Robert Copeland BISHOP, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Ira D. KELSO, Superintendent of the Lee Correctional
Institution and Michael J. Bowers, Attorney
General of the State of Georgia,
Respondents-Appellees.
No. 89-8641.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Oct. 15, 1990.
George M. Weaver, J. Melvin England, England Weaver & Kytle, Atlanta, Ga., for petitioner-appellant.
Michael J. Bowers, Atty. Gen., Susan V. Boleyn, Dennis R. Dunn, Asst. Attys. Gen., Atlanta, Ga., for respondents-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before HATCHETT, Circuit Judge, HILL* and FAIRCHILD**, Senior Circuit Judges.
FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge:
Robert Copeland Bishop is serving a mandatory life sentence in Georgia after being convicted of mаlice murder. After exhausting his state remedies, he filed a petition for habeas corpus in federal court. He appeals the district court's dismissal of that petition. His appeal raises the question whether the state introduced enough evidence to prove that his actions were the proximate cause of the death of the victim.
I.
Mr. Bishop thought someone had been breaking into his trailer home, so he rigged a gun inside the trailer, set to fire when the front door was opened. A friend of his, James Ronnie Freeman, came to the trailer when Mr. Bishop was gone, opened the front door, and got shot by the trap gun. The bullet glanced off his right thigh and entered his forearm. Mr. Freeman's thigh wound was superficial, but his forearm wound was more serious, fracturing and exposing the bone.
Mr. Freeman was taken from the trailer home to Humаna Hospital. Upon admission, a doctor treated Mr. Freeman's wound, operated on his forearm, and stabilized his condition. He was transferred a few days later to Crawford Long Hospital for reconstructive surgery to his forearm. There, a 19 X 15 centimeter skin graft was taken from his left lateral thigh, up near the hip area. Tr. 129. A bone graft was taken from the left lateral iliac area, higher up than the skin graft. Tr. 129. He also apparently had a surface nerve graft. Tr. 120. The treating physician at Crawford Long was happy with Mr. Freeman's progress, and after аbout two weeks in the hospital, he was released and went home. Late that evening or early the next morning, he developed trouble breathing and died.
II.
Due process requires a state to prove each element of the offense beyond a reasonablе doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,
The element at issue here is causation--whether the shot fired by Mr. Bishop's gun was the actual, and proximate, cause of Mr. Freeman's death. There is no dispute that Mr. Bishop is criminally responsible for the injuries caused by the trap gun he set. Nor is there any dispute that the immediate cause of Mr. Freeman's death was a pulmonary embolism--a blood clot which blocked the blood flow between his heart and lungs. However, Mr. Bishop questions whether the prosecution introduced enough evidence to prove that the gunshot wounds caused the pulmonary embolism, rather than something unrelated to the wounds. And, he argues that the evidence which did tend to рrove that the gunshot wounds precipitated the embolism was "tentative," and pointed only to cause in fact, not proximate cause, and thus was insufficient to support a conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt that the gunshot wounds were the proximate causе of death.
We have no trouble concluding that if the pulmonary embolism resulted from the gunshot wounds or the necessary treatment and bedrest, the requirement of proximate cause was met. Under Georgia law, which defines the elements of the offense, when a person "infliсts an unlawful injury, such injury is to be accounted as the efficient, proximate cause of the death, whenever it shall be made to appear ... that [ ] the injury directly and materially contributed to the happening of a subsequent accruing immediate cause of the death...." Ward v. State,
The harder question concerns actual cause--whether the evidence was sufficient to suрport a conclusion that, beyond a reasonable doubt, Mr. Freeman's embolism actually resulted from the gunshot wounds or subsequent treatment, rather than from some unrelated cause.
In cases such as this, determining the actual cause of death is a matter for expert testimony. Williams v. Martin,
Dr. Powell characterized Mr. Freeman's thigh wound as superficiаl and his forearm wound as serious, but not life-threatening. Tr. 115, 113-14. He had not participated in the autopsy on Mr. Freeman, and expressed no opinion on what precipitated the pulmonary embolism. Tr. 122. He did testify that "it ought to be in the path of the bullet," and that pulmonary embolisms usually оriginate in the "lower extremities" (legs), and that ones which result in death usually originate in the thigh. Tr. 117-18. As to what causes embolisms, he said that "It can be caused by bedrest. You can get it from making a trip or sitting still. Anywhere. You can get it from anything," including sitting at a desk. Tr. 119.
The pathologist, Dr. Gilbert, was more specific about the causes of embolisms. He testified they can result from an injury to the "lower extremities," and, less often, from injuries to the "upper extremities" (arms). Tr. 124-25, 127. He explained that
Normally what occurs is that you have a patient that is hospitalized, or a person that has had аn injury to the lower extremity and a blood clot develops in the leg or in the pelvis area and these blood clots break loose and go through the veins in the body up to the heart and then get thrown out to that vessel that leads to the lungs. Occasionally in older persons that have some arrhythmia a clot will form actually inside the heart and these clots will be dislodged, will locate in the big vessel and block it and cause death.
Tr. 124-25. Pulmonary embolisms are not commonly seen in persons Mr. Freeman's age, thirty-six years, Dr. Gilbert agreed. Tr. 125.
Dr. Gilbert concluded that the pulmonary embolism which struck Mr. Freeman originated in his lower left extremity, which was also the site of the source tissue for the skin and bone grafts. Tr. 126, 128, 129-30. He did not state definitely that the gunshot wound or resulting treatment caused the embolism, but he agreed that the wound, and the subsequent surgery and hospitalizаtion "could have" brought about the embolism, and that it was "possible" there was a connection. He agreed that it is "fair to say that but for a gunshot wound requiring surgery it's not likely that this clot would have occurred." Tr. 126.
Mr. Bishop argues that this just isn't enough evidence to permit a rational juror to сonclude beyond a reasonable doubt the embolism was causally related to the injuries inflicted by his gun. This raises a serious question whether, in a case where expert testimony is necessary to determine a factual question, testimony that the gunshot wounds and resulting surgery were a "рossible" cause, and that any other cause was "not likely," can support a conclusion, beyond a reasonable doubt, that they were the cause.
Dr. Powell's testimony showed that it is at least possible that Mr. Freeman's pulmonary embolism and death resulted from a cаuse independent of the gunshot wounds. Certainly the prosecution could have presented more thorough evidence concerning the cause of the pulmonary embolism, perhaps by asking the two doctors to estimate the degree of probability that the embolism resulted from the gunshot wounds and resulting treatment, or by asking Dr. Gilbert for his opinion on causation to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, rather than supplying him with the proposition that other causes were "not likely" and leaving it at that. Nonetheless, we feel thе prosecution met, barely, the minimum showing necessary under Jackson to sustain the conviction.
Dr. Gilbert testified that it was not likely that the embolism was precipitated by independent causes, and he concluded that the clot itself originated in the same region of Mr. Freeman's leg from which the various grafts were taken. He did not explain how he reached this conclusion (the clot being found in the pulmonary arteries during the autopsy), and he did not specifically say that bone graft surgery could cause an embolus. However, Dr. Powell did testify that an embolism could result from surgery or a deep injury, and presumably retrieving tissue for a bone graft would qualify. This testimony tended to show an increased probability that the embolism resulted from the treatment necessitated by the forearm wound.
Furthermore, even though Dr. Powell testified that a pulmonary еmbolism can be caused by just about anything, the jury was entitled to draw on the medical testimony that pulmonary embolisms are not commonly seen in thirty-six year old men, as well as the common knowledge that men of that age do not often drop dead for no externally apparent reason. The record contains nothing to show that Mr. Freeman was at any greater risk of a pulmonary embolism than any other person his age, except that he had been shot, underwent reconstructive surgery, and spent two weeks in the hospital, all due to Mr. Bishop's gun. Without some evidence in the record of an independent cause which could have triggered an embolism, the mere speculative possibility that the embolism was not related to the gunshot wounds does not prevent a rational juror from concluding beyond a reasonаble doubt that it was related.
The lack of record support of an independent cause for the embolism, along with stronger positive testimony tying the embolism to the gunshot wounds, distinguishes this case from Littles v. DeFrancis,
III.
Georgia law provides that when an element of a crime is proven solely through circumstantial evidence,
the proved facts shall not only be cоnsistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but shall exclude every other reasonable hypothesis save that of guilt of the accused.
Ga.Code Ann. Sec. 24-4-6; Nelms v. State,
We may assume, without deciding, that all the evidence tending to show proximate cause was circumstantial, so that Sec. 24-4-6 applied to his case in state court. While Sec. 24-4-6 is а state standard of proof not mandated by the federal constitution, see Jackson,
As a federal habeas сourt, our review of the petitioner's conviction is limited to a consideration of whether the evidence is sufficient as a matter of federal constitutional law. In setting out the federal constitutional standard in Jackson v. Virginia, the Supreme Court expressly rejected the standard of proof now embodied in O.C.G.A. Sec. 24-4-6, and that state standard has no place in our sufficiency of the evidence analysis.
Wilcox,
The district court's dismissal of Mr. Bishop's petition for the writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
Notes
See Rule 34-2(b), Rules of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
Honorable Thomas E. Fairchild, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation
See e.g., Tarpley v. Estelle,
