OPINION
Frаnk Billotti was found guilty of first-degree murder by a West Virginia jury. The jury declined to make a recommendation of “mercy,” and the trial court accordingly imposed a sentence of life without possibility of parole. In this petition for habeas corpus, Billotti claims, among other things, that West Virginia’s system of discretionary appeals and lack of standards for jury recommendations of mercy have dеprived him of due process. We believe, however, that West Virginia’s procedures comport with the requirements of due process and thus affirm the district court’s dismissal of the petition.
I.
Sometime between 10:00 P.M. and 2:00 A.M. on the night of October 8, 1982, Frank Billotti shot and killed his wife, Carolyn, and their daughters, Andrea and Francie. After shooting his family, Billotti shot himself in the head. Billotti lost an eye, but survived to stand trial.
At trial, Billotti did not contеst that he had in fact shot his wife and daughters. His sole defense was one of insanity. Bil-lotti testified that for six or seven years before the murders, he felt that someone was out to get him, and that this feeling had intensified during the summer of 1982. He claimed that during the period leading up to the murders he had been smoking marijuana daily and taking amphetamines prescribed for weight loss. Billotti also claimed that he had been awake for three days and three nights prior to the shootings. On the evening of the killings, he had seen visions and had passed out twice. Petitioner testified that after regaining consciousness the second time, he believed that an enemy was attacking his family. He picked up a .45 pistol in the living room, but put it down and ran into the bedroom. Believing that someone was attempting to get into the bedroom, Billotti picked up his shotgun and fired.
Trooper Reyes of the West Virginia Department of Public Safety was assigned to investigate the Billotti home after the shootings. Reyes testified that he found Carolyn and Andrea backed up against a hallway wall and that he found Francie face down in the hallway; she had been shot from behind. In addition, Reyes found six shell casings and a shotgun in the Billotti home.
Three psychiаtrists testified that, in their opinion, Billotti did not appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts at the time of the shooting. The doctors disagreed, however, on a diagnosis of petitioner’s condition as well as on the effect of petitioner’s drug usage. In addition, the record suggests that petitioner gave inconsistent accounts of the evening’s events to the psychiatrists. Dr. Sine, who examined Billotti at the request of the state, testified that during the examination Billotti said that he had snorted crank (a crystalline amphetamine) for four days before the shooting. Billotti had not shared this fact with the other two psychiatrists, however. The state also presented several lay witnesses who testified as to Billotti’s seemingly normal behavior during the time leading up to the shootings. In addition, several witnesses testified to petitioner’s lucidity the day after the shooting. Drs. Rasmussen and MacIntyre, who treated Billotti for his gunshot wound, testified that he was alert, responsive and well-oriented.
The jury rejected petitioner’s claim of insanity, and 'Billotti was convicted on three counts of first degree murder on December 21, 1983. Pursuant to West Virginia law, the trial court submitted to the jury the question of whether Billotti should be *115 granted “mercy,” which wоuld make parole available to Billotti. The jury declined to recommend mercy, and Billotti was accordingly sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. In September, 1984, Billotti filed a petition for appeal with the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, which declined to grant the appeal after briefing and oral presentation. That petition was dismissed in аn unpublished order without a decision on the merits.
After exhausting his remedies on state collateral review, Billotti then filed the instant petition in the district court for the Northern District of West Virginia. He contended that West Virginia’s failure to grant an appeal as of right for criminal convictions is unconstitutional and that West Virginia’s decision to leave recommendations for “mercy” to the unguided discretion of the jury allows jurors to act in an arbitrary and irrational fashion in determining the availability of parole. In addition, Billotti challenged the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to his sanity and other aspects of his conviction.
The district court dismissed the petition, and Billotti now appeals. We shall take up his claims in turn.
II.
Billotti contends that West Virginia has denied him due process by affording а criminal defendant only a discretionary appeal from conviction. He claims that due process requires an appeal as of right, with full review on the merits by the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. Reduced to its essence, petitioner’s argument is that appeals as of right are constitutional, while discretionary appeals are not.
While the Supreme Court has stated on occasion that “[tjhere is, of course, no constitutional right to an appeal” from a criminal conviction, see
Jones v. Barnes,
In West Virginia, the Supreme Court of Appeals provides the sole avenue of appellate review from сourts of general jurisdiction. The decision to grant an appeal is discretionary with that court.
State v. Legg,
West Virginia further provides criminal defendants an adequate opportunity to present their case in filing a petition for appeal. The rules of the Supreme Court of Appeals require a petition to statе:
1. The kind of proceeding and nature of the ruling in the lower tribunal.
2. A statement of the facts of the case.
3. The assignments of error relied upon on appeal and the manner in which they were decided in the lower tribunal.
4. Points and authorities relied upon, a discussion of law, and the relief prayed for.
W.Va.R.App.P. 3(c). Petitions for appeal can be up to fifty pages, and longer with leave of the court.
Id.
In petitioning for aрpeal, a defendant can submit the transcript and other materials. W.Va.R.App.P. 4(c). In addition, a defendant is entitled to an oral presentation before the Supreme Court of Appeals. W.Va.R.App.P. 5. The West Virginia Constitution allows one justice to decide whether there is error in the record sufficient to justify the granting of appeal, but it was represented at argument before this сourt that the longstanding practice of the Supreme Court of Appeals is to have all five justices in attendance at oral presentations.
Compare
Fed.R.App.P. 34(a) (authorizing denial of oral argument). Petitioner’s counsel has also conceded that the relevant procedural safeguards were observed here — Billotti’s counsel filed a substantial petition on Billotti’s behalf, aсcompanied by the transcript, and made an oral presentation before all of the justices of the Supreme Court of Appeals. In addition, West Virginia affords collateral review in criminal convictions, although that review is limited to claims of constitutional dimension. Indeed, Billotti’s claims were collaterally reviewed at some length and rejected by both the state Circuit Court аnd the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
See Billotti v. Dodrill,
It is plain that West Virginia has afforded Billotti an adequate opportunity to challenge the alleged errors in his trial. The Fourteenth Amendment does not authorize the federal courts to micromanage state criminal justice systems.
See Donnelly v. De Christoforo,
Indeed, petitioner has not explained exactly how an appeal as of right would have increased the accuracy of the determinаtion that he received.
See Schall v. Martin,
III.
Petitioner next contends that West Virginia’s failure to provide guidelines for juries in making recommendations of “mercy” allows for arbitrary and irrational decisions, thus violating due process. Petitioner was convicted of first degree murder, which under West Virginia law carries a sentence of life imprisonment without parole. There is an exception, however: “[T]he jury may, in their discretion, rеcommend mercy, and if such recommendation is added to their verdict, such person shall be eligible for parole_” W.Va.Code § 62-3-15. Trial judges are required to instruct the jury that mercy is an option,
State v. Kopa,
We decline the invitation. At the outset we note that there exists no constitutional impediment to jury participation in the sentencing process. “Jury sentencing, based on each jury's assessment of the evidence it hears and appraisal of the demeanor and character of the accused, is a legitimate practice.”
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
Nor do we think it avails petitioner that the Supreme Court has required instructions limiting jury discrеtion in
capital
cases.
See, e.g., Maynard v. Cartwright,
*118
In any event — and contrary to petitioner’s suggestion — the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence in the area of capital sentencing does not cast into constitutional doubt West Virginia’s provision for discretionary mercy. In a capital сase, the jury must be allowed to consider any aspect of a defendant’s character or record and any circumstances of the offense offered by a defendant as a mitigating factor.
Blystone v. Pennsylvania,
IV.
Billotti claims that the trial court erred when it failed to enter a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity. He notes that the three рsychiatrists who testified at trial all believed that he was incapable of appreciating the wrongfulness of his acts and argues that the jury should not have been allowed to disregard this expert testimony.
Under West Virginia law, once a defendant has brought forth substantial evidence of insanity, the state bears the burden of proving the defendant sane beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Milam,
The question of Billotti’s sanity at the time of the shooting was a factual one for the jury to decide, not a legal question that could be resolved solely on the basis of psychiatric testimony.
See Ake v. Oklahoma,
Petitioner next contends that he was entitled to a dirеcted verdict because the prosecution failed to provide sufficient proof of malice and premeditation. The district court found that the evidence in the record supported “a pre-conceived plan of destruction whereby Petitioner decided to kill his family before ending his own life.” Petitioner has offered nothing on appeal to persuade us that this finding was erroneous and we will not disturb it.
Finally, petitioner argues that the state trial court erred in its jury instructions concerning premeditation. Billotti nowhere explains in his briefs how this alleged trial error resulted in a deprivation of a federal right. “A state prisoner is entitled to relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 only if he is held ‘in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.’ ”
Engle v. Isaac,
V.
For the above reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The
Jackson
standard applies to defenses only when the state has made the absence of an affirmative defense an element of the crime.
Engle v. Isaac,
