This is a petition for habeas corpus brought by Dean Frey, a South Dakota inmate presently serving two concurrent sentences of twelve years’ imprisonment for aggravated assault. Mr. Frey attributes error of constitutional magnitude to the state trial court’s refusal to give several of his proposed jury instructions. A magistrate judge 1 recommended that Mr. Frey’s application for writ of habeas corpus be denied. The District Court 2 adopted the Magistrate’s Findings and Recommendations, dismissed the petition, and denied petitioner’s application for a certificate of probable cause for appeal. This Court initially denied petitioner’s request for a certificate and dismissed the appeal. *1254 Upon rehearing, a certificate of probable cause was granted, and the appeal was set for oral argument. We now affirm the judgment of the District Court.
The events leading to petitioner’s convictions are related in the opinion of the South Dakota Supreme Court affirming Mr. Frey’s convictions on direct appeal.
State v. Frey,
Schmeltzer and Schaefer used binoculars and a sighting scope to view the carcasses from a highway adjacent to the Frey ranch. With darkness fast approaching, however, they were unable to identify the species of the animals. Desiring a closer look, the two officers drove onto the Freys’ property behind a pick-up truck driven by the petitioner’s brother, Roland Frey, who had just returned from his parents’ home. Roland demanded to know what the officers were doing there, and told them they needed a warrant to be on his property. From this point the stories differ, but loud arguments, abusive language, and apparently some scuffling ensued. Schmeltzer claims that Roland insisted that Schmeltzer see the animals himself. Roland, on the other hand, claims he did not invite Schmeltzer for a closer look at the animals, and that he tried to prevent Schmeltzer from walking up the hill to view the carcasses.
When the pair reached the animals, Schmeltzer saw that they were goats, not deer. Dean Frey then appeared on the scene with a shotgun. Petitioner swore at Schmeltzer, accused him of spreading rumors about marijuana plants on the Frey ranch, and fired at least two shots in the air. Petitioner claims he told Schmeltzer, “Hey, you got no warrant. Get out of here.” Tr. 270. Schmeltzer testified that Dean Frey aimed the shotgun at him and said, “I’ve got every right to kill you. I think I will blow your [expletive deleted] away_ You better get ... off of my property before I kill you.” Tr. 123. Before the officers left the property, according to Schmeltzer, Dean Frey repeated his threat: “You’re dead. I’m going to kill you right now_” Tr. 125. A Perkins County Grand Jury returned an indictment charging petitioner with two counts of aggravated assault for placing Schmeltzer and Schaefer in fear of imminent serious bodily harm, in violation of S.D.C.L. § 22-18-1.1(5). A jury found petitioner guilty of both counts.
In his petition for federal habeas relief, Mr. Frey claims that he was denied due process of law when the trial court refused to instruct the jury on the South Dakota law of self-defense, defense of others, and mistake of fact. He also claims that his due-process rights were violated when the trial court determined, as a matter of law, that the officers were not trespassing, and refused to instruct the jury on the justifiable use of force to prevent a trespass. In essence, petitioner claims that because he submitted evidence that the two officers were on his property at night, without a search warrant, and appeared to him to be endangering his brother’s life, he was entitled to these jury instructions in order to put on an adequate defense.
We begin with petitioner’s proposed instruction on the justifiable use of force to prevent a trespass. The trial court ruled as a matter of state law that the officers were not trespassing. The South Dakota Supreme Court affirmed this ruling.
We need reach only the first inquiry. The officers entrance onto the Frey ranch without a warrant was permissible under the Fourth Amendment. The Fourth Amendment protects against unlawful searches of homes and persons, but does not extend to open fields. See
Hester v. United States,
We next consider whether the trial court s refusal to instruct the jury on self-defense, defense of others, and mistake of fact violated Mr. Frey’s right to due process. Mr. Frey contends that he presented sufficient evidence to support the instructions, and the instructions were a necessary part of his theory of the case. Even if the failure to give these instructions was an error of state law, however, which the South Dakota Supreme Court held it was not,
We are convinced that Mr. Frey received a fair trial. Granting that petitioner initially may have thought his brother was in danger, and did not know, at first, that the two men on his property were law-enforcement officers, Dean Frey’s subsequent actions contradict his claims that he acted in defense of himself or his brother, or under a mistake of fact. Within moments of his arriving on the scene, before he discharged his shotgun, Dean Frey knew who the officers were. Tr. 269. Roland Frey told his brother what the officers were doing on the property. Tr. 216-17, 268. Dean admitted that he fired two shots in the air, while yelling angrily at the two men. Tr. 270, 272. The only testimony possibly supporting an instruction of defense of others is petitioner’s statement that, soon after petitioner encountered his brother and Schmeltzer, he saw Schmeltzer reach for his gun. Tr. 267. But according to petitioner’s own testimony, the threatening words and the shotgun blasts occurred after Schmeltzer started to walk away. Tr. 270.
Petitioner relies upon
United States ex rel. Means v. Solem,
For these reasons, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
