Moawad petitions us for habeas relief from his state convictions for murder and aggravated assault. Moawad’s primary claim is that he was denied effective assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal. His focus is a failure to object to a jury instruction regarding presumed malice deemed improper under Mississippi law. We affirm the district court’s denial of relief.
I
Moawad and Kathleen married in 1965. In 1975, Kathleen filed for divorce. On November 13, 1975, Moawad and his youngest son, Paul, one of their three children, went to the Tubbs’s family home in Sardis, Mississippi to announce that he and Kathleen were reunited. They found at home Kathleen’s father, mother, and brother. Moawad visited with the Tubbs family in .the living room for approximately forty minutes and all seemed well.
According to the state’s evidence at trial, Moawad and Paul went into the backyard. E.O. Tubbs, Kathleen’s father, moved from the living room to the kitchen. After Moa-wad entered the kitchen from the yard, Wil-lodean, Kathleen’s mother, and Michael, Kathleen’s brother, heard a single shot in the kitchen. Moawad then went into the living room where he shot Willodean with a .32 caliber pistol. Moawad and Michael struggled for the gun. Moawad struck Michael in the face causing lacerations, but Michael escaped, and ran to a neighbor’s house. Moa-wad grabbed Paul, left the house, and drove to North Mississippi Legal Services in Ox
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ford to speak with an attorney. Michael returned to his house to find his father dead in the kitchen from a single gunshot to the head and his mother gravely wounded.
See Moawad v. State,
Moawad’s half-brother testified at trial that Moawad on the day of the shooting told him that there was no hope for his marriage; that he saw Moawad’s pistol in a baby diaper; and that Moawad told him in a telephone call that he had gone to the Tubbs’s house, broke E.O.’s arm, took his pistol, and killed him. After the phone call, the step-brother searched the house he shared with Moawad for Moawad’s .32 caliber gun and could not find it. See id. at 633.
At trial, Moawad testified on his own behalf that he and E.O. had an argument during which he was attacked by E.O. and Michael. The gun fired several times during the struggle, killing E.O. and injuring Willo-dean. Moawad stated that he struck Michael with an ashtray during the incident. See id. at 634.
Moawad was charged with murder and two counts of aggravated assault. Without objection, the jury was instructed on the murder count as follows:
Instruction S-5
The Court instructs the Jury that malice aforethought mentioned in the indictment may be presumed from the unlawful and deliberate use of a deadly weapon.
Id. at 635. The trial -judge excused the alternate jurors and the jury entered deliberations at four o’clock. At approximately ten o’clock that night, the jury returned a verdict convicting Moawad on each count. The trial court sentenced him to life on the murder charge and to twenty and five years, for the aggravated assaults of Willodean and Mb chael, respectively, with the sentences to run consecutively.
Eleven days after the trial judge adjourned the term of court, Moawad’s trial counsel filed a motion for new trial on the grounds that the trial court erred by recalling an alternate juror who had been excused, not swearing in the alternate juror, and skipping the first alternate juror on the replacement fist and selecting the second alternate. The trial court denied this motion as untimely. Moawad’s trial counsel failed to file an appeal, an act resulting in counsel receiving a two-year suspension from practicing law in Mississippi.
See Myers v. Mississippi State Bar,
On February 26, 1986, the Mississippi Supreme Court granted Moawad an out-of-time appeal. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed Moawad’s conviction finding the challenge to jury instruction S-5 to be proeedurally barred because Moawad did not object to it at trial. The court rejected for lack of evidence Moawad’s contention that an alternate juror had replaced a regular juror in the deliberations.
Moawad,
Moawad filed for postconviction relief with the Mississippi Supreme Court and was allowed to proceed
on his
ineffective assistance of counsel claims. The state circuit court denied his petition. Moawad then filed a § 2254 petition which the district court denied., Moawad timely filed a notice of appeal. The district court granted his request for a COA; that it did not specify the issues to be appealed is of no moment because Moawad filed his § 2254 petition prior to the effective date of the AEDPA. We treat Moawad’s COA as a CPC, which raises on appeal all of the issues presented below.
1
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See Green v. Johnson,
II
To succeed on an ineffective assistance claim against either his trial or appellate counsel, Moawad must satisfy both prongs of the
Strickland
test.
See Ellis v. Lynaugh,
A
Moawad asserts that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to jury instruction S-5, long condemned by the Mississippi Supreme Court as relieving the prosecution of the burden of proving malice aforethought on the part of the defendant.
See Tran v. State,
Moawad argues that but for the erroneous instruction the jury would have convicted him of manslaughter instead of murder; that the record does not support a finding of malice. According to Moawad, if the jurors had not been instructed that they could presume malice from his use of a deadly weapon, then there is a reasonable probability that they would not have convicted him of murder.
We disagree with Moawad’s contention. We have refused habeas relief from a state conviction where “overwhelming” evidence of the petitioner’s guilt was presented even though trial counsel failed to object to a jury instruction warranting automatic reversal under state law even without an objection.
See Ricalday,
B
Moawad claims that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to three alleged incidents of jury tampering, viz., (1) six members of the jury were not on the Special Venire Facias; (2) people were going in and out of the jury room after the jury retired to consider its verdict; and (3) the second alternate juror on the substitute list replaced a juror several hours after deliberations had started and the alternate jurors had been excused.
Moawad did not assert argument (1) in the Mississippi collateral relief proceedings.
2
As á result, Moawad is procedurally barred from raising this claim in a subsequent state court proceeding for post-conviction relief.
See
Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-23(6) (“The order ... denying relief ..: shall be a bar to a second or successive motion under this chapter.”);
see also Grubb v. State,
Moawad seeks an evidentiary hearing on jury tampering charges (2) and (3). According to Moawad, his counsel failed to object (a) to outside influences tainting the jury during deliberations and (b) to the trial court’s erroneously replacing a juror after deliberations had begun and the alternate jurors were discharged; recalling the second alternate juror instead of the first alternate juror; denying him an opportunity to question the second alternate juror for bias; and omitting to instruct the jury to begin its deliberations anew upon seating the new ju-' ror. On direct appeal, the Mississippi Supreme Court observed that “the record [did] not reflect this alleged replacement of a regular juror by an alternate.”
Moawad,
We have scoured the record as well and have found no indications of the jury’s being contaminated by outside influences or of an alternate juror’s participating in deliberations. To support his allegations, Moawad points to a post-judgment motion for new trial filed by his trial attorney which asserts that the trial court seated the alternate juror instead of the first alternate juror and to his brief on direct appeal in which his attorney claims to have spoken to the second alternate juror who apparently confirmed that he participated in the jury deliberations and voted for Moawad’s guilt. We note that the judgment of conviction listed the second alternate juror as an alternate but did not state that he participated in the deliberations.
Moawad is entitled to an evidentiary hearing to prove his contentions only if we
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believe that he is entitled to relief if his allegations prove true.
See Ward v. Whitley,
Mississippi courts have oft stated that “during a jury’s deliberations outside influences must be eliminated if possible and minimized if not. Otherwise the integrity of the verdict is in question and a mistrial is appropriate.”
Fuselier v. State,
C
Moawad argues that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate adequately his defense that the shooting of E.O. Tubbs was either an accident or in self-defense. In particular, Moawad contends that his trial counsel should have determined whether Tubbs had powder burns on his hands because the presence of powder burns would have corroborated his testimony that Tubbs pointed a gun at him and that the gun fired several times while he and Tubbs struggled for control of it. Moawad claims that his counsel abdicated his “duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.”
Strickland,
In assessing counsel’s performance, we must presume that counsel’s action fell within the “wide range of reasonable professional assistance” and that “the challenged action ‘might be considered sound trial strategy.’ ”
Id.
at 689,
D
Moawad contends that his appellate counsel was ineffective because he did not raise the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel with respect to his trial attorney’s failure to object to the presumed malice jury instruction. “Because the error at the appellate stage stemmed from the error at trial, if there was no prejudice from the trial error, there was also no prejudice from the appellate error.”
Ricalday,
Ill
We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment, denying Moawad’s § 2254 petition for relief.
Notes
. Though we treat Moawad’s COA as a CPC, we will only review those issues presented in his appellate brief.
See United States v. Pierce,
. Moawad included, however, all three arguments in his objections to the magistrate judge’s recommendation and report forwarded to the district court.
