OPINION
We are called upon to decide whether a state court defendant lacked fair notice as a matter of federal Constitutional law that aiding and abetting a deliberate homicide would subject him to the death penalty in Montana.
I
A
On September 2, 1990, the badly beaten body of inmate Gerald Pileggi was found lying in the exercise yard of the Montana State Prison in Deer Lodge, Montana. 1 Several witnesses had seen inmates William Gollehon and Douglas Turner both strike Pileggi multiple times with baseball bats. An autopsy revealed that Pileggi died from massive head injuries, including a blow to the top of the head which had caved in part of his skull, as well as a blow to the side of his face which had collapsed his forehead, torn his brain, and ruptured his eyeball.
Gollehon and Turner were jointly charged with deliberate homicide for the beating death of Pileggi. The information was later amended to add an alternative count of deliberate homicide by accountability.
2
The difference between these
*1022
counts, as explained by the Montana Supreme Court, is that the “charge of deliberate homicide by accountability allowed the jury to convict both men involved in the deliberate homicide without having to make the determination of who struck the fatal blow.”
State v. Gollehon,
B
On direct appeal, Gollehon argued that the trial court erred by sentencing him to death for deliberate homicide by accountability because no sentence for this crime was set by statute. Id. at 264. A divided Montana Supreme Court rejected this argument, holding that deliberate homicide by accountability is the same offense as deliberate homicide and therefore subject to the same penalties, including death. Id. at 264-65. The three dissenting justices contended that because no statute explicitly makes death an available penalty for deliberate homicide by accountability, the rule of lenity required that a fallback sentencing provision for felonies without a specified penalty should apply. Id. at 270-72 (Gray, J., dissenting).
After state post-conviction proceedings, Gollehon filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the federal district court arguing that his right to due process was violated because he lacked fair notice that deliberate homicide by accountability is punishable by death in Montana. The district court held that this claim was unexhausted and denied his petition on other grounds. Although, on appeal to this court, we affirmed the district court as to grounds it reached, we concluded that Gollehon had “sufficiently presented the federal issue to the state court.”
Gollehon v. Mahoney,
On remand, the district court denied Gollehon’s motion for summary judgment on the due process claim, dismissed the habeas petition, and sua sponte denied a certificate of appealability (“COA”).
See Gollehon v. Mahoney,
Because Gollehon filed his habeas petition before the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), pre-AEDPA law applies.
Lindh v. Murphy,
II
“Elementary notions of fairness enshrined in our constitutional jurisprudence dictate that a person receive fair notice not only of the conduct that will subject him to punishment, but also of the severity of the penalty that a State may impose.”
BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore,
Section 45-2-301 of the Montana Code provides that “[a] person is responsible for conduct which is an element of an offense if the conduct is either that of the person himself or that of another and he is legally accountable for the conduct as provided in section 45-2-302, or both.” Mont.Code Ann. § 45-2-301 (1990). 6 Section 45-2-302, in turn, provides that “[a] person is legally accountable for the conduct of another when ... either before or during the commission of an offense with the purpose to promote or facilitate the commission, the person solicits, aids, abets, agrees, or attempts to aid the other person in the planning or commission of the offense.” Id. § 45-2-302(3). Gollehon does not contest that because he aided and abetted the killing of Gerald Pileggi, he is legally accountable for deliberate homicide pursuant to section 45-2-302. 7 We therefore consider whether section 45-2-301 provided Gollehon with fair notice that a person “responsible” for an offense by way of accountability is subject to the penalty specified for that offense.
To determine the plain meaning of a statute, we traditionally refer to dictionaries in use at the time of the statute’s enactment.
See Lamar v. United States,
Gollehon contends that the only applicable penalty was Montana’s default penalty for felonies for which “no penalty is otherwise provided,”
i.e.,
up to 10 years in the state prison, a fine of up to $50,000, or both. MontCode Ann. § 46-18-213. But no penalty was specified for accountability because accountability is not a separate offense requiring a separate penalty. Rather, it is a theory of liability for an offense for which penalties were already provided by the legislature.
8
In the case of deliberate homicide, the legislature unambiguously provided for a penalty of death, life imprisonment, or 10-100 years’ imprisonment.
Id.
§ 45-5-102(2). Consequently, we conclude that Montana’s accountability statutes, together with the deliberate homicide statute, made it “reasonably clear at the relevant time” that Gollehon’s conduct would subject him to the death penalty.
United States v. Lanier,
III
Although we believe that Montana’s criminal statutes, standing alone, supplied all the fair notice that the Due Process Clause requires, we proceed to consider whether prior judicial decisions also contributed to such notice. See id. (holding that the “touchstone” of the due-process inquiry “is whether the statute, either standing alone or as construed ” provided fair notice (emphasis added)).
As an initial matter, we address Gollehon’s contention that he lacked fair notice because “no decision of the Montana Supreme Court (up until [his] case) even considered whether an offender convicted of deliberate homicide by accountability could be sentenced to death.” Mot. for COA at 12. “Due process is not, however, violated simply because the issue is a matter of first impression.”
Ponnapula v. Spitzer,
Here, prior decisions gave Gollehon reasonable warning that aiding and abetting a deliberate homicide would subject him to the death penalty.
9
For exam-
*1025
pie, in
Matter of B.D.C.,
Moreover, prior to Gollehon’s offense, the Montana Supreme Court had explicitly adopted the Illinois Supreme Court’s construction of Illinois’s accountability provisions, from which Montana’s provisions were adopted.
See State v. Oppelt,
Numerous Montana decisions also made clear that persons convicted of felonies by accountability did not receive the 10-year and/or $50,000 default penalty set forth in section 46-18-213, which Gollehon claims was applicable.
See, e.g., State v. Senn,
IV
We next consult the history of Montana’s treatment of aiders and abettors to determine whether the death penalty was an unfair surprise to Gollehon.
At common law, the participants in a felony were classified into the following categories:
(1) first-degree principals, those who actually committed the crime in question;
(2) second-degree principals, aiders and abettors present at the scene of the crime; (3) accessories before the fact, aiders and abettors who helped the principal before the basic criminal event took place; and (4) accessories after the fact, persons who helped the principal after the basic criminal event took place.
Gonzales v. Duenas-Alvarez,
Montana, like “all States and the Federal Government,” has “expressly abrogated the distinction among principals and aiders and abettors in the second and third categories” and “treats those who fall into the first three categories alike.”
11
Duenas-Alvarez,
By “abandoning] completely the old common law terminology and simply providing] that a person is legally accountable for the conduct of another when he is an accomplice of the other person in the commission of the crime,” section 45-2-302 represents a “much more modern approach to the entire subject of parties to crime.” LaFave & Scott, supra, § 6.6 & n. 99 (citing Mont.Code Ann. § 45-2-302). This modern approach does not purport, however, to alter the long-standing rule that aiders and abettors are punishable to the same extent as perpetrators. Indeed, the drafter’s comment to section 45-2-302 explains that this provision “accepts the approach of the existing law and endeavors to develop it in full and systematic fashion.” Mont.Code Ann. § 45-2-302 cmt. The imposition of the death penalty in Gollehon’s case thus comported with well-settled principles of accomplice liability.
V
The dissent in
Gollehon I
does not compel a contrary conclusion. The three dissenting justices contended that the majority had erroneously focused on “the nature of ‘accountability rather than on Montana’s sentencing statutes.”
Gollehon I,
The rule of lenity “is simply a canon of statutory construction.”
United States v. LeCoe,
Gollehon “has not pointed to anything in the federal Constitution — other than, of course, the ‘fair notice’ guaranty, which, we have just held, is satisfied here — that would
require
a state court to apply the rule of lenity when interpreting a state statute.”
Sabetti,
VI
The relevant statutory text, decisional law, and centuries of Anglo-American jurisprudence made it clear at the relevant time that aiding and abetting an offense would subject a person to the same penalty available for that offense, not a separate and lesser penalty. Therefore, the Montana courts’ conclusion that deliberate homicide by accountability is a death-eligible offense is far from a “radical and unforeseen departure from former law,” but rather, a perfectly logical extension of it.
Webster,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court denying Gollehon’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing Gollehon’s habeas petition is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. These facts are summarized from the Montana Supreme Court decision affirming Gollehon's conviction and sentence.
See State v. Gollehon,
. This second count alleged that "defendants, with the purpose to promote or facilitate the *1022 commission of the offense of deliberate homicide, aided, abetted, or attempted to aid one another in the commission of the offense of deliberate homicide of Gerald Pileggi by striking him on the head with baseball bats.”
. We limit the COA to the question ”[w]hether Petitioner's right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment was violated since the relevant Montana statutes and case law failed to provide sufficient notice that the crime of homicide by accountability is punishable by the death penalty.” Mot. for COA at 1.
. Because the parties thoroughly argued the merits of the due process claim in their briefing on the motion for a COA, as well as during the one-hour oral argument we held on the motion, we agree that further briefing and argument is unnecessary.
. Although we are bound by the Montana Supreme Court’s interpretation of Montana law,
see Bradshaw v. Richey,
. All statutory references are to the Montana Code as it existed in 1990, the year of Gollehon’s offense.
. Here, the relevant offense is deliberate homicide, which is committed when a person "purposely or knowingly causes the death of another human being.” Mont.Code Ann. § 45-5-102(1).
. As such, accountability differs from inchoate offenses, which are distinct from their target crimes and therefore require their own penalty provisions. See Mont.Code Ann. § 45-4-101(2) (solicitation); id. § 45-4-102(3) (conspiracy); id. § 45-4-103(3) (attempt).
. “Because the
Bouie
analysis focuses on notice to the defendant, we look only to cases decided before the crime was committed.”
*1025
Clark v. Brown,
. Gollehon attempts to distinguish
Powers
on the ground that the defendants were also "charged directly with, and apparently convicted of, the offense of deliberate homicide” rather than deliberate homicide by accountability. Mot. for COA at 11. The dissent in
Powers
explains, however, that “the State, its counsel realizing that Jennifer Denise Gill did not participate in the critical beatings that brought about the death, tried its case ... on the basis of accountability, sections 45-2-301 and -302.”
. Accessories after the fact are now considered a separate category. See LaFave & Scott, supra, § 6.6 (explaining that "the accessory after the fact, by virtue of his involvement only after the felony was completed, [is] not truly an accomplice in the felony,” and is therefore subjected "to different and lesser penalties”); see also id. § 6.9 ("Unlike the principal in the second degree and accessory before the fact, the accessory after the fact is generally not treated as a party to the felony nor subject to the same punishment prescribed for the felony.”).
