the Fifth Amendment (1968); McCormick’s Handbook of the Law of Evidence § 114 (2d ed. 1972); 8 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 2250 (McNaughton rev. ed. 1961); McCormick,
The Scope of the Privilege in the Law of Evidence,
16 Tex.L.Rev. 447 (1938); Morgan,
The Privilege Against Self-Incrimination in America,
21 Va.L.Rev. 763 (1935), and none of the values the privilege is designed to protect reflect concern for the accuracy of trial results. See
Carter v. Kentucky,
. Dr. Patterson testified that he based his analysis on petitioner’s answers to the test questions he administered to petitioner, Tr. 1230, and upon “the pertinent information that [petitioner] produce[d] in relation to the test protocol or test battery.” Tr. 1244.
. The question of a person’s competency can arise at several points in the criminal process, see Note, The Eighth Amendment and the Execution of the Presently Incompetеnt, 32 Stan.L. Rev. 765, 783 n. 83 (1980), and we will use the term competency to stand trial to refer to all of these different points.
. “ [Examinations which are restricted to a determination of a defendant’s competency to stand trial cannot be said to incriminate him. A finding of incompetency is only an adjudication of status, neither incriminating nor exculpatory per se. Incompetency is not a defense to a criminal charge; it merely works a delay in the start of the trial.” Berry, Self-Incrimination and the Compulsory Mental Examination: A Proposal, 15 Ariz.L.Rev. 919, 937 (1973) (footnotes omitted). See Pizzi, Competency to Stand Trial in Federal Courts: Conceptual and Constitutional Problems, 45 U.Chi.L.Rev. 21, 23, 37-38 (1977); note 8 supra.
.
Whether psychiatric evidence assists the State in establishing the necessary prediсate for imposing criminal punishment may turn on two factors: (1) whether the State or the defendant bears the burden of proving insanity; and (2) whether proof of insanity is inconsistent with proof of the elements of the offense charged against the accused.
Cf.
notes 8 & 9,
supra.
Because the State may require the accused to bear the burden of proving insanity by a preponderance of the evidence,
Rivera v. Delaware,
. “Once a defendant decides to testify, ‘[t]he interests of the other party and regard for the function оf courts of justice to ascertain the truth become relevant, and prevail in the balance of considerations determining the scope and limits of the privilege against self-incrimination.’ ”
Jenkins v. Anderson,
.
See, e. g., Estelle v. Smith,
-U.S.--, -,
There is no federal constitutional right to present an insanity defense, Note,
supra
note 19, 32 Stan.L.Rev. at 794 n. 120, and therefore this result does not burden the exercise of a constitutional right. But even if there were a federal constitutional right to present an insanity defense “the Constitution does not forbid ‘every government imposed choice in the criminal process that has the effect of discouraging the exercise of constitutional rights.’ ”
Jenkins v. Anderson,
. In post-argument brief, the State contends that we should remand this case to the district court in order to permit the State to expand the record to demonstrate that petitioner was validly warned, that petitioner waived his fifth amendment privilege, and that petitioner’s responses constituted real rather than testimonial evidence. Second Supplemental Brief for Respondent-Appellee at 15-17. But even assuming that a party is otherwise entitled to supplement the record in a habeas corpus case at this late date, the State has not offered to show any specific facts that contradict the present record. Prior to the intrоduction of Dr. Patterson’s testimony at the sentencing phase, petitioner’s trial counsel objected on the ground that petitioner had not been warned prior to Dr. Patterson’s examination. Tr. 1196. During the voir dire that followed, as well as Dr. Patterson’s testimony at the penalty phase, the State did not elicit from him any testimony that he warned petitioner in accordance with Miranda. To the contrary, Dr. Patterson stated that to his knowledge petitioner never signed a consent or release form either prior to or subsequent to the tests Dr. Patterson administered. Tr. 1201, 1203. Dr. Patterson also testified that he based his analysis upon the answers given by petitioner to his tests. Tr. 1230, 1244. See note 18 supra.
.
See Estelle v. Smith,
- U.S. -, -,
