Anthony Jerome HARRIS, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Ron CHAMPION, Warden; Attorney General; Steve Hargett;
Stephen Kaiser; Bobby Boone; Dan Reynolds; Joy Hadwiger;
Michael Cody; Edward Evans, Jr.; Jack Cowley; Neville
Massie; H.N. Scott; Sue Frank; Denise Spears; Earl
Allen; Jim Sorrels; Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals;
Honorable James F. Lane; Honorable Gary L. Lumpkin;
Honorable Thomas Brett; Honorable Ed Parks; Honorable
Charles A. Johnson; Oklahoma Indigent Defense Systems
(OIDS); Henry A. Meyer, III, also known as Hank Meyer;
Richard Reeh; Doug Parr; Richard James; Becky
Pfefferbaum, M.D.; Patti Palmer; E. Alvin Schay,
Respondents-Appellees,
Oklahoma Criminal Defense, and National Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers, Amicus Curiae.
No. 93-5191.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
Feb. 21, 1995.
Susan M. Otto, Federal Public Defender, Oklahoma City, OK, for petitioner-appellant.
Susan B. Loving, Atty. Gen., Oklahoma, Diane L. Slayton, Asst. Atty. Gen., Oklahoma City, OK, for Warden respondents-appellees.
John M. Imel, John E. Rooney, Jr., of Moyers, Martin, Santee, Imel & Tetrick, Tulsa, OK, Gail L. Wettstein, Oklahoma City, OK, for Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals respondents-appellees.
Before BRORBY, LOGAN, and EBEL, Circuit Judges.ORDER
EBEL, Circuit Judge.
This matter comes before the court on appellant's petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing in banc, as well as the warden appellees' petition for rehearing. In our decision of September 27, 1994, we concluded that because the district court ultimately determined that appellant's habeas petition was a mixed petition, presenting both exhausted and unexhausted claims, it should have dismissed the entire petition, rather than dismiss only the unexhausted claims and adjudicate the exhausted claim.1
Therefore, we vacated the district court's ruling on the merits of appellant's due process claim based on delay in adjudicating his direct criminal appeal and remanded the action to the district court. We directed the district court to determine whether appellant's previously unexhausted claims had since been exhausted and, if not, to dismiss appellant's appellate delay claim and to permit appellant to refile his habeas petition asserting only his exhausted appellate delay claim if he so desired.
In his rehearing petition, appellant argues that this court's opinion in Harris v. Champion,
In their rehearing petition, the warden appellees contend that this court erroneously required appellant to exhaust all his other habeas claims before proceeding on his appellate delay claim. Like appellant, appellees also contend that we erroneously placed appellant back where he started many years ago in federal court, thereby exacerbating the delay appellant has already suffered. Finally, appellees state that if appellant were permitted to proceed on his appellate delay claim, they would not seek to dismiss a subsequent habeas petition as an abuse of the writ if it challenged appellant's conviction and sentence on grounds other than state appellate court delay. See Rule 9(b), Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases.2
In considering the parties' arguments, we begin by noting that our opinion in Harris I did not excuse appellant's failure to exhaust his claims based on trial errors. Rather, we directed the district court on remand to determine whether delays in adjudicating appellant's state appeal "so impair his ability to raise his claims of unconstitutional trial error that he should be excused from exhausting his state appeal as to those trial claims before they too may be heard on their merits by the federal court." Harris I,
In its order of March 29, 1994, the district court determined that, because appellant never presented to the state appellate court the non-delay claims he sought to pursue in federal court, the delay in adjudicating appellant's direct criminal appeal was not responsible for his failure to exhaust those claims. Therefore, the court refused to excuse exhaustion.
Because appellant has not appealed the district court's dismissal of his non-delay habeas claims for failure to exhaust, the propriety of that decision is not before us. We must accept as law of the case the district court's determinations that, with the exception of the appellate delay claim, appellant's habeas claims were not properly exhausted in state court, and that further resort to state court on those claims would not be futile.
Contrary to appellees' contention, our September 27 ruling did not require appellant to exhaust all his other habeas claims before proceeding on his appellate delay claim. Rather, our decision simply acknowledged that a habeas petitioner ordinarily cannot proceed on a petition that raises both exhausted and unexhausted claims. We held that because the district court dismissed appellant's other habeas claims for failure to exhaust, it should have dismissed appellant's exhausted appellate delay claim, as well. See Rose v. Lundy,
Ordinarily, a habeas petitioner who abandons his unexhausted claims and proceeds on his exhausted claims risks that the state will move under Rule 9(b) to dismiss any subsequent habeas petition raising the previously unexhausted claims as an abuse of the writ.4 See Rose,
Inordinate and unjustified delay by the state in adjudicating a direct criminal appeal can " 'make the state process ineffective to protect the petitioner's rights.' " Harris v. Champion,
We also established a rebuttable presumption that the state appellate process will be deemed ineffective if the state has been responsible for a delay of more than two years in adjudicating the petitioner's direct criminal appeal. Id. at 1556. Thus, we held that a federal court ordinarily can excuse exhaustion and hear the merits of the petitioner's federal claims if the petitioner's direct appeal has been delayed more than two years by the state. Id. at 1556-57. We also held that if the delay is sufficiently excessive, it may give rise to a presumption of prejudice that will establish a separate due process violation for the delay in resolving the petitioner's direct appeal, but that otherwise, the petitioner must make a particularized showing of actual prejudice. Id. at 1564-65. We did not, however, establish at what point prejudice because of appellate delay will be presumed. Our experience since Harris II now leads us to hold that a presumption of such prejudice will arise when delay in adjudicating the appeal attributable to the state exceeds two years. As in the exhaustion context, this presumption is a rebuttable one. See id. at 1556. Under appropriate circumstances, the district court may apply the more fact specific analysis set forth in Harris II,
Whether the district court chooses to adjudicate the merits of the petitioner's federal claims of trial error itself or to grant a conditional writ of habeas corpus, requiring the state either to resolve the petitioner's direct appeal within a specified time or release the petitioner, is a matter left to the sound discretion of the district court. In exercising that discretion, the district court should consider various jurisprudential factors, including whether the merits of the federal claims are easily resolvable by the federal court or whether they appear complicated or intertwined with state issues, and whether a pattern of cases suggests that the state is failing to fulfill its duty "to provide an 'adequate and effective' direct criminal appeal to its ... criminal defendants," id. at 1557 (quoting Griffin v. Illinois,
If the district court decides not to resolve the underlying federal claims of trial error, but rather grants a conditional writ, and if the state then resolves the petitioner's appeal within the specified time but does not grant the petitioner all the relief he seeks, the petitioner can then return to federal court with a second habeas petition that raises the issues he raised in his first federal habeas petition, without running afoul of either Rose v. Lundy or Rule 9(b). Because the issues will have been exhausted in state court, the petition will not be mixed. Further, because the issues will have been raised in the earlier petition but not adjudicated on the merits, the petition will not be either abusive or successive. See Watkins v. Champion,
All of the foregoing assumes that the petitioner has raised in his direct criminal appeal all of the issues he seeks to raise in his first federal habeas petition. If, however, the petitioner attempts to raise issues in his federal petition that are or were not raised in state court, we do not reach the same result.
Delay by the state in adjudicating a petitioner's direct criminal appeal can be deemed responsible for the petitioner's failure to exhaust only those claims that he has raised in the direct state appeal. Therefore, if the petitioner raises claims in his federal habeas petition that he has not raised in state court, delay in adjudicating his state appeal cannot excuse his failure to exhaust such claims, and his petition will be a mixed one. Absent a determination by the federal court that the claims not raised in state court would now be procedurally barred, see Coleman v. Thompson,
Appellant, here, failed to raise before the state court all the claims he tried to pursue in federal court. The district court ruled that some of appellant's claims were not properly exhausted, that such claims would not be procedurally barred, and that appellant's failure to exhaust would not be excused. The correctness of that ruling is not before us. Therefore, while we sympathize with the length of time appellant has been attempting to litigate his claims in federal court, we cannot ignore the facts: appellant presented a mixed petition; the district court determined that appellant's unexhausted claims should be dismissed; and the Supreme Court explicitly held in Rose,
If appellant now wants to pursue his appellate delay claim without waiting to exhaust his other claims, he may do so by submitting a habeas petition to the district court that raises only the appellate delay claim. Of course, he risks dismissal of a subsequent petition raising the previously abandoned grounds as an abuse of the writ.
The parties' respective petitions for rehearing are DENIED on the merits. Appellant's petition having been denied on the merits by the panel to which the case was submitted, the suggestion for rehearing in banc was transmitted to all the active judges of the court in regular active service in accordance with Rule 35(b) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure.8 No member of the hearing panel and no judge in regular active service on the court having requested that the court be polled on rehearing in banc, see Fed.R.App.P. 35, the suggestion for rehearing in banc is DENIED.
Notes
Our decision of September 27, 1994, was originally issued as an unpublished order and judgment. On the court's own motion, that decision has since been authorized for publication
Rule 9(b) provides:
A second or successive petition may be dismissed if the judge finds that it fails to allege new or different grounds for relief and the prior determination was on the merits or, if new and different grounds are alleged, the judge finds that the failure of the petitioner to assert those grounds in a prior petition constituted an abuse of the writ.
The rule in Rose is not absolute. If a federal court that is faced with a mixed petition determines that the petitioner's unexhausted claims would now be procedurally barred in state court, "there is a procedural default for purposes of federal habeas," Coleman v. Thompson,
Another instance in which a court need not dismiss a mixed petition is when the state fails to raise the issue of exhaustion and the court determines that "the interests of comity and federalism will be better served by addressing the merits [of any unexhausted claims] forthwith [than] by requiring a series of additional ... proceedings before reviewing the merits of the petitioner's claim," Granberry v. Greer,
Here, appellees have represented that if appellant were to proceed on his appellate delay claim, alone, they would not file a Rule 9(b) motion to dismiss a subsequent petition that raised claims not based on state appellate court delay. Rule 9(b) serves many interests besides those of the state, however. This fact has led at least one circuit court to hold that the state cannot stipulate to the rule's unenforcement. Thigpen v. Smith,
Because most claims for ineffective assistance of trial counsel are not appropriate for review on direct appeal, see Brecheen v. Reynolds,
This presumption of prejudice to the petitioner does not alter our holding in Harris II,
As we said earlier, because most claims for ineffective assistance of counsel cannot be pursued on direct appeal, if a habeas petitioner files a petition in federal court that seeks relief from delay in adjudicating his direct criminal appeal, he need not include in that petition an ineffective assistance claim if such a claim could not properly have been raised in his direct appeal. If the petitioner files a subsequent petition raising the ineffective assistance claim once that claim is exhausted, that petition will not be abusive, because at the time he filed his first federal petition, he could not properly have raised the ineffective assistance claim in federal court
Chief Judge Seymour is recused
