After a childhood of abuse of himself and his sister, Dale Whipple killed his mother and father. The jury found Whipple “guilty but mentally ill” on two counts of murder and the Indiana Supreme Court upheld the conviction. On appeal in this Court, Whipple seeks collateral relief on the basis that the trial court’s failure to submit to the jury Whipple’s defense theory of self-defense and the defense of others violаted his constitutional rights.
I.
Throughout their lives, Dale and Penny Whipple were subjected to physical and mental abuse at the hands of their parents. Defendant, Dale Whipple, testified at trial that during December 1984, he was frequently beaten and experienced extreme pain at least every day. At some time in December, after Whipple’s father severely beat him for having candy bars in his room, Dale Whipple, then 17 years old, formulated a plan to kill his parents. According to the Indiana Supreme Court,
“On the evening of January 1, 1985, the Whipple family returned home from visiting nearby relatives. Mr. Whipple went to bed. Defendant asked his mother to go with him to the garage on the pretext of looking at something outside the garage window. Once inside the garage, defendant killed his mothеr with several blows of an ax to her back and head. Defendant then proceeded to his parents’ bedroom and killed his father with the same ax.”
Whipple v. State,
Whipple originally attempted to conceal his involvement in the crime by discarding evidence of the crime and pretending to discover his mother’s body. However, he later confessed to both killings. The jury found him “guilty but mentally ill” on two counts of murder аnd he was sentenced to concurrent terms of 30 years of imprisonment for his father’s murder and 40 years of imprisonment for his mother’s murder.
The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed Whipple’s conviction and held that the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury on the defenses of self-defense and defense of others was proper. According to the Indiana Supreme Court, the threat of harm to Dale оr his sister was too temporally remote to be “imminent” for the purpose of self-defense or defense of others as a matter of Indiana law. 1 Therefore, the Indiana Supreme Court upheld the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury on Whipple’s proffered defense theory.
Whipple sought collateral relief from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court, finding no constitutional error, denied Whipple’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus and issued an order certifying probable cause for appeal. On appeal, we assume jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2253.
II.
A. Procedural Default
Before addressing the merits of Whipple’s challenge, we consider the state’s allegation that Whipple failed to present his claims fairly to the Indiana Supreme Court. The State maintains that Whipple may not raise his federal claims on habeas review because he failed to present those claims adequately to the Indiana Supreme Court. Specifically, the State asserts that Whipple waived two particular claims because of procedural default — his constitutional claim concerning the trial court’s failurе to present an instruction on self-defense and the defense of others, and his factual claim regarding the “daily pain” he experienced throughout December 1984.
*420
Ordinarily a prisoner who seeks federal habeas relief must raise his federal claims in state court before proceeding to federal court.
Picard v. Connor,
This case presents a similar question to that raised in
United States
ex rel.
Sullivan v.
Fairman—“whether and under what circumstances a state prisoner who has fully presented to the state court the substance of a claim that forms the basis of the constitutional deprivation alleged in the prisoner’s habeas petition, but has not done sо in explicit constitutional terms, may be held to have sufficiently apprised the state court of the potential existence of an error of constitutional dimension.”
Whipple’s brief in the Indiana Supreme Court claimed deprivation of an entitlement “tо have a jury determine the issue of his defense of himself and his sister” (Def.Br., Ind.Sup.Ct. 52). Whipple argued that the jury must be “instructed on any theory of the defense which has any foundation in the evidence regardless of the strength of that evidence” (Def.Br.,Ind.Sup.Ct. 17). Although Whipple did not identify the source of his alleged entitlement, he cited
Cyrus v. State,
Although Whipple did not expliсitly advise the Indiana Supreme Court that his claim involved a constitutional question, his reliance on the line of cases including
Cyprus
and
Hillsman
adequately notified that court that a constitutional question was involved. It would indeed be ironic if we were to penalize Whipple for failing to state the constitutional underpinning of his entitlement when this Court’s own opinion in
Hillsman
fails to note that a defendant’s entitlemеnt to present his defense theory to the jury stems from constitutional guarantees. See also
Mathews v. United States,
With regard to Whipple’s factual claim that he experienced daily pain, the State’s assertion that the claim was not fairly presented to the Indiana Supreme Court is devoid of merit. Whipple’s claim is not a “new factual allegation,” as alleged by the State of Indiana. Whipple first made that claim during his trial in state court.
4
Similar factual arguments were presented to the Indiana Supreme Court.
5
Although the State attempts to bolster its argument by invoking
Cruz v. Warden of Dwight Correctional Center,
Thus we agree with the district court that “the issues here presented were fairly presented to the highest court in Indiana” (Mem. and Order, at 6 (Nov. 29, 1990)).
B. Constitutionality of Denying Whipple’s Request to Instruct Jury on Defense of Self-Defense and Defense of Others
Under Indiana law, in order to assert the defense of self-defense or the defensе of another, a defendant must show that he reasonably feared the imminent use of unlawful force against himself or a third person.
6
On appeal, Whipple strenuously
*422
argues that the Indiana Supreme Court misreads Indiana’s self-defense statute by reading the term imminent to mean immediate. However compelling, Whipple’s argument is misdirected. It is basic horn-book law that federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Chemerinsky,
Federal Jurisdiction
217 (1989). In exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2253, this Court has no authority to tell the Indiana Supreme Court how to construe Indiana statutes. See
Mendiola v. Estelle,
The scope of self-defense statutes has been the subject of much thoughtful scholarship
7
that has led many states to reexamine their self-defense laws in light of cases of recurring domestic violence.
8
But regardless of the merits of a particular construction of the word imminent in self-defense statutes, ultimately the meaning of that word is an issue upon which state courts can and do differ.
9
Divergent state court interpretations of identical state self-defense statutes comport with general principles of federalism. On federal habeas corpus review this Court does not reinterpret Indiana law, but instead seeks to determine whether the petitiоner has been convicted in violation of his constitutional rights. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254;
Smith v. Phillips,
Whipple contends that the trial court judge’s failure to instruct the jury on the issue of self-defense and the defense of *423 his sister deprived him of his constitutional right to present his defense theory to the jury. Whipple asserts that his entitlement to present his defense to the jury stems from constitutional guarantees, in particular, the right of due process of law guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, as well as the right to trial by jury secured by the Sixth Amendment.
This Court has firmly established that under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments “a criminal defendant is entitled to have a jury instruction on any defense which provides a legal defense to the charge against him and which has some foundation in the evidence, ‘even though the evidence may be weak, insufficient, inconsistent, or of doubtful credibility.’ ”
United States ex rel. Peery v. Sielaff,
A defendant’s right to submit a defense for which he has an evidentiary foundation is fundamental to a fair trial, and has been considered protected under both the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. The Sixth Amendment, which assures the defendant of a right to trial by jury, is violated where the trial judge directs a verdict on an issue against the defendant. “[I]f the trial judge evaluates or screens the evidence supporting a proposed defense and upon such evaluation declines to charge on that defense, he dilutes the defendant's jury trial by removing the issue frоm the jury’s consideration.”
Sielaff,
Consequently, a defendant is entitled to have a jury consider any defense theory that is supported by law and has some foundation in the evidence.
United States v. Briscoe,
Whipple’s claim of an alleged constitutional deprivation is exclusively based on “[t]he attempt by the trial court and the Indiana Supreme Court to equate ‘imminent’ with ‘immediate’ ” (Br. 30). As previously discussed, interpretation of Indiana’s self-defense statute is a matter of state law. Had the Indiana Supreme Court interpreted its statute in a novel or unnatural fashion, the defendant could argue that he did not have adequate notice that his conduct was prohibited.
Griffin v. Wisconsin,
Whipple does not maintain, nor does he offer any evidence to support, what he must show under Indiana law — that he reasonably believed that his mother and father *424 posed a present threat to himself or his sister at the time of the killings. 10 Had Whipple presented such evidence, however weak, he would have been entitled to present his defense to the jury.
III.
Given Indiana’s substantive definition of its law of self-defense, Whipple did not present any evidence from which an objectively reasonable juror could have found that he acted in self-defense. Therefore, the trial judge’s failure to permit an instruction on self-defense did not violate Whipple’s constitutional rights.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Court wrote "We find that the absence of imminent or impending danger presented by the victims in this case, as evidenced by the remoteness in time between the murder of the victims and the last physical assault inflicted upon either defendant or his sister, and by the fact that the father was asleep and the mother was in a non-threatening disposition on the night of the killings, precludes the successful assertion of the defense of sеlf or defense of others as a matter of law.”
Whipple v. State,
. A habeas petitioner is exempted from the general rule of procedural default if he can demonstrate cause and prejudice,
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. Since the Indiana Supreme Court had a fair oрportunity to correct alleged constitutional errors, the exhaustion requirement does not bar this Court from evaluating Whipple’s constitutional claim.
United States
ex rel.
Simmons
v.
Gramley,
. The trial court testimony offered by Dale Whipple on redirect examination reads as follows:
Q: “In some fashion or other, with the board or with slaps or with fists or with feet, in December, 1984, did you experiencе extreme pain at least every day in that month?"
A: "Yes."
Record of Proceedings at 1255.
. In his reply brief to the Indiana Supreme Court, the defendant claimed "[Mr. Whipple’s] vicious attacks on Dale became at least daily occurrences. (R.P. 1255)" (Def.Rep.Br., Ind. Sup.Ct. 6).
. Indiana Code § 35-41-3-2 provides in relevant part "A person is justified in using reasonable force against another person to protect himself or a third person from what he reasonably believes to be the imminent use of unlawful force. However, a person is justified in using deadly force only if he reasonably believes that force is necessary to prevent serious bodily injury to himself or a third person or the commission of a forcible felony. No person in this state shall be placed in legal jeopardy of any kind whatsoever for protecting himself or his family by reasonable means necessary.”
Indiana Code § 35-41-1-25 further provides ‘“Serious bodily injury’ means bodily injury that creates a substantial risk of death or that causes serious permanent disfigurement, unconsciousness, extreme pain, or permanent or pro- *422 traded loss or impairment of the function of a bodily member or organ.”
. Many authorities advocate modification of the law of self-defense based on the realities of domestic violence. See, e.g., Willoughby, Rendering Each Woman Her Due: Can a Battered Woman Claim Self-Defense When She Kills Her Sleeping Batterer?, 38 U.Kan.L.Rev.. 169 (1989); Kinports, Defending Battered Women's Self-Defense Claims, 67 Or.L.Rev. 393 (1988); Crocker, The Meaning of Equality for Battered Women Who Kill Men in Self-Defense, 8 Harv.Women's L.J. 121 (1985); Eber, The Battered Wife's Dilemma: To Kill or to be Killed, 32 Hastings LJ. 895 (1981); Schneider, Equal Rights to Trial for Women: Sex Bias in the Law of Self-Defense, 15 Harv.C.R.-C.L. 623 (1980); Walker, The Battered Woman (1979). For a more extensive list of scholarship, see Schneider, Describing аnd Changing: Women’s Self-Defense Work and the Problem of Expert Testimony on Battering, 9 Women’s Rts.L.Rep. 195 (1986).
. See,
e.g., State v. Koss,
.
People v. Yaklich,
. Whipple did offer evidence that he faced a threat of serious bodily injury. According to the Indiana self-defense statute, “serious bodily injury" includes injury that causes “extreme pain.” Whipple has claimed that as a result of his father's abuse he experienced extreme pain on a daily basis. However, Whipple did not offer any evidence that at the time he killed his parents he believed the threat of serious bodily injury to himself or his sister was imminent within Indiana's narrow temporal understanding of that term so that his defense properly failed under Indiana law.
