In 1992, after trial in the Superior Court, Robert Foxworth was convicted of murder in the second degree; the Appeals Court affirmed the conviction in 1996.
Commonwealth
v.
Foxworth,
“In considering the petitioner’s application, filed in 2000, for leave to obtain further appellate review of the 1996Massachusetts Appeals Court decision, did the Supreme Judicial Court reopen the finality of the petitioner’s conviction in 2002?”
Foxworth
v.
St. Amand,
Background.
The procedural history of this case in both the State and Federal courts is set out in detail in the First Circuit’s opinion accompanying the certification order. See
Foxworth, supra
at 420-424. We summarize those procedural facts that bear on the certified question. In March of 1992, Foxworth and two codefendants were tried in the Superior Court on indictments charging each of them with murder in the first degree. Foxworth had moved unsuccessfully before trial to sever his case from his codefendants on the ground that he would be prejudiced by the introduction of a statement one of his codefendants, Troy Logan, had given to the police. At trial, Logan’s statement was introduced in evidence (over Foxworth’s timely objection) through a police detective, but the statement was redacted or altered in several places to substitute the term “Mr. X” for Foxworth’s name. See
id.
at 421-422. On March 31, 1992, a jury convicted Foxworth of murder in the second degree, and acquitted Logan.
3
Foxworth filed a timely appeal from his conviction. On March 16, 1994, he filed a motion for new trial in the Superior Court pursuant to Mass. R. Grim. R 30 (b),
Pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 27.1 (a), as amended,
Almost four years later, on October 25, 2000, Foxworth filed in this court a pro se application for leave to obtain further appellate review (FAR application), accompanied by a motion to file the FAR application late. One of the grounds asserted for obtaining further appellate review was the alleged
Bruton
violation. In November, 2000, before the court acted on his application and motion to file the application late, Foxworth filed, and this court allowed, a motion to stay action on his requests in order to allow Foxworth to pursue a second motion for a new trial. Foxworth filed pro se his second new trial motion in the Superior Court in December, 2000; the motion did not raise the
Bruton
violation claim.
Foxworth,
Thereafter, on July 22, 2002, Foxworth, now represented by counsel, filed in this court an amended FAR application that represented a consolidation of his original 2000 FAR application with another FAR application concerning the Appeals Court’s 2002 decision. He also filed a motion to file the application late; the court allowed that motion on July 22.
4
On September 6,
On September 10, 2003, Foxworth filed a petition for habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Lengthy proceedings in the Federal courts ensued. In summary, on August 17, 2006, a District Court judge initially granted Foxworth’s petition on the basis of the claimed
Bruton
violation, vacated his conviction, and ordered the Commonwealth to retry Foxworth within sixty days or release him; on appeal by the Commonwealth, the First Circuit remanded the case to the District Court judge to address Foxworth’s claim of insufficient evidence; on remand, in May of 2008, that judge concluded that the evidence was insufficient to support Foxworth’s conviction and ordered his release; and on the Commonwealth’s appeal, the First Circuit certified to this court the question now before us. See
Foxworth,
The certified question is relevant to the First Circuit’s review of the habeas petition because that court has concluded, in contrast to the District Court judge, that the evidence presented at Foxworth’s trial was sufficient to sustain his conviction, see
id.
at 428-429, and that the remaining pertinent question is whether Foxworth’s
Bruton
violation claim entitles him to relief. In the view of the First Circuit, the answer to that question turns on the date on which Foxworth’s direct appeal from his conviction was final, because for Federal habeas relief to be granted, the State court’s decision is to be “measured against ‘clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.’ In most cases (and, specifically, in this case), the date of finality of the state court conviction determines the time line to be used for determining what Supreme Court decisions comprise the corpus of this ‘clearly established Federal law.’ ”
Id.
at 430, quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
6
Compare
Griffith
v.
Kentucky,
The First Circuit considered that there were two possible dates of finality in the present case: (1) November 18, 1996, the date the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s rescript issued, concluding that court’s consideration of Foxworth’s direct appeal; or (2) September 6, 2002, the date that this court denied Fox-worth’s amended FAR application.
Foxworth,
Discussion.
We accept the premise of the First Circuit, that the “date of finality” of a State court judgment (see note 6,
supra)
is a matter to be determined with reference
to
State law. See
Foxworth,
As rule 23 indicates, the reason for the twenty-eight day
The certified question asks whether the finality of Foxworth’s
Foxworth argues to the contrary, claiming that when a court decides to allow a motion to file a FAR application late, it “raise[s] the question whether the court will modify the judgment and alter the parties’ rights,”
Hibbs
v.
Winn,
Foxworth’s reliance on the recent decision of the United
Conclusion. We respond to the certified question as follows: This court did not reopen the finality of the petitioner Robert Foxworth’s 1992 conviction in 2002.
The Reporter of Decisions is to furnish attested copies of this opinion to the clerk of this court. The clerk in turn will transmit one copy, under the seal of this court, to the clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, as the answer to the question certified, and will also transmit a copy to each party.
Notes
We refer to the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit as the “First Circuit” to avoid any confusion between that court and the Massachusetts Appeals Court.
The defendant in this case, Peter St. Amand, is the superintendent of the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Cedar Junction, and in that capacity is named as the respondent in the habeas corpus proceeding at issue,
Foxworth
v.
St. Amand,
Before the case went to the jury, the trial judge granted the third defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty on all charges against him. See
Foxworth,
As the First Circuit noted, the record is ambiguous concerning whether the July 22, 2002, order on the “motion to file FAR late” was intended to be, or had the effect of, an allowance of the late filing of the first FAR application four years late. See
Foxworth,
It appears that Foxworth’s initial pro se motion to file late was never acted on
The First Circuit defined “finality” as follows: “Finality means that ‘a judgment of conviction has been rendered, the availability of appeal exhausted, and the time for a petition for certiorari [has] elapsed or a petition for certiorari [filed and] finally denied.’ ”
Foxworth,
The word “rescript” is defined in Mass. R. A. R 1 (c),
Rule 23 of the Massachusetts Rules of Appellate Procedure, as appearing in
“The clerk of the appellate court shall mail to all parties a copy of the rescript and the opinion, if one was written. The rescript of the court shall issue to the lower court twenty-eight days after the date of the rescript unless the time is shortened or enlarged by order. The timely filing of a petition for rehearing or of an application for further appellate review will stay the rescript until disposition of the petition or application unless otherwise ordered by the appellate court. If the petition or application is denied, the rescript shall issue forthwith unless the appellate court or a single justice orders otherwise. If an application for further appellate review is granted the rescript of the Appeals Court shall not issue to the lower court.”
The twenty-eight days also accommodates a party’s right under Mass. R. A. R 27, as amended,
Rule 27.1 of the Massachusetts Rules of Appellate Procedure, as amended,
One might argue that, although the direct appeal concluded with the issuance of the Appeals Court’s rescript on November 18, 1996, the judgment of conviction in this case did not truly become final until the rescript was entered on the Superior Court docket four days later, on November 22, 1996. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Bodden,
Case law has also recognized that a party’s entitlement to request further appellate review must be taken into account before the direct appeal process is deemed complete. See
Sabatinelli
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.,
We frequently, but not always, allow motions to file FAR applications late. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
O’Neil,
In
Hibbs
v.
Winn,
In
Young
v.
Harper,
Finally, we note that both the Hibbs and Young cases involved points of Federal law; the limited question that has been certified to us is whether the Foxworth’s conviction, which became final in 1996, was reopened by us in 2002 as a matter of State law.
In the brief filed on behalf of St. Amand, the Attorney General takes the
