Howie Ray ROBINSON, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Henry WADE, Winfield Scott, Richard Mays and Bill Shaw,
Respondents-Appellees.
No. 81-1344.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
Sept. 20, 1982.
As Modified Nov. 19, 1982.
Edward W. Gray, Dallas, Tex. (Court-Appointed), for petitioner-appellant.
J. Steven Bush, Asst. Dist. Atty., Dallas, Tex., for respondents-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
Before WISDOM, JOHNSON and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
JOHNSON, Circuit Judge:
Howie Ray Robinson, three times convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of William Moon and three times granted a new trial, has asked this Court to order his release from the custody of the State of Texas on the ground that the State's planned fourth prosecution of him is barred by the federal Constitution. The district court found that Robinson's reprosecution would not offend the double jeopardy clause and that his other claims were not properly before it. This Court is of like mind with the district court and affirms its denial of relief.
I.
A.
In the early hours of September 28, 1973, Robinson killed convenience store attendant William Moon with a single shot to the head. At trial, Robinson admitted the killing, but claimed that he shot in self-defense. Robinson, describing the course of events leading up to Moon's death, testified that he and Ernest Benjamin Smith entered the all-night grocery while their companion, George Holden, remained in the car. Robinson denied that he planned to rob the store, saying that he only wanted to buy some food; he stated, however, that he then believed Smith to be entertaining thoughts of robbery. Robinson testified that he walked to the back of the store and selected some items for purchase, then turned to approach the checkout counter. As he turned, he saw Smith and Moon facing each other with guns drawn. Smith saw him approach, shouted a warning to him and dropped behind a counter. Moon swung around and took aim at him; Robinson drew his gun and fired the fatal shot into Moon's head. He and Smith then ran to the car and, while Smith told Holden what had happened, they made good their escape.
Robinson turned himself in to the police in late October 1973. He was indicted for capital murder shortly thereafter and tried in June 1974. The jury returned a verdict finding Robinson guilty as charged and dictating that the penalty be assessed at death.1 In April 1977, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reversed Robinson's conviction, holding that the trial court had erred in allowing the State to bolster the credibility of State's witness Holden's testimony by showing that he had passed a polygraph examination. Robinson v. State,
Robinson was retried in the summer of 1977. The second trial resulted in a second sentence of death; that verdict was subsequently set aside with the trial court's granting of Robinson's motion for a new trial. The trial court's reasons for granting Robinson's motion for new trial were not articulated, see Vernon's Ann.C.C.P. art. 40.07 (1979) (prohibiting comment on the evidence in rulings on new trial motions). Our independent examination of Robinson's motion and the testimony adduced at the hearing on that motion discloses that the court's inquiry focused on Robinson's allegation that one or more jurors had considered, despite the court's instructions to the contrary, the prosecutor's suggestions that Robinson's testimony as to the circumstances of the slaying differed from that given by co-defendant Smith at Smith's separate trial, and from that given by Robinson to Dr. James Grigson, a psychiatrist, in the course of a pre-trial competency examination.2
On April 3, 1978, the day his third trial began, Robinson entered a Special Plea3 asking that his reprosecution, or at least resentencing to death, be found barred by article I, section 14 of the Texas Constitution4 and the fifth, eighth, and fourteenth amendments of the federal Constitution.5 The Plea was denied, the jury proceeded to judgment, and on May 13, 1978, Robinson was for the third time convicted and sentenced to death. The court denied Robinson's original motion for new trial based on charges of juror selection errors, erroneous evidentiary rulings, and insufficiency of the evidence. In May 1980, it granted Robinson's second motion: the court reporter had lost part of her notes and was unable to prepare a complete trial transcript for appellate review.
In early 1981, the district attorney informed Robinson that a fourth prosecution was imminent. Robinson responded with institution of this action in the federal district court.
B.
Robinson's pro se complaint framed this action under the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. ยง 1983. Charging that the prosecutorial and judicial errors which provoked his retrials evidenced a malicious purpose to deprive him of a fair trial, Robinson asked that his reprosecution be enjoined and damages be assessed against the district attorney, the assistant district attorney, the state trial court judge, and the clerk of court who participated in his previous prosecutions. The district court construed his complaint as a petition in habeas corpus seeking relief from the threat of reprosecution under the proscriptions of the double jeopardy clause,6 and ordered the state court criminal proceedings stayed pending consideration of that claim.7 The court appointed counsel to represent him and referred the matter to a magistrate for further proceedings.
The State joined the double jeopardy argument on the merits.8 On due consideration, the magistrate concluded that Robinson's reprosecution would not offend the double jeopardy clause and accordingly recommended that his petition be dismissed and the stay of the impending criminal prosecution be dissolved. The magistrate's recommendations elicited two responses on Robinson's behalf. Robinson himself, in a pro se response, challenged the magistrate's conclusion that the trial errors of which he complained neither individually nor collectively evidence the deliberate prosecutorial attempts to provoke a mistrial requisite to constitutional preclusion of reprosecution. His attorney, taking an approach not evidenced in Robinson's original federal court petition, challenged the course of the state proceedings as violative of Robinson's right to a speedy trial, and argued the threat of a fourth prosecution in and of itself to constitute cruel and unusual punishment.
The district court endorsed the magistrate's resolution of Robinson's double jeopardy claim, declined consideration of the claims newly raised under the sixth and eighth amendments, and denied relief.9 Robinson appeals.
II.
Robinson urges this Court to find his fourth prosecution precluded by the double jeopardy clause, barred for lengthy delays violative of both his right to a speedy trial and general precepts of fundamental fairness, and prohibited as itself cruel and unusual punishment. The latter three claims are not properly before this Court and cannot at this time be considered.
Robinson's initial presentation of his speedy trial and eighth amendment claims was made directly to the district court, after the magistrate had completed consideration of the merits of the habeas corpus petition and submitted to the court his recommended findings and conclusions. The district court refused to entertain these claims and dismissed them without prejudice.
In habeas corpus proceedings, as in other civil proceedings, claims can be added after filing of the pleadings only by amendment;10 under Fed.R.Civ.P. 15, amendment can be made after responsive pleadings have been filed "only by leave of the court or by written consent of the adverse party."11 Grant or denial of leave to amend is within the discretion of the trial court. Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
Though vigorously pressing these claims on their merits, Robinson has not argued that the district court erred in denying their consideration. Nor can we find its decision an abuse of discretion. The claims were filed at a very late stage of proceedings in the district court; moreover, there is no showing that the claims had been exhausted in the state courts, see Brown v. Estelle,
These claims stand in the same posture as Robinson's entirely new argument that the delays encountered in his prosecution are "fundamentally unfair." Never a part of the proceedings in the district court, they are no part of the proceedings on appeal. Cobb v. Wainwright,
We begin, then, consideration of the single claim properly before us. Robinson charges that by its misconduct in the course of his prior trials, the State of Texas has triggered the preclusive effects of the double jeopardy clause. He seeks a ruling that his reprosecution is wholly barred; failing that, he asks that the State be restricted to a demand that he be punished by life imprisonment. The separate aspects of Robinson's double jeopardy claim will be taken up in turn.
A.
1.
The contours of the double jeopardy clause13 are not easily delineated. A welter of cases, venerable and recent, have sought the application of its command;14 their proliferation is itself testimony to the difficulties encountered in development of a cohesive jurisprudence of preclusion.15 The dynamic process has, perhaps inevitably, spawned uncertainty over aspects once thought settled. The theory of preclusion pressed by Robinson has not gone unaffected by the instabilities inhering in this course of evolution. Developments have, in one sense, quelled disharmony: the bounds of prosecutorial misconduct giving rise to protection against reprosecution have recently been given authoritative definition more exacting than that which in some quarters had been accorded. But unresolved by that redefinition are doubts, attributable in large part to pronouncements in a related branch of double jeopardy law, to the very applicability of this theory in circumstances such as are here presented.
In a decision rendered while Robinson's appeal was under our consideration, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that prosecutorial overreaching may indeed trigger the preclusive effects of the double jeopardy clause. But Oregon v. Kennedy, --- U.S. ----,
But Kennedy 's consideration of the preclusive effects of prosecutorial overreaching, like all prior circumstances of that doctrine consideration in the Supreme Court, occurred in a situation of the premature termination of the original proceeding, see Kennedy
The uncertainty, first noted by this Court in United States v. Opager,
But that Scott 's unyielding characterization of the limited interaction of the double jeopardy clause with prosecutions following reversals may admit too much becomes apparent on examination of Kennedy, and on appreciation of the rationale of Burks itself. Dissension among members of the Kennedy court over the soundness of the rule there announced in part focused on this very question of the applicability of the double jeopardy bar to reprosecution where overreaching is first acknowledged by reversal on appeal. Justices concurring in the judgment termed "irrational" the assumption they believe to have been made by the majority that "an appellate court that concluded not only that the defendants' mistrial motion should have been granted, but also that the prosecutor intended to provoke a mistrial would not be obligated to bar reprosecution as well as reverse the conviction," Kennedy
Nor is the rationale of Burks inconsistent with application of the "prosecutorial overreaching" exception to bar retrial where the overreaching caused a tainted verdict to be set aside, rather than a tainted proceeding to be aborted. Burks' holding, resting on a perceived dichoctomy between reversals for trial error and reversals for evidentiary insufficiency, indicated that, as the former hold no implication for the guilt or innocence of the defendant, they would raise no bar to further prosecution. Burks
Neither Burks nor subsequent cases imply diminution of the significance attached to the interest protected by the prosecutorial overreaching exception. In its recent decision of Tibbs, the Court explained that
Burks ... implement(s) the principle that "(t)he Double Jeopardy Clause forbids a second trial for the purpose of affording the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to muster in the first proceeding." Burks, supra (431 U.S.) at 11 (
Tibbs
The problem is nonetheless not one susceptible of easy resolution, see Opager at 236; United States v. Roberts,
2.
Though uncertainty reigns elsewhere, the principles governing examination of a claim of prosecutorial overreaching are in the wake of Kennedy clear. Double jeopardy will bar reprosecution only if analysis of objective facts and circumstances, Kennedy
The district court found that the misconduct assigned by Robinson, while basis for grant of a new trial,22 did not constitute overreaching preclusive of retrial. On the record before us we cannot say that the district court clearly erred. The prosecutor's conduct in Robinson's first trial is attributable at least in part to an evidentiary ruling not wholly without support in Texas law, see Robinson,
Nor does the court reporter's inability to prepare a complete transcript of the third trial trigger preclusion of retrial. The loss was at worst negligent; simple negligence will not support invocation of the double jeopardy clause. Westoff at 1050, citing Illinois v. Summerville,
On the facts here presented there occurred no prosecutorial overreaching sufficient to bar Robinson's retrial. His plea of preclusion under the double jeopardy clause must be denied.
B.
Robinson urges that even if his retrial is not barred the State should be precluded from again seeking the death penalty. His argument finds no quarter in the double jeopardy clause.
Supreme Court cases examining the import of the double jeopardy clause in sentencing determinations have found it to be most restricted. Double jeopardy considerations do not prohibit imposition of a harsher sentence upon retrial than that pronounced upon the original conviction, Pearce,
Robinson advances a claim distinct from those entertained in Supreme Court precedent: he argues that the double jeopardy clause demands that a circumstance of repetitive proceedings exact a toll on the Government's latitude in punishment.26 We find no support in the double jeopardy clause for such a balance of burdens. Its interference with issues of sentencing is minimal; where the result sought is not avoidance of a harsher sentence but governmental restriction to a lesser one than previously imposed, its principles are of no effect.
IV.
The district court's denial of habeas corpus relief is in all aspects affirmed. The stay of state court proceedings ordered by this Court shall be dissolved upon issuance of the mandate.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Robinson was charged under V.T.C.A., Penal Code ยง 19.03 (1974) providing:
Capital Murder
(a) A person commits an offense if he commits murder as defined under Section 19.02(a)(1) of this code and:
(1) the person murders a peace officer or fireman who is acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty and who the person knows is a peace officer or fireman;
(2) the person intentionally commits the murder in the course of committing or attempting to commit kidnapping, burglary, robbery, aggravated rape, or arson;
(3) the person commits the murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration or employs another to commit the murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration;
(4) the person commits the murder while escaping or attempting to escape from a penal institution; or
(5) the person, while incarcerated in a penal institution, murders another who is employed in the operation of the penal institution.
(b) An offense under this section is a capital felony.
(c) If the jury does not find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of an offense under this section, he may be convicted of murder or of any other lesser included offense.
V.T.C.A. Penal Code ยง 19.02(a)(1) (1974) provides:
Murder
(a) A person commits an offense if he:
(1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual.
Under Texas law, the penalties for capital murder are life imprisonment or death. V.T.C.A., Penal Code ยง 12.31 (1974). The death penalty is imposed if the jury returns affirmative answers to special issues asking:
(1) whether the conduct of the defendant that caused the death of the deceased was committed deliberately and with the reasonable expectation that the death of the deceased or another would result;
(2) whether there is a probability that the defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society; and
(3) if raised by the evidence, whether the conduct of the defendant in killing the deceased was unreasonable in response to the provocation, if any, by the deceased.
Vernon's Ann.C.C.P. art. 37.071(b) (1981).
Robinson charged that the prosecutor's attempted comparison of his version of the events leading up to Moon's death with Smith's testimony violated the hearsay rule and the confrontation clause of the sixth amendment. His objection to the prosecutor's reference to his conversation with Dr. Grigson was rooted in the prohibition of Vernon's Ann.C.C.P. art. 46.02, ยง 3(g) (1979), against the use of such statements in determination of guilt
Evidence offered at the hearing on Robinson's motion indicated that several jurors found themselves unable to disregard the implications emanating from the prosecutor's questions that Robinson had at other times told a different story. The doubts those questions induced were said to have contributed to their discreditation of Robinson's claim that he acted in self-defense, to the return of a finding of guilt, and to the recommendation of a penalty of death.
Texas law provides that a claim of former jeopardy may be raised at the inception of the prosecution under attack, but that the facts concerning the Special Plea are determined in the course of the trial on the merits, see Vernon's Ann.C.C.P. arts. 27.05 & 27.07 (1966 & Supp.1981). The Plea is a mechanism for avoidance of reconviction, not retrial. In its limited function, it falls short of the protections extended to criminal defendants by the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment, Baker v. Metcalfe,
Art. I ยง 14 of the Texas Constitution provides:
No person, for the same offense, shall be twice put in jeopardy of life or liberty, nor shall a person be again put upon trial for the same offense, after a verdict of not guilty in a court of competent jurisdiction.
Vernon's Ann.Const. Art. 1 ยง 14 (1955).
Robinson argued that his third prosecution was barred by the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment, the cruel and unusual punishment clause of the eighth amendment and concepts of fundamental fairness under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment
The magistrate to whom the district court referred Robinson's complaint recommended that the several claims for damages against the district attorney, the assistant district attorney, and the state trial court judge be dismissed under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) as barred by Imbler v. Pachtman,
Robinson does not challenge the propriety of the district court's construction of his ยง 1983 claim as a petition in habeas corpus invoking the protections of the double jeopardy clause. Insofar as the gravamen of his complaint lies in the legality of his continued confinement, that construction was, of course, dictated under Preiser v. Rodriguez,
The entry of a stay of the state criminal proceedings, indeed, the very maintenance of this habeas corpus action, raises obvious issues under Younger v. Harris,
(1) (A) substantial likelihood that plaintiff will prevail on the merits, (2) a substantial threat that plaintiff will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted, (3) that the threatened injury to plaintiff outweighs the threatened harm the injunction may do to defendant, and (4) that granting the preliminary injunction will not disserve the public interest.
Wilson v. Thompson,
Robinson's petition is properly considered to arise under 28 U.S.C. ยง 2241(c)(3), allowing the writ of habeas corpus to petitioners "in custody in violation of the Constitution," rather than under 28 U.S.C. ยง 2254(a), which requires that custody be "pursuant to the judgment of a state court." Although section 2241 contains no statutory requirement of exhaustion like that found in section 2254(b), exhaustion of state remedies has been held a necessary prelude to its invocation. Fain v. Duff,
Because the double jeopardy clause protects against multiple prosecutions, as well as multiple convictions and punishments, see n.3 supra, its infringement cannot adequately be remedied by post-conviction review, Fain at 224. Determination of whether the exhaustion requirement has been satisfied focuses, then, on state avenues to relief available to the petitioner prior to commencement of the criminal proceedings.
The State's response, made through the trial court judge who had presided at Robinson's three previous trials and in whose constructive custody Robinson is held pending retrial, addressed pre-trial avenues to relief. The trial judge noted that he had, by denial of the Special Plea of former jeopardy offered at the inception of the third trial, see note 3 and accompanying text, supra, considered and rejected Robinson's claim that the prosecutorial and judicial errors precipitating his first two retrials precluded his reprosecution. He further stated his belief that the loss of the court reporter's notes which had prompted vacation of Robinson's third conviction neither alone nor in combination with preceding events barred a fourth prosecution. Recourse to the Special Plea, by design inadequate to safeguard the constitutional right asserted, id., is doubly unnecessary when its invocation is demonstrably futile. Smith v. Estelle,
The district court also dissolved its stay of Robinson's impending reprosecution. By its order of September 21, 1981, this Court has stayed further state court action on this matter pending resolution of Robinson's appeal
Subject to certain exceptions, such as effective amendment by consensual trial of matters not pleaded, Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b), not applicable here
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure govern amendments of petitions for habeas corpus. 28 U.S.C. ยง 2242; Hodges v. Rose,
It is of no significance that Robinson presented his new claims in the guise of "Objections to the Recommendation of the Magistrate." Attempts to raise new claims are governed by the rules of amendment, without regard to the characterization given the claims by the petitioner. See, e.g., Sturm v. Wilson,
Because we do not consider the unexhausted issues which Robinson would inject on appeal as a part of the petition properly before us, and because there is no state procedure adequate to protect the single interest properly raised, we are not confronted by a "mixed" petition. Miller at 350 n.1, citing Mayberry at 1072 n.3; see Rose v. Lundy, --- U.S. ----,
"nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb ...." U.S.Const.Amend. 5
See United States v. Di Francesco,
Interpretation of the clause has hardly followed an unerring course. See, e.g., United States v. Scott,
Specifically cited as a possible source of what the Court characterized as "justifiable confusion," Kennedy
This Court has previously stated that the exception may be premised on "gross negligence ... (of a prosecutor) which 'seriously prejudice(s) a defendant' causing him to 'reasonably conclude a continuation of the tainted proceeding would result in a conviction,' " United States v. Kessler,
"Justice Stevens' concurring opinion criticizes the suggestion that the broader rule he espouses would make it less likely the judges would grant a motion for mistrial than if the narrower rule prevailed. At 2095 n.22. Justice Stevens' criticism of our conclusion appears to be based on the erroneous assumption that the courts in such a situation would be applying the narrow rule, rather than the broad rule. Tested by the correct assumption that the courts would be applying the all-encompassing standard denominated 'overreaching,' which he espouses, at 2097, we do not find his criticisms persuasive," Kennedy
This section of the Court's opinion,
Moreover, the defendant's valued right to go to a particular tribunal, Jorn
The Supreme Court repeatedly has eschewed distinctions in the scope of protection afforded by the double jeopardy clause grounded wholly on temporal or technical considerations. See Jeffers v. United States,
See Smith v. Phillips,
The court's ruling on defense counsel's objection to the prosecutor's inquiry into Robinson's knowledge of co-defendant Smith's "position" allowed limited questioning regarding conversations between Robinson and Smith after the shooting. The prosecutor's subsequent questions pushed the line between such conversations and Smith's trial testimony, but did not cross it
In explanation of his questions referring to Robinson's statements to Dr. Grigson in the course of the competency examination, the prosecutor stated his belief that such statements, though inadmissible on issues of guilt, were admissible in the guilt phase as impeachment. Strained though it may be, the argument was not beyond the pale. Definitive rejection of it came two years later, in Caballero v. State,
The Court did find the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to prohibit imposition of a harsher sentence if in retaliation for the exercise of the right to attack the conviction, id.
That approach is consistent with the deference accorded legislative definitions of punishment, see, e.g., Rummel v. Estelle,
Robinson has represented that "(n)o where (sic) in the reported case decisions from State or Federal Courts does there appear a case in which a Defendant was subject to threat of death four times upon the same charge," Petitioner's Brief at 5. The situation is not entirely unprecedented. In Hopt v. Utah,
