Alvin Bernard FORD, or Connie Ford, individually and acting
as next friend on behalf of Alvin Bernard Ford,
Petitioners-Appellants,
v.
Louie L. WAINWRIGHT, Secretary, Department of Corrections,
State of Florida, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 84-5372.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Jan. 17, 1985.
Richard H. Burr, Public Defender, 15th Judicial Circuit of Fla., Richard L. Jorandby, Asst. Federal Public Defender, West Palm Beach, Fla., Laurin A. Wollan, Jr., Tallahassee, Fla., for petitioners-appellants.
Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., State of Florida, Joy Shearer, Russell Bohn, Penny H. Brill, Asst. Attys. Gen., West Palm Beach, Fla., for respondent-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Before VANCE and CLARK, Circuit Judges, and STAFFORD*, District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
Over ten years ago, on July 21, 1974, Alvin Bernard Ford murdered a helpless, wounded police officer by shooting him in the back of the head at close range. Ford was captured, tried in state court and sentenced to death. The history of these events and the various steps in the judicial proceedings that followed are set forth in more detail in our original panel opinion, Ford v. Strickland,
The 1983 en banc opinion affirmed the district court's denial of Ford's habeas petition but remanded for a determination of the possible effect on this case of Barclay v. Florida,
Before resolution of his first federal habeas procedure Ford invoked the procedures of Fla.Stat. Sec. 922.07 (1983). The Florida governor appointed a commission of three psychiatrists to evaluate Ford's current sanity in light of the appropriate statutory standards. The commission members reported their findings and on April 30, 1984, the governor signed a death warrant setting Ford's execution for the week beginning at noon Friday, May 25, 1984.
Ford's mother, as next friend, then filed a motion in state trial court requesting a stay of execution, a hearing and court appointment of experts to determine Ford's competency to be executed. The motion was denied summarily. After hearing oral argument, the Florida supreme court also denied relief. Ford v. Wainwright,
Ford contends that presently he is insane.2 He does not contend that he was insane at the time of the murder, that he was incompetent to stand trial or that he lacked competence to pursue his initial collateral attack. He argues, however, that his mental condition has deteriorated, so that presently he is insane.
Either by statute or case law, states that authorize the death penalty uniformly prohibit the execution of presently insane persons. The origin of the rule is in the common law. Its initial justification is obscure.3 Florida's prohibition is incorporated in Fla.Stat. Sec. 922.07 (1983), which prescribes both the test of insanity and the procedure for determining the sanity of a person under a death sentence. The test is whether the prisoner has the mental capacity to understand the nature of the death penalty and the reason it is to be imposed on him. Fla.Stat. Sec. 922.07(2) (1983). The statutory procedure requires the governor to appoint a commission of three psychiatrists and to make a determination as to the prisoner's sanity after receiving the commission's report. Ford does not challenge the state's compliance with the statutory procedure.
Ford contends that the prohibition against execution because of insanity is rooted in the eighth amendment. No federal appellate court has so held. There has, however, been considerable comment supportive of his contention.4 Prior references in Justice Frankfurter's dissent in Solesbee v. Balkcom,
Ford argues, however, that procedural protections comporting to federal due process standards would inexorably follow from recognition of the federal constitutional basis of his substantive right. He contends that the Florida statute, which is essentially an ex parte procedure conducted by the executive, falls short of those due process standards.
If the matter were being presented for the first time, Ford's contention might present considerable difficulty. The panel majority, however, feels that Ford's contention is foreclosed by binding authority. In Solesbee the Supreme Court examined a Georgia procedure which was virtually identical to that now incorporated in the Florida statute. In the controlling portion of the opinion the Supreme Court held: "We are unable to say that it offends due process for a state to deem its Governor an 'apt and special tribunal' to pass upon a question so closely related to powers that from the beginning have been entrusted to governors." Solesbee v. Balkcom,
Ford argues that the development of eighth amendment law has so eroded the underpinnings of Solesbee that it no longer can be considered as binding authority. That contention is confronted, however, with this court's opinion in Goode v. Wainwright,
AFFIRMED.
CLARK, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. In the law, as in many other disciplines, where one ends up is frequently determined by where one begins. The majority fails to address and decide whether there is a constitutional prohibition against execution of an insane person. The court says that "[n]o federal appellate court has so held." Majority opinion at 4. Before addressing a party's constitutional due process rights, it is necessary to first decide the substantive constitutional right to which he is entitled, if any. Dissenting, Justice Frankfurter challenged the majority of the Court in Solesbee to reach the issue, saying:
If the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not bar the State from infliction of the death sentence while such insanity persists, of course it need make no inquiry into the existence of supervening insanity. If it chooses to make any inquiry it may do so entirely on its own terms. If the Due Process Clause does limit the State's power to execute such an insane person, this Court must assert the supremacy of the Due Process Clause and prohibit its violation by a State.
The Court in an easy, quick way puts this crucial problem to one side as not before us. But in determining what procedural safeguards a State must provide, it makes all the difference in the world whether the United States Constitution places a substantive restriction on the State's power to take the life of an insane man. If not to execute is merely a benevolent withholding of the right to kill, the State may exercise its benevolence as it sees fit. But if Georgia is precluded by the Due Process Clause from executing a man who has temporarily or permanently become insane, it is not a matter of grace to assert that right on behalf of the life about to be taken. If taking life under such circumstances is forbidden by the Constitution, then it is not within the benevolent discretion of Georgia to determine how it will ascertain sanity. Georgia must afford the rudimentary safeguards for establishing the fact. If Georgia denies them she transgresses the substance of the limits that the Constitution places upon her.
Solesbee v. Balkcom,
A panel of this court granted Ford's application for a certificate of probable cause and stayed his execution so that this court could fully address Ford's "substantial procedural and substantive Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment" claim of right not to be executed while insane.
Believing that it is necessary that we first resolve whether Ford has a substantive Constitutional claim, this will be considered before analyzing the due process procedural requirements. Because the majority and I have different starting points, we therefore come to different conclusions. In my view, a proper resolution of the issues in this case must begin with an inquiry into whether there is an Eighth Amendment right not to be executed while insane.
The Eighth Amendment and the Right Not to be Executed While Insane
The Supreme Court has developed a two-part standard for assessing Eighth Amendment claims. This analysis inquires whether a challenged punishment is both acceptable to contemporary standards of decency and comports with the dignity of man. Gregg v. Georgia,
The History of Executing of Insane
It has been a part of the English common law since the medieval period that the presently incompetent should not be executed. Feltham, The Common Law and the Execution of Insane Criminals, 4 Mel.U.L.Rev. 434, 466-67 (1964). See also E. Coke, Third Institute 4, 6 (London 1797) (1st ed. London 1644); 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries 24.1 In the United States, early commentary and decisions reflected the same attitude towards the execution of the presently insane. See, e.g., 1 F. Wharton, A Treatise on the Criminal Law Sec. 59, at 89 (8th ed. Philadelphia 1880) (1st ed. Philadelphia 1846); State v. Vann,
The question of whether the execution of the insane would be in conflict with the dignity of man, the basic concept underlying the Eighth Amendment, Gregg, supra,
Retribution is generally perceived as "an expression of society's moral outrage." Gregg,
Furthermore, deterrence is not served by the execution of the mentally incompetent. Prospective offenders of capital crime would not identify with an insane person who is executed. As one commentator said: "[H]ow could the execution of a man incapable of understanding any law, operate more as a warning to others to avoid the violation of the law, than the public punishment of a dog? The one would be a spectacle of horror, the other of ridicule." Collinson, A Treatise on Law Concerning Idiots, Lunatics, and Other Persons Non Compos Mentis 472 (1812).
Therefore, a view of the historical and objective evidence as well as an independent judicial assessment of the execution of the presently insane leads to the conclusion that such an act violates both contemporary standards of decency and the basic dignity of man. Therefore, there is an Eighth Amendment right not to be executed while presently insane.
Further support for this conclusion regarding the Eighth Amendment is found in Solem v. Helm,
When the framers of the Eighth Amendment adopted the language of the English Bill of Rights, ... one of the consistent themes of the era was that Americans had all of the rights of English subjects .... Thus, our Bill of Rights was designed in part to insure that these rights were preserved. Although the framers may have intended the Eighth Amendment to go beyond the scope of its English counterpart, their use of the language of the Bill of Rights is convincing proof that they intended to provide at least the same protection--including the right to be free from excessive punishments.
The Procedural Requirements Stemming from the Eighth
Amendment Right Not to be Executed While Insane
The State of Florida has created an administrative proceeding in which the governor determines whether an individual under sentence of death is competent to be executed. F.S.A. Sec. 922.07 (1983). That proceeding essentially provides little due process rights for the individual. When the governor is informed that a person may be insane, he must stay the execution of sentence and appoint three psychiatrists to examine the convicted person "to determine whether he understands the nature and effect of the death penalty and why it is to be imposed upon him." F.S.A. Sec. 922.07(1). The examination is to take place with all three psychiatrists present at the same time. Defense counsel and the prosecutor may be present at the examination and if the prisoner sentenced to death has no counsel the trial court shall appoint counsel to represent him. Id. However, no hearing is held and no provision is made for advocacy. The present governor has a publicly announced policy of "excluding all advocacy on the part of the condemned from the process of determining whether a person under sentence of death is insane."4 After receiving the psychiatrists' report, the governor makes a decision. If the governor decides that the convicted person does not meet the prescribed competency test, then he orders the person committed to the state hospital. If he decides that the person is sane, then the governor issues the death warrant ordering execution. F.S.A. Sec. 922.07(2) and (3). There are no written findings and there is no judicial review of the decision. The Florida Supreme Court held in this case that "the statutory procedure is now the exclusive procedure for determining competency to be executed." Ford v. Wainwright,
This procedure does not adequately protect a person's Eighth Amendment right not to be executed while insane. The fact that we are considering a federal constitutionally protected right (rather than a state created right which may be afforded some due process protections5) requires more process than the Florida procedure gives. Because of the qualitative difference of the death penalty, the Supreme Court has articulated a procedural component to the Eighth Amendment. In this vein, the Court has been chiefly concerned "with the procedure by which the state imposes the death sentence...." California v. Ramos,
Admittedly, we are not reviewing here the question of whether death is the appropriate punishment for Mr. Ford and the procedures used to make that decision. Nevertheless, the procedure used to determine whether the death penalty is a permissible punishment for him at this time is being reviewed. The reliability required for capital decisions is still relevant and adequate procedures to determine his present death eligibility are still required. We have not held in any case that a substantive constitutional right is adequately protected by an administrative ex parte hearing conducted by the executive branch of state government. It is the role of the courts, both state and federal, as the expositors of the dimensions of constitutional rights to make this decision. Marbury v. Madison,
A judicial hearing is required in order to provide the "adversarial debate our system recognizes as essential for the truth seeking function." Gardner v. Florida,
The conclusion that the Florida procedure is inadequate is supported by the Supreme Court's habeas corpus decisions. In Townsend v. Sain,
Section 2254(d) assumes that there will be findings made by a state court. In this case, there was no hearing and thus no court determination. Furthermore, Sec. 2254(d)(1) provides that federal courts will not defer to state fact-finding if the merits were not resolved in the state court hearing. Subsection (2) of Sec. 2254(d) precludes giving deference to a fact-finding procedure employed by the state which was not adequate to afford a full and fair hearing. Subsection (3) of the same statutory section precludes deference if the material facts were not adequately developed at the state court hearing. Finally, subsection (6) requires that no deference be accorded if the petitioner did not receive a full, fair and adequate hearing in the state court proceeding. The facts as to Ford's sanity are in sharp dispute and have never been reached or resolved by a hearing in the state court or otherwise. As we said in our previous decision in this case, "credible evidence ... indicates that Ford is insane." Ford v. Strickland,
Contrary to the holding of the majority, Ford's claims are not foreclosed by Solesbee v. Balkcom,
Solesbee and Caritativo were decided before the Eighth Amendment was applied to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Eighth Amendment was incorporated in the case of Robinson v. California,
A certificate of probable cause was denied in Goode because "[a]ssuming that there is such a right [not to be executed when insane], we agree with the district court that petitioner is barred from raising it in this case because of abuse of the writ." Goode v. Wainwright,
The majority thus errs in relying upon an opinion that did not consider on their merits the issues considered herein. The decision of this court to deny Goode's certificate for probable cause was appealed to the Supreme Court which summarily refused to stay the execution. Goode v. Wainwright, --- U.S. ----,
The present case has a different history. The panel of this court granted the certificate of probable cause on May 30, 1984, because there was no abuse of the writ. The execution was stayed to permit decision of this important issue. As stated previously, the Supreme Court refused to vacate our stay. Wainwright v. Ford, --- U.S. ----,
It is apparent that the Supreme Court considered that Goode was decided on the issue of abuse of the writ and that it was presented the issue of whether our court erred in denying the certificate of probable cause. It is just as apparent that the Supreme Court refused to vacate the May 30, 1984 stay of execution so that this court could consider the important issues of whether a person sentenced to die has the right not to be executed if he is insane, and if he has that right, whether he is entitled to a due process hearing to make the determination of this factual issue.
The district court should be reversed and the case remanded for an evidentiary hearing pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2254(d) to determine whether Ford is insane.
Notes
Honorable William H. Stafford, Jr., U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Florida, sitting by designation
The summary holding of abuse of the writ on the insanity issue is troublesome under the facts presented. In light of our resolution of the merits of this issue, however, it is not necessary that we reach the question
As a second claim for relief, Ford restates his contention that Florida administers the death penalty arbitrarily and discriminatorily on the basis of the race of the victim, the race of the defendant and other impermissible factors. With respect to this contention, we conclude that the district court's abuse of the writ holding was clearly correct. In addition, this contention fails on the merits. We do not belabor these conclusions since they have been the subject of expressions of approval by a majority of the justices of the Supreme Court. Wainwright v. Ford, --- U.S. ----,
Justice Frankfurter and several commentators have discussed the variety of justifications offered for the common law rule. See Solesbee v. Balkcom,
See Note, The Eighth Amendment and the Execution of the Presently Incompetent, 32 Stan.L.Rev. 765 (1980); Note, Insanity of the Condemned, 88 Yale L.J. 533 (1979)
See Robinson v. California,
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
For a more detailed analysis of the common law history, see Note, The Eighth Amendment and the Execution of the Presently Incompetent, 32 Stan.L.Rev. 765; Note, Insanity of the Condemned, 88 Yale L.J. 533 (1979)
Twenty-two states have enacted statutory procedures explicitly prohibiting the execution of a prisoner who has been found presently incompetent. Ala.Code Sec. 15-16-23 (1981); Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. Sec. 13-4021 et seq. (1982); Ark.Stat.Ann. Sec. 43-2622 (1977); Cal.Penal Code Sec. 3700 et seq. (1979); Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 54-101 (1980); Fla.Stats. Sec. 922.07 (1983); Ga.Code Ann. Sec. 17-10-60 et seq. (1982); Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, Sec. 1005-2-3 (1982); Kan.Stat. Sec. 22-4006 (Supp.1981); Md.Ann.Code art. 27, Sec. 75 (Cum.Supp.1983); Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 279, Sec. 62 (Supp.1984); Miss.Code Ann. Sec. 99-19-57 (Supp.1983); Mo.Rev.Stat. Sec. 552.060 (Supp.1983); Mont.Code Ann. Sec. 46-19-201 et seq. (1983); Neb.Rev.Stat. Sec. 29-2537 et seq. (1979); Nev.Rev.Stat. Sec. 176.425 et seq. (1983); N.M.Stat.Ann. Sec. 31-14-4 et seq. (1978); N.Y.Correc.Law Sec. 655 et seq. (Supp.1983); Ohio Rev.Code Ann. Sec. 2949.28 et seq. (Supp.1982); Okla.Stat.Ann. title 22, Sec. 1004 et seq. (1983); Utah Code Ann. Sec. 77-19-13 (1982); Wyo.Stat. Sec. 7-13-901 et seq. (Cum.Supp.1984)
Five states which authorize capital punishment have adopted statutes requiring the transfer of any mentally disordered prisoner to a state mental hospital. See 11 Del.Code Ann. Sec. 406 (1982); Ind.Code Ann. Sec. 11-10-4-1 et seq. (1983); N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 15A-1001 (1983); S.C.Code Ann. Sec. 44-23-210 et seq. (Supp.1983); Va.Code Sec. 19.2-177 (1983).
Except in cases involving a woman supposedly pregnant, only the governor can reprieve a death sentence in Idaho. Idaho Code Sec. 19-2708 (1979). But Idaho adopts the common law absent a specific statutory provision, id. Sec. 73-116 (1973), and the common law prohibits the execution of the presently incompetent. Therefore, the Idaho statute should apply for the presently incompetent.
Four states have statutes that grant the governor, or some other authority discretion to stay the execution of the presently incompetent. See Ark.Stat.Ann. Sec. 43-2622 (1977); Ga.Code Ann. Sec. 27-2602 (1978); Mass.Ann.Laws ch. 279, Sec. 48 (Michie/Law.Co-op 1963); N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. Sec. 4-24 (1970).
Four states have adopted, by case law, the common law rule prohibiting the execution of the presently incompetent. State v. Allen,
"Amid the darken midst of mental collapse, there is no light against which the shadows of death may be cast. It is revealed that if you were taken to the electric chair, he would not quail or take account of its significance." Id.
Goode v. Wainwright,
See discussion, supra, pages 528-529
The petitioner cannot call witnesses, cross-examine the doctors who render the decision, or present argument on his behalf
See Furman v. Georgia,
