OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court
Applicant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in 1985. On direct appeal, we affirmed his conviction and sentence.
Hathorn v. State,
1. Did applicant object at trial that his jury was not given an adequate vehicle through which it could give effect to his mitigating evidence? Was any other ob *572 jection specifically pertaining to mitigating evidence made when discussing the charge to be given the jury?
2. If no objection was made, does this make a difference regarding the resolution of applicant’s allegation?
3. Was the mitigating evidence presented at applicant’s trial the type of evidence for which applicant was entitled to a separate vehicle?
4. Although applicant’s direct appeal began prior to the time the United States Supreme Court handed down the decision in Penry, was direct appeal counsel obligated to raise the claim post-submission considering applicant’s direct appeal remained pending in this Court for some three years after the Penry decision was handed down?
ISSUES ONE AND TWO
There was no objection at trial pertaining to mitigating evidence. Applicant did object to the trial court’s refusal to include a special issue related to provocation, and it is interesting to note that the evidence in support of the provocation instruction was the same evidence that is now raised as mitigating evidence. The evidence is the same in this case specifically because Applicant killed his father, stepmother, and half-brother and claimed at trial that the murders were provoked by childhood abuse at the hands of his father, which resulted in a longstanding hatred for his family.
Although Applicant made no objection that the jury did not have a vehicle to give effect to mitigating evidence, we have held that, in these particular circumstances, no objection is necessary.
Black v. State,
Given the settled state of the case law at the time of appellant’s trial, we refuse to fault him or his attorney for failing to object to the jury charge at punishment or request an instruction informing the jury it may give effect to the mitigating evidence presented at trial. Under the established precedent, the trial judge would have been correct in overruling the objection or denying the additional instruction, and clearly the defendant would not have been granted relief from this Court on direct appeal.
We acknowledge that normally, an egregious harm standard is proper in analyzing an un-objected-to charge error. However, rather than characterize this as a jury charge error, we interpret the Supreme Court cases related to this particular issue to have broader due process implications. See infra.
ISSUE THREE
The evidence presented at trial was the type of evidence that we have said requires a separate vehicle in order for the jury to be able to give effect to their consideration of the evidence. Applicant testified at the punishment hearing that his father and step-mother were neglectful; that his father was abusive and beat him nightly during his first two years of grade school — on one occasion for going to church; that his father had shot and killed his pony and a dog and appellant had to bury the dog; and that his father was violent and carried a weapon. The former Chief Psychologist for the Texas Depart *573 ment of Corrections testified about Applicant’s violent and dysfunctional home environment and how it may have shaped his development and contributed to the offense for which he was charged.
As the Supreme Court pointed out in
Brewer v. Quarterman,
Nowhere in our Penny line of cases have we suggested that the question whether mitigating evidence could have been adequately considered by the jury is a matter purely of quantity, degree, or immutability. Rather, we have focused on whether such evidence has mitigating relevance to the special issues and the extent to which it may diminish a defendant’s moral culpability for the crime.
Brewer,
Following these decisions by the Supreme Court, we decided in
Ex Parte Moreno,
We can no longer maintain that evidence of a troubled childhood is adequately encompassed within the statutory special issues. Both Abdul-Kabir and (especially) Brewer expressly state that Supreme Court precedent has long rejected the notion that a jury can meaningfully express its reasoned moral response to evidence of a troubled or disruptive childhood within the narrow confines of the special issues.
Moreno,
As in
Brewer,
it is likely that, in Applicant’s case, the jury believed that all they needed to decide was whether he had acted deliberately and would likely be dangerous in the future, disregarding any concern they may feel that, given Applicant’s troubled childhood, he may not deserve a death sentence.
See Brewer,
ISSUE FOUR
Because the United States Supreme Court handed down the decision in
Penry v. Lynaugh,
CONCLUSION
Given the unique circumstances of this case, and the state of the law at the time of Applicant’s trial and direct appeal, Applicant’s claim is not barred by procedural default for failure to object to the lack of a mitigation instruction at trial, or for failure to file a supplemental brief raising a Penry claim on direct appeal. Because the mitigating evidence presented at Applicant’s trial is the type of evidence for which he was entitled to a separate vehicle for consideration, we remand the case to the trial court for new punishment hearing.
