Lead Opinion
BOGGS, C. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. CLAY, J. (pp. 435-38), delivered a separate concurring opinion, in which MOORE, J., also joined.
OPINION
Michael Brown, who was convicted of sexually molesting his teenage daughter, appeals the district court’s denial of his habeas petition. He argues that his trial attorneys’ failure to investigate and obtain records related to his daughter’s counseling sessions — which records would have undermined her credibility — denied him the effective assistance of counsel under Strickland v. Washington,
I. Background
In March 2000, Michael Brown was convicted by a jury in Midland County, Michigan, of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC) and one count of second-degree CSC, stemming from an incident in which Brown was alleged to have sexually fondled his fourteen-year-old daughter, H.B., and forced her to perform oral sex on him. The defense theory was that H.B. fabricated the story of abuse to thwart her father’s impending marriage to his live-in girlfriend, Jane Romankewiz, whom the daughter detested.
At trial, the only direct evidence the prosecution presented of the crime was H.B.’s own testimony that her father had sexually assaulted her on one occasion sometime in early March 1999. She also testified that, prior to the assault, her father had made inappropriate comments about her developing body, had touched her inappropriately on several occasions, and was physically abusive toward her. This testimony was partly corroborated by a friend of H.B.’s who testified at the trial, but was also categorically refuted by two other witnesses, Romankewiz and Brown’s father. Approximately four months after the alleged sexual assault, during the second week of July, H.B. told her friend that her father had molested her, and her friend encouraged her to tell her mother (Brown’s ex-wife), which she did the next day. This revelation occurred the week after Romankewiz told H.B. that her divorce would soon become final, thereby paving the way for Romankewiz to marry Brown. Romankewiz testified that H.B. “didn’t seem happy at all” about this news.
In her testimony, H.B. denied any dislike for Romankewiz, stating that Roman-kewiz caused “a little bit” of trouble in her relationship with her father, but that she liked Romankewiz as a person and bore no animosity toward her. She acknowledged that she did not want her father to marry Romankewiz, but said it was because they “didn’t get along” and were abusive toward
On direct appeal, Brown unsuccessfully argued that he had been deprived of the effective assistance of counsel because his trial lawyers had failed to investigate H.B.’s counseling sessions with Nancy Parsons (then Nancy Rachow), a therapist with whom H.B. met regularly in the months prior to and immediately after the alleged assault. After denying Brown’s request for a Ginther hearing to develop this issue,
[T]he decision whether to present the victim’s counselor in order to impeach the victim was a matter of trial strategy. The proposed impeachment evidence was not substantially different from other evidence presented at trial. Indeed, there are indications in the record, including the attachments to defendant’s sentencing memorandum, that the counselor was defendant’s friend, that defense counsel did not find her to be credible, and that she did not have knowledge of any inconsistencies or recantations, only her personal opinion that the victim may be fabricating the allegations of abuse. Defendant has failed to overcome the presumption of sound trial strategy or shown that there is a reasonable probability that counsel’s failure to call this witness deprived him of a substantial defense or otherwise affected the outcome.
People v. Brown, No. 227953,
Brown timely filed a habeas petition with the district court in 2003, raising, inter alia, this ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. The district court held a hearing on the matter and reviewed Parsons’s counseling records in camera, after which the district court made the records available to both Brown and the State.
The records could have provided additional grounds for impeachment of H.B.’s testimony. For example, at trial, H.B. downplayed any animosity between her and her would-be step-mother. The counseling notes, however, reveal that H.B. told Parsons that “she can’t stand [Roman-kewiz]” and that “she hates [Romankewiz] for the way she tries to change her dad and his relationship with [her].” Similarly, during the session held immediately prior to her publicly accusing her father of molesting her, H.B. vented about Romankew-iz to Parsons: “[H.B.] says she’s not used to no relationship with her dad. They have always had one, [Romankewiz] got mad, the D.T. which stood for ‘Damned
Additionally, the notes reveal that H.B. was suicidal about two months before the alleged assault (she “stuck a gun in her mouth”), show that H.B. was not always truthful with her father (contradicting her testimony at trial), and contain a somewhat cryptic reference to H.B.’s peculiar involvement in an uncle’s rape trial: “Uncle Tim Brown, dad’s brother was sentenced for rape and [H.B.] gave police witness and she worries about what her uncle will do when he gets out. Uncle did not rape girl, the girl consented willing.”
The district court, operating under the assumption that AEDPA deference applied, “agree[d] that defense counsel should have investigated what Ms. Parsons had to say.... Counsel could not have evaluated or weighed the risks and benefits of calling Ms. Parsons as a witness without so much as contacting her and determining what she would say if called.” Brown v. Smith, No. 03-CV-73247-DT,
Calling Ms. Parsons as a witness would have entailed some risks. Although she might have been a good ... witness for [Brown], she also could have provided evidence favorable to the prosecution on cross-examination. The Court’s confidence in the outcome of the trial is not undermined by defense counsel’s failure to investigate and present Ms. Parsons as a witness.
Id. at *10. Consequently, the district court denied habeas relief.
II. Analysis
The district court erred in presuming that AEDPA’s deferential standard applied to this case, and thus its conclusion as to ineffectiveness and prejudice cannot stand.
A. Standard of Review
AEDPA requires that a state court’s adjudication with respect to a habe-as claim cannot be overturned unless it is contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). This deferential standard of review, however, applies only to a claim that has been “adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings.” Ibid. Brown argues, and we agree, that his ineffective-assistanee-of-counsel claim has not been “adjudicated on the merits” because the counseling notes that form the basis of the claim were not in the record before the
This circuit has held that, in the context of a Brady claim, when the petitioner’s habeas claim involves Brady material that was uncovered only during the federal habeas proceedings, AEDPA deference does not apply to an earlier, state-court Brady adjudication involving a different mix of allegedly improperly withheld evidence. Joseph v. Coyle,
To be sure, this rule presupposes that the threshold standard for admitting new evidence in the federal district court is met: (1) the petitioner must not be at fault for failing to develop the evidence in state court, or (2) if the petitioner is at fault, the narrow exceptions set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) apply. See Holland,
We conclude that the absence of the counseling records before the Michigan Court of Appeals (through no fault of Brown’s), combined with that court’s explicit statement that its review was “limit
B. Performance of Counsel
Strickland sets the standard by which the performance of trial counsel is to be measured: “reasonably effective assistance.”
are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.
Id. at 690-91,
So far as can be determined from the sparse record before us, the extent of Brown’s counsels’ “investigation” into Parsons and her counseling records consisted of a two- to three-minute conversation between Parsons and one of Brown’s attorneys, Mitchell Nelson, on the third day of trial. We do not know what was said during this brief meeting between Nelson and Parsons,
We think it likely that Brown could have made the threshold showing that Stanaway requires, though we can find no Michigan case explaining precisely what constitutes a “reasonable probability.” Cf.
The prosecution’s entire case hinged on the credibility of H.B., and defense counsel were aware that Parsons (who disbelieved H.B.) had treated her near the time of the alleged assault, both before and after the assault. It was therefore negligent- — indeed, constitutionally deficient — for Brown’s attorneys not to seek in camera review of the counseling records, at least in the absence of any evidence that they had some legitimate reason for not pursuing the records.
The Michigan Court of. Appeals, on the record before it, thought that trial counsels’ decision not to call Parsons to the stand was a strategic one, and cited “indications in the record, including the attachments to defendant’s sentencing memorandum, that the counselor was defendant’s friend, that defense counsel did not find her to be credible, and that she did not have knowledge of any inconsistencies or recantations, only her personal opinion that the victim may be fabricating the allegations of abuse.” Brown,
With regard to the state court’s assertion that Parsons “did not have knowledge of any inconsistencies,” we conclude that Brown has met his burden. The -counseling records, which the state court never reviewed, plainly reveal several inconsistencies between H.B.’s testimony at trial and what she confided to her counselor
With regard to the state court’s assertion that Brown’s counsel did not find Parsons to be credible, we can find no basis in the record to support that statement. Although the state court cited “indications in the record, including the attachment^] to [Brown’s] sentencing memorandum,” as the source for its findings, neither Brown nor the State has been able to point us to any relevant document upon which the state court could plausibly have relied in concluding that Brown’s attorneys did not find Parsons to be credible. Indeed, at oral argument, counsel for Brown (a member of the Federal Public Defender’s Office) represented that his office had inquired with the clerk of the state court and was informed that no “attachment to the defendant’s sentencing memorandum” existed because none was ever filed on behalf of Brown. The State, on the other hand, represented that the transcript of Brown’s sentencing hearing does indeed refer to such a memorandum, but that the memorandum was never docketed and no one can find it. Thus we are left in the awkward position of having to assume the correctness of a state court finding when no one can locate any evidentiary support for that finding.
But even assuming that the state court was correct, our quarrel is not with trial counsels’ decision to forego calling Parsons as a witness per se, but rather with the lack of any reasonable, timely investigation into what she might have offered the defense. Without ever seeking in camera review of the counseling records, Brown’s counsel could not reasonably have determined what value, if any, those records might have been to his defense, and could not properly have weighed the potential benefit of calling Parsons to the stand (whatever her perceived credibility) against the potential risk. Moreover, even if Parsons were never called as a witness, defense counsel could still have used the counseling records to impeach the daughter on cross-examination.
Though we are mindful that, under Strickland, the burden is Brown’s to overcome the “strong presumption that [his] counsels’] conduct f[ell] within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,”
C. Prejudice
Even where a habeas petitioner demonstrates deficient performance, Strickland requires that “the defendant affirmatively prove prejudice” resulting from the ineffectiveness of his counsel. Id. at 693,
In the present case, the only evidence of Brown’s guilt was the testimony of his teenage daughter, most of which was uncorroborated.
The state argues that this impeachment evidence is cumulative, given that Brown’s counsel impeached H.B. with her school assignment, in which she had written that one of her goals was to prevent her father from marrying Romankewiz, and H.B.’s friend’s testimony that H.B. “hated” Romankewiz. While it is true that “the failure to present additional ... evidence that is merely cumulative of that already presented does not ... establish prejudice,” Getsy v. Mitchell,
It is only in this last category that the missing evidence in this case might plausibly be characterized as cumulative, but we disagree that H.B. was so effectively impeached by defense counsel at trial that the addition of this evidence could not have caused significant further deterioration of her credibility. On the critical issue of H.B.’s feelings toward Romankewiz, the impeachment evidence that was introduced was limited principally to the school assignment and H.B.’s Mend’s statement that H.B. “hated” Romankewiz. But the school assignment was written months before H.B. publicly accused her father of molesting her, diminishing its relative importance, i.e., it does significantly less to undermine her credibility than do her statements, uttered less than one week before she accused her father of molesting her (and contemporaneous with her learning that Romankewiz’s divorce had become final), that Romankewiz was a “Damned Tramp” who caused her to have “no relationship with her dad.” Second, the friend’s testimony is far less damaging to H.B.’s credibility than H.B.’s own words, especially given when those words were spoken and how significantly they contradicted her trial testimony.
There were also other revelations contained in the counseling notes that certainly merited exploration by defense counsel, and which could have further eroded H.B.’s credibility. For example, at the first counseling session after the alleged assault, H.B. told Parsons that she had felt suicidal and “stuck a gun in her mouth” four months earlier (which would have been approximately two months before the alleged assault), and could have led defense counsel to explore carefully the state of H.B.’s mental health around the time she says she was victimized. Also, on direct examination, H.B. testified that she was always truthful with her father, but the counseling records contradict this.
Admittedly, and as noted by the district court, the counseling notes would also have revealed some information damaging to Brown. See Brown,
Where there is relatively little evidence to support a guilty verdict to begin with (e.g., the uncorroborated testimony of
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is REVERSED. We REMAND with instructions to grant a conditional writ of habeas corpus, giving the State of Michigan 180 days from the date of this opinion’s entry to commence a new trial against Brown, or, failing that, to release him.
Notes
. In the Michigan courts, a Ginther hearing is an evidentiary hearing related to claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. See People v. Ginther,
. We note, however, that the district court was ill-served in this regard by the petitioning party, who never argued that AEDPA deference did not apply until this appeal. Nevertheless, a party cannot "waive” the proper standard of review by failing to argue it. See Worth v. Tyer,
. For its part, the State offered no specific rebuttal, either in its brief or at oral argument, to Brown’s assertion that AEDPA deference did not apply.
. There are no affidavits in the record from Brown's trial attorneys, and, although Parsons did submit an affidavit (in the form of a letter to the district judge) along with her counseling records, she never mentioned this meeting. Apparently, neither Brown nor the State made any effort to contact Brown's trial attorneys.
. See, e.g., People v. Laird, No. 276566,
. This assumes, of course, that the trial court, after in camera review, would have determined that Brown was entitled to have access to those records. We think, however, that this proposition is likely, considering the numerous derogatory statements that the daughter made directed toward Romankewiz, the daughter's revelation that she had "stuck a gun in her mouth” approximately two months prior to the alleged assault (indicating the fragile state of her mental health at the time), and various other statements that could also have been used to impeach her testimony.
. H.B.'s friend did testify that she witnessed Brown strike H.B. on one occasion and also saw “weird” touching and wrestling between them. Romankewiz and Brown's father, on the other hand, both testified that they never witnessed any inappropriate behavior directed toward H.B. by her father.
. Although H.B. did, during the June 29 counseling session, mention a "secret” that she would soon reveal to Parsons, Parsons wrote at the time that H.B.’s comment "seemfed] in good humor and light hearted.” By her comment, H.B. might have been referring to the sexual assault she later disclosed to Parsons (or to the fact that she planned to charge such conduct against her father), but it is impossible to know exactly what H.B. meant, and we cannot give such an ambiguous statement much weight in assessing prejudice against Brown.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring, in which Judge MOORE joins.
Although I concur in Chief Judge Boggs’ opinion for the Court, I write separately to emphasize an important issue regarding the standard of review that governs our consideration of this habeas petition.
Because the district court concluded that the Michigan Court of Appeals had ruled on the merits of Brown’s ineffective assistance of counsel, claim, the district court applied AEDPA’s deferential standard of review under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). We now reject the district court’s conclusion that such deference is appropriate, and, for the reasons set forth in Chief Judge Boggs’ opinion for the Court, instead conclude that Brown’s claims are subject to de novo review despite the fact that the Michigan Court of Appeals purported to resolve that claim on the merits. While I concur in this conclusion, our holding that deference under AEDPA is inappropriate under these circumstances bears further consideration.
In reaching this conclusion, we have relied on a line of cases from this Court and our sister circuits holding that AEDPA’s deferential standard of review does not apply where substantial new evidence is presented in support of a petitioner’s Brady claim. Our decision here expressly recognizes that this same principle “applies generally” to a broader universe of claims. In that respect, our decision today represents a natural but important progression of this body of case law.
I.
In many cases, ambiguities in the record make it difficult to determine whether the state courts resolved a particular claim “on the merits” for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). See Harris v. Reed,
The Michigan Court of Appeals thus never considered significant evidence that would have supported Brown’s claim. Nevertheless, without knowing what information Parsons’ records may have yielded, the Michigan Court of Appeals held that “the decision whether to present the victim’s counselor in order to impeach the victim was a matter of trial strategy,” and concluded that Brown had “failed to overcome the presumption of sound trial strategy or show[ ] that there [was] a reasonable probability that counsel’s failure to call this witness deprived him of a substantial defense or otherwise affected the outcome.” Id. at *4. In so ruling, the Michigan Court of Appeals appears to have resolved Brown’s Strickland claim “on the merits.”
Under AEDPA, that fact typically requires deference to the state court adjudication. This Court, however, has recognized that an important exception to the deference owed state courts under AED-PA exists where substantial new evidence in support of a petitioner’s claim arises during federal habeas proceedings. See, e.g., Joseph v. Coyle,
That is precisely the case here. Because the Michigan courts refused to permit Brown to pursue evidence critical to his Strickland claim, Brown was never able to press the specific claim he raises here: whether, in light of the information contained in Parsons’ records, Brown’s trial counsel performed deficiently. As a result, there is no relevant state court adjudication of the merits of Brown’s claim to which we could defer. Under such circumstances, as Chief Judge Boggs’ opinion explains, the deference due state court adjudications under AEDPA is inapposite and inappropriate.
What Chief Judge Boggs’ opinion leaves unstated, however, is that our holding today represents an important and natural progression of this Court’s prior jurisprudence in this area. Until today, this Court has abandoned AEDPA’s deferential standard of review based on new evidence only in the limited context of Brady claims. See, e.g., Joseph,
Today we conclude that, although most of these decisions have arisen in the context of Brady claims, there is no basis for limiting the rule to such claims. Rather, as we hold today, this principle “applies generally ” whenever substantial evidence supporting a habeas claim comes to light during a petitioner’s federal habeas proceedings, or whenever the reviewing state court improperly limits the scope of its review when considering a defendant’s federal constitutional claim.
II.
Our broader application of Joseph follows directly from the language of the statute and comports with this Court’s relevant jurisprudence. By its very terms, AEDPA applies only to habeas claims that were “adjudicated on the merits in State court....” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Thus, regardless of the nature of a petitioner’s claim, deference is required only where the state courts in fact adjudicated a claim “on the merits.” Where, however, the state court did not assess the merits of a claim properly raised in a habeas petition, the deference due under AEDPA does not apply. Wiggins v. Smith,
The lesson of Joseph and other such cases is that there is no state court adjudication “on the merits” to which the federal courts could defer when evidence critical to a petitioner’s claim was never before the state courts. See
Building on Joseph, the import of our holding here is that this principle applies generally, regardless of the nature of the claim presented. Because AEDPA does not apply where critical evidence in support of a petitioner’s claim was never considered by the state courts, the availability of significant new evidence demands that the federal courts take a fresh look at that claim. See Holland v. Jackson,
Simply put, deference under AEDPA is inappropriate, and not required by statute, where significant new evidence relevant to a petitioner’s claim becomes available during federal habeas proceedings or the state courts improperly failed to consider significant evidence relevant to that claim. In this case, because the newly-available evidence is central to Brown’s Strickland claim, we must make an independent assessment of whether this evidence supports habeas relief.
. Under Michigan law, a defendant asserting an ineffective assistance of counsel claim may request a Ginther hearing to develop an evi-dentiary record to support his claim. See People v. Ginther,
