Petitioner-Appellant Walter J. Evans (“Evans”) is a Louisiana State Penitentiary inmate who seeks to reverse the district court’s denial of his habeas corpus petition and requests immediate release from incarceration. For the reasons set forth below, we deny relief and affirm the district court.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Evans was indicted by a Louisiana grand jury on two counts of aggravated rape, one count of attempted aggravated rape, and one count of armed robbery. He
A series of state court postconviction and habeas corpus petitions followed. All were denied. Evans then filed a petition for habeas relief in federal court, raising four grounds of error. The district court denied the petition. Evans sought a certificate of appealability (“COA”) from this court which was granted on the sole issue of whether the Louisiana trial court lacked jurisdiction to sentence him after it had granted his motion for a new trial. Shortly thereafter, Evans filed a “Motion For Order Staying Pending Appeal.”
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“In a habeas corpus appeal, we review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and review its conclusions of law de novo, applying the same standard of review to the state court’s decision as the district court.”
Martinez v. Johnson,
DISCUSSION
I Motion to Stay
In his Motion to Stay, Evans urges that we stay the determination of his remaining claim while he seeks re-review of his original claims in the Louisiana Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal according to the Louisiana Supreme Court’s opinion in
State v. Cordero,
In
Cordero,
the Louisiana Supreme Court remedied a deficiency in the Louisiana Fifth Circuit’s process of reviewing pro se, postconviction applications for supervisory writs, a process that fell short of the state constitution’s requirements.
Our denial of Evans’s request is guided by Supreme Court precedent. In
Rhines v. Weber,
the Supreme Court held that federal district courts retain their discretion to stay federal habeas proceedings but warned that too frequently staying federal habeas proceedings “has the potential to undermine [AEDPA’s] twin purposes” of comity and finality.
Here, the circumstances of Evans’s case do not justify a stay.
1
First, Evans does not argue that he will be barred from obtaining re-review in the state court by our continued review and disposition of his habeas case. Second, no party here argues that Evans’s remaining claim is unexhausted. In fact, the Louisiana Supreme Court has reviewed that claim and denied his application for a supervisory writ.
See State ex rel. Evans v. State,
II. Jurisdictional Challenge
Evans argues that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction by sentencing him because, from the time the court signed the order granting a new trial, it was divested of authority under the Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure. In other words, Evans asserts that the signed order should prevail over the subsequent verbal order denying him a new trial. Evans maintains that because his Fifth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights were consequently violated, he is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus and immediate release. 3
The district court determined that Evans’s jurisdictional complaint was one of state procedure and did not entitle him to federal habeas relief. Accordingly, it deferred to the state courts’ handling of the matter — which had previously denied Evans’s request for relief. Finding no unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented at trial and nothing contrary to or involving an unreasonable application of federal law, the district court further noted that the trial court’s error was purely ministerial and did not affect the fundamental fairness of Evans’s trial.
This court has consistently demonstrated deference to state court determinations of state law, including jurisdictional determinations based on state law. This deference is illustrated in our decisions involving challenges to the sufficiency of a state indictment. There, we have emphasized that “[i]t is settled in this Circuit that the sufficiency of a state indictment is not a matter for federal habeas corpus relief
unless
it can be shown that the indictment is so defective that the convicting court had no jurisdiction.”
Branch v. Estelle,
Here, the question of whether the state trial court lacked jurisdiction to sentence Evans was squarely presented to the Louisiana Supreme Court in Evans’s application for a supervisory writ. And, unlike the application in Garrett, the Louisiana Supreme Court did not deny the application as improvidently set; instead, the state’s highest court “necessarily, though not expressly” held that the state trial court had jurisdiction to sentence Evans. Because this issue was presented to and denied by the Louisiana Supreme Court and because Evans’s current argument relies solely on the contention that the state courts misapplied that state law, our review of this claim is therefore precluded.
Even were our review not precluded, we would still be required “to accord due deference to the state courts’ interpretations of its own law.”
See McKay,
CONCLUSION
The Motion to Stay is DENIED. The district court’s judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Evans’s case is unlike that in
Gomez v. Dretke,
where this court granted a stay to allow Texas state courts to address whether a prisoner who was a Mexican citizen was entitled to habeas relief based on a Presidential memorandum addressing the treaty-based right to assistance from the Mexican consulate.
See
. Our situation is unlike that of a district court facing a Cordero-based motion to stay filed at the very outset of a federal habeas proceeding. A district court must carefully assess whether the circumstances of each case justify a stay,
see, e.g., Rhines,
. Under the Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure, "[w]hen a defendant obtains a new trial ..., the state must commence the second trial within one year from the date the new trial is granted, ... or within the period established by Article 578, whichever is longer.” La.Code Crim. Proc. art. 582. Article 578 provides that "no trial shall be commenced nor any bail obligation be enforceable ... in capital cases after three years from the date of institution of the prosecution.” La.Code Crim. Proc. art. 578. Evans was indicted in 2001 and the period of re-trial would have elapsed three years later, in 2004.
