These are appeals from the district court’s disposition of a habeas corpus petition brought under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court considered the three grounds for relief stated in the petition and found that two grounds were without merit. The court, however, granted the writ on the basis of the third ground for relief after determining that petitioner had been denied effective assistance of counsel in his state court trial.
Petitioner Earl David Inge was convicted by a state court jury of first degree murder in the Circuit Court of the City of Lynch-burg, Virginia on November 3, 1975. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed Inge’s conviction with a formal opinion. Inge v. Commonwealth,
Inge was charged and convicted of murdering one Clifford Smith the evening of April 26, 1975. Smith died in his Lynch-burg apartment after he received a blast from a shotgun which had been fired through a rear window of his apartment. Although no direct evidence was introduced at trial to connect Inge to the crime in the sense that no one saw Inge do the shooting, the Commonwealth was able to link him to Smith’s murder by circumstantial evidence.
The police interrogated Inge several hours after the murder, and he admitted that he had fired a shotgun , on April 26 while he was at his parents’ house outside of Lynchburg. The police then went to the home of petitioner’s parents around 3:10 a.m. on April 27 and therein observed two shotguns. One gun was clean and the other gun was filled with sand around the breach. The police officers left without seizing the guns but returned the next day with a search warrant. When the officers seized the shotguns, both guns were clean. Inge admitted that he had cleaned the gun after he was questioned about the killing and that the gun that he cleaned was the gun he fired on April 26.
It was the Commonwealth’s theory of the case that Inge parked his truck at the end of Fleetwood Drive, walked down to Black Water Creek, crossed the creek by walking on a sewer pipe, found and shot Smith at his apartment, retraced his steps, and fled in his pickup truck.
Inge’s defense at trial was alibi. He testified that he was fishing in the early evening on April 26 and that he returned to his parents’ home to pick up his son later that evening. He also testified that he and his son left his parents’ home at about 9:00 p.m. to return to Lynchburg and that he had taken a circuitous route home which placed him at or near Smith’s apartment at about 9:30 p.m.
We will consider initially the two grounds for relief that the district court found to be without merit. First, that there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction. We agree with the district court that under Jackson v. Virginia,
Petitioner nevertheless argues that Jackson requires this court to apply a higher standard of review for determining sufficiency of the evidence because the Supreme Court of Virginia has adopted a stricter standard of review for cases involv
Contrary to what Inge argues, Jackson mandates application of a federal standard of review for sufficiency of the evidence because the substance of habeas corpus relief is based on federal due process grounds. Thus, even though the Virginia standard of review requires the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis of innocence, a habeas corpus court is not free to reject the federal standard in favor of a stricter state standard that is not constitutionally mandated. Simply put, a federal court may review a state court judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 only upon a showing by a state prisoner that “he is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” Pulley v. Harris,
We next consider the claim that Inge was denied a fair trial based on the admission into evidence of what is alleged to be an unconstitutionally suggestive identification of Inge’s truck by a witness for the Commonwealth. At trial, Gilbert Baldock testified that while he was mowing his lawn on the evening of April 26, he had seen a pickup truck driving down Fleetwood Drive somewhere between 8:30 and 8:40 p.m. Baldock also testified that he identified the same truck two days later when police officers took him to Inge’s place of employment. Inge claims that the testimony of Baldock concerning the identification of Inge’s truck deprived him of a fair trial because Baldock’s identification of the truck was made under circumstances that were unconstitutionally suggestive. At the time Baldock viewed the truck at Inge’s place of employment, police officers were around the truck taking pictures. Petitioner claims that this was a “one-on-one” confrontation inherently suggestive under Stovall v. Denno,
Finally, we consider the district court’s grant of the writ based on ineffective assistance of counsel. Inge claims that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his attorneys failed to object to the exhibition of two shotguns at trial which the Commonwealth did not introduce into evidence. It is undisputed that the two shotguns the police officers seized from the home of Inge’s parents remained on or underneath the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s table throughout the trial. While both the Commonwealth and Inge made repeated references to the shotguns, the. prosecution did not move to have the shotguns admitted into evidence. Inge now argues that the presence of the shotguns at the trial had a prejudicial effect on his defense and that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his attorneys failed to take any action to exclude the shotguns from the view of the jury or otherwise to object to the presence of the guns in the courtroom.
The district court determined that under Marzullo v. Maryland,
Initially, we note that the district court decided petitioner’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim prior to the Supreme Court’s announcement of a two-prong test for deciding such claims in Strickland v. Washington, — U.S.-,
Because we are of opinion the performance of Inge’s attorneys was reasonable considering all the circumstances and was within “the wide range of professionally competent assistance,” Strickland,
Under these circumstances, whether the defense attorneys simply didn’t think to object or deliberately did not object to the presence of the shotguns is immaterial. An objection could only have called the guns to the jury’s additional attention. A motion to exclude the guns from the courtroom could have resulted only in the Commonwealth’s Attorney correcting his inadvertence and caused him to have the guns admitted. Indeed, it is not subject to strained conjecture that had the defense attorneys moved for the exclusion of the guns, which motion resulted in their being admitted into evidence, they would be now defending themselves for making a mistake in correcting the inadvertence of the Commonwealth’s Attorney to the detriment of their client. In this respect, we should also add that since the guns were not introduced into evidence, the jury did not take the guns to the jury room when it retired. Had the guns been introduced into evidence, this further danger is apparent.
Thus, we do not think the failure of the defendant’s attorneys to object to the presence of the shotguns in the courtroom amounts to professional error at all, much less performance which is not reasonable under all the circumstances and which is outside the wide range of professional competence which is acceptable.
The decision of the district court with respect to the cross-appeal by Inge is AFFIRMED.
The judgment of the district court that a writ of habeas corpus issue is REVERSED.
Notes
. We do not believe that Standard 4-7.5(c) of the ABA Standards for Criminal Justice has any application in this case. The claim is made that Inge’s attorneys were ineffective in permitting the Commonwealth’s Attorney to engage in unprofessional conduct by permitting the shotguns to be displayed prior to the time a tender was made to admit them into evidence. There is no claim that the Commonwealth's Attorney did this deliberately, and the record is uncontradicted that the failure to offer the shotguns into evidence was nothing more than inadvertence. Cases are commonplace in which some exhibit is not formally admitted into evidence through inadvertence, and we are of opinion the ABA standard simply has no application in such cases.
