ORDER
Petitioner, a state inmate, initiated this action seeking the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, by complaint filed May 10, 1983. This matter is before the court on petitioner’s objections to the United States Magistrate’s memorandum, which reluctantly recommended dismissing Bush’s petition. Extensive and excellent briefs have been filed by both parties to this action and the matter is ripe for disposition.
Petitioner was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death in the Superior Court of Onslow County, North Carolina, on May 22, 1975. Bush was represented by counsel at trial, offered evidence, and testified in his defense. On appeal, the North Carolina Supreme Court found no error in either petitioner’s conviction or his sentence and affirmed the judgment of the Onslow County Superior Court.
State v. Bush,
Petitioner then filed a motion for appropriate relief, pursuant to N.C.GEN.STAT. § 15A-1411 et seq., alleging three constitutional infirmities in his conviction. 2 Broadly stated, Bush argued that: (1) the trial court improperly placed the burden upon him to prove the absence of malice; (2) the trial court also improperly placed the burden upon him to prove self-defense; and (3) he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his court-appointed attorneys failed to raise these issues on direct appeal. By order dated April 21, 1981, Superior Court Judge Henry L. Stevens denied petitioner’s motion on the merits.
The North Carolina Supreme Court then allowed Bush’s petition for writ of certiora-ri and, on December 7, 1982, filed its opinion affirming the order of the Superior Court.
State v. Bush,
The Supreme Court further found that the self-defense instruction was also constitutionally infirm.
See Mullaney v. Wilbur, supra.
However, the court determined that the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient as a matter of law to support an instruction on self-defense. Thus, the court found that the improper instruction was favorable to the petitioner and any error in the charge was harmless.
Petitioner next filed this petition for writ of habeas corpus, raising essentially the same three constitutional infirmities that he alleged in his motion for appropriate relief. Respondents concede, and upon review of the record the court agrees, that Bush presented these issues as matters of federal constitutional law to the state courts, thereby properly exhausting state remedies in this proceeding.
Anderson v. Harless,
Since disposition of the issues at bar requires a detailed understanding of the facts of this case and the trial court’s instructions to the jury, a review of both the facts and the charge follows.
I. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
The state’s evidence showed that on November 18, 1974, Mrs. Eva Marshbum returned to her home near Jacksonville, North Carolina, and found the house ransacked and her husband, Kirby W. Marsh-bum, lying on the floor in a puddle of blood. One of the Marshbum’s steak knives and Mr. Marshburn’s billfold were on the floor near his body. (R. pp. 10-11) When Mrs. Marshburn looked up from her husband’s body she noticed petitioner standing there. According to Mrs. Marsh-burn, petitioner, after first threatening her, took $3.00 from her, then told her he was not going to harm her, and tied her up. She also testified that he told her that he killed her husband because "... he wouldn’t do anything I asked him to do,” 4 and that he apologized for tying her up. (R. p. 12). After tying Mrs. Marshburn up, petitioner left the house, taking her car keys and a gun. (R. p. 13).
The state also introduced evidence that, earlier in the same evening, petitioner had taken an automobile from outside a bar at the United States Marine Corps base at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. Bush, a 20 year old marine, had been drinking beer, lost control of the car, and drove it into a ditch near the Marshbum home. (R. pp. 19-20 and 23-25).
Petitioner’s statement, given to Detective Jarman of the Onslow County Sheriff's Department on November 19, 1974, was also introduced into evidence. In that statement, Bush admitted killing Mr. Marshbum after he had received permission from Marshbum to enter his residence to use the telephone to request assistance regarding the car he had driven into the ditch. (R. pp. 25-28). Detective Jarman testified that:
He stated that he started talking to the old man and asked for a drink of water and the old man gave him a drink of water and that they were standing bythe sink. He stated that for no reason at all the old man told him to get out and pushed him into the sink and that he then saw a knife and that his hand closed on the knife and he picked it up and stuck it in the old man. He stated that he stabbed the man two or three times and the man fell on the floor.
He stated that he got in the truck and the woman came to the house and went inside and that he went back inside after her. He stated that the woman told him not to kill her and that he said he was not going to kill her and that he asked her for some money and that she only had a little bit and he took $3 and some change from her. He stated that he told the woman that he wasn’t going to kill her and that he didn’t mean to kill her husband and he asked the lady if she had some rope and she said she did not. He stated that he took some curtain cord and tied her in a chair. (R. p. 26).
On cross-examination, Jarman reiterated that Bush told him that the stabbing occurred only after an argument had started with Mr. Marshburn. (R. p. 27). Both Jarman and Captain Woodward of the On-slow County Sheriff’s Department testified that, after his initial reluctance to talk, petitioner cooperated fully and supplied them with information which led to much of the evidence used to convict him. (R. pp. 27-31).
The State introduced additional evidence establishing that the victim died as a result of the stab wounds inflicted by the petitioner (R. pp. 21-22), and further physical and circumstantial evidence connecting Bush with the killing. (R. pp. 18-19, 23-25, and 28-35).
Petitioner, testifying on his own behalf, admitted stabbing Mr. Marshburn. He testified, however, that he went to the Marsh-burn home only to use the telephone after he had driven the car into the nearby ditch. His description of the events which led to the stabbing is, in pertinent part, as follows:
After I was unable to reach the person I was calling, I had a conversation with the man in the house and as far as I knew there was nobody in the house except me and the man. We were standing in the kitchen having our conversation. Up until that time our relationship had been good and we had just been talking. There were no ill words between us at that time. I asked him for a drink of water and he gave me a glass full of water and we stood there and talked. I was standing inside the kitchen by the sink and the man was standing near me and the door was on the other side of him. The man was talking about some person down the road who owned a wrecker and he said something about there being a “colored boy” down the road who owned a wrecker. Before he got all the words out I corrected him and I said “colored boy?” and I asked him what color the person was. The man did not make any immediate response, it was kind of a delayed response and he stopped for a second and then all of a sudden he started pushing me and telling me to get out. At that time I was standing in front of the sink and the sink was to my back. Mr. Marshburn was standing in front of me and the door that I entered was behind him. I must have been six or seven inches from the sink when he pushed me and I backed into the sink. He never struck me and he did not have a weapon in his hand.
I believe he repeated three or four times for me to get out of the trailer and all the time he was between me and the door. There were dishes around the kitchen but I do not recall if there was any food on the table. There was a counter top by the sink and I saw a knife laying there (State’s Exhibit 4) and I picked it up. I picked up the knife because I was nervous and I thought I was protecting myself and I was afraid for my safety.
As far as I knew the only way out of the trailer was the door that I entered as I had never been there before and I did not know who was there when I went there. After picking up the knife, I stabbed the man to get him off of me and at that time I did not have any intention of stealing anything from himor from his house. When I went into the house earlier I did not have any intention of stealing anything (It. pp. 36-37).
The man started pushing me and telling me to get out at the same time, but he was not pushing me towards the door. The man did not have a knife in his hand and did not threaten me with a knife. He appeared to be an older man but I do not know if he was 65 years old because I was not trying to figure out how old he was. I am five feet ten inches tall and I weigh 150. At that time I was afraid of this man that I now know was 65 years old. There is nothing physically wrong with me and I guess I was afraid of him because of the element of surprise (R. p. 42).
II. THE TRIAL COURT'S CHARGE
The trial court, in instructing the jury as to the elements of first degree murder on a theory of premeditation and deliberation stated:
Our Supreme Court has said concerning murder in the first degree which is not a robbery or felony murder that murder in the first degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice and with premeditation and deliberation. So the elements of such a-of that crime are that there must be an unlawful killing, it must have been perpetrated with malice, it must have been committed after deliberation and premeditation.
Now our court has said that malice is not only hatred, ill will or spite, as it is ordinarily understood, but it also means that condition of the mind which prompts a person to intentionally take the life of another without just cause, excuse or justification. It may be shown by evidence of hatred, ill will or dislike and it is implied in law from the intentionally (sic) killing with a deadly weapon. (emphasis added). (R. p. 7).
The trial court then explained the terms premeditation and deliberation, before charging on second degree murder. At the start of his charge on second degree murder, the judge stated, with respect to malice and unlawfulness (elements of both first and second degree murder):
Now murder in the second degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice but without premeditation or deliberation. Where a person intentionally inflicts wounds on the person of another with the use of a deadly weapon which causes the death of such other person. (sic) Then two presumptions arise, first, that the killing was unlawful and second, that it was done with malice and it is for you to determine whether the defendant used a deadly weapon. (emphasis added). (R. p. 9).
This was, once again repeated, as follows:
So if you find the knife that the defendant used was the knife offered in evidence and that it was a deadly weapon and that he intentionally inflicted wounds which did in fact cause death to Mr. Marshburn, then nothing else appearing, the presumption of unlawfulness and malice would arise and an unlawful killing with malice is murder in the second degree.
Upon such a finding, if you should so find, then the burden be upon the defendant not to satisfy you from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt, nor even by the greater weight of the evidence but merely to satisfy you of the absence of malice to reduce the homicide from murder in second degree to manslaughter because manslaughter is simply the unlawful killing of a human being without malice and without premeditation and deliberation and further the burden would be upon him to satisfy you-~nierely to satisfy you that he was justified on the grounds of self-defense in order to excuse the killing altogether, in which event he would be entitled to a verdict of not guilty. (emphasis added). (R. p. 10).
III. PETITIONER'S SELF-DEFENSE AND INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL ARGUMENTS
Dealing first with the trial court's self-defense instructions, this court agrees
Applying these principles to the case at bar, it is obvious that no evidence exists to support any finding that petitioner in fact formed a belief that it was necessary for him to kill the victim in order to protect himself from death or great bodily harm.
Bush II,
To the extent petitioner testified that he was “nervous” and “afraid,” these statements do not amount to evidence that Bush had formed any subjective belief that it was necessary to kill the victim in order to save himself from death or great bodily harm.
Id.
Nor do they provide any support for the proposition that if such a belief actually existed, that it was reasonable.
Thus, although as everyone agrees, the trial court erred in placing on the defendant the burden of proving self-defense to the satisfaction of the jury,
Furthermore, assuming
arguendo
that petitioner was entitled,
under state law,
to have the jury properly consider his imperfect self-defense claim, absent extraordinary circumstances impugning the petitioner’s right to a fair trial and due process of law, the sufficiency of the evidence for purposes of instructing the jury is solely a matter of state law only and does not present a cognizable constitutional issue on habeas review.
See Grundler v. North Carolina,
In addition, because the court has decided petitioner’s self-defense instruction claim on the merits and will now proceed to do so with regard to his malice instruction claim, there simply is no need to consider Bush's contention that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his court-appointed counsel failed to raise both of these substantive issues on direct appeal to the North Carolina Supreme Court. Accordingly, the court now turns to the gravamen of petitioner’s complaint, the trial court’s instructions on malice.
Petitioner claims that the trial court's instructions to the jury on the element of malice violated his fourteenth amendment due process rights under Sandstrom v. Montana,
In
Sandstrom,
the defendant was convicted under Montana law of “deliberate homicide,” which the statute defined as “purposely or knowingly” causing the death of another human being. The state conceded that “purpose” was equivalent to “intent,” and thus that proof of defendant’s intent to kill would suffice to establish the “purpose” element.
Id.
at 521 and n. 11,
The state had argued, in
Sandstrom,
that the Montana Supreme Court had exclusive jurisdiction to determine the effect of the presumption contained in the trial judge’s instruction and that the state supreme court had held the instruction placed only a burden of producing
some
evidence on the defendant. Thus, the argument continued, the presumption could only have affected defendant’s burden of going forward with the evidence rather than the ultimate burden of persuasion. The Supreme Court conceded that the state supreme court had the final authority on the effect of the presumption under state law, but declared that the state court was “not the final authority on the interpretation which a jury could have given the instruction.”
Id.
at 516-17,
Further, the Court found that, although the challenged instruction could be interpreted in the manner suggested by the state, it could also be interpreted in two more stringent ways, neither of which were constitutional:
First, a reasonable jury could well have interpreted the presumption as "conclusive," that is, not technically a presumption at all, but rather as an irrebuttable direction by the court to find intent once convinced of the facts triggering the presumption. Alternatively, the jury may have interpreted the instruction as a direction to find intent upon proof of the defendant's voluntary actions (and their "ordinary consequences") unless the defendant proved the contrary by some quantum of proof which may well have been considerably greater than "some" evidence-thus effectively shifting the burden of persuasion on the element of intent.
Id.
at 517,
Sandstrom
was followed by and elaborated upon in
Francis v. Franklin, supra.
In
Franklin,
the Georgia trial court instructed the jury that “[t]he acts of a person of sound mind and discretion are presumed to be the product of a person’s will, but the presumption may be rebutted” and “[a] person of sound mind and discretion is presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of his acts, but the presumption may be rebutted.”
5
The Court stated, “[t]he question is whether these instructions, when read in the context of the jury charge as a whole, violate the fourteenth amendment’s requirement that the State prove every element of a criminal
The Court began its analysis by stating that:
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment “protects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged.” In re Winship,397 U.S. 358 , 364,90 S.Ct. 1068 , 1073,25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1970). This “bedrock, ‘axiomatic and elementary’ ” [constitutional] principle, id. at 363,90 S.Ct. at 1072 , prohibits the State from using evidentia-ry presumptions in a jury charge that have the effect of relieving the State of its burden of persuasion beyond a reasonable doubt of every essential element of a crime, [citations omitted]. The prohibition protects the “fundamental value determination of our society,” given voice in Justice Harlan’s concurrence in Winship, “that it is far worse to convict an innocent man than to let a guilty man go free.”397 U.S. at 372 ,90 S.Ct. at 1077 .
The Court’s initial review of the instruction focused on the nature of the presumption described; the critical inquiry being whether the challenged portion of the charge created a mandatory presumption or simply a permissive inference.
Id. See also County Court of Ulster County v. Allen,
Applying the above principles to the facts before it, the Court, in reviewing the context of the trial court’s charge as a whole, held that the challenged instruction “undeniably created an unconstitutional burden-shifting presumption with respect to the element of intent.”
Id.
at 1973. Although the Court found that the Georgia Supreme Court had interpreted the above instruction as creating no more than a permissive inference, the Court reiterated its language in
Sandstrom,
that the state court “is not the final authority on the interpretation which a jury could have given the instruction.”
Id.
at 1972
citing Sandstrom,
The Court found that the challenged instructions were cast in the language of command and that the jurors “ ‘were not told that they had a choice, or that they
might
infer that conclusion; they were told only that the law presumed [that a person intends the ordinary consequences of his voluntary acts]’ ”
Id. citing Sandstrom,
In
Franklin,
the State argued that the language of the instruction allowing the presumption “may be rebutted” differentiated
Franklin
from
Sandstrom,
but the Court disagreed. The Court held that mandatory rebuttable presumptions are no less unconstitutional than mandatory conclusive .presumptions, even if slightly less onerous.
Furthermore, the Court found that language in the overall instruction to the effect that the defendant was presumed innocent, the State was required to prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt, and a general instruction on “criminal intention” did not dissipate the error in the challenged portion of the instruction. “Language that merely contradicts and does not explain a constitutionally infirm instruction will not suffice to absolve the infirmity.” Id. at 1974-75.
Finally, the Court held that the constitutionally erroneous jury instructions were not rendered harmless by the facts of the case. Franklin’s only defense was that he lacked the requisite intent to kill and the evidence in the case did not overwhelmingly preclude his defense on that score.
Id.
at 1977
citing Connecticut v. Johnson,
Based on
Sandstrom
and
Franklin,
this court finds that the following analytical approach must be utilized in determining cases alleging burden-shifting error in violation of the Due Process clause. First, the court must consider whether the challenged instruction concerned an essential element of the offense with which petitioner was charged; second, whether the instruction created a constitutionally objectionable “mandatory presumption” operating to shift the burden of proof to the defendant or whether it simply contained a “permissive inference”; third, whether, given the context of the charge as a whole, any error rendered by a “mandatory presumption” instruction was dissipated by other clarifying instructions given by the trial court; and fourth, whether any error which might have arisen from shifting the burden was rendered harmless in the context of the specific case.
See Flowers v. Blackburn,
A. Malice is an essential element of premeditated murder in North Carolina.
It is simply beyond cavil that first-degree murder in North Carolina includes within its definition the distinct and separate essential element of malice.
Davis v. Allsbrooks,
Premeditation means the act was thought out beforehand for some length of time, however short, but no particular amount of time is necessary for the mental process of premeditation.
State v. Brown,
Premeditation and deliberation relate to mental processes and ordinarily are not readily susceptible to proof by direct evidence. Instead, they usually must be proved by circumstantial evidence.
State v. Buchanan,
As for malice, the law of North Carolina recognizes three forms: (1) the emotions of hatred, ill will, and spite,
State v. Benson,
B. The challenged instruction operated as a ‘mandatory presumption’ and impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to the defendant.
During the instructions on first-degree murder, petitioner’s jury was informed that malice “... is implied in law from the intentionally [sic] killing with a deadly weapon.” (R. p. 7). On the following instructions concerning second-degree murder, the trial court elaborated upon the earlier malice instruction by clearly charging the jury that the use of a deadly weapon raised a “presumption” of malice which the defendant had the burden to disprove. (R. pp. 9-10). See jury charge, supra at 1326. All told, the jurors were informed in four (4) separate paragraphs that malice could be “presumed” or “implied in law” from the use of a deadly weapon and were further instructed that the burden was on the defendant to disprove the existence of malice.
Under
Sandstrom
and
Franklin,
there simply is no doubt that the trial court’s instruction constituted a mandatory presumption rather than a permissive inference.
8
The instructions, considered separately, and certainly as a whole, did far more than “suggest to the jury a possible conclusion to be drawn if the State proves predicate facts ...”
Franklin,
Respondents argue that the use of the term “implied” rather than “presumed” erases any constitutional concerns. The court disagrees. First, the trial judge used the term “implied in law,” a phrase which is far stronger and substantially more definitive than the single word “implied.” Second, the subsequent second-degree murder instructions that the jurors were given on the use to be made of the fact that petitioner had used a deadly weapon seemingly would have insured that “implied in law” was understood to mean exactly what the trial judge meant it to say — that malice could be “presumed” solely on the basis of the existence of the predicate fact, i.e., that a deadly weapon was used by Bush.
9
Similar instructions, where the word “implied” or phrase “implied in law” were used, have consistently been held to have created mandatory presumptions.
E.g., Mullaney v. Wilbur, supra; Engle v. Koehler,
The easy answer to this question can be garnered from the trial court’s instruction on second-degree murder. That instruction, without doubt, impermissibly shifted the burden of persuasion onto the defendant. It required the defendant to prove the absence of malice to the satisfaction of the jury. The state must bear the burden of proving malice in a first-degree murder conviction and it may not constitutionally shift the ultimate burden of disproving malice to the defendant.
Even if this court assumes the jurors never reached the issue of second-degree murder because of their first-degree verdict, they obviously sat and listened to
all of the instructions
before they began their deliberations. The jury was never, at anytime in the court’s charge, properly instructed on the element of malice and the second-degree instruction was so clearly infirm that this court would be hard-pressed to find the error in that instruction did not fatally infect the first-degree instruction.
See Franklin,
Nonetheless, the court’s holding today need not and does not rest solely on this basis, for a detailed review of the effect of the trial court’s malice instruction on first-degree murder makes clear that the “implied in law” charge,
standing alone,
was constitutionally infirm. In this regard, the court is guided by the incisive analysis of Judge Phillips of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals as set forth in his concurring opinion in
Davis v. Allsbrooks,
In Davis, the Fourth Circuit considered a similar instruction to the one at bar in a first-degree murder case out of North Carolina. The trial court had instructed the jury:
If the state proves beyond a reasonable doubt or it is admitted that the defendant intentionally killed [the victim] with a deadly weapon, ... the law implies first that the killing was unlawful, and second, that it was done with malice, (emphasis added).
Petitioner in
Davis
asserted that this instruction unconstitutionally shifted the burden of persuasion to him in violation of
Mullaney v. Wilbur, supra.
The Fourth Circuit rejected this contention, holding that “a state may legitimately shift a
burden of production
on an element of the crime to the defendant, as North Carolina has done, so long as the presumed fact is rationally connected to a proven fact.”
In reviewing North Carolina law, just as the United States Supreme Court had reviewed Montana law in Sandstrom and Georgia law in Franklin, the Court of Appeals found that North Carolina intended, through the above instruction, only to shift that burden of production on the element of malice to the defendant, not the burden of persuasion. Id. As the North Carolina Supreme Court has explained:
The effect of the presumption is to impose upon the defendant the burden of going forward with or producing some evidence of a lawful reason for the killing or an absence of malice; i.e., that the killing was done in self-defense or in the heat of passion upon sudden provocation. The state is not required to prove malice and unlawfulness unless there is some evidence of their non-existence, but once such evidence is presented, the state must prove these elements' beyond a reasonable doubt. (emphasis added).
State v. Simpson,
However, since the Supreme Court has held that the “state court is not the final authority on the
interpretation which a jury could have given the instruction,” Franklin,
As Judge Phillips’ concurring opinion in
Davis
recognizes, the old North Carolina first-degree murder instruction, as used by the trial court in this case and in
Davis
and
Rook,
“presents serious problems of reconciling the challenged instruction with Supreme Court decisions respecting the use of the type presumption it incorporated.”
The court begins its analysis by looking at the instruction. As previously stated, the first-degree instruction in this case simply told the jury that if the jury was persuaded beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant killed the victim intentionally with a deadly weapon, then it was “implied in law” that the killing was done with malice. Thus, a mandatory presumption was invoked requiring the jury find the elemental fact (malice) upon proof of the predicate fact (intentional killing with a deadly weapon).
See
Of course, the burden of production does not derive from the jury instruction itself, but rather is a “creature of state decisional law,” id, as the majority opinion in Davis established. What follows is a description of the operation of this procedural device as explained by Judge Phillips:
Under North Carolina law, “malice” and “unlawfulness” are elements of the crime of murder in the second degree. The state, therefore, under Mullaney,has the burden of convincing the jury beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of these two elements, along with the other elements of the crime. This is a burden of persuasion that remains throughout on the state. Nevertheless, to hold these elements fully in direct issue for jury resolution unaided by the presumption, a defendant has the burden of producing some evidence that tends to negate the existence of the elements. As to malice, this would be “some” evidence that any killing done was done “in the heat of passion on sudden provocation.” As to unlawfulness, it would be “some” evidence that any killing done was in self-defense. Failure to carry that production burden invokes the presumption, whose effect may then be submitted to the jury for use in deciding whether the elements of malice and unlawfulness have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
These respective burdens are implemented in jury trials by the traditional device of instructions to the jury that define and submit the disputed factual issues that remain for resolution under controlling substantive principles and the appropriate burdens of persuasion. The first step in administering this jury control device therefore precedes any instruction to the jury about its fact-finding function. The judge first decides as a matter of law whether on all the evidence the defendant’s slight burden of production has been carried. If he determines that it has not been carried, he does not tell the jury this, he simply tells them that if the evidence before them (including of course the unremarked non-evidence of “heat of passion” or self-defense) persuades them beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant killed intentionally with a déadly weapon, then they must also find that beyond a reasonable doubt he killed with malice and unlawfully (the “law presumes” the one from the other). Failure to carry that burden of production thus “raises” the presumption.
On the other hand, if the judge determines that some evidence of heat of passion or self-defense has been adduced — that the burden of production has been carried — again he does not specifically tell the jury so. But because the effect is to “dissipate” (or prevent the invocation of) the mandatory presumption, he simply does not submit it for use by the jury in reaching a verdict. In this circumstance he may, however, in instructing the jury on the malice and unlawfulness elements, tell the jury that the evidence of intentional killing with a deadly weapon may, but need not, give rise to an inference of malice and unlawfulness as defined elements of the crime. See Hankerson,220 S.E.2d at 589 (“mandatory presumption ... disappears but the logical inferences from the facts proved remain in the case to be weighed against [the rebutting] evidence”).
... several critical things about the device appear. First, and most important, is the fact that as judicially created this presumption is not intended to shift to a defendant any burden of persuasion. That however does not foreclose the possibility that by an erroneous instruction, or as a necessary consequence of a correct statement of the presumption, the burden of persuasion might be impermis-sibly shifted in a jury’s mind.
Second, the practical effect of the device is to require a criminal defendant to do something more than merely stand on his “general issue” plea of not guilty in order to hold the state to its full ingoing burden of persuasion on all elements of the crime unaided by any compelled inference of “elemental fact” from proven “basic” fact.
Third, proper administration of the device depends upon the trial judge’s accurate determination as to whether the defendant’s production burden has been carried — whether the defendant has produced at least “some” evidence to dissipate the putative presumption. If thereis “some” evidence in a particular case but the trial judge erroneously determines that there is not, and on that basis submits the issue of malice and/or unlawfulness subject to the mandatory presumption, the effect would necessarily be to “curtail/] the [jury’s] freedom to assess the evidence independently, ” Allen, 442 U.S. at 156 ,99 S.Ct. at 2224 (emphasis added), i.e., on the conflicting evidence alone. Such a specific trial error would presumably be of constitutional dimensions, and would be subject to free appellate review.
Fourth, the presumption that finally effectuates the device has the flat effect of making proof of intentional killing with a deadly weapon in circumstances containing no suggestion of “heat of passion on sudden provocation” or of “self-defense” tantmount to proof of “malice” and “unlawfulness.”
Given this setting, Judge Phillips found that determining the constitutionality of this procedure, in any given case, required the resolution of several independent but related inquiries:
1. whether the jury instruction, regardless of its intended effect, could actually and reasonably have been interpreted by the jury to place upon the defendant any burden of persuasion of disputed issues;
2. whether placing any burden of production upon the defendant at peril of his having invoked against him the mandatory presumption with respect to an element of the crime violates due process;
3. whether there existed any evidence that tended to negate the existence of malice, so that submitting the mandatory presumption in the case sub judice violated due process; and
4. whether the mandatory presumption is rational in terms of its compelled inference of elemental facts from predicate facts, in light of a defendant’s unmet burden of production.
As to the first question,
Sandstrom
and
Franklin
clearly indicate that where the presumed fact was an essential and fully disputed element of the crime, a mandatory presumption, which has the potential, by virtue of its form or context, for leading the jury reasonably to believe that because the law “implies” the essential fact from the predicate fact, this placed upon the defendant some burden to dissuade the jury of the essential fact, is unconstitutional.
Franklin,
Thus, when the presumed fact is in issue,
Sandstrom
and
Franklin
establish that an instruction such as the one given in this case is impermissibly likely to shift the burden of persuasion to the defendant.
12
The unequivocal language of the flawed
Of course, whether this same infirmity would accompany the use of such a presumption when its only effect is in relation to facts that had been taken out of dispute by a defendant’s failure to contest them is another matter entirely. On this point, the court agrees with the reasoning of Judge Phillips and the majority opinion in
Davis
that (1) the technical effect of a defendant’s failure to meet his production burden should be treated as comparable to a judicial admission or evidence that the defendant concedes the particular element of the crime; (2) the use of production burdens for the purpose of narrowing the issues in a criminal case is not
per se
unconstitutional; and (3) there is a rational and fundamentally fair basis for requiring a defendant to produce evidence of heat of passion provocation or self-defense in order to hold the elements of malice fully in issue in North Carolina murder prosecutions.
The problem in this case and what distinguishes it from the results reached in Davis and Book, is that evidence was clearly presented at trial which “tended to negate the existence of malice, so that submitting the mandatory presumption ... violated due process.” Id. at 180. The existence of malice was undoubtedly a disputed element at petitioner’s trial; in fact, it was the only seriously contested issue. There was conflicting evidence regarding whether Bush was provoked into his act of aggression by racial epithets of the victim — evidence which, if believed, would negate the element of malice. Petitioner testified at trial in support of his version of the killing and statements from his confession were introduced which, at least in part, corroborated his trial testimony.
Although the court finds the credibility of Bush’s version of events, as it relates to the evidence pertaining to malice, susceptible of significant suspicion, that obviously is not the standard to be applied by the court in determining whether
some
evidence was tendered by the defendant which would negate the existence of the disputed element. As the North Carolina Supreme Court explicitly found, “[t]he defendant contends and we agree that there was some evidence justifying an instruction concerning heat of passion killing on sudden provocation and a resulting absence of malice. This being the case, any presumption of malice arising from a finding that the defendant intentionally inflicted the fatal wounds with a deadly weapon disappeared and the State was entitled to no presumption.”
Bush
(II),
Accordingly, unlike the defendants in
Davis
and
Rook,
petitioner in this case did not admit or concede the presence of the element of the crime at issue in the defective jury instruction. Given the opposing inferences to be drawn from the evidence, this court has no alternative but to find, as did the North Carolina Supreme Court, that the challenged first-degree jury instruction embodied a mandatory presumption favoring the prosecution in respect of a disputed and essential element of the crime charged.
C. The burden-shifting error rendered by the “mandatory presumption” was not dissipated by other clarifying instructions of the trial court.
Respondents argue that any error in the instructions generally and the first-degree instruction specifically was cured by the trial court’s general instructions on the presumption of innocence and proof beyond a reasonable doubt. This is the same argument that was expressly rejected by the Supreme Court in
Franklin
and
Sand-strom.
As the court noted, these general instructions are not rhetorically inconsistent with the existence of a burden-shifting presumption because a reasonable juror could have regarded the presumption on malice as “a means by which proof beyond a reasonable doubt ... could be satisfied.”
Franklin,
Furthermore, although the offending words in the jury charge must be considered in the context of the instructions as a whole,
Under these circumstances, because a reasonable juror could have understood the challenged portions of the jury instructions in this case as creating a mandatory presumption that shifted to the defendant the burden of persuasion on the crucial and disputed element of malice, and because the charge read as a whole does not explain or even attempt to cure the error, this court holds that petitioner’s jury charge fails to comport with the fundamental requirements of the Due Process Clause. Id. at 1977.
D. Under Rose v. Clark, supra, the burden-shifting error at petitioner’s trial was not rendered harmless.
Respondents maintain that even if the malice instruction was impermissibly burden-shifting under Sandstrom and Franklin, the error was rendered harmless given the facts of this case. For the reasons that follow, the court must, with considerable reluctance, disagree.
First, the state contends that the jury’s findings of deliberation and premeditation (i.e. the first-degree murder verdict) cured any error in the malice instruction. This argument was essentially adopted by the North Carolina Supreme Court in
Bush
(II).
Furthermore, while there is undoubtedly a relationship between the elements of premeditation, deliberation, and malice, this connection serves only to heighten the prejudice caused by the invalid instruction on malice in petitioner’s case. As the
Bush
(II) opinion points out, in North Carolina the presence or absence of heat of passion is relevant to the question of premeditation and deliberation as well as malice.
“... that the act is done in a cold state of blood ... not under the influence of a violent passion suddenly aroused by some lawful or just cause or legal provocation ... if the purpose to kill was born and immediately executed in a passion, especially if the passion was aroused by recent provocation or by mutual combat, then the murder is not deliberate and premeditated.” (R. p. 8).
The problem lies in the fact that Bush’s jury had, by this time, already been told that heat of passion and legal provocation, which would, under the above instructions, negate the element of deliberation, were unavailable to petitioner solely because he used a deadly weapon to kill the victim. Thus, it is conceivable that a reasonable juror could have interpreted the first-degree murder instruction taken as a whole, to mean that premeditation, deliberation, and malice were all implied in law from the petitioner’s use of the deadly weapon. While this court has no way of knowing exactly how petitioner’s jury interpreted the malice instructions in relation to the
Based on the above scenario, a reasonable juror could easily have resolved the contradictions and ambiguities that existed in the trial court’s instructions by choosing to abide by and consistently apply throughout the instructions, the mandatory presumption initially set forth in the first-degree malice charge. Nothing in the instructions as a whole makes clear to the jury that any one instruction carried more weight or should be considered independently of another.
See Franklin,
Finally, the
Bush
II court cited a series of cases arising out of Maryland, particularly
Guthrie v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary,
Since the jury found the defendant guilty of premeditated and deliberated murder in
Guthrie,
the Fourth Circuit found that the constitutionally infirm burden-shifting malice instruction constituted harmless error.
See also Wilkins v. Maryland,
“[t]he [erroneous] instructions concerning intoxication and heat of passion went only to the distinction between manslaughter and second-degree murder. They did not touch on first-degree murder, the offense of which Guthrie was convicted.”
The North Carolina Supreme Court’s reliance upon and the Magistrate’s reluctant finding that the petitioner’s case is controlled by Guthrie might be of merit if petitioner’s jury had received the infirm instructions on malice only during the portion of the court’s charge dealing with the distinction between second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter. See, e.g., State v. Fowler, supra; State v. Freeman, supra. That, however, is not what occurred in this case. Here, Bush’s jury was specifically charged during the first-degree instruction that malice was to be “implied in law” from Bush’s intentional use of a deadly weapon. Thus, since the infirm instruction in petitioner’s case did indeed “touch upon” the first-degree murder charge, and since malice is a distinct element of first-degree murder in North Carolina, reliance on Guthrie is misplaced and petitioner’s conviction of first-degree murder did not render the erroneous instruction harmless. See Franklin, supra; Engle v. Koehler, supra; Anderson v. Harless, supra.
Respondents’ second and final argument is that, given the overwhelming nature of the evidence in this case, any Sandstrom error committed by the trial court was harmless beyond any reasonable doubt. This issue presents an extremely close question, but one which, when viewed fairly, forthrightly and without regard to the court’s “belief” in the defendant’s actual guilt or innocence, must be decided, as a matter of law, in petitioner’s favor. 20
Until last month’s opinion in
Rose v. Clark, supra,
the Supreme Court had left
Given the lack of guidance by and the clear division that existed within the Court on this issue, the lower federal courts and state courts, not surprisingly, developed a number of different approaches to the problem. Some courts held that
Sand-strom
errors could be deemed harmless where the evidence of guilt was overwhelming.
See, e.g., Patterson v. Austin,
Notwithstanding all of the above,
Rose v. Clark,
decided July 2, 1986, has now put the issue to rest. In
Rose,
the defendant was charged with the murder of two persons arising from the same incident. At his state trial in Tennessee, Clark raised the defense that he was insane or, at least, incapable of forming the requisite intent to kill the victims. The trial court instructed the jury on first-degree premeditated and deliberate murder and second-degree murder, which required malice, but not premeditation and deliberation. The court instructed the jury that “[a]ll homicides are presumed to be malicious in the absence of evidence which would rebut the implied presumption” and that “if the state has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that a killing occurred, then it is presumed that
On state appeal, the Tennessee Court of Appeals affirmed the convictions, rejecting Clark’s argument that the malice instruction impermissibly shifted the burden of proof as to malice. Clark then sought ha-beas relief in the federal district court, which, upon review, held the malice instruction was unconstitutional under
Sandstrom. Clark v. Rose,
The Supreme Court subsequently granted certiorari to answer the question of “whether the harmless error standard of
Chapman v. United States,
Given this standard of review, the Court found that the lower federal court’s ruling, that
Sandstrom
error could never be harmless where a defendant contests intent, was erroneous.
23
Id.
at-,
Here, Bush admitted stabbing and killing Mr. Marshburn. His only defense (disregarding his questionable self-defense argument), and a seriously contested defense from the outset, was the fact that he did not act with malice. A mandatory presumption that Bush intended to kill and did kill in malice predicated solely on his use of a deadly weapon essentially eliminated this defense from the trial. Since the facts did not overwhelmingly preclude this defense, as the North Carolina Supreme Court itself found, this court cannot find the error to be harmless.
Clearly, the record indicates conflicting evidence and inferences which could be drawn from that evidence regarding whether the stabbing occurred as a result of a racist remark and provocation, which, if believed, would negate the element of malice. The state relied heavily on petitioner’s own statements to Mrs. Marshburn and Detective Jarman to convict him. In fact, the only evidence adduced at trial concerning the events surrounding the killing was derived from statements made by Bush to others and his own trial testimony. Bush never conceded that he acted with malice. Respondent acknowledged that Bush’s defense to first-degree murder was lack of malice and the North Carolina Supreme Court held in
Bush
(II) that evidence was introduced at trial supporting this defense —sufficient evidence so as to mandate an instruction on “heat of passion killing on sudden provocation and a resulting absence of malice.”
In point of fact, if the jury chose to believe Bush, upon correct instructions, it would have had to exonerate him on the charge of first-degree murder. Of course, the jury was free to discredit Bush’s trial testimony and to consider the exculpatory portions of his confession as self-serving, but because of the erroneous charge, this court cannot determine whether the jury disbelieved Bush, or whether it merely applied the erroneous presumption charged by the trial court.
See Brooks v. Kemp,
On the other hand, it is of course possible to kill without malice and Bush’s trial testimony indicates that is what occurred. Although there is overwhelming evidence in this case that Bush was the killer, that fact does not constitute overwhelming evidence that the killing was malicious.
See Davis v. Kemp,
Therefore based on the aforesaid, Bush’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus must be and hereby is GRANTED. Respondents are directed to retry or release petitioner from custody within 90 days of the entry of this order.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The issues raised in the petition at bar were not raised on Bush’s appeal of right to the North Carolina Supreme Court.
. These assignments of error constitute the issues at bar.
. As the Magistrate correctly notes, the trial court instructed the jury on the alternate theories of felony murder and premeditated murder in the first degree. The jury, upon returning its verdict, failed to indicate on which theory it relied in convicting the petitioner. For purposes of its consideration of the case, the North Carolina Supreme Court assumed the jury relied on the theory of premeditation and deliberation. This-presumption, of course, was favorable to Bush, since under felony-murder it would have been unnecessary for the jury to reach any decision on whether the homicide was committed with or without malice. Thus, erroneous instructions on this issue would have been rendered irrelevant and obviously harmless. Like the North Carolina Supreme Court, this court assumes the jury relied on the premeditated and deliberate murder theory.
. Petitioner denied making this statement.
. Intent to kill is an element of the offense of malice murder in Georgia.
. A conclusive presumption completely removes the presumed element from the case once the state proves all the predicate facts giving rise to the presumption. A rebuttable presumption does not remove the element, but nevertheless mandates the jury find the presumed element unless the defendant persuades the jury such a finding is unwarranted.
.
Franklin
specifically left open the question of whether a mandatory presumption that shifts only a burden of production to the defendant is consistent with the Due Process Clause.
. This is true of the first-degree malice instruction standing alone without the second-degree instruction’s extensive elaboration.
. In this regard, the trial court was simply giving the state the benefit of a "presumption” that had been part of North Carolina law at that time for over one hundred years.
See State v. Hankerson,
The court notes that the North Carolina Pattern Jury Instructions have subsequently been changed to read:
If the state proves beyond a reasonable doubt (or it is admitted) that the defendant shot the deceased with a deadly weapon or intentionally inflicted a wound upon the deceased with a deadly weapon that proximately caused the deceased's death, you may infer, first, that the killing was unlawful, and second, that it was done with malice, but you are not compelled to do so. You may consider this along with all other facts and circumstances in determining whether the killing was unlawful and whether it was done with malice.
N.C.P.I. — Crim. 206-10 (emphasis added).
.In some of these cases, the mandatory presumption shifted only the burden of production and not the burden of persuasion. See discussion infra.
. A similar result was reached in
Rook v. Rice
on a nearly identical trial court instruction.
. Again, it is important to note that this is true of the first-degree instruction alone, even without regard to the clearly unconstitutional language thereafter contained in the second-degree instruction.
. At a minimum, "[s]o long as the jury could conclude that the defendant was required to produce more than ‘some’ evidence in order to rebut the presumption, the instruction imper-missibly shifted the burden of proof....
Once the jury is instructed that [malice is ‘implied in law,’] the burden has been unconstitutionally shifted, unless the instruction specifies the precise quantum of evidence by which the defendant can refute the presumption against him.”
Davis v. Kemp,
. Indeed, this court may well be bound by this factual finding of the state court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d);
Sumner v. Mata,
. In the Fourth Circuit’s opinion which was affirmed by the Supreme Court in
Reed,
Senior Circuit Judge Haynsworth, writing for a unanimous panel, specifically held that the "allocation to Ross of the burden of persuasion as to the lack of malice was in violation of his constitutional right,” obviously notwithstanding Ross's first-degree conviction.
Ross v. Reed,
QUESTION: ... But, anyway, the malice thing is clear now. but the — if malice is an element of defense — of the offense, the prosecution must prove it.
MR. LEAGUE: Oh yes, yes sir.
QUESTION: That’s clear.
MR. LEAGUE: Yes.
. '“The pivotal concept of
Sandstrom
is that the
possibility
that the jury reached its decision in an impermissible manner requires reversal even though the jury may also have reached the same result in a constitutionally acceptable
fashion.’" Connecticut v. Johnson,
. Although this court, like Justice Rehnquist, < has some doubts as to whether any jury is so "attentively attuned" to a trial court’s instructions that it can divine the difference between words like "infer,” "presume” and “implied in law,”
Sandstrom,
... The Court presumes that jurors, conscious of the gravity of their task, attend closely the particular language of the trial court’s instructions in a criminal case and strive to understand, make sense of, and follow, the instructions given them_ [Wje adhere to the cru-
cial assumption underlying our constitutional system of trial by jury that jurors carefully follow instructions. As Chief Justice Traynor has said, "we must assume that juries for the most part understand and faithfully follow instructions. The concept of a fair trial encompasses a decision by tribunal that has understood and applied the-law to all material issues in the case.” Quoted in Connecticut v. Johnson,460 U.S. 73 , 85 n. 14,103 S.Ct. 969 , 977 n. 14,74 L.Ed.2d 823 (1983) (opinion of BLACKMUN, J.).
See also Parker v. Randolph,
A crucial assumption underlying [our system of trial by jury] is that juries will follow the instructions given them by the trial judge. Were this not so, it would be pointless for a trial court to instruct a jury, and even more pointless for an appellate court to reverse a criminal conviction because the jury was improperly instructed.
.Bush
(II) also cites two prior North Carolina cases similarly holding that erroneous malice instructions are rendered harmless by a first degree conviction,
State v. Fowler,
. The Fourth Circuit further held in
Guthrie
that as to the separate instructions on first-degree murder, the jury was properly and adequately charged on all elements of that crime.
. Society's legitimate concern for punishing crime cannot be effected "without heeding the mode by which it is accomplished.”
Connecticut v. Johnson,
. The Fourth Circuit’s unusual standard was the subject of significant and immediate criticism. See, e.g., Comment, Limiting the Availability of Habeas Corpus Relief for Burden-Shifting Errors — Fourth Circuit Avoids Harmless Error Analysis With a Fundamentally Unfair Standard: Fulton v. Warden, 59 St. John’s L.Rev. 786 (1985). Much of this court’s initial draft of this opinion (written prior to Rose v. Clark, supra), dealt with an analysis of the majority opinion in Fulton, Judge Phillips’ dissenting opinion in that case, and a review of the other three standards established in the lower federal courts, all in light of the plurality opinion in Connecticut v. Johnson, supra. However, this discussion was rendered irrelevant given the Supreme Court’s recent and decisive opinion in Rose v. Clark and, thus, this portion of the opinion at bar was edited and redrafted in light of Rose.
. Justice Stevens concurred in the Court's judgment that harmless error analysis applies to cases involving Sandstrom error, but parted company with the majority in its dictum regarding the nature of that analysis. Justice Black-mun, joined by Justices Brennan and Marshall, dissented, stating:
The Court recognized 40 years ago that the question a reviewing court must ask "is not whether guilt may be spelt out of a record, but whether guilt has been found by a jury according to the procedures and standards” required by the Constitution. Bollenbach v. United States, 326 U.S. [607], at 614 [66 S.Ct. 402 , 405,90 L.Ed. 350 (1946) ]. When a jury has not been properly instructed concerning an essential element of the offense that has been charged, the danger exists that the defendant has been deprived of his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to have the jury determine whether the State has proved each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Faced with an incorrect instruction and a general verdict of guilty, a reviewing court simply lacks any adequate basis for deciding whether the jury has performed its constitutionally required function. Because I believe the Court today asks and answers the wrong question, I dissent.
. The Sixth Circuit was guided by Justice Blackmun’s opinion in Connecticut v. Johnson, supra, where he stated that:
An erroneous presumption on a disputed element of the crime renders irrelevant the evidence on the issue because the jury may have relied upon the presumption rather than upon that evidence. If the jury may have failed to consider evidence of intent, a reviewing court cannot hold that the error did not contribute to the verdict. The fact that the reviewing court may view the evidence of intent as overwhelming is then simply irrelevant. To allow a reviewing court to perform the jury’s function of evaluating the evidence of intent, when the jury never may have performed that function, would give too much weight to society’s interest in punishing the guilty and too little weight to the method by which decisions of guilt are to be made.
. Thus, the Court remanded Rose v. Clark to the Sixth Circuit for application of the above-cited standard under Chapman to the facts.
. In North Carolina, such jury instructions, when requested by the defendant, are only required where there is some evidence from which a jury could reasonably find the defendant acted without malice.
See State
v.
Patterson, supra; State v. Hankerson, supra. Cf. State v. Spaulding,
