Clifford Wise appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York,
For the reasons given below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
After a jury trial before Justice James H. Boomer, New York State Supreme Court, Monroe County, Wise was convicted in June 1976 of robbery in the second degree, N.Y.Penal Law § 160.10, and grand larceny in the second degree, N.Y.Penal Law § 155.35. He was acquitted of first degree robbery. Wise was sentenced on the robbery charge as a second felony offender to 7V2 to 15 years imprisonment. No sentence was imposed on the grand larceny charge because it merged with the robbery conviction.
Before and during the trial, Wise was represented by retained counsel, apparently his third and possibly his fourth lawyer in the case. At the completion of jury selection, Wise advised the trial judge that this was his counsel’s first jury trial, something Wise alleged that he had only recently learned, and that he did not feel counsel was experienced enough to handle the trial. The judge denied Wise’s request to obtain new counsel on the grounds that it was too late in the proceedings to do so and that he felt counsel was capable of handling the trial. On the fourth day of trial and in the presence of the jury, counsel refused to continue, accused the judge of prejudging his client’s guilt and of unfairly influencing the jury and stalked out of the courtroom. After immediately dismissing the jury and summoning counsel back to the courtroom, the judge engaged in a prolonged and sometimes heated colloquy with counsel in which the judge denied any prejudicial conduct and ordered counsel to continue representing Wise. The trial proceeded without further incident.
Represented by new counsel, Wise appealed his conviction to 'the Appellate Division essentially on the same grounds presented in the habeas petition now before us. In November 1978, the Appellate Division vacated the grand larceny conviction as an inclusory concurrent count of the robbery conviction, but in all other respects affirmed the judgment. Leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals was denied. Meanwhile, during the pendency of his appeal to the Appellate Division, Wise moved in the trial court pursuant to N.Y. Crim. Pro. Law § 440.10 to vacate his conviction on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel. After argument, the trial judge denied the motion without an eviden-tiary hearing. Leave to appeal this decision was denied by the Appellate Division in January 1978.
Wise filed a habeas petition pro se in the district court in October 1979. After counsel was appointed and an amended petition filed, Judge Telesca denied the amended petition in March'1983, without an eviden-tiary hearing. The judge held that Wise’s numerous assertions of omissions, mistakes and misconduct by his trial counsel could not stand in the face of the findings of the state trial and appellate courts. Applying this circuit’s former “farce and mockery” standard, the judge found that the representation was not a denial of effective
This court granted a certificate of probable cause to appeal on the ineffectiveness of counsel claim, but because the moving papers were ambiguous as to the fair trial claim and it was also fully briefed on appeal, we have considered it as well.
II.
In their briefs and argument to us, the parties raised several difficult questions, including the retroactivity of our recent decision in
Trapnell v. United States,
In denying Wise’s habeas petition, the district court considered itself bound under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) and Sumner v. Mata I and II, supra, by the following determinations of the trial judge and the Appellate Division: the trial judge’s statement that “[a]t first [Wise’s trial counsel] was rather slow in selecting the jury, but he impressed me, as matters went on, of being an aggressive defense counsel, and his summation, I thought was impressive under all the circumstances of the case”; and the Appellate Division’s statements that “[n]o crucial element of the defense was omitted ... and counsel appeared to be prepared and to have a grasp of the facts and legal principles involved”; that “[t]here is no evidence that counsel ever lost his composure or his concentration or that after his er-uption he was less effective”; and that “[fjurthermore, we view counsel’s conduct as part of a tactic intended to force the court to declare a mistrial.”
Wise argues that the district court erroneously accorded a presumption of correctness to what were legal conclusions on the ultimate question of effectiveness of counsel or at least were conclusions on mixed questions of fact and law. While we think that the district judge may have gone too far in giving preclusive effect to all of the state courts’ findings listed above in deciding the ultimate constitutional issue of effectiveness of counsel, we agree with the judge’s ultimate conclusion after our own independent review of the record. We do not, therefore, have to decide precisely how each of the above-listed findings should be treated under Sumner v. Mata I and II, supra.
In his amended habeas petition and his brief on this appeal, Wise sets forth numerous alleged errors and omissions by counsel in the trial record which are said to demonstrate that counsel failed to under
Wise further argues that counsel permitted the prosecutor to make improper statements before the jury without objection; made meaningless “general objections” to introduction of evidence; promised in his opening statement to call a police department fingerprint expert, but failed to do so; and allowed a defective jury charge to be given by failing to be ready with specific objections when the judge asked for objections to the charge. Wise also alleges additional instances of counsel’s incompetence that do not appear in the trial court record, including failing to consult with Wise prior to trial except briefly during court appearances; urging Wise in these brief discussions to plead guilty rather than eliciting facts and formulating a trial strategy; failing to interview all of the witnesses who could corroborate Wise’s alibi; and failing to advise Wise of his lack of criminal defense experience, his beliefs about the court’s bias and his intention to confront the judge in front of the jury.
While this is a substantial list of alleged shortcomings, we do not think the picture Wise has drawn accurately depicts counsel’s performance. On our own independent review of the record we agree with the state trial and appellate court findings that counsel was aggressive, that he was well prepared and had a good grasp of the facts, that no crucial element of the defense was omitted and that counsel had an adequate understanding of the legal principles involved. We are most troubled by counsel’s outburst at the judge in front of the jury, which was not competent conduct. In this regard, we do not believe the record supports the Appellate Division’s finding that the outburst was a tactic to obtain a mistrial. Nevertheless, we do not feel the incident deprived Wise of the effective assistance of counsel in his defense; rather, we think the real question is whether the outburst so prejudiced the case in the eyes of the jury as to deny Wise’s right to a fair trial, a question we will turn to shortly.
Apart from this incident, although counsel was no Clarence Darrow, his performance was not so lacking in competence as to fall short of the standard set down in Strickland v. Washington. Many of the omissions that Wise complains of appear to have been tactical decisions or concerned matters that under the facts of the case did not warrant much attention. Some of the other alleged omissions and mistakes are inaccurately described, and while some of the remaining ones were perhaps error, they were not as serious in the context of the entire trial and counsel’s vigorous defense as Wise claims.
Before trial, counsel made a detailed and comprehensive request for
Brady
material, a bill of particulars, statements made by Wise, certain grand jury material and broad discovery. He also sought a suppression hearing and a
Wade
hearing. He did not' request a
Sandoval
hearing, but the assistant district attorney who handled the combined suppression and
Wade
hearing testified at the post-trial hearing that he discussed
Sandoval
with counsel and that counsel indicated that as a matter of trial tactics he did not believe Wise should testify, so that there was no need for a
Sandoval
hearing. A review of the com
We do not think it is necessary to discuss each of the claimed errors and omissions. Wise was not entitled to a perfect defense, and the cumulative effect of the errors and omissions that we might find do not amount to a denial of effective assistance of counsel. We have considered Wise’s allegations of extra-record instances of incompetence, and in the context of the entire record we do not believe they raise sufficiently serious doubts about counsel’s performance to warrant an evidentiary hearing.
Finally, turning to the second half of the
Strickland v. Washington
test, we conclude that defendant has not shown prejudice even if we assume that his counsel’s performance was constitutionally defective. As a result of that decision, Wise “must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Moreover, “[a] reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Strickland v. Washington,
supra, — U.S. at -,
The evidence against Wise was, as the trial judge characterized it, “overwhelming.” Cf.
United States v. Aulet,
III.
As noted earlier, counsel’s misconduct in front of the jury is best considered in the context of Wise’s claim that he was denied his due process right to a fair trial. This incident is the most troubling aspect of the case and we do not condone such misconduct, but we conclude that denying a mistrial certainly was within the discretion of the trial judge. He was in the best position to assess the impact on the jury. Moreover, he immediately dismissed the jury; when they returned, he admonished them to disregard the incident; and he included an appropriate instruction in the jury charge. We would not characterize the outburst as a trial tactic, but we do not think that it denied Wise a fair trial. 1
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Citing
Rose v. Lundy,
