In this сase, the Eighth Circuit granted habeas relief on the ground that it is a violation of Fourteenth Amendment due process for a state appellate court to dismiss the appeal of a recaptured fugitive where there is no demonstrated ad
*116
verse effect on the appellate process. The court declined to consider whether application of its ruling in rеspondent’s case would violate the principle of
Teague
v.
Lane,
In 1986, a Missouri jury convicted Lynda Branch of the first-degree murder of her husband. On retrial after the Missouri Court of Appeals reversed her conviction because of an error in the admission of evidence, the jury again convicted her. Branch moved for a new trial, and the trial court scheduled a hearing for Aрril 3, 1989, to consider this motion and to sentence her. Before the hearing, however, Branch, who was free on bail, took flight to a neighboring county. She was recaptured on April 6,1989, and sentencеd to life imprisonment without possibility of parole.
Branch filed a timely notice of appeal on direct review and an appeal of the trial court’s denial of her motion for post-conviction relief. In 1991, the Missouri Court of Appeals consolidated and dismissed the appeals under Missouri’s well-established fugitive dismissal rule, which provides that a defendant who attempts to еscape justice after conviction forfeits her right to appeal.
State
v.
Branch,
On petition for federal habeas relief under 28 U. S. C. § 2254, Branch alleged that the dismissal of her consolidated appeal violated due process. The District Court undertook what it termed a procedural due process analysis under the framework set forth in
Mathews
v.
Eldridge,
The application of
Teague
is a threshold question in a federal habeas case.
Caspari
v.
Bohlen,
The State’s Teague argument was preserved on this record and in the record before the Court of Appeals. In the District Court, the State argued that respondent’s due process claim “is barred from litigation in federal habeas corpus unless the Court could say, as a threshold matter, that it would make its new rule of law retroactive. Teague v. Lane.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 99 (citation omitted). In its brief on appeal, the State pointed out that it had raised the Teague issue before the District Court, see Branch, supra, at 374, and argued that if the court were to decide that a constitutionаl rule prohibited dismissal, “such a conclusion could not be enforced in this collateral-attack proceeding consistently with the principles set forth in Teague v. Lane, and its progeny,” App. to Pet. for Cert. 129, n. 5 (citation omitted). Con *118 fronted for the first time at oral argument with a substantive due process claim, the State reasserted that “the prohibition of Teague against Lane on the enforcement of new rules of constitutional law for the first time in a collateral attack proceeding in federal court applies with full force to this case.” Id., at 152. The next five pages of the record are devоted to the court’s questions and the State’s responses regarding the Teague issue. App. to Pet. for Cert. 153-157.
This record supports the State’s position that it raised the
Teague
claim. The State’s efforts to alert the Eighth Circuit to the
Teague
problem provided that court with ample opportunity to make a reasoned judgment on the issue. Cf.
Webb
v.
Webb,
A new rule for
Teague
purposes is one where “ ‘the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.’”
Caspari, supra,
at 390 (quoting
Teague,
Neither respondent nor the Eighth Circuit identifies existing precedent for the proposition that there is no substantial basis for appellate dismissal when a defendant fails to appear at sеntencing, becomes a fugitive, demonstrates contempt for the legal system, and imposes significant cost and expense *119 on the State to secure her recapture. The Eighth Circuit opined that a substantive due process violation arose from conduct that was “arbitrary,” “conscience-shocking,” “oppressive in a constitutional sense,” or “interferes with fundamental rights,” аnd that dismissal of Branch’s appeal fell within that category. Branch, supra, at 375. These arguments are not based upon existing or well-settled authority.
Respondent and the Court of Appeals rely for the most рart on
Ortega-Rodriguez
v.
United States,
The Eighth Circuit did rely on
Evitts
v.
Lucey,
Branch argues that even if
Teague
does apply, the rule announced by the Eighth Circuit falls into
Teague’s
exception for “ ‘watershed rules of criminal procedure’ implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
Saffle
v.
Parks, supra,
at 495 (citing
Teague, supra,
at 311). The new rule here is not among the “small core of rules requiring observance of those proсedures that . . . are ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.’”
Graham, supra,
at 478 (some internal quotation marks omitted; citations omitted). Because due process does not require a State tо provide appellate process at all,
Evitts, supra,
at 393;
McKane
v.
Durston,
As we explained in Allen v. Georgia, supra, at 140, where the Court upheld against constitutional attack the dismissal of the petition of a fugitive whose appeal was pending, “if the Supreme Court of a State has acted in cоnsonance with the constitutional laws of a State and its own procedure, it could only be in very exceptional circumstances that this court would feel justified in saying that there had been а failure of due legal process. We might ourselves have pursued a different course in this case, but that is not the test.” The Eighth Circuit converted a rule for the administration of the federal courts into a constitutional one. We do not (and we may not, in the face of the State’s invocation of *121 Teague) reach the merits of that contention. The result reached by the Court of Appeals was neither dictated nor compelled by existing precedent when Branch’s conviction became final, and Teague prevents its application to her case. The petition for certiorari is granted, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
It is so ordered.
