Henry Lee CORDOVA, Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
Leroy BACA, Sheriff of Los Angeles County; Deanne Myers, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge; Steven Cooley, Los Angeles District Attorney; Bill Lockyer, Attorney General of California, Respondents-Appellants.
No. 02-55713.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted January 14, 2003 — Pasadena, California.
Filed October 6, 2003.
Matthew G. Monforton, Deputy District Attorney, Los Angeles, California, argued for the respondents-appellants. Steve Cooley, District Attorney of Los Angeles County, George M. Palmer, Head Deputy District Attorney, and Brentford J. Ferriera, Deputy District Attorney, joined him on the briefs.
Ronald S. Smith, Los Angeles, California, argued for the petitioner-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California; Lourdes G. Baird, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-01-01959-LGB.
Before: Cynthia Holcomb HALL, Alex KOZINSKI and Johnnie B. RAWLINSON, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge:
We must evaluate under AEDPA a state court's decision to apply harmless error review where a criminal defendant was not represented by counsel at trial, following a defective waiver of his right to counsel.
Facts
Petitioner Henry Cordova was arrested outside his home after an altercation involving his neighbors. He was handcuffed by a Deputy Sheriff and placed in the back seat of a patrol car. After the deputy entered the car and sat in the driver's seat, Cordova either sneezed (his story) or spit (the deputy's story), as a result of which something unsavory landed on the deputy's face.
Cordova was charged in the South Bay Municipal Court with three misdemeanor counts of battery—two on his neighbors, the third on the deputy. Cordova was not eligible for representation by the Public Defender, and he vacillated as to whether he would hire a lawyer or represent himself. The trial judge, everyone agrees, did not admonish him as required by Faretta v. California,
Cordova ended up representing himself. After a jury trial, he was acquitted of the two counts involving his neighbors but was convicted of battery on the deputy. The Appellate Division of the Los Angeles County Superior Court affirmed the conviction, even though it found that "the trial court committed error in failing to adequately advise [Cordova] of the dangers of self-representation" and the record was therefore "inadequate to ... demonstrate[] that appellant was sufficiently informed of the dangers of self-representation so as to make an intelligent and knowing waiver." App. Div. Order at 7. The Appellate Division, however, found that "the failure to advise the appellant of the dangers of self-representation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt" under Chapman v. California,
In petitions presented to the California Court of Appeal and California Supreme Court, Cordova argued that the Appellate Division should not have conducted harmless error review, but rather reversed automatically once it determined that he had not effectively waived his right to counsel. After the state courts denied him relief on this claim, he brought this habeas petition in federal court.1 The district court granted the writ; it held that, once the Appellate Division had concluded Cordova's waiver was invalid, he was entitled to automatic reversal of his conviction. The state appeals, claiming that the Appellate Division's ruling did not contravene any Supreme Court case law directly on point, nor was its ruling an unreasonable application of that law under the alternative prong of AEDPA. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
Discussion
It is so well established as to require no citation that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to counsel at trial. It is also established by numerous Supreme Court cases that if a defendant is denied the right to counsel, that error is structural and calls for automatic reversal of the conviction; in other words, denial of the right to counsel at trial is not subject to harmless error review. See, e.g., Penson v. Ohio,
The right to counsel, like other constitutional rights, may be waived. Faretta,
Here, the state appellate court determined that Cordova did not effectively waive his right to counsel because the trial court did not give him proper warnings. See p. 925 supra. Cordova thus commenced the trial with his right to counsel intact. Because Cordova was tried without a lawyer, it follows ineluctably from Supreme Court cases such as Rose and Penson that his trial was infected by structural error, and the Appellate Division was wrong when it concluded the error was harmless.
The state argues vigorously that there is in fact no Supreme Court authority on point because no Supreme Court cases deal with the consequences of a defective Faretta waiver. In the absence of such authority, the state argues, the Appellate Division's harmless error review following a defective waiver was neither directly contrary to Supreme Court authority nor an unreasonable application thereof. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). But we do not need a Supreme Court case to tell us the consequence of a defective waiver; a defective waiver waives nothing and thus is of no consequence. See Johnson v. Zerbst,
The state's confusion on this elementary point stems from its failure to distinguish between two separate steps in the analysis—the effect of a defective waiver colloquy and the effect of a defective waiver. As noted, the Supreme Court in Faretta held that, before a trial court accepts a defendant's waiver of the right to counsel, "he should be made aware of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation." Faretta,
Because the Supreme Court has not spoken to the consequences of a trial court's failure to give proper Faretta warnings, a state court would be entitled to conclude that a defective waiver colloquy does not automatically result in a defective waiver — that a defendant's waiver was nonetheless knowing and voluntary, perhaps because defendant was well versed in the criminal justice process. That, indeed, is the approach our own court has taken. See United States v. Balough,
The distinction between harmless error analysis at the waiver colloquy stage and that at the waiver stage is illustrated by People v. Dennany,
All but one of the remaining cases on which the state relies are equally unhelpful to its position. Richardson v. Lucas,
The state, finally, relies on three cases from the California intermediate appellate courts.5 One of these, People v. Noriega,
In concluding that the error was not structural, McArthur recognized the teaching of Rose where "the United States Supreme Court ... stated denial of the right to counsel is an error which `necessarily render[s] a trial fundamentally unfair.'" Id. at 629,
This leaves People v. Wilder,
Wilder also conflated harmless error analysis at the waiver colloquy stage with harmless error analysis once the waiver is deemed to be invalid. Thus, the court concluded that "[a] recitation of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation would have led to the same result; he would have voluntarily proceeded in pro se. The trial would have still occurred with defendant representing himself. Nothing would have changed had defendant been advised of the dangers of self-representation." Id. at 502,
The state argues vigorously that, whether or not we agree with Wilder, its interpretation of Supreme Court case law is not unreasonable and we must therefore accord it deference. This is not so. Federal courts owe substantial deference to state court interpretations of federal law only under the alternative prong of AEDPA, which asks whether the state court's ruling amounts to an "unreasonable application of [] clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Our ruling, however, rests on the first prong of the test, namely that the state court's ruling is "contrary to" a long line of Supreme Court cases—not merely Rose and Penson, but also Chapman itself,
In sum, we conclude that if a criminal defendant is put on trial without counsel, and his right to counsel has not been effectively waived, he is entitled to an automatic reversal of the conviction. The reason for the denial—whether it be an oversight on the part of the court, a failure to give proper warning or some other reason—is irrelevant. What matters is that the defendant was put on trial without a lawyer though the Constitution guarantees him that right. That is the kind of defect in the trial process the Supreme Court has told us time and again cannot be unscrambled. The Appellate Division's effort to analyze the evidence and determine what would have happened, had Cordova been represented by counsel, is precisely the kind of inquiry the Supreme Court has said cannot be made. Automatic reversal of the conviction is the only lawful remedy.
AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
The state agrees that Cordova adequately exhausted his state remedies
It is unclear whether the Appellate Division concluded that the defective waiver colloquy resulted in a defective waiver because it found no evidence in the record that the waiver was, nonetheless, knowing and intelligent, or whether it did so because it did not appreciate the distinction. Whatever the reason, the fact remains that the Appellate Division found the waiver defective
Dennany itself dealt with the converse situation — whether the trial court had erroneously denied defendant the right to represent himself — and the part of the opinion dealing with Dennany's case says nothing relevant to us.
A concurring justice, by contrast, concluded that defendantdid have sufficient education and experience, so that the trial court's failure to give proper warnings was indeed harmless and the waiver was valid. Id. at 152 (Boyle, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Justice Boyle's concurrence did state that, had the waiver not been effective, the absence of counsel at trial might be reviewed for harmless error. Dennany,
We note that the state's recitation of California appellate cases on this issue is not complete. The state does not cite cases such asPeople v. Hall,
We note thatWilder gave no reasons in the record for this conclusion. Unlike other cases that have carefully examined the defendant's education and experience in concluding that warnings from the court would not have mattered, see, e.g., Balough,
That having been said,Wilder is enough of an outlier, and its reasoning is sufficiently suspect, that we would have little hesitation in concluding that it is also an unreasonable application of federal law as announced by the Supreme Court, under the alternative prong of AEDPA.
