EX PARTE SONIA CACY, Applicant
NO. WR-85,420-01
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS
November 2, 2016
ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS CAUSE NO. P-2037-B-83-CR IN THE 83RD DISTRICT COURT FROM PECOS COUNTY
YEARY, J., filеd a concurring opinion in which KELLER, P.J., joined.
CONCURRING OPINION
A post-conviction habeas corpus applicant can obtain relief in Texas if he can produce new evidence to satisfy this Cоurt, by clear and convincing evidence, that no reasonable jury, having heard both the evidence presented at trial and the new, exculpatory evidence, would have cоnvicted him. Ex parte Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d 202, 209 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996). We have described this as a “Herculean” burden. Ex parte Brown, 205 S.W.3d 538, 545 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). I am in favor of granting post-conviction relief to any applicant who can meet it. I think that Applicant has. Beyond that, I think she has clearly established that she is entitled to relief on several other bases, including a claim that the State inadvertently used false evidence against her, a claim that her conviction is based upon unreliable science under
The astute reader may have noticed that I hаve not yet used the short-hand rendition often attributed to a claim brought under Elizondo: so-called “actual innocence.” I have avoided that terminology advisedly because I believe thаt, in many cases, it overstates the criteria under which we are amenable to granting post-conviction habeas corpus relief as a matter of due process. Not evеry successful Elizondo applicant is necessarily literally “actually innocent.” The Elizondo standard, on its face, does not really focus on innocence per se. It is, instead, an exceedingly high burden by which an applicant must show that, if newly available evidence were added to the evidentiary mix, no reasonable jury would have found the Stаte‘s case to have been compelling enough to defeat the systemic presumption of innocence. Simply put, the State would not have been able to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and a reasonable jury would be obliged to declare him not guilty. This is not the same as establishing that the applicant is manifestly innocent.2
I realize that, in Ex parte Franklin, 72 S.W.3d 671, 678 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002), the Court arguably seemed to stiffen the Elizondo standard—even more—by engrafting a sоrt of preliminary burden of production that the habeas applicant must meet. There we held that, before we will even proceed to inquire whether the Elizondo standard has been satisfiеd, we must first determine that the applicant‘s new evidence “constitute[s] affirmative evidence of [his] innocence.” Id. In the context of the facts of Franklin, however, it does not appear to me that the Court reаlly meant to require an applicant to adduce evidence that would conclusively prove his innocence. That would make the threshold part of the Franklin/Elizondo test more rigorous than the ultimate part that actually measures the likelihood that a reasonable jury would find him not guilty. It would be absurd to fashion a
My bottom line is that, though I remain content to grant habeas relief to any applicant who satisfies the Elizondo standard, I would avoid the label of actual innocence—at least in the absence of evidence that conclusively proves, not just that a reasonable jury, by clear and convincing evidence, would not have convicted him, but that the applicant manifestly did not commit the offense. I cannot say that Applicant has met that threshold of proof, and so I would not call her “actually innocent.”4
Nevertheless, whether because I believe she has satisfied Elizondo, or because I believe she has proven by a preponderance of the evidence one or more of her other claims for relief—false evidence,
FILED: November 2, 2016
PUBLISH
