Marshall Ellis, sentenced to life imprisonment for murder and other offenses, appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (2000). We affirm.
I.
Most of the relevant facts are undisputed. Ellis drove a female companion to a methamphetamine deal in the parking lot of a restaurant in Woodward, Oklahoma, on May 8, 1985. The other parties to the deal arrived in a van: unknown to Ellis, several were undercover police officers. After the drug transaction was finished, undercover Agent William Stewart emerged from the van holding a pistol. Ellis shot and killed Stewart from his car with a sawed-off shotgun. Other undercover officers returned fire on the car, injuring Ellis’s companion. Ellis fired again, wounding Detective Mark Chumley, then escaped. He was apprehended shortly thereafter.
The jury convicted Ellis of first degree murder and shooting with intent to kill. He received concurrent sentences of life imprisonment and fifty years, respectively, for the offenses. Ellis appealed his conviction to the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, alleging, among several other arguments, that prosecuting him for the three shooting charges after he pleaded guilty to the firearms charge violated the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. The Court of Criminal Appeals upheld Ellis’s conviction, but the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari, vacated, and remanded for reconsideration in light of
Grady v. Corbin,
Ellis next sought state postconviction relief, asserting some new arguments including claims based on the due process clause. Relief was denied, and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the denial in 1997. Ellis then filed a federal habeas corpus petition. The district court originally dismissed the petition as untimely, but this court reversed and remanded for consideration on the merits.
Ellis v. Hargett,
No. 98-6016,
II.
Ellis raises two arguments for habeas relief, both concerning the jury instructions at his trial. The more substantial argument focuses on the instructions on murder and heat of passion manslaughter. Ellis claims that the court should have instructed specifically that heat of passion was an affirmative defense to first degree murder, one that the government, not Ellis, bore the burden to disprove beyond a reasonable doubt. In light of the evidence at trial, Ellis argues, the court’s failure to give such an instruction violated his due process right to be convicted only upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of all facts necessary to constitute the crimes charged against him.
See Mullaney v. Wilbur,
A habeas petitioner who seeks to overturn his conviction based on a claim of error in the jury instructions faces a significant burden. “The question in such a collateral proceeding is ‘whether the ailing instruction by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.’ ”
Davis v. Maynard,
A showing that a defendant received ineffective assistance of counsel will establish cause excusing a procedural default.
Murray v. Carrier,
To demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel a petitioner must establish both (1) that his counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and (2) that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unreasonable errors, the outcome of his appeal would have been different.
Williams v. Taylor,
Ellis’s due process argument is based on
United States v. Lofton,
By the time Ellis’s counsel filed a direct appeal, however, subsequent cases had thrown doubt on
Lofton’s
applicability.
Lofton
was based on
Mullaney,
in which the Supreme Court held that the prosecution must specifically prove the absence of heat of passion beyond a reasonable doubt when the issue is “properly presented” in a homicide case.
The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals rejected a
Lofton
claim in
Goulsby v. State,
In
Stewart v. State,
This court, too, refused to extend
Lofton
in
Davis v. Maynard,
Ellis’s case is very close to
Davis.
Both cases involved the same Oklahoma homicide statutes and the same due process challenge to instructions. Like Davis, Ellis argued self-defense and never sought a heat of passion defense at his trial. In Davis’s ease, the court told the jury that malice aforethought and heat of passion were mutually exclusive; in Ellis’s case, the court, after instructing the jury on murder and manslaughter, instructed them that any reasonable doubts between a greater and a lesser crime were to be resolved in favor of the lesser crime.
Davis
thus casts serious doubt on the merit of Ellis’s present due process claim. Further,
Stewart
and
Goulsby,
which were on the books at the time Ellis appealed, indicate that the Oklahoma courts would not have been receptive. These precedents suggest that Ellis’s counsel was not objectively unreasonable in failing to offer the argument. The Supreme Court has held that “appellate counsel who files a merits brief need not (and should not) raise every nonfrivolous claim.”
Smith v. Robbins,
Ellis’s direct appeal counsel urged fourteen different arguments for reversal. These included a search and seizure argument (relating to the police’s inventory search of his car) and an argument involving the potential admission of other crimes evidence, both of which were unsuccessful, but were not without force. Also, as noted before, Ellis raised a double jeopardy argument that later prompted the Supreme Court to vacate the Court of Criminal Appeals’ first opinion on the double jeopardy issue and remand for reconsideration. The vacation and remand in turn suggest that the Court viewed the double jeopardy issue as having some merit.
See Henry v. City of Rock Hill,
We must resolve Ellis’s ineffective-assistance claim in light of the constraints AEDPA imposes on our scrutiny of state-court decisions. The Court of Criminal Appeals held that it was not objectively unreasonable under the circumstances for appellate counsel to omit the Lofton claim. We in turn must decide, not whether this application of the Strickland standard was correct, but whether it was reasonable. We hold that it was. In light of the Oklahoma precedents applying Lofton, discussed above, as well as our own handling of the similar’ claim urged in Davis, it could reasonably be concluded that Ellis’s omitted due process claim was not “clearly stronger” than the issues his appellate counsel did argue. Hence Ellis cannot overcome his state procedural default. That prevents us from reaching the merits of his challenge to the heat of passion instructions.
III.
Ellis also challenges the trial court’s instructions on self-defense, contending, first, that the instructions misstated Oklahoma law, and second, that they unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof on self-defense to Ellis’s disadvantage, violating the due process clause. Ellis presented the first part of this argument to the state courts on direct appeal, but not the second. His challenge to the self-defense instructions in state court dealt entirely with their correctness under Oklahoma law and cited no federal authority. Therefore, his federal due process claim has not been exhausted.
See Adelson v. DiPaola,
As for the remaining, state-law part of Ellis’s challenge to the self-defense instructions, “claims of state law violations are not cognizable in a federal habeas action.”
Montez v. McKinna,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s order denying Ellis a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. We will also overlook a procedural default in rare cases when the failure to consider a petitioner's claims would produce a "fundamental miscarriage of justice,” on the ground that the petitioner is actually innocent of the charged crime.
Id.; Neill v. Gibson, 278
F.3d 1044, 1057 (10th Cir.2001). Ellis briefly asserts that his procedural default should be excused on this ground. This argument cannot prevail. Ellis does not claim that new evidence shows he is factually innocent of shooting Stewart and Chumley. Rather, his claim boils down to asserting that he is
legally
innocent because his conduct is justified or mitigated by the doctrines of self-defense or heat of passion, on which he maintains the jury was not accurately instructed. The miscarriage of justice exception, however, only applies to claims of factual innocence.
Beavers v. Saffle,
Even if such a factual claim were before us, it would be unavailing. Ellis’s trial was contested, but the prosecution presented significant evidence of guilt. Assuming
arguendo
that the instructions in Ellis's trial were constitutionally defective, it still could not be said, in light of the evidence, that "no reasonable juror would have found the defendant guilty,” as is required to invoke the miscarriage of justice exception.
Schlup v. Delo,
