In 1983, an Indiana state court jury convicted Elijah Moore of four counts of robbery and determined that he was a habitual offender. The state trial judge sentenced Moore to twenty years imprisonment on each robbery count, with the terms to run concurrently, and enhanced the sentence by thirty years in light of the jury determination that Moore was a habitual offender. Moore then embarked on a number of direct appeals. Ultimately, Moore sought habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in regard to his habitual offender enhancement.
In his § 2254 petition, Moore claimed that his state petitions for post-conviction relief had been wrongly denied on procedural grounds that were not adequate to support a judgment. The district court denied Moore’s petition, but we found that the Indiana state court had erred in concluding that Moore’s petition for post-conviction relief was barred by a procedural default. We reached the merits of Moore’s claim and determined that the state had not proved in the correct sequence the elements underlying the habitual offender determination. For this reason, we reversed the district court’s denial of Moore’s habeas corpus petition and directed that on remand “it issue a writ granting Moore relief under § 2254 regarding the imposition of sentence upon Moore as an habitual offender.”
Moore v. Parke,
Nine days after we issued our decision in
Moore I,
the United States Supreme Court issued
Monge v. California,
On remand to the district court, Moore argued that our denial of the petition for rehearing suggested that we found that
Monge
was inapplicable to his case under the law of the case doctrine and the non-retroactivity principle enunciated in
Teague v. Lane,
Analysis
The state asserts that neither the law of the case doctrine nor the non-retro-activity principle of
Teague
bars the application
of Monge
as relevant authority. The state also argues that
Monge
provides authority for its contention that it be permitted to retry Moore’s habitual offender determination. For this reason, the state requests that we vacate or modify the unconditional writ issued by the district court. The application of
Monge
or its foreclosure because of the law of the case or other corollary doctrines are questions of law, and when considering a district court’s decision granting or denying a writ of habeas corpus, we review
de novo
questions of law.
See Lieberman v. Washington,
Law of the Case
The district court found that the retroactive application of Monge to the facts of this case presented a “close question” of law and that if it “were able to write on a clean sheet,” it might retroactively apply Monge. However, the court felt constrained to apply the mandate strictly, in deference to what it understood to be our direction to provide an unconditional grant of Moore’s petition. Because it found that our unconditional mandate precluded the state from retrying Moore and that our denial of the state’s petition for rehearing constituted the law of the case on the application of Monge, the district court refused to grant Moore’s writ conditioned on the right of the state to retry his habitual offender enhancement.
We commend the district court’s intention to follow strictly our mandate. We also acknowledge our rebanee on the law of the case doctrine, which protects parties “from the expense and vexation attending multiple lawsuits, conserves judicial resources, and fosters reliance on judicial action.”
Montana v. United States,
However, the mandate is only controlling “as to matters within its compass.”
Sprague v. Ticonic Nat’l Bank,
The district court inferred that because we noted no conditions in directing the grant of relief, it was then powerless to set a condition for retrial when issuing the writ. This inference is, no doubt, based on a premise that a district court has no power to add conditions to an unconditional mandate from this court. That is, of course, true up to a point. However, as we have discussed, the district court does have the power to add conditions even to an unconditional mandate when those conditions address matters that were not within the compass of the mandate. Put simply, the law of the case “does not extend to issues an appellate court did not address.”
Luckey v. Miller,
Moore contends, however, that our denial of the state’s petition for rehearing, in which the question of Monge’s applicability was briefed extensively, constitutes a ruling from which law of the case may be inferred. If that were the case, our summary denial of the state’s petition for rehearing might constitute an implied expansion of the compass of our original mandate, and it would justify the district court’s conclusion that we intended a consideration of
Monge
to be brought within our mandate. “Under the law of the case doctrine, ‘when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages of the same case.’ ”
United States v. Thomas,
Applicability of Monge
Because we have found that the law of the case does not bar the application of
Monge,
we will address the state’s contention that
Monge
permits the state to retry Moore. The state contends that
Monge
should apply and that it should be permitted to retry the elements of Moore’s habitual offender enhancement. Moore responds that
Monge
is inapplicable in light of the non-retroactivity principle enunciated in
Teague,
In
Monge,
the Supreme Court reviewed a decision of the California Supreme Court, in which the California Supreme Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar retrial of evidence of prior convictions for the purposes of a habitual offender sentence enhancement.
See Monge,
Moore argues that because
Monge
created a new rule of constitutional criminal procedure the non-retroactivity principle of
Teague
should apply, and the guarantee against double jeopardy should still bar a rehearing. However, the principle of non-retroactivity favors only the state, on the rationale that “a State should not be penalized for relying on ‘the constitutional standards that prevailed at the time the original proceedings took place.’ ”
Lockhart v. Fretwell,
Moore asserts accurately that in this case the state has no interest in preserving the finality of the judgment, but this argument misunderstands the nature of the non-retroactivity principle. The principle favors the state’s interest in finality when the state has based its conviction in reliance on certain constitutional standards but does not favor the habeas petitioner, who has no such interest in finality.
See Lockhart,
Monge
holds that the Double Jeopardy Clause will not restrict a state from retrying prior conviction allegations in the non-capital context. Moore does not contest that
Monge
controls the facts of this case and that it would allow the state to retry the habitual offender enhancement to his sentence. However, Moore insists that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Indiana Constitution may still bar a retrial. Indiana courts are split as to whether the state Double Jeopardy Clause offers protection in addition to the protection offered by the United States Constitution.
Compare Russell v. State,
In its holding below, the district court opined that if it had the authority, it likely would have applied Monge and conditioned the grant of Moore’s petition on the State’s right to retry Moore. On remand the district court will have the opportunity to condition the grant of Moore’s writ in the way it had envisioned. In such a circumstance, Indiana state courts, rather than federal courts, will be in a position to rule on the state constitutional law question. For this reason, we decline to address the question whether the Indiana Constitution will bar a retrial of Moore’s habitual offender enhancement.
Conclusion
We Vacate the district court’s grant of an unconditional writ of habeas corpus and Remand the case to the district court with directions to issue a new writ granting Moore relief under § 2254 regarding the imposition of sentence upon Moore as an habitual offender; provided, that the State of Indiana shall have 180 days within which to retry Moore as an habitual offender.
